Sunday, February 11, 2018

We'll be with you shortly.


Mid-morning the phone goes. A very Scottish voice on the other end says : '' Hello is that Aonghus ? We'll be with you shortly to pick up the chair ". 'The Font' has somehow forgotten that the museum has arranged for The Old Pretenders Chair to be picked up and shipped back to London.


There is mild panic. '' You'd better take it out and dust it down " says 'The Font' . The chair has sat in hallways for the last forty years gathering dust, ignored rather than unloved. Its legs have been chewed by generations of PONs, the seat polished to a high shine by Cost Centres using it to put on their Rugby  Boots.

Bob follows me outside. He's intrigued that furniture is being moved into the courtyard. The male PON has that '' I know this is going to be great fun " look on his face. His sister joins him . He kisses her. Sophie shrieks. A squirrel chooses this very moment to scamper down onto the lawn. Pandemonium ensues. Loic arrives to blow leaves.


The phone goes again. '' Hello. We're parked by the church. Which house is yours ? ". Angus promises to be out  to see the shippers as soon as the dogs are safely inside . The PONs have other ideas. Bob stands on his stump seat watching events unfold . '' Sophie ! There's a large truck over there ! ".  


The angelic duo eventually go inside. A vast Panthecnicon reverses down the lane. Four men emerge. '' We've come to crate the chair " says the most garrulous. The others maintain a Doric silence. Loic has to move his moped so that the area round the gate is clear. Villagers congregate to see what's going on. The chair is measured.  A wooden crate is made. The chair is wrapped in layers of bubble wrap and placed in the crate. Photos are taken. Two men carry the chair carefully into the back of the truck. It is strapped into place. Forms are signed. '' You'll be relieved when this makes it safely back to London " says the garrulous one. 



After they've gone The Old Farmer observes that the trucks steering wheel was on the wrong side . '' In the army I was trained to note that sort of thing ". The man with anger management issues tells 'The Font' that the sooner Scotland is independent from England the better. Mopping her eyes Madame Bay informs anyone that will listen that she will miss the chair. '' It had so much history. It was my favourite thing in the house ". This comes as something of a surprise as our saintly octogenarian used to put her floor mopping bucket on it. Madame Bay, by now in full poetic flow, tells the lady with the purple hat that a very old chair used by Mary the Queen of England has gone back home to be at rest. Out of the blue the man with the bulbous nose informs us that Brexit shows the English are mad.  A propos to nothing the mayor announces that the irrigation system has sprung a leak. The village odd job man says he wouldn't give us five francs for an old chair like that. The PONs howl at being excluded from village life. It's half term - the tikes race their rally bikes up and down the lane.

So passes another day in deepest, deepest France profonde. We seriously consider opening a lunchtime bottle of wine. For the PONs this has certainly been the best day ever. 



13 comments:

WFT Nobby said...

How unexpected to see a Shore Porters lorry in France profonde! Their base beside Aberdeen harbour is less than a mile from my house. But also how appropriate that such a venerable company (founded in 1498) should be transporting the historic chair.
Was a wine bottle opened?
Cheers, Gail.

Coppa's girl said...

Do you realise, Angus, that we who live such mundane lives (OK, boring most of the time) positively revel in the excitement that your little village of so few souls, generates? My day would not be complete without my visit to the ROF, and finding out exactly what goes on in deepest France profonde.
I wonder what historians will make of the generations of PON teeth marks on the legs of the venerable chair?

Emm said...

Coppa's girl says it all. When the time comes, Scotland will have to go some to be as exciting as daily life in France profonde.

~Kim at Golden Pines~ said...

Who knew that an "ignored" chair could bring so many together? :-)
But it the chair reminds me of when we were selling my Mother's home. A buyer included in their offer for the house, a library table that belonged to my Grandparents, that for many years had a TV on top of it and was a catch-all for dust, videos, games, etc. We turned down their offer for both.

Yamini MacLean said...

Hari OM
Definitely wine-worthy... YAM xx

Beau and Mom said...

I totally agree! What excitement you provide each and every day. I hope the wine was opened.

Taste of France said...

Goodness! This is a bigger event than the fiber-optic Internet ceremony!

Unknown said...

Good observation!

Coppa's girl said...

Yes, that's true - how could we have forgotten such a momentous event so quickly !

rottrover said...

I love that everyone turns out for an event like a big truck being parked in the lane!

Bella Roxy & Macdui said...

Surprised the chair wasn't a PON viewing platform at some time.

BaileyBobSouthernDog said...

How long before Bob or Sophie notice there is an empty space they could claim for their very own??? I like the idea that a historic chair is being transported by a historic company.

dustbunny8 said...

I hope someday in the future a very old villager tells the story of the day,Mary Queen of Scots, chair was returned from it's hiding place in France to it's homeland.