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I’ve rung the log man virtually every day since and heard every excuse under the sun. He’d delivered the outstanding load to the wrong house was an early one. Orders to subordinates being repeatedly ignored was another. The best one, though, was that he’d been out of the country for three weeks over Christmas. ‘Sourcing new supplies?’ I said. He’d been on holiday, he said. I ask you: whoever’s heard of a log man going away for three weeks over Christmas? ‘Hawaii?’ I said. He’d been to the south of France, he said. Provence. ‘Lovely!’ I said. ‘What was the weather like?’ He admitted it hadn’t been great.
Then he must have exhausted his imagination because he’s stopped answering my calls. Every day for the past fortnight I’ve sat down and rung my boy and been mugged off with that simpering woman saying, ‘Welcome to Orange answerphone.’ Then I’ve dialled the flaming log man and there she is again.
One day last week I made these two, by now, routine calls and was fobbed off twice by the Orange answerphone woman, while out walking the dog. Joe currently has one of those lampshades on his head to stop him continually licking an open sore on his front leg. In spite of this strange, inhibiting nuisance he remains cheerful. But it makes him deaf to my shouted instructions and much less biddable.
He’d galloped on ahead to make friends with a sleek Doberman and there was a danger that the Doberman’s owner was going to lead his dog across the main road, and that Joe would follow. This particular road, running between the sea on one side and a freshwater lake on the other, is the only straight road for miles around and many drivers take the opportunity to put their toes down. I yelled at Joe to wait, but he took no notice. I felt like a man calling out in a fog and no one answering. Why won’t anyone answer?
Then I lost my temper. I sprinted angrily across the shingle and, as I reached the dog, tripped over a root, so that it appeared to the Doberman’s astonished owner that I’d brought down my invalid dog with a spectacular flying rugby tackle. Too angry to laugh or explain, I got up and hauled a very surprised Joe roughly away by the collar.
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Winston
February 26th, 2009 9:08am Report this commentSorry about your son. I have the same problem. Take it from me, if your son won't. Take it from a father who was once a son too. I love you.
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