If the Runton Hall Estate was a brothel, I would be the madam at the front, taking the money and looking after the coats. What happens in the rooms upstairs is none of my business. However, when the rooms upstairs are full of Reiki healers, action needs to be taken, because your reputation is at stake. This situation has recently occurred at Runton, and it falls to me and the implementation of the Smith Plan – my contribution to working life here while I recover from the Tennyson Road Incident – to deal with this bunch of Jedi wankers.
Reiki healing is, as they say, not exactly rocket science. This is true, because rocket science has credibility. You really need to know what you’re doing to be a rocket scientist, spending many years studying and researching at the limits of human knowledge in a volatile and high risk pioneering technology. A Reiki healer is just some menopausal woman who wears a lot of purple, and who you’d usually expect to find doing bad charcoal drawings of cats in an Outer London sixth form college evening class. I imagine that talking to a rocket scientist about rocket science is interesting and impressive. Talking to a Reiki healer about Reiki healing fills your head with pleasing images of brutal and sustained violence and inventive ways to dispose of corpses. That said, I should like to acknowledge the disservice I am paying to the Runton Reiki healers. Most of them are Reiki masters. The difference between a Reiki healer and a Reiki master is a certificate you print yourself at a time when you consider you deserve it. It is literally that simple.
Whether or not I believe in Reiki healing is immaterial. It’s not my job to believe stuff at Runton, because to revisit our earlier metaphor, I am the madam. I don’t have to shag the punters. I just oversee an environment where shagging might take place, and pop in now and again to open a window and spray a bit of Fabreze about. Therefore, while I don’t necessarily believe that the Earth is flat, or that Paul McCartney was replaced by a body double in 1966, or that humans are ruled by shape shifting lizards from the rings of Saturn, I am entirely happy for people who do to come to Runton and get it out of their systems because, ultimately, it is harmless. The problem with Reiki healing is that there are circumstances – such as being persuaded away from conventional medicine to receive Reiki care in the belief that you will be fine in the morning – where it isn’t. It is these exact circumstances that ‘Anton’ discovered the Runton Reiki coven attempting to establish, while asking if one of them could magic him up ‘a spare set of bollocks for
Christmas’. With the exception of his genuinely charming children, I think I am right in saying that this is the first time the world has any reason to thank his bollocks for anything.
As I write, it strikes me that there is a similarity between a rocket scientist and a Reiki healer after all, and it is this: if either make a mistake, someone could die. You’re just as dead either way of course, but if you died due to a rocket scientist’s oversight, at least it would be in the noble cause of human advancement. If you died having trusted a Reiki healer with your deteriorating health, you’d look like a dick. I understand that exposure to conventional medicine has the potential for side effects, such as addiction and depression. Exposure to Reiki healing has the potential for side effects such as believing in Reiki healing, making it far more dangerous. I mentioned this to a Reiki healer, who said I was encouraging a form of fascism*. Anyway. There will be a meeting between Joe, myself and the Reiki coven before the weekly Trustees meeting next Monday, where I shall state that they can have Reiki conventions and Reiki discussions and talk about Reiki things as much as they want, so long as they don’t try to use Runton as some kind of hospital for broken fairies. One of the main aims of the Smith Plan is to help Joe get a proposal for a sizeable Lottery grant past the Trustees, and if someone pegs out in the Old Servant’s Quarters because their aura wasn’t sparkly enough, we’re all in trouble.
Elsewhere on the Estate, things are gently decaying in their usual leisurely manner. I am sitting in my traditional spot by the Restored Barn, and can almost hear the sound of Brillo pads on ironmongery as Becka sets the Forest School fun groups to work in the Victorian greenhouse. The Goat Bag Man has mastered the intricacies of the Sandstone Bell Tent and is performing admirably with ‘Anton’ and the glampers. He was once an actual teacher, too, so there is scope for him to pitch in with the Forest School, especially if we turn more of the outbuildings into dormitory space, doubling its capacity. As far as I can make out, his teaching experience mainly involved fighting with nutbox adolescents in the Luton area, which will stand him in good stead with Graham’s children, who only respect people they can’t beat up. As for Joe – well, if you’re of a mind to watch the Emirates Cup games this weekend you might spot him, as he’s letting off the fireworks on the pitch when the medals get awarded. I have no idea how this turn of events came about.
*Not the first time some hippy has levelled such an accusation. Many years ago at Camden, Joe and I sold t shirts, some of which had Dolphins Are Gay Sharks written on them, on the basis that as far as I’m concerned that is exactly what they look like. Some dismal old slag tried to sue us for ‘subconscious racism’, but to my considerable disappointment the case never got to court. She probably changed the fuck out of her tune when the same phrase was adopted and plastered all over season two of Glee.
Photards:
Main: Sloping football pitch near Runton. No one lives within five miles of it, and I can only assume it is used by the numerous ghosts which lurk in these parts.
Top inset: Joe at one of the pizza ovens installed by Forest School fun groups for the Bollywood wedding.
Middle inset: Archibald al-Sadique looking pleased with himself.
Lower inset: Livestock enclosure at Runton. It looks quite sweet when you can’t smell it.
officially employed by the Runton Estate, giving him a greater measure of credibility with the Board of Trustees. As we have seen, larger, boring projects such as cleaning of the Victorian greenhouse are undertaken by Forest School ‘fun groups’ of inner city children, arranged by Becka. ‘Anton’, a reasonably qualified electrician, is of value among the 1930’s wiring, as there are many miles of it around the estate, sparking gently away. Amid all this activity, I can’t, as ‘Anton’ rightly points out, ‘just sit around all day thinking about stuff, like that Stephen Hawkings’, and this is where the Panama hatted Goat Bag Man, now no longer regarded as the subject of a search and destroy mission by Graham’s children, comes into the equation by way of a major fire at Camden Market.
legend ‘A.J. Gives Toothy Blow Jobs’, written across the railway bridge overlooking the beer garden of the Hawley Arms. The next morning, Vinny, landlord of the Duke of Wellington, the Whitechapel interchange for market traders from north, south and east London, gave us to a Hero’s Breakfast – a fried egg sandwich – on a table thoughtfully situated next to the emergency exit, in case the pub caught fire. Joe was at Runton and I had moved to Greenwich Market when the next inferno struck, but the Goat Bag Man was lucky for a second time as it affected only the Stables Market, and he again received a Hero’s Breakfast from Vinny the next morning. The luck of both the Goat Bag Man and the Lock Market ran out on July 10th this year, when fire finally got the opportunity to make an absolute mess of the place, and while his business was largely unscathed, trade will inevitably suffer. This time there was no Hero’s Breakfast, because Vinny, who looked after us for so long, died in 2013. I’m sure this was due to his horrified response to the Goat Bag Man’s decision to give up the booze, making him technically guilty of involuntary manslaughter.
This takes place in the bath, kitchen sink and several barrels in the Goat Bag Man’s tiny flat, three floors up in the Highgate sky, but I all but sobbed as I detected about his person a hint of the escalators at Kentish Town, and the smell of warm air vented from the 214 bus as it meanders from Liverpool Street to Chalk Farm. To complete the scene, Becka appeared, fresh from the Screaming Car, where she been since one of her younger daughters irretrievably slid her phone, purse and keys into a hollow tree while shouting ‘Post box!’, and general revelry ensued. Later that evening, a member of the Christadelphian Isolationist League (currently glamping in the Fallow Field) appeared and played
didn’t see any of it. People would wander in and check things and look at stuff now and again, and visitors would come and go. I spent my time having morphine mainlined into me and watching classic war films, which backfired somewhat when
was indeed looking at his Tinder matches, as I suspect was the case, I hope he was swiping whichever way signifies interest, because if a relationship comes of it, he and his partner will have an amusing anecdote about how they met the night a Cockney came through the windscreen to tell their grandchildren. Who knows – they might make a thing of it and run me over every year on their anniversary. Then again, if the criminal negligence charges being brought against him by the old bill stick, he’ll miss the first few of them, what with being in prison and everything, but still.
What happened next was that the cabbie, who had a name badge informing me that his name was Andrew, asked if I was alright, and in return I asked if he was ‘fucking blind’, both reasonable questions under the circumstances. My right leg was the only limb in working order, and using this to lever myself to the side of the road, I made further enquiries as to ‘What kind of fucking ISIS bullshit was that?’ and ‘Where’s your fucking van, you fucking terrorist?’, because I had discovered that adrenaline and indignation make you quite gobby. His passengers were also remonstrating with him, and as they called sundry emergency services my guardian Rastafarian appeared. A long time ago in a London borough far far away en route to Greenwich Market, I slid off my bike on Peckham High Road, and was helped up, dusted off and jollied along by two passing Rastas. Rural Norfolk, however, is an unlikely place to chant down Babylon, and my baffled state was further enhanced when, at this latest moment of peril, a bona fide follower of Haile Selassi appeared from a passing car, asking me which football team I supported by way of determining possible head injuries.
West Ham fan and an Arsenal fan in the same place, it’s usually the Arsenal fan that’s lying on the floor, severely injured. By now, Andrew the cabbie was being arrested and I was being placed in a neck and spine brace by an ambulance driver who looked like Jeremy Corbyn, adding to the overall surreal nature of the evening. This caused me to think that perhaps a middle-class ambulance had picked me up by mistake, and I prepared myself for quite a long discussion about, probably, Brexit. These fears increased when, on the way to the Norwich and Norfolk University Hospital, the first question asked by the ambulance lady was if I had any food allergies. My experience with glampers at Runton tells me that there are a lot of things middle class people can’t eat – nuts, gluten, meat, dairy, fish, stuff from Israel etc – as they are an evolutionary dead end, which is also why they don’t breed. Upon reflection, I think this was the moment I realised I was going to be in hospital for some time, so I just said that while I have no allergies as such, I don’t like tapas as it is annoying because there is never enough of anything. Attempting to wrestle the conversation back to that evening’s headline news, I asked if I was badly hurt. The ambulance lady said that if I was a cat, I’d certainly have lost one of my nine lives. I pointed out that if I was a cat I wouldn’t have been riding a bike in the first place, and she admitted I had a point.
I pointed this out to Graham today at dawn as he prepared his ferrets and dogs for a bit of rabbit culling. ‘Anton’ was supposed to be helping him, but is wary of Graham after an incident prior to the last cull when Graham asked him to hold up a roof beam in an outbuilding we are renovating and, with ‘Anton’ fully committed and visibly shaking under the strain, placed two ferrets in his shirt. Some say that it is still possible to hear the words ‘I’ll kill you, you bastard fucking pikey cunt’, and sundry other sentiments with which I will not trouble you, dancing in the wind on the west side of the estate on still, moonlit nights. We Cockneys are kind, gentle, trusting people, and all too often this is our treatment at the hands of country folk. Anyway. ‘Anton’ was instead employed installing nets across gaps in the fences where rabbits might escape, the sound of his hammering filling the morning air. ‘Sounds like he’s crucifying one of yer glampers’ said Graham, and I was moved to agree.
They are messy though. This is what happens when you put the white middle class in a field – look at the state of Glastonbury when they’re done with it. Joe and I no longer wake them up in the morning by wandering through their enclosure shouting that someone’s found a way Jeremy Corbyn can still be Prime Minister, or that there’s going to be another EU Referendum, or that Great British Bake Off is not going to commercial television after all, and so forth. These days, we let them sleep in and ask them nicely to clean up after themselves, and almost all of them do so quite happily. I give the details of those who refuse, or who are basically dicks, to Graham’s kids, who then aggressively sell re-treaded tyres to them until they see the error of their ways. Graham’s kids, the oldest of whom is twelve, are fantastic. As you may recall, I acquired my dog, Archie, as part payment for teaching them how to read (‘A is for fucking apple, B is for fucking ball and my fucking bollocks. What’s this fucking book now?