Community Service - Part 4(New Version)
This story is written by David, please send comments and appreciation to voondave@yahoo.co.uk
Part 4: What's the
worst that could happen?
It had already been the worst day of my life to date: earning my £80 per
week Unemployment Benefit payments, by working as a community servant in
the Sock Room.
And it wasn't over yet ...
I was at home; that is, at my parents' house, where I was still living at
the time. It was almost 7:00 p.m. and, having eaten hardly anything all day
I was ravenous.
The whole of the Smith family, and also my eighteen-year-old cousin, Rose,
who worked for Mum and Dad, were seated at the dinner table enjoying one of
Mum's incredibly tasty spaghetti Bolognese dinners.
"I can't believe that working in the Sock Room is anything like as bad as
you are trying to make out, David," said Mum, pooh-poohing my tale of woe.
"Oh, it is, Mum. And trust me: I have given you the edited version!"
My nineteen-year-old brother John, on time off from his well-paid job as a
chef on one of the North Sea oil rigs, said, "I'll take you to the Nelson
later, Dave. And you can tell me all about it all the grizzly details!"
"You're on, John! Thanks. After the day I've had, I could murder a pint!"
Just then, on the portable TV sitting on the kitchen counter, we heard the
familiar intro music to Channel 4's seven o'clock news, and we all hushed up
to watch the top-story headlines.
"... And, at Westminster now, talking to Cathy," announced the studio's
veteran anchor-man, John Frost, "is the Home Secretary, Theresa Maynard."
The camera switched to the blonde and attractive TV journalist, Cathy
Newton. Cathy was standing next to an ash-blonde, blue-eyed, slim and
attractive woman in her mid-forties. The woman wore her hair in the
distinctive concave bob style, and it was shot through with attractive
natural highlights of light-grey and silver streaks. She also wore a
distinct aura of presence, that was immediately apparent, and that would be
ignored only by fools. And, rather incongruously, perhaps, for a woman in
such a senior governmental position, on her feet she was wearing a pair of
eye-catching leopard skin pattern flats.
"Theresa Maynard ... were you surprised," asked the wavy-haired, blue-eyed
Cathy, on behalf of Channel 4's viewers, "that the Authoritarian Female
Party, led by Caroline Flynt, were elected to govern Britain in such an
amazing landslide victory?"
"No. No, I wasn't, quite frankly. Were you, Cathy ...? I very much doubt it.
After all, Cathy, Britain had been crying out for change. Crying out, for a
government that would do something about the perennial problem of our male
long-term unemployed. And only the A.F.P., led by Caroline Flynt, were
prepared to tackle the issue to grab it by the ... well, I'm sure you know
where I'm coming from, Cathy," replied Theresa Maynard, a meaningful smirk
tugging at the corners of her mouth.
"Um ... quite," replied Cathy. "But, some would say, though, that the A.F.P.
have gone a little bit overboard ... have gone too far ...? I mean, for
example, take the introduction of the town centre Public Caning Posts, and
the medieval-style stocks. And then there's the highly controversial
Placement scheme, for school leavers with no job or training to go to upon
their leaving education. And and then there are these so-called Sock
Rooms, that have been installed in every town and city in the UK. Where male
community servants, under the supervision of cane-wielding female Community
Service Officers, are made to hand-wash girls' and women's dirty socks ...
Some would say"
"And some would say, Cathy," bristled the Home Secretary, "that forcing
lazy, workshy, parasitic ... career claimants, to do something for their
Unemployment Benefit payments, is a jolly good thing. Wouldn't you? The
wake-up call for these appalling scroungers is long overdue. And can you
think of a better way, Cathy, of motivating the country's long-term
layabouts into finding gainful employment? Because I certainly can't!"
"Just one final question, Home Secretary ... Is it true, that the Sock Room
scheme was Caroline Flynt's own, personal brainchild?"
"Ha ha ha! Yes! Yes, it was, actually. As was the highly successful Air
Purification Technician initiative, a Placement scheme that all of our major
airlines have now adopted. Another wonderfully efficacious idea of
Caroline's ha ha ha ha!" laughed the Home Secretary. "From the very first
day of its operation, the Air Purification Technician scheme has been
achieving quite brilliant results, proving to be an extremely effective tool
for ratcheting down the statistics of male long-term unemployed. In fact,
Caroline personally presided over that particular Placement scheme's opening
ceremony, at Manchester Airport. The inaugural flight, I recall, was a
Sunshine Holidays flight to Corfu."
"Thank you, Theresa Maynard, for talking to us this evening."
"You're welcome, Cathy. It's always a pleasure."
Turning to face the camera, the attractive and engaging Cathy Newton said,
"And it's back to you, John, in the studio."
Before the two women went out of camera shot, Cathy Newton could be seen
smiling, as she said something while pointing down at the Home Secretary's
leopard skin pattern flats. Smiling equally widely, Theresa Maynard
responded by slipping free her right, bare foot, picking up her flat, and
tucking her right foot in behind her left knee; her bare right sole, now
angled directly towards the camera. Effortlessly balancing herself upon her
standing left leg, Theresa Maynard then proudly showed her shoe to Cathy,
apparently extolling its virtues as she turned it this way and that, and
viewing the stylish shoe from every conceivable angle. The two women
interviewer and interviewee continued smiling, as they tested the flat's
flexibility, scrutinised the insole, and apparently began discussing at
length the merits and delights of owning and wearing said footwear.
"Oh, but she's a hard woman, that Theresa Maynard," commented Dad, returning
his attention to his dinner.
"Nonsense!" replied Mum. "We need bright and intelligent, hands-on,
no-nonsense women like Theresa Maynard running the country. Women with some
backbone, resolve ... And she always wears nice shoes, too. Did you see
those flats, girls? Absolutely gorgeous!"
Alison said, "Yes, they were lovely, weren't they, Mum? And girl-friendly,
too. I like shoes that you can easily slip your feet in and out of while
you're sitting at your desk in the office, wiggle your toes a bit, and let
them breathe. That's why I love mules ... mmm, such freedom. We have to wear
three-inch heel pumps in the office don't we, Denise? Mine are still quite
new and oh, my poor feet! I can just about pop out my heels, but ... Oh,
and that stuffy Mr Kilroy, the senior partner more like kill-joy! he
says it's unseemly, in a solicitors' office, for office girls to be seen
playing about with their shoes with their feet, under their desks and
seats."
Denise said, "Yes, Alison, but at least my office pumps are quite well
worn-in now, so they've become supple, and are actually quite nice to wear.
And sod Mr Kilroy the miserable old duffer! None of the other partners
have ever said anything ... In fact, now that I come to think of it, Alison,
that Mr Pervis ...? You know, the junior partner, who sits at the desk
behind mine I've lost count of the number of times I've looked over my
shoulder to see him staring, bug-eyed, under my chair ... Oh, my god! ha
ha ha ha! Do you think he's got some kind of a foot fetish, or something? Ha
ha ha ha! Pervis the pervert! ... Anyway, yes, I thought Theresa Maynard's
flats were quite sexy, actually. I thought they looked great on her and
she looked fantastic in them. Maybe I'll buy myself a pair ... Des will love
them."
Des (Desmond) was Denise's fiancι. Apparently he was 'something in the
City', and he was well loaded. One of his money-coming-out-of-his-ears,
Champagne-swilling banker colleagues, Henry (hedge-fund) Harris, he'd said,
bought a brand-new, top-of-the-range Porsche every year, and had opened an
account for his shoe-crazy girlfriend at the world-famous women's shoe
designer, Manolo Blahnik. And, he'd added admiringly, of his
richer-than-Croesus colleague, that he routinely lit his £100-a-pop Cuban
cigars with £50 notes. And the very idea of that of money literally going
up in smoke drove me totally mental. Yes, it was his friend's money, and
he could spend it how he liked. And I didn't care a jot, that he bought a
brand-new, ultra-expensive motor every year, and that his banker's bonuses
made the Prime Minister's salary look like children's pocket-money. And I
didn't even care that, thanks to his indulgent largesse, his girlfriend made
Imelda Marcos look stuck for something to wear good luck to her, in fact.
But, the thought of him lighting up his cigars with £50 notes made me want
to put my foot through the TV screen.
Rose said, of Theresa Maynard's leopard skin pattern flats, "Yes. They are
to die for, aren't they? Stylish, comfy, and like you said, Denise sexy,
too." After glancing at Dad, Rose said, "And look at the state of these
ratty old things, uncle Dan," as she pushed her chair back, stuck out her
bare, olive-skinned legs and, dangling her pair of black, well-worn flats
from her toes, worked her toes to execute a rapid-fire half-dozen heel
slaps. Rose then added coyly, "But a pair of those flats would cost more
than I earn in a week ..."
Pretending not to have taken on-board Rose's thinly veiled hint at a pay
rise, and trying to get the conversation back on-topic; or, to be more
precise, to get his shoe-mad wife, daughters and niece off the subject of
female footwear because, once they got started, you couldn't prise them
off the subject with a 12-foot crowbar Dad said feelingly, "Well, I'm glad
I'm not Theresa Maynard's husband!"
"Ah," responded Mum, "but that's because you are married to me. Isn't it,
darling? To me, who you love more than life itself. To me, who you just
can't get enough, of"
"Children present!!" I yelled in mock shock, pointing to my
nineteen-year-old brother, John, and my two sisters, Alison and Denise,
twenty-one and twenty-three, respectively. And to my eighteen-year-old
cousin, Rose, who was my parents' full-time assistant in their town centre
florist shop, Roses are Red.
Alison and Denise were solicitors, and they both held well-paid, responsible
positions at the town's most eminent law firm, of Black, Brown and Grey.
Although in fact, there was no one with those names at the law firm any
more. Alison had explained to me that Mr Kilroy ("more like kill-joy!"), who
had bought those fine old gentlemen out, hadn't then removed their names
from the window and replaced them with his own name and those of his
partners'. He'd preferred instead, to cash in on the kudos of those
long-established, and prestigious predecessors' names and reputations.
Apparently that was quite lawful. Provided, of course, that Mr Kilroy and
his partners all signed legal documents, etcetera, with their real names.
Alison then said to me, "So ... about your job hunting, David. Are you sure
you've looked everywhere? Knocked on every potential employer's door? Adrian
says he's heard a rumour they may soon be taking on some warehouse staff at
Tesco's."
Adrian was Alison's fiancι, and he worked as a forklift truck driver for the
supermarket giant.
"Yes, everywhere I can think of," I said. "They are sick of the sight of me,
Alison, turning up on their doorstep every week or so. But I'll get myself
round Tesco's again as soon as I get the chance. And thanks for telling me
say ta to Adrian for me."
Denise said, "Hmm ... You've definitely thought of everywhere, though, have
you? Everywhere in Canford? All of the employment agencies? Units in the
Industrial Estates, supermarkets, warehouses, garages, factories ...?"
"Yes. Anywhere I might have a chance, they are just not taking on staff. Or,
when they do, they always give the job to someone else. But yes, Denise, I
keep thinking there must be somewhere I haven't looked. Or that something
hasn't occurred to me. I ..."
I was looking at Rose ... She was a full-time employee in Mum and Dad's town
centre florist shop, Roses are Red.
And Rose was looking at me ... uneasily, as if she was waiting to see if a
penny was going to suddenly drop ...
"That ... that's ... that's it!" I cried, in my Eureka moment as the penny
suddenly dropped. "Rose. Rosie ... don't you see? You can sign on the dole!
Females are getting two hundred and forty pounds a week now, in Unemployment
Benefit payments. Don't you get it ...? You can be a lady of leisure. And I
could work for Mum and Dad at the florist shop!"
I was cock-a-hoop. It was problem solved! I couldn't believe it. The simple
solution had been there all along, staring me in the face. What a relief! I
was euphoric. I couldn't contain myself. I sprang out of my chair and
started doing a merry jig. "Ha ha ha! We-hey!" Clapping my hands in sheer
happiness, I sang, "No more Sock Room oh no! No more Miss Karen, no more
Miss Linda oh no! No more"
At perceiving her cherished job in dire jeopardy, Rose whined, "But but I
don't want to go on the dole! I don't want to be a lady of leisure! I want
to work! At the florist's! Are you forgetting, David? I'm supposed to be
taking over the running of Roses are Red eventually, when auntie Gail and
uncle Dan retire. So there! You'll just have to find something else and
that's that!" she told me flatly.
I stopped singing. Stopped clapping my hands. Stopped doing a merry jig.
And then Rose recovered her confidence and assurance, saying to me, "Anyway,
David. It's a ridiculous idea. What possible use would you be, in a florist
shop? You wouldn't know a cowslip from a cow's bum!"
"Ha ha ha!" laughed Mum. "Rose has got a point there! And besides, David,
you should be ashamed of yourself trying to steal your cousin's job! How
could you? I think you should apologise to Rose and now, David."
"Thank you, auntie Gail," said the grossly affronted and gravely offended
Rose as if the pair of them had just caught me red-handed, looking through
my cousin's underwear drawer. Rose looked at me, expectantly. "Well, David?"
she prompted. "I'm waiting ..."
While Rose waited, she crossed her right leg over her left knee, allowed her
right flat to dangle from her toes, and she proceeded to work her toes,
causing the heel of her dangling flat to repeatedly slap against the bottom
of her bare heel ... slap ... slap ... slap ... slap ... slap ...
I felt my face going red from shame. Mum was right: I should be ashamed. And
Rose was right, too: I had taken leave of my senses there, for a moment. I
would be about as much use in a florist shop, as an ashtray on a Harley
Davidson. While Rose was a natural, in the florist shop she had the
proverbial green fingers. And taking her out of Roses are Red, and replacing
her with me, would be akin to removing Michelangelo from the Sistine Chapel,
and replacing him with some slapdash, cack-handed emulsion dauber.
Completely deflated, I slumped back down in my chair at the dining table,
and miserably twirled some of the remaining strands of spaghetti around my
fork. When I felt able to face her, I looked across the table at Rose. "I'm
sorry, Rose," I said. "I wouldn't really have taken your job. Honest, I
wouldn't. It was just an idea, that's all. Just a daft idea. Just a daft,
clutching-at-straws idea," I said despondently.
Everyone had gone quiet at the dining table.
"Come on, Dave," said John, slapping me on the shoulder. "Let's go and have
that pint."
* * *
The Lord Nelson, our local pub, was quite busy for eight o'clock on a Monday
evening. It was Happy Hour half-price drinks until nine.
On the Juke Box, Mick Jagger was raucously bemoaning that he couldn't get no
satisfaction. No and you are not the only one, Mick, I mumbled under my
breath.
John and I found a vacant table to sit at and, when we had both taken the
tops off our ice-cold pints of lager, I observed, "It's funny that, isn't
it, John? It says Happy Hour. But it starts at six o'clock, and finishes at
nine. That's three hours."
John raised an eyebrow. "Why? Not complaining are you, Dave? Shall I go and
have a quiet word with the landlord for you tell him he's contravening the
Trades and Descriptions Act of eighteen something-or-other?"
"Ha! You've never been able to take your drink, John. It goes straight to
your head. You've only taken the top off your pint, and you're already
spouting nonsense."
"Never been able to take my drink? I'm nineteen years old, Dave hardly a
veteran drinker. Anyway, having a sense of humour, it's called, actually,"
responded John with mock offence.
"A sense of humour? Yeah, well, I used to have one of those ... You'd soon
lose that, John, in the Sock Room," I said morosely.
"Ah, yes. The dreaded Sock Room. So ... is it as bad, then, as you've been
leading us to believe?"
"No, John it's a thousand times worse. What you heard earlier ... well,
that was the sanitised version. For Mum's benefit. No it's hellish, John.
Just hellish. I've ... I've got these two supervisors, C.S.O.'s Karen and
Linda. Hell! They are only a year or so older than me, but I have to
respectfully call them Miss Karen, and Miss Linda. Or they'll cane me
chastisement, they call it they'll pull my uniform shorts down around my
ankles, and cane my bare bum. In fact ... they've already done it. They
really let me have it six strokes of the cane each. I've never known pain
anything like it. And it's still hurting like hell, even now, hours later."
"What ...?" said John, in tones of outraged incredulity. "Did I hear you
right? Your supervisors caned you, just because you didn't call them Miss"
"No. No, there's a bit more to it than that. I I had a bit of a mishap
with some detergent, Kolour Kind, it's called. Even then, I might have still
gotten away with a stern telling-off from C.S.O.'s Karen and Linda ..."
"But ...?" prompted John.
"But I I'd been, well ... undiplomatic, with Canford High's schoolgirls'
PE teacher, a Miss Pardew. So C.S.O. Linda handed her cane to Miss Pardew,
so that she could cane me as well. It was bad luck, really, because it
turned out that C.S.O.'s Karen and Linda are former students of Miss Pardew,
which made matters a hundred times worse. They were both apoplectic,
outraged that I'd been anything less than ultra respectful to their former
PE teacher, who they both apparently think the world of. So they gave Miss
Pardew carte blanche let her cane me as many times as she wanted. God,
John, Miss Pardew really gave it to me really gave me a good seeing to. I
thought she was never going to stop. She kept saying that my manners weren't
what they ought to be, and that she was bringing me to heel."
"Good god!" exclaimed John. "I was wondering why you were looking so
agitated; shifting and shuffling about on your chair all the time during
dinner. You hardly sat still for two seconds. No wonder, you tried to pinch
Rose's job"
"And Mrs Newlove was there at the Sock Room. She actually came for the day
like it was a day out at some amusement theme park. Can you believe that?
She'd got her mum to mind the kids, and brought a load of food and drink
like it was some kind of picnic outing ... incredible! Her, and another
woman, Gina Stainham ...? You've seen her around, John. Anyway, she"
"What? Mrs Newlove, did you say? Norma Newlove? Norma Newlove, from across
the road her? Why? What about her, Dave? Oh, hell, what has she done now?
What did she"
"What did she do? Mrs Newlove? She saw everything I did, heard everything I
said, to Miss Pardew and she blabbed to my supervisors! When Miss Pardew
turned up again in the afternoon, with another big batch of Canford High
schoolgirls' dirty sports socks Year Four's, this time Mrs Newlove
opened her big mouth and gave my supervisors chapter and verse. And I mean,
chapter and verse. She was in her element. She dropped me right in it! But,
John, that's not the worst of it not by a long chalk ... Mrs Newlove, she
... she"
"Don't mind if we join you, do you, David?" said Mrs Newlove, and I nearly
choked on my second sip of lager, as she and Gina Stainham put their own
halves of lager down on our table and sat down opposite John and I.
*
"Hello, John," said Mrs Newlove pleasantly. "Got some time off from the rig,
then, have you? Has David been telling you all about his first day, working
as a community servant? About being made to earn his dole money ... in the
Sock Room? Heh heh heh."
"He's been telling me all about your famous big mouth, Mrs Newlove, that's
what he's been telling me about!" said John hotly. "Not that I need telling!
I know you of old. You are a malicious mouthed, mean spirited, trouble
making"
"John! John!" I said in low-voiced urgency. "Leave it out, eh? You're just
making things worse for me. She's making my life a misery as it is her and
Gina. You've no idea!"
Sitting opposite John, Gina Stainham said to him, "Oh, we had a lovely day
out today, Norma and me ... watching David hard at work, in the Sock Room.
It was more entertaining than the cinema, ha ha ha! Has he told you about it
about hand-washing all of those girls' and women's dirty socks? Ah ... it
gives me a lovely warm glow inside, knowing that David is going to be
hand-washing all of my dirty socks for me in future."
"Ha ha ha ha!" laughed Mrs Newlove. "Yes! And mine, too! And David had
better get used to it too, because he's going to be doing it for years
who's going to give the likes of him a job?"
"No one with any sense, Norma, that's for sure," opined Gina Stainham
disdainfully. "They would have to be extremely hard-up, that's all I can
say."
"Yes, Gina," agreed Mrs Newlove. "They would really be scraping the bottom
of the barrel, wouldn't they ... and getting the dregs."
"Oh, you two really make me ... you make a fine pair," said John ironically,
in failing to think of an off-the-cuff insult that would paint them black
enough. "You claim every benefit allowance under the sun, and do nothing but
sit on your fat"
"Oh," interjected Mrs Newlove, "and I had David's supervisors cane his bare
bum chastise him for disrespecting me ... Aw, diddums, the poor thing
was bawling his eyes out. Did he tell you, John ...? Ha ha ha! I can see by
the look on your face, that he hasn't! Well, I don't think he'll be speaking
out of turn to me again, any time soon. And ha ha ha! best of all ...
did David tell you, John, that while he was handcuffed to the foot of my
recliner, and having his bare bum caned by his supervisors, I made him ha
ha ha ha!! 'pre-wash' my dirty socks? I pulled my dirty socks inside out,
and I stuffed them both into his"
"Come on, John, let's go," I said. "Let's get out of here."
"Ha ha ha ha!" guffawed Mrs Newlove and Gina Stainham, as John and I
abruptly got up and left the table. John and I looked back, to see the
uproariously laughing Mrs Newlove and Gina Stainham topping up their glasses
from our barely touched pints of lager. Then, before John and I could turn
away in disgust, they raised their topped-up glasses and, in unison, made
sardonic toasts to us. "Cheers, dears! Ha ha ha ha!"
"See you tomorrow, David in the Sock Room. Ha ha ha ha ha!" was Gina
Stainham's parting shot.
"Me, too, David Mum's got the kids," Mrs Newlove informed me. "And you can
'pre-wash' these, for me. Ha ha ha ha ha!" she laughed, as she quickly
pulled off her trainers, and propped her white-socked feet on the table,
ankles crossed. There were grey, damp-looking patches, I saw, on the soles
of her white cotton socks. And the actions of her repeatedly scrunching toes
were causing the grey, damp-looking areas to intermittently darken further,
at the balls of her feet, and under her toes, as the cotton material folded
and creased.
"Ugh!" said John. "Yes come on, Dave. Let's get the hell out of here."
On the Juke Box, Bob Geldof was peevishly complaining that he didn't like
Mondays.
No and you are not the only one, Bob, I said under my breath as I hastened
through the exit doors of the Lord Nelson.
* * *
Back at home, over a cup of coffee in the kitchen, John said, "Well, Dave, I
see what you mean now, about giving Mum the abridged version of what it's
like in the Sock Room. It must be an absolute nightmare in there, with the
likes of Norma Newlove and Gina Stainham plaguing you."
"Oh, it is, John, it is," I said wretchedly. "And a lot of the girls and
women are like them you'd be surprised, how many. Gloating, and coming
over all haughty, and arrogant, and smug-faced, because they know that I'm
going to be hand-washing their dirty socks. Loving it, that they can waltz
into the Sock Room and make my life a misery. Loving it, that they can come
swanning in there, and give me a right load of grief torment the hell out
of me. And Mrs Newlove is right: the way things are going, I am going to be
stuck in the Sock Room for years."
"Well, maybe not ..."
"What? What are you on about, John? What do you mean?"
"Well, Dave, I've been thinking: I mean, just don't go back to the Sock
Room. I mean, if you didn't; if you didn't go in tomorrow ... what's the
worst, that could happen?"
At John's very suggestion "just don't go back" I felt a thousand tons of
woes slip from my shoulders. The answer really did seem that incredibly
simple, and that blatantly obvious.
"You you're right, John! I just won't go back! Sod them sod them all!
Sod C.S.O.'s Karen and Linda! Sod the Community Service Liaison Officer,
Harriet Harmman! Sod Theresa Maynard! And sod Caroline Flynt, and her
so-called brainchild her sodding Sock Room! Yes! You're right, John. I
just won't go back to the Sock Room. After all, like you say ... what's
the worst, that could happen?"
*
When I went to bed, I fell into a deep, trouble-free sleep almost as soon as
my head hit the pillow, and I slept like the proverbial baby ... Until,
according to my bedside digital clock: 08:20 ...
"Community servant David double-oh-seven! Out of bed, and into your uniform!
Now! And I mean, NOW!" shrieked C.S.O. Karen, right in my face.
What, the ...? Talk about a rude awakening! As though materialising out of
the ether, like the dark angels of chastisement that they were, it was
C.S.O.'s Karen and Linda! Lying on my stomach, to protect my still-sore
bottom from the painful friction, I pulled my duvet over my head to protect
my ears, too.
"You're trespassing! How dare you!" I yelled, outraged. "And how did you get
in?" I demanded. I knew Mum and Dad couldn't have let them in, because they
would already have left for their florist shop in town.
"With these, community servant David," said C.S.O. Karen, smugly jangling
something shiny in front of my eyes. "Skeleton keys. We can let ourselves
into any property we want, with these little beauties," she told me. "And
we're not trespassing. We are Community Service Officers, conducting the
business of the Authoritarian Female Party. That's how we dare!"
"Well, you're wasting your time. I'm not going back to the Sock Room
today, or any other day. So you can sod off the pair of you!"
"Oh ... is that right?" said C.S.O. Linda menacingly. "Well, we'll see about
that!" she said, snatching my duvet from by bed, and uncovering my
bare-assed body. "Miss Karen just gave you an explicit order,
double-oh-seven, didn't she? Out of bed, and into your uniform now!"
"And I just told you, didn't I? I'm not going back to the Sock Room not
today, or any other day. So you can both get lost go take a running jump!
Oh, and if you don't mind, close the door after you I'm going back to
sleep."
Whoo! Whoo! Crack! Crack!
"So ... you are not reporting to the Sock Room, are you, community servant
David?" said C.S.O. Karen.
"Aaaahhhh! Aaaaaahhhhhh!!" I yelled, as C.S.O.'s Karen and Linda's whippy,
A.F.P. issue canes smacked into my exposed, and still sore bare buttocks.
But I didn't want to get up in front of them. I didn't want them to ... see
me.
Whoo! Whoo! Crack! Crack!
"Tell Miss Karen and me to sod off, will you, double-oh-seven?" said C.S.O.
Linda. "And, after you promised to keep a civil tongue in your head, too.
Tut tut."
"Aaaahhhh! Aaaaaahhhhhh!!" I wailed, as C.S.O.'s Karen and Linda's savagely
flailing canes reawakened all of my heinous agonies of the previous day.
"All right! All right! Stop! Stop!" I yelled. I'd had enough ... I knew I
was beat.
Whoo! Whoo! Crack! Crack!
"Dare to defy us, will you, community servant David?" said C.S.O. Karen.
"That comes with consequences. Now, for the last time: I am ordering you to
get out of bed, and into your community servant's uniform! And hurry up!"
"Aaaahhhh! Aaaaaahhhhhh!!" I roared, as much from outrage as from pain. "All
right! I said all right! Didn't I? I'm coming! I'm coming!"
Whoo! Whoo! Crack! Crack!
"All right, what ...?" said C.S.O. Karen ...
"Aaaahhhh! Aaaaaahhhhhh!!" I moaned, in my hideous torment. I knew what
C.S.O. Karen meant, but I didn't want to say it; didn't want to humbly bow,
didn't want to say the humiliating words didn't want to give her the
satisfaction.
Whoo! Whoo! Crack! Crack!
"All right, WHAT ...?" demanded C.S.O. Linda.
"Aaaahhhh! Aaaaaahhhhhh!! ... All all right ... Miss Karen ... And Miss
Linda," I said through gritted teeth.
"You are a fool to yourself, double-oh-seven," C.S.O. Linda told me. "You
have just earned yourself an audition with the Community Service Liaison
Officer. And all the while, your work in the Sock Room will be building up,
and getting out of control. So you will have to work through your lunch
break today on my orders!"
Whoo! Crack!
"Say: Yes, Miss Linda!" commanded C.S.O. Linda waspishly.
"Yes, Miss Linda!" I wailed in agonised defeat, my capitulation complete.
"Right then, community servant David. Into the bathroom you've got two
minutes!" ordered C.S.O. Karen harshly.
So much, then, for John's big idea, I glumly thought, exactly two minutes
later, as C.S.O.'s Karen and Linda hustled me down the stairs, closed the
front door behind us and, right in front of my avidly watching neighbours,
bundled me into the back of their A.F.P. van.
* * *
Upon our arrival at the Community Service Operations Centre, C.S.O.'s Karen
and Linda forced my arms behind my back, and frogmarched me through to
Reception.
At seeing my ID, printed in bold black letters and numbers on my white
uniform T-shirt, the Community Service Liaison Officer, Harriet Harmman,
said sarcastically, "Hmm ... didn't I have the pleasure of your company
yesterday morning, community servant David double-oh-seven?"
Whoo! Crack!
"Say: Yes, madam!" snapped C.S.O. Karen who, when I didn't immediately
respond to the Liaison Officer's question, lashed out with her cane at my
right calf.
"Aaaaaaahhhhhh! ... Yes, ma madam," I responded as instructed, trying to
rub my injured right calf with my hand but C.S.O. Linda wouldn't let me.
Addressing C.S.O. Karen, the Liaison Officer said, "So, to what do I owe the
pleasure, then, of community servant David's unexpected visit?"
"Community servant David double-oh-seven is charged with three counts of
misconduct, altogether, ma'am. One: He failed to report to his assigned
duties this morning, in the Sock Room. Two: When ordered to immediately
report for duty, by myself and by C.S.O. Linda, he refused to comply,
repeatedly disobeying direct orders, as issued to him by Community Service
Officers. Three: In the course of his repeatedly disobeying our direct
orders, he grossly disrespected both myself, and C.S.O. Linda. He told us
both to and I quote: "Sod off" and "Get lost" and "Go take a running jump"
ma'am."
Harriet Harmman once again turned her attention to me and, by her
stony-faced glare, I knew this wasn't going to end well.
"Community servant David double-oh-seven, you have just heard the charges
against you, as read out by C.S.O. Karen," said the Liaison Officer gravely.
"Let me make myself perfectly clear. I will not tolerate such behaviour, as
has just been described to me. And neither will your supervisors haven't
you realised that yet? You have flagrantly disobeyed your supervisors'
direct orders. You have repeatedly shown them gross disrespect. In short:
you have shown utter contempt, for their authority as Community Service
Officers and, by association, for the Authoritarian Female Party
government itself.
"Community servant David double-oh-seven," intoned Harriet Harmman coldly,
"your actions are sanctionable. And I hereby fine you two weeks'
Unemployment Benefit payments. This is your chastisement ... And, no doubt,
over the ensuing days, weeks, and months, C.S.O.'s Karen and Linda will also
help you to see the errors of your ways.
"And now, C.S.O.'s Karen and Linda," said the Liaison Officer brusquely, as
though this petty matter had already taken up far too much of her time,
"please escort community servant David from these premises, and return him
to his assigned duties immediately ... I'm sure he will have a lot of work
to be catching up on, in the Sock Room."
"Yes, ma'am! Right away, ma'am!" responded the stern faced C.S.O.'s Karen
and Linda simultaneously.
Once again, I regretted my disastrous folly in taking John's well-meaning
advice: "Just don't go back." And for listening to his careless-shrugged,
criminally complacent comment his catastrophic counsel: "What's the worst,
that could happen?"
Well, John, I thought gloomily. Let's see. What's the worst, that could
happen? Where should I start?
Hmm ...
How about: giving the Community Service Liaison Officer, Harriet Harmman, a
face like thunder, and three good reasons to remember me?
How about: the devastating loss of two weeks' Unemployment Benefit payments,
which was going to wipe out all of my 'rainy day' reserves, and leave me
struggling to make ends meet, for weeks after?
And, worst of all the real kicker: How about my two supervisors, C.S.O.'s
Karen and Linda, helping me to see the errors of my ways, over the ensuing
days, weeks, and months?
I mournfully mused over these miserable matters, as C.S.O.'s Karen and Linda
once again forced my arms behind my back, manhandled me out of the Community
Service Operations Centre, and frogmarched me across Canford town square ...
to the Sock Room.
Community Service continues, in Part 5.
This story is written by David, please send comments and appreciation to voondave@yahoo.co.uk