Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Series 2, Episode 5: The Bublé Ultimatum

 
‘It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas,’ said Keanu McPherson.
The men of the Millport barbershop were standing at the window, first cup of coffee and a morning pastry in hand. So far there’d been no customers, and few were expected this Christmas Eve.
Barney Thomson, crack, barbershop über-genius, looked out upon the world. The deserted shore road along the front at Millport, the gull-inhabited white promenade wall, the sea beyond, grey and agitated, spoiling for a storm, the rocks and the Eileans, the few boats buoyed this side of those small islands, the sea stretching away to the ugly, dull blocks of Hunterston B on the mainland, the island of Little Cumbrae to their left, and straight ahead, the line of the horizon, and the passage to the south and the Malay Archipelago.
‘It doesn’t matter how many times you say it, son,’ said Barney, ‘it won’t make it happen.’
There was Christmas music playing in the shop, but Barney wasn’t a fan of the modern Christmas song, having heard – like everyone else – I Wish It Could Be Christmas Every DayLast Christmas and All I Want For Christmas eight million times too many for one lifetime. He could stomach Bing and Frank and all those fellows, so they were his compromise, but for the most part, he preferred classical interpretations of the old recognisable Christmas tunes, alongside other classical pieces which affected to be winter-based, but which could really have been anything. Seriously, if Bach’s Christmas Oratorio had been called Bach’s Genocide & Pancakes Oratorio, would anyone have been able to tell the difference? It’s just a bunch of people singing, and, magnificent though it may be, it’s not like you can make out a word of it.
‘Well, you know,’ said Keanu, ‘there’s a chill in the air, there’s expectation, there’s stuff on the tele. We can pull this off.’
‘Arf,’ said Igor, legendary deaf, mute hunchbacked barbershop sidekick, a man still wanted for crimes he didn’t commit in seven eastern European countries.
‘Aye,’ said Barney. ‘It’d be a tough ask any year, given the weather’s just grey and bleak, and those magical wintry Christmases are a thing of the past, but this year, we’re screwed. The dream is over.’ He popped the last of his chocolate croissant into his mouth and squeezed Keanu’s shoulder. ‘Next year perhaps we could all plan to go somewhere for Christmas. Assuming this madness is over by then, and obviously when politicians say things like everything’ll be getting back to normal by the summer, one automatically assumes we’re screwed until the end of the decade. But, we’ll see. All being well, we could have a work trip somewhere, take along the sergeant and Garrett and Sophia.’
‘Arf!’ said Igor.
‘Somewhere magical and cold?’ asked Keanu, taking a sip of coffee, before eating the last of a pecan cinnamon nutmeg spiced cloved Tom-and-Jerry-Christmas-episode Danish.
‘If such a place still exists in the northern hemisphere.’
‘Nice. It’s currently minus-27 in Resolute in northern Canada,’ said Keanu. ‘That could be a goer.’
‘I don’t know that place,’ said Barney. ‘Is it magical, with Christmas markets, an old town square, a three-hundred-year-old church and the peel of a bell on Christmas Eve?’ A beat, then he added, ‘And is there a five-star hotel?’
Keanu fished his phone from his pocket, tapped the screen, took a moment, then passed it to the others so they could see pictures of Resolute.
‘Oh,’ said Barney.
‘Seen worse,’ said Igor, though it came out as arf.
‘Cold, at least,’ said Keanu, looking at the pictures of what looked like a remote, desolate army base.
‘Let’s park it for the moment,’ said Barney. ‘Maybe there’ll be somewhere in Norway or Finland.’ Another pause, and then he added, ‘If the Russians haven’t invaded,’ and Igor nodded, and Keanu slipped the phone back into his pocket, and the day continued outside, Christmas Eve, grey and cold, all hope lost beneath a low cover of cloud.
 
* * *
 
Late morning, and Old Man McGuire was in for his pre-Christmas cut. He’d had his hair cut so often in the past year his head had evolved to meet the challenge, and now his hair, in a mutation new to science, was growing at a rate of a quarter of an inch a day.
In order to combat the familiar weight of disgruntlement from McGuire, Barney had allowed Keanu to put on some of the old 50s warbler Christmas tunes, and the shop was currently relaxing to the sound of Dean Martin crooning his way through classic yuletide, date-rape creepfest Baby It’s Cold Outside, Mind If I Wear Your Skin.
Keanu was giving McGuire his weekly Disconnected Caesar Undercut, Igor was sweeping up at the back, quietly humming along with the tune he couldn’t hear, and Barney was sitting on the customers’ bench, disinterestedly looking through the days’ newspapers. He’d passed on the Times, with its headline, Trump Threatens to Nuke D.C. As Coup Attempt Gathers Momentum; the Independent, Turns Out Farage Is Still A Cunt; the Guardian, New Covid Strain Bullshit Backfires As Rest Of World Tells UK To Fuck Off; the Express, Truss Announces ‘Extraordinary’ New Trade Deal With North Korea Worth £27.34; the Telegraph, Brilliant Boris Blueprint To Save NHS By Wiping Out Over-60s On Track; the Sun, Tory MP’s Covid Babe Caught In Sex Toy Cure Scam; and the National, with its front page scoop, Salmond Returns With New Nude Centrefold Charm Offensive, choosing instead to read the Mail, Time For D-Day 2, As ERG Persuades Boris To Declare War.
‘So, what have you got for us?’ asked McGuire, looking suspiciously at Keanu in the mirror, with his perpetually raised eyebrow.
Keanu, as ever, smiled in response.
‘How’d you mean, Mr McGuire?’
‘It’s Christmas,’ said McGuire.
‘Yep. Magical, isn’t it?’
‘Naw. So, what have you got?’
‘Not sure what you mean, Mr McGuire.’
‘You’re always talking about this set-up of yours, how it’s like a sitcom.’
‘It is.’
‘So, those shows, they always have Christmas episodes, where, you know, Christmas shite happens, and at the end of it people go away feeling all, you know, Christmassy and whatnot. So, what have you got?’
Barney smiled as he laid down the paper – silently vowing to himself to never again, in his life, lift a copy of the Daily Mail – looked at Igor, made the international sign of the cup of tea, Igor perked up like Scooby Doo, and then he walked through to the backroom to stick the kettle on and get the doughnuts lined up on the plate.
‘We’ve got Christmas music on,’ said Keanu.
‘Ach, they’ve got Christmas music playing at the crematorium, son, that doesn’t mean shite. What your audience is looking for is, fuck, I don’t know, an angel, or a benevolent ghost, or some cute yuletide storyline or other.’
‘It’s just not that kind of sitcom,’ said Barney, leaning on the doorway at the back.
McGuire’s eyes narrowed, looking harshly at Barney in the mirror.
‘What kind of sitcom is it, then? There’s certainly no comedy in it.’
‘Seems to be just three guys in a shop talking about stuff,’ said Barney. ‘If something actually happened, it’d change the nature of the show.’
‘But there’s no depth, son,’ said McGuire. ‘Youse’re so shallow, you might as well not be saying anything. Look around you. Look at Scotland, the real thing. You see they drug death figures from last week? What about that? What about independence and the coming war with England? How about crucial questions on what Scotland’s future currency’s going to be?’
He looked from Barney to Keanu and back. Behind Barney, the comforting rumble of the kettle.
‘Thought they’d settled on the groat,’ said Barney.
‘Aye, and if we do that, we’ll be speculated upon, cleaned out and bankrupted before lunch,’ said McGuire, taking him seriously.
‘Frank,’ said Barney, ‘like you said, we’re a sitcom. We don’t do drug deaths. We might do independence, we might not, but really, I’m through with talking about politics. I hate it all. You want to talk about that stuff, go to the pub, where you can be in an episode of River City. Cup of tea and a doughnut?’
Doughnut?’ said Keanu and Igor.
Truth be told, Barney had never watched River City, and had no idea if they ever talked about politics.
McGuire squinted into the dull light of late morning.
‘What flavours have you got?’
‘Just the one. Special Christmas flavour, made with the distilled essence of Frank Sinatra.’
‘Aye, all right,’ said McGuire, unhappily. A moment, or two, then he remembered his manners, and muttered, ‘Thanks, son.’
‘Four doughnuts and four cups of tea it is,’ said Barney, retreating into the back of the shop.
And so it was, through the medium of fried dough confection, Barney was able to bring Old Man McGuire the little piece of Christmas magic he was looking for.
 
* * *
 
There was a bit of last-minute, Christmas eve bustle about the shop. Barney was giving Old Man Carpenter a Top Of The World cut, Keanu was giving young Hickenlooper a Hatless Corbyn, Igor was sweeping up, and the tink-tink-tinkling of sleigh bells was a-tinkling through the shop, via a classic selection of Frank Sinatra Christmas tunes.
There’s a happy feeling nothing in the world can buy, when they’re passing round the covid and you’re going to die…
‘That’s the dichotomy at the heart of any artist wishing to release a new Christmas album,’ said Hickenlooper, finding a willing accomplice in Keanu when looking for a chat about festive tunes. ‘The old tunes are so well-known, that even if you go eleven months without listening to them, even if you managed the impossible and only listened to them for a week before Christmas, they have an over-familiarity. It’s unavoidable. So, what you’re looking for is something new. But then, it’s very difficult to produce a new Christmas song that immediately invokes the same kind of emotional, festive response as the old classics.’
‘True,’ said Keanu. ‘Just because you mention Christmas in a song, it doesn’t make it automatically festive. And most modern yuletide classics only invoke Christmas because you hear them every year over a period of time. It’s tough to create a new classic.’
‘Doesn’t really happen until a few other people have recorded the song.’
‘Even Mariah Carey took a while, wasn’t an overnighter.’
Hickenlooper nodded, and Keanu quickly lifted the scissors away from his head in order to save a life-threatening ear injury.
‘Hate that shite,’ muttered Old Man Carpenter from beneath Barney’s scissors.
‘Bit harsh,’ said Keanu, while Hickenlooper gave Carpenter a side-eye.
I just want you for my own, she says,’ said Carpenter. ‘Really? That’s some weird, fucked-up, possessive psycho bullshit, by the way. That’s serial killer stuff. No wonder the guy’s not going anywhere near her, smart bastard’s on the other side of the planet.’
‘Come on, Mr Carpenter,’ said Keanu, ‘she’s just looking for a hug.’
‘She wants to lock him in the basement, and if she can’t have him for herself, she’ll turn him into soup.’
Barney smiled, and from the back of the shop they could hear the quiet, comforting sound of Igor sniggering.
I’ll Be Home For Christmas,’ said Carpenter, rising to his theme, ‘serial killer on death row, threatening to come back from the dead and kill his abused wife on Christmas Eve. And Santa Clause sees you when you’re sleeping? Does he, now? I mean, that’s not even fucking code, by the way. And see they carols… Lo! He abhors not the virgin’s womb? Seriously, what the fuck is even happening in that sentence? Ditto veiled in flesh the godhead see. That’s just fucking minging, by the way.’
‘So, what you’re looking for,’ said Hickenlooper, deciding to retake control of the conversation by more or less ignoring Old Man Carpenter, ‘is a song that borrows from themes of previous numbers, using familiar chord structures and arrangements. That’s kind of what the Mariah Carey does, and yon Leona Lewis did it with One More Sleep, but as we’ve established with our extensive examination of the documented facts here this morning, it still takes a while for a Christmas song to become part of the collective consciousness.’
‘Leona Lewis?’ chimed in Carpenter, ‘wrote a Christmas song? As well as winning that Olympic gold medal in heptathlon. Some fucking woman, eh? You got her phone number?’
‘That was Denise Lewis,’ said Keanu.
‘He said her name was Leona.’
‘That’s who wrote the Christmas song. Denise was the Olympic athlete.’
‘What?’ snarked Carpenter. ‘The fuck she change her name for?’
‘She didn’t change her name, it’s two different women.’
‘Who are?’
‘Denise and Leona Lewis.’
‘It’s not the same person?’
‘No!’
‘Wait, they’re not one of they lesbian couples are they?’ said Carpenter, and he stared harshly at them in the mirror for a moment, before allowing his face to relax and adding, ‘I mean, I’m a new man, ‘n’ a’ that, these ladies can do what they like, don’t get me wrong.’
‘They’re not a couple, Mr Carpenter,’ said Keanu, smiling.
‘So, what, they are the same person, then? That’s what I was saying. Talented girl.’
‘And we’re done,’ said Barney, giving a final flourish of the scissors, then taking a step back.
‘What the…?’ said Carpenter, not expecting the cut to be over so quickly, and not realising, through his agitated discussion, that Barney had been executing one of his legendary Two-Minute Exceptionals, where he’d have the customer dispatched as quickly as possible, with the finest head of hair in the land.
A moment’s consideration, however, and Old Man Carpenter began nodding, a grudging look of respect on his face.
‘I suppose it’s not shite,’ he said. ‘I’ll have to change my profile picture online, see if I can get hold of the Lewis girl. Might be in with a chance.’
 
* * *
 
‘So, my dad gave us the Santa-doesn’t-actually-exist chat, when I was three…’
‘Ooft,’ said DS Monk.
‘I know, right,’ said Sophia. ‘Anyway, he wasn’t holding back. He did Santa, and then boom, he moved on to Jesus. All that stuff about the nativity, he said, none of it’s true. Sure, he existed, he was a guy who was around at the time and he did things, but virgin birth? Son of God? Forget about it.’
‘Hard to argue,’ said Keanu, and Sophia nodded phlegmatically.
End of the day, the Closed sign up, the shop shut for the holidays. The men of the Millport barbershop had been joined by the wives and girlfriends – the hairdresser, the detective and the lawyer – and they were all sitting around the shop, appropriately spaced out, drinking mulled cider and chewing the festive fat, while the Bublé Christmas album played in the background.
‘And I said, what about the three wise men, and he said, well, the Bible doesn’t actually say how many wise men there were, it just mentions three gifts, and I said, so there could’ve been five thousand wise men, and dad said, there haven’t been five thousand wise men in the history of the world never mind in the Middle East at that singular point in time, and then he said it was made up anyway, so in fact, there weren’t any wise men, because when Jesus was born, he was just another kid like everybody else, and there were no angels and no shepherds and no star. And then, I think mum was having a go at him, but I don’t really remember, I guess he started joking and said that Bing Crosby didn’t really exist either. Trouble being, I was, as I said, three.’
‘Uh-oh,’ said Barney.
‘Exactly. I believed him. And, of course, Dad died not long after that, and I’ve always idolized him, and kind of hung on to the little I can remember about him, this being one of the few things. He said Bing Crosby was this mythical troubadour figure, played by various people through time. So when you heard a Bing Crosby song, it was just someone playing the part of Bing Crosby, the way people play the part of Santa, and that no one ever really knew who the different Crosby’s were. As long as they could do that low crooner thing, they’d get the job.’
‘When did you find out the truth?’ asked Garrett Carmichael, town lawyer, and the person for whom Igor swept up at home.
Sophia looked at Keanu, they shared a rueful smile, then she turned back to Carmichael.
‘Last night.’
There was a moment while everyone drank mulled cider. It was decent mulled cider, by the way, and since the town was small and no one had to drive home, they’d all be having a second glass.
‘Until last night, you thought Bing Crosby didn’t exist?’
‘My dad said. You believe your dad when you’re a kid. And he wasn’t wrong about Santa and Jesus.’
‘What happened last night?’ asked Igor, and even though it came out as ‘Arf?’ everyone understood the question.
‘We were watching a movie called High Society on iPlayer, and I said to Keanu, who’s that playing the geezer who’s way too old for the gorgeous socialite lady, and he says Bing Crosby, and I’m like, yeah, but who’s playing Bing Crosby, and he’s like, no one’s playing Bing Crosby, that’s Bing Crosby playing a guy, I forget his name…’
‘C.K. Dexter-Haven,’ chipped in Monk, who loved High Society.
‘Yep, that’s the guy, and I’m like, no, you don’t understand, who’s the actual dude who’s Bing Crosby, because you don’t usually see Bing Crosby, he’s always just a voice on a Christmas album, and Keanu’s looking at me like, what the fuck, and it took an hour or two, but we got there finally, then I end up spending like another two hours on the internet reading about the actual Bing Crosby, who really did exist by the way, and had seven children, I could tell you all about him, and so I’ve been on a bit of a journey. Have to admit I had to check out Santa and Jesus just to make sure, but it turns out dad wasn’t making that up.’
‘You have a lot of movies to catch up on,’ said Barney, ‘if you like that kind of thing.’
‘Think they might all be a bit old for me,’ said Sophia. ‘I mean, that was some serious fucked-up sexist shit in the movie, by the way.’
‘Yeah,’ said Monk, nodding. ‘You kind of have to get past that, and just enjoy the songs, and looking at Grace Kelly.’
Sophia let out a low whistle. ‘Wow. Beautiful. Couldn’t act for biscuits, but beautiful. What happened to her?’
‘Tell you later,’ said Keanu.
‘I like Road To Morocco,’ said Barney, ‘though it may not be considered one of his best.’
‘We’ll check it out, boss,’ said Keanu, and there was a nod around the room, accompanied by the contemplative drinking of mulled cider, as the collective acknowledged the discussion on Bing Crosby, real or otherwise, had gone as far as it could.
Bublé had moved on to his innovative post-punk version of I Saw Three Ships, and the feeling in the shop was pretty much as acceptable a feeling as one was going to get in these times, when the country was standing at the precipice, waiting to take the blind jump.
‘We need a new Bublé Christmas album,’ said Carmichael, indicating the air with a general wave of the hand. ‘Disappointed he didn’t pull one out of the bag this year to cheer everyone up. I mean, those old guys like Sinatra and the actual Bing Crosby,’ and she smiled at Sophia, ‘and Dean Martin, they’d be bringing Christmas albums out every other year. Bublé’s is the gold standard of this century, but we’ve all heard it a billion times. We need a new one.’
‘Didn’t he do all the Christmas songs last time?’ asked Keanu. ‘As we established previously in the episode, though you missed it, there’s a careful balance to be struck when creating new Christmas material.’
‘There are tonnes he didn’t do,’ said Carmichael. ‘Hark the Herald, Sleigh Ride, Here Comes Santa, Must Be Santa, the one about New Year’s Eve, Little Drummer Boy, Christmas Island, you know. Masses. Plus, he could do versions of newer songs which have either already made it into the lexicon of the season or which he could help establish as new festive classics. Plus, he could do a different version or two of songs he previously did.’ She looked around the room, pleased to see her bold assertion of Bublé’s future recording career was gaining general approval. ‘Lots of potential. Am I right?’
‘You are,’ said Monk. ‘Can’t believe he hasn’t done it already.’
‘Someone should start a petition. I mean, let’s face it, next year is liable to be even shitter than this year, and we’re all going to need a new Bublé festive album by December.’
‘I’m all in,’ said Monk. ‘Let’s work on it in the new year.’
‘Maybe we’ll sue him.’
‘You are a lawyer.’
‘One of those benevolent lawsuits, we don’t want him piss him off.’
‘Yep,’ said Monk, raising her glass. ‘And maybe I’ll benevolently charge him with a crime in international court.’
‘I see a plan coming together,’ said Carmichael. ‘By this means we can start to think about next year in a more positive light.’
‘Anyway,’ said Barney, finishing off his drink, and heading to the back of the shop to get the pan, in order to top everyone up, ‘we’re getting way ahead of ourselves. It’s only Christmas Eve. There are still eight more days for 2020 to get catastrophically worse. And let’s face it, the way it’s going…’
Keanu looked at Monk.
‘Can’t you do something about him?’ and Monk smiled, shrugged, and said, ‘On this occasion, he’s not wrong…’
Barney returned with the pot of steaming mulled cider and began ladling a second helping into everybody’s mug. The smell of hot apples and spices filled the air, Michael Bublé’s first Christmas album of the forthcoming trilogy played on, and outside, as they all turned and looked out at the dark of evening, the snow had just begun to fall.
They watched for a moment, as the magic of Christmas took them, allowing them a fleeting escape from the shitshow of the worst festive season since the third century BC.
‘Merry Christmas, everyone,’ said Keanu, raising his glass.
They shared the look and the sentiment, they lifted their glasses to the room, and they drank in the snowy, spiced, warm contentment of early evening, Christmas Eve.
‘Merry Christmas!’
‘Merry Christmas!’
‘Merry Christmas!’
‘Merry Christmas!’
‘Arf!’

Monday, December 7, 2020

Series 2, Episode 4: The Schrödinger Impasse


‘You know what I hate,’ said Keanu McPherson, abruptly shattering a lovely silence. The silence of the seaside, on a still day, a flat, silvery-grey calm stretching away from them to the mainland, and the island of Little Cumbrae, and onto the distant horizon, and the southern passages to the tropics.
The men of the Millport barbershop were leaning on the promenade wall, taking in the view. In fifteen minutes, there’d been no conversation, and they’d only had to greet three or four people who’d passed them by. There had been others, but despite their reluctant worldwide fame, not everyone knew the men of the local tonsorium.
‘Arf?’ asked Igor, tonsorium assistant, quicker to the interruption to their tranquility than Barney Thomson, tonsorium legend, who was having to drag himself back from an idyl of sitting with Monk on top of Goatfell, looking west out over Kintyre, a bag of crisps, a glass of pinot, a smoked salmon and cream cheese on homemade granary.
‘End of,’ said Keanu.
He could have meant that he wasn’t going to say anything else, but they understood what he was getting at.
‘Hmm,’ said Barney.
‘Arf,’ agreed Igor.
They could have left it there, given they were all in agreement, but they understood that only by talking it through would Keanu exorcise the end of demon.
‘First off, it’s just ugly use of language, right? It’s blunt and unattractive. English can be wonderful and colourful and glorious, and it can be crude and vulgar, it can be sweeping, and it can be claustrophobic. End of is just, tight, and short, and sour. Look, I know tight can be good, but this isn’t good tight. This is ugly, constraining tight.’
‘I get you,’ said Barney.
He took a drink of coffee. That cup of coffee was certainly lasting a long time, and keeping hot too, almost as though none of this actually existed in real life.
‘And the presumption of it. I mean, I know a lot of people use it in a comedic way, and fine, on you go. But if you use it seriously, it’s like, who made you king? Who made you the arbiter of the discussion? Who said that you were so right that this isn’t worth talking about anymore? This world, the media, newspapers, everything, they demand everything is simple, black and white, reduceable to a five-word headline. But virtually everything is grey, so much in life is nuanced. And if something really is beyond dispute… I don’t know, like dark chocolate digestives are Satan’s work, or Brexit is moronically stupid, and someone’s disagreeing with you, you don’t want to say Brexit is ludicrous, end of, do you? You want to have it out.’
He was becoming agitated, which isn’t a good state to be in when looking at a calming view, so he took a drink of coffee to slow down, regaining his equilibrium.
‘What’s your plan?’ asked Barney.
To be honest, Barney never wanted to have it out with anyone. On the odd occasion that someone in the shop spoke positively about Brexit, for example, he would never engage them in conversation, and would generally have the haircut completed, to the highest specifications, in under two minutes, in order to get rid of them. Sure, he might find them so objectionable he’d want to give them a stinker, but that was unlikely to hurry anyone silently on their way.
‘To stamp it out?’ said Keanu.
‘Yep.’
They stared across the water in silence for some time. Gulls came and went, coffee was drunk. In the far distance, on the grey line of the horizon, the Ardrossan ferry appeared from behind the edge of Little Cumbrae, inching its way towards the mainland. Old Man Littleferry appeared on his mobility scooter to their right, shooting along the pavement, and he waved as he zipped past them, his few strands of hair blowing playfully in the wind.
‘I’ll be in on Monday for my Quaffed Pompadour Overlay!’ he called, as he went on his way.
‘George,’ said Barney, tipping his mug.
And once again, silence resumed.
‘Don’t have many options,’ said Keanu eventually. ‘One, in fact.’
‘Arf?’
‘Become an uber-famous writer, which I think I may well achieve with my new erotic thriller, The Princess and The Caveman, so that everything I do is analysed and quoted, and then through this medium I can spread the word. Stop using end of, or you will become what you despise.’
A gull swooped before them from on high, down into the water, abruptly coming away empty-beaked, and then it flew off into the air, flying up and away, quickly blending into the grey/white of the low cloud.
They drank their coffee, the waves continued to silently wash, never-ending, upon the rocks.
‘Aye,’ said Barney, after a while.
 
* * *
 
The first haircuts of the day. Too early yet to say how the day would turn, although only rarely in these coronavirus times would the shop be busy. People were wary. Well, some people were wary. Others were idiots. The unwary were the kind of people who would’ve gone on holiday to Belgium in October 1918, rather than leave it a couple of months.
Not that Belgium was the world’s premier holiday destination in December 1918, but at least there was less chance of getting shot if you lit a cigarette after nightfall.
There was a quiet, harmonious hum about the barbershop, the gentle sounds of a day going about its business. The click of scissors, the sweep of Igor’s brush, the rustle of a newspaper, the swish of cape fabric, the soft sound of a barber’s footfall as he moved slowly around the chair.
Barney was cutting the hair of Old Man Schrödinger, who had said he might want a haircut, or he might not, and so Barney was just randomly snipping away, doing enough to make the customer feel like he was getting something done, but not enough for anyone to notice any difference about his hair. Keanu was giving Old Man McCartney the same Mull of Kintyre cut he’d been getting since 1977. McCartney was reading the Independent – headline, Trump Looks To Baby Yoda In Last-Ditch Election Overturn Attempt – and Schrödinger was reading the Sun, headline, Prem Star’s Covid Babe’s Yuletide Sex Balm Cure.
On the customers’ bench behind them, a bench currently unoccupied by customers, was the remainder of that day’s pile of journalistic detritus. From the top, the Telegraph, headline, Bravura Boris In Barnier Buggeration Bruhaha; the Express, EU Fuckers Poison Hero Brits With Toxic Belgian Serum; the Times, leading with Patel Takes To Killing Immigrants With Bare Hands At Dover Arrivals; the Star with Hancock Even Bigger Asshole Than First Thought; the Mail with I Spit On Your Grave, Crows Raab, As He Steps Over Cold Corpse Of Overworked Civil Servant; and the National, with Sturgeon Accused Of Using Competence To Show Up Tories, were being left to languish, unread. Such was the fate of the newspapers in these times.
‘See yon Trump,’ began Old Man Schrödinger, indicating the newspaper with a small nod, then he allowed silence to return as he appeared to decide that seeing yon Trump was a beginning, a middle and an end of a discussion in itself.
Barney, naturally, would have let it go. Keanu, however, was not one to leave an itch unscratched.
 ‘What’s he done now, Mr Schrödinger?’ he asked after a few moments, smiling as Barney slung him the familiar rueful glance.
Schrödinger took a second, then he looked strangely at Keanu in the mirror and said, ‘Who?’
‘Trump.’
‘What about him?’
‘What’s he done now?’
Schrödinger looked animatedly baffled – Barney temporarily suspended the cut to avoid serious injury – then he said, ‘Fuck should I know what he’s done?’
‘You just said, see yon Trump,’ said Keanu.
‘Did I?’
‘Aye.’
‘Why’d I say that?’
Barney gave Keanu the same look, times a thousand. Keanu smiled broadly at Old Man Schrödinger.
‘We don’t know, Mr Schrödinger. You must’ve read something about him in the paper.’
Schrödinger turned away and looked curiously at himself in the mirror.
‘What was the last thing you read?’ asked Keanu, hoping to nudge him, as he didn’t seem to be doing the obvious thing of actually looking at the paper, albeit he had turned the page since he’d started what was quickly becoming known as “the Trump Affair.”
‘One of they Fifty Shades books,’ said Schrödinger, ‘though I don’t know what that’s got to do with it.’
‘In the paper!’ snapped Barney, unable to stop himself.
‘Oh, aye, which one?’ asked Old Man McCartney, joining the fun. ‘I love they books. My favourite’s Fifty Shades Anal.’
‘I’ve no’ heard of that one,’ said Schrödinger.
‘Got it in the library, but you can only find it if you go in through the back door,’ and then he chuckled.
Yes, in the blessed name of Dan Brown, he chuckled.
‘Help m’boab,’ muttered Schrödinger, ‘the neck of some people. Where was I?’
Barney was now standing with his arms folded looking at Keanu, who had his lips pressed together, trying not to laugh. Igor was sniggering at the back of the shop.
‘You were trying to remember which Fifty Shades book you just read,’ said McCartney.
‘No, you weren’t,’ Barney threw into the ring.
Fifty Shades Moister,’ said Schrödinger, nodding to himself.
‘Oh, nice,’ said McCartney. ‘Terrific lesbian scenes. Really gets me and Margaret going on a Friday night. I like to read it to her in the bath.’
‘Oh my fucking God,’ said Barney quietly to himself, and he ran the hand that wasn’t holding a pair of scissors across his face.
‘Erwin,’ said Barney, looking up, determined to bring the madness to a conclusion, ‘two minutes ago, or maybe it was two days, we’ve been here so long it’s hard to tell, you were reading the paper, on the page before the one you’re currently looking at, and you said, see yon Trump. Then, to the delight of most of us, but for some reason to the consternation of my young, soon-to-be former employee, you didn’t add to that. So, will you please, for the love of God, turn back the page, see what it is that Trump did to get you talking, and tell Keanu. And then I’m going to finish your haircut, and you can be on your way.’
‘Haircut? I don’t remember actually asking for a haircut.’ A beat, then he added, ‘Or, did I?’
‘Turn back the page, Erwin.’
‘I’m not going anywhere, by the way,’ said Keanu, smiling. ‘I’ve got rights.’
‘Arf!’
Barney gave them both a look, sighed heavily, then looked over Schrödinger’s shoulder, as he turned the page, to see the Trump article.
There were three news articles across the double page. Alien Monster Shark Discovered Off Dover ‘Not One Of Mine,’ Claims PatelWith Brexit In Mind, Man Eats Entire Horse To Lay Down Winter Fat; and New Edition Of Government Minister Top Trumps Gives Gove 0/10 In Every Category, Except Being A Cunt.
Schrödinger studied the page. Igor and Keanu craned their necks to have a look. Everyone read the headlines. Barney gave his colleagues the most side-eyed side-eye anyone ever gave anyone else in the long, storied history of the side-eye.
‘Don’t know what you’re talking about,’ said Schrödinger. ‘Think you’re full of shite, Barney.’
Barney laid down the scissors, lifted the brush, quickly brushed off Schrödinger’s shoulders and neck, then whipped off the cape.
‘You’re done, Erwin. That’ll be ten pounds. You can pay Igor on your way out.’
Schrödinger stared at himself in the mirror, a little surprised. Although, to be fair, he quite liked the new haircut.
Or did he?
‘Hmm,’ he said.
‘Come on,’ said Barney, ‘up, oot. There’s a queue.’
Keanu laughed again and turned back to McCartney’s Mull of Kintyre. Igor, smiling cheekily to himself, bent once more over his broom. Barney walked to the back of the shop to turn the radio on. The shop went about its business.
And somewhere, out there, in the miles and depths of British coastal waters, Priti Patel’s alien monster shark bided its time.
 
* * *
 
Mid-afternoon. The day had continued much as it had begun, with customers sporadic, the silences long and golden. Barney and Igor found the situation not disagreeable. Keanu, as was invariably the case, was getting bored. He was looking for a little more action, and while that could have been a car chase along the front, a gigantic explosion at the nuclear power station on the mainland, or an invasion of a giant, crossbred aquatic species, bent on world domination, he would’ve settled for giving a few more people a short back and sides.
As it was, the men of the shop currently had no customers, and they’d taken advantage of the situation by once again standing across the road, leaning on the white promenade wall, looking out to sea, drinking a cup of tea. There was a chill in the air, a hint of winter, the taste of colder weather to come.
‘How long d’you think before we get this vaccine?’ Keanu threw into the silence.
Igor didn’t hear. Obviously, being deaf, Igor never heard anything, but that didn’t mean he couldn’t pick up conversations. The means by which he did this was unknown to science, however. Nevertheless, on this occasion, he was staring at the horizon, dreaming of the far away lands to the south, lands of warm sea breezes and a bright midday sun, so that the remote vibrations of Keanu’s words did not penetrate.
Which left Barney in the lurch, having to engage in conversation when he didn’t really feel like it. Sure, he was self-aware enough to realise that he was succumbing to the lockdown, that this year of lack of social interaction had swallowed him up and that soon enough he would be happy to never talk to anyone again. But was that a bad thing? Think how wonderful it would be if you never had to listen to anyone talk?
‘Sorry?’ he said, giving Keanu a glance.
‘How long d’you think before we get this vaccine?’
‘Hmm,’ said Barney, and he took a drink of tea, before indicating the great beyond with his mug. ‘So, they say they’ve got 800,000 vaccines arriving about now. Population of the UK is, what…?’
’66.65 million,’ said Keanu. ‘I looked.’
‘Did you do the maths?’
‘Aye. If you get 800,000 vaccines a week, that means 83 weeks.’
‘There are a few things to factor in there,’ said Barney.
‘Such as, will we actually get 800,000 vaccines every week?’
‘Aye.’
‘Since the government were such gloaty assholes about how brilliant we are, will the next lot of vaccines accidentally get redirected back into the EU?’
‘Aye.’
‘Once we produce our own, British flag vaccines, made from the distilled essence of Spitfires and baked beans, will we be producing a million a week, or eight million a week?’ A pause, Barney left him to it. ‘Or eight a week?’
‘Aye,’ said Barney.
They stared for a moment out across the grey-blue yonder, contemplating the future of humanity.
‘Seems to me,’ said Barney, ‘that we don’t have enough information yet to be able to make an informed guess.’
‘But we’re barbers,’ said Keanu, ‘we instinctively know stuff.’
‘Good point. I’ll say we’ll have everyone who wants or needs to be vaccinated done by summer.’
‘Which summer?’
‘2036.’
‘Arf!’ said Igor, having tuned in somewhere along the way, nodding in agreement.
With a flurry of white, and an unusually loud squawk, a gull landed on the wall a few feet along from them, and the men turned to look at it. Had the gull had a camera, it would have made a decent photo. The three guys in a row, all staring to their right, the perfect shot for an album cover. Keanu & The Deadmen, Show Me the Way to Millport & Other Songs.
‘What?’ said Barney.
The seagull cocked its head to the side, studied their mugs of tea and, having decided it preferred the idea of coffee, turned away, righted itself for push-off, and then soared quickly into the cold afternoon sky.
‘And there was you,’ said Barney to Keanu, indicating the gull, ‘thinking that nothing was going to happen today.’
‘Ha!’ said Keanu, then he made the banner headline gesture. ‘Gull In New Wall Outrage.’
‘FTSE Plummets After Gull Wall-Landing Shock,’ said Barney.
‘Stoned Gull Misses Sea, Narrowly Escapes Death In Wall Plunge.’
‘Gull Would Have Died Without Brexit, Says Gove.’
‘Trump Insists Gull Missed Wall,’ joined in Igor, in his own way.
‘Sex Shame Of Anti-Vax Fish Killer,’ said Keanu.
And so the afternoon passed.
 
* * *
 
‘Anything interesting happen in Millport today?’ asked Keanu.
The shop was closed, darkness had long since fallen, the men of the shop were sitting around, drinking the essential wrap-up cup of tea of the day, and had been joined by Detective Sergeant Monk, come to chew the end-of-the-day fat, before heading home with Barney for a night of flicking endlessly through a million different television viewing options, watching several hundred trailers, while not actually watching a single show. Such were the evenings of so many spent in these dark days, as the lights of civilisation dimmed.
‘Hmm,’ said Monk, and the men each gave her an interested eyebrow. There had been a lot going on in that single syllable.
‘Ooh,’ said Keanu, ‘this sounds promising. Did you break up a diamond smuggling operation or get into a helicopter chase and shootout with Columbian drug barons?’
‘Not today.’
‘OK, cool, cool. Go on.’
Barney and Igor drank their tea, a little more grounded in their expectations.
‘Well, it turns out Old Man Limburger still has the hand gun from his National Service days just after the war. A Browning. Never registered it, of course, because these people never did. Anyway, no one’s getting up in the grill of these old guys, because invariably those weapons are going to be kept in a shoebox in the loft, and their existence will only be discovered when they die. Except Old Man Limburger is a conspiracy theorist…’
‘Tell us about it,’ said Barney, ruefully.
‘Ah,’ said Monk, ‘you get to hear it, do you?’
‘He’s in here every couple of weeks, and he’s in on them all. Moon landing, JFK, Covid as a Chinese world domination tool, alternatively, the world is run by giant lizards…’
‘For a while he was pushing a theory that the Pope and Donald Trump were the same person, but he seems to have dropped that one recently,’ chipped in Keanu.
‘Good to know,’ said Monk. ‘So, Mr Limburger keeps his old gun polished, armed, ready to go. You know, in case the Russians invade, or the French, or, in fact, in case Constable Gainsborough and I decide to stage a takeover of the island.’
‘God, he hasn’t killed someone, has he?’ asked Barney, seeing where this was going.
‘It’s weirder than that.’
‘So, no one’s dead?’
‘No one’s dead.’
‘OK, good,’ said Barney. ‘I’ll relax and enjoy it. What’s the weirdness?’
Monk took a drink of tea, the storyteller’s narrative pause, nodded to Igor at its quality, and then continued. ‘Today he was sitting out the front of his house, you know at the back of Kames, and he was cleaning his gun. Looks like he does that a lot.’
‘I’ve seen him,’ said Barney. ‘Didn’t realise he was cleaning a gun.’
‘Me neither,’ said Monk. ‘Anyway, he accidentally discharged the weapon.’
‘Arf.’
‘Like I said, no one died. Or got injured. Here’s where it gets weird. The only reason we get to hear about this, because no one in the area reported hearing a gunshot, was because of young Billy Theroux.’
‘Top-down pompadour undercut,’ said Keanu.
‘That’s what you call it?’
‘Gave it to him three days ago.’
‘So, young Billy’s out for a walk. He’s got his walking boots on, as it’s been a bit wet recently, and he’s aiming to go round the bay, and up the hill behind our place, and, as we know, it’s pretty muddy scrambling up that hill at the moment. He has long laces on his boots. Every time he goes out, he doubles knots them. Says he did it before he went out, same as always, nice and tight. Old laces, once they’re tied, they stay tied. He’s walking along, something catches his eye, he notices the second knot has come loose on his left boot. That’s odd, he thinks. He bends down to tie it, and… boom… gun shot, he feels the bullet whiz pass the top of his head, misses him by who knows how little, and disappears into the trees.’
Keanu let out a long whistle. Igor looked suspicious.
‘And luckily,’ said Barney, warily, ‘as they say on Thomas the Tank Engine, no one got hurt.’
‘Yep,’ said Monk, ‘that’s the size of it. Young Billy, of course, is seeing a higher power at work.’
‘He hasn’t found Jesus, has he?’
‘Seems to be leaning more towards Slartibartfast. Meanwhile, Old Man Limburger is seeing some other kind of conspiracy, where young Billy is in league with this higher power, and that’s what saved his life. Nevertheless, given that he nearly accidentally killed the kid, he has to accept that no one really cares what he thinks.’
‘You take his gun off him?’
‘Oh, yes. He wasn’t happy, but you know…’
Story dispatched, she took another drink of tea, nodded to herself again, accepted that she’d imparted all the details she needed to, and then settled back. ‘And that was that for Millport today, really.’
‘Weird,’ said Keanu. ‘As you said.’
‘Yep.’
‘Maybe it was a metaphor.’
‘For what?’
‘No one knows. I mean, it’s a slightly surreal tale in the way you’d get in fiction, but not in real life. So, maybe if you bring a literary scholar into the investigation, they might be able to help you.’
‘It’s not actually an investigation.’
‘Well, if you don’t want to find out what really happened…’
He smiled, she shared it, and then together they drank their tea, and if it wasn’t just the thing, but they were all more or less finishing at the same time, right on cue to be ready to close up, leave the shop, and head home.
‘Tell me something, boss,’ said Keanu, throwing a last-minute conversational spanner in the works.
‘Hmm?’
‘Isn’t it weird that, even though you’ve never had children, you can quote Thomas The Tank Engine? How did that happen?’
Barney smiled. Igor sniggered to himself. Monk looked expectantly at Barney.
‘Good spot,’ she said. ‘He quoted Winnie the Pooh at me last week.’
‘That’s because I don’t write my own lines,’ said Barney. ‘The woman who does it must have kids. Pretty straightforward, really.’
‘Your lines are written by a woman?’
‘Possibly. We’ll never know.’
‘Kind of feel like you’d say more if you were written by a woman,’ said Keanu. Barney smiled, and Monk threw a silent fuck off across the shop.
‘Anyway,’ said Monk, ‘maybe you could get this woman to write you a few more lines. We’d all appreciate it.’
‘I’ll speak to her,’ said Barney, ‘see what we can work out.’
And that, ladies and gentlemen, was all she wrote…