Strike Up The Band


            Virginia Moffatt

I see him every morning, when I step out of the house to get the milk. Every morning at
seven o’clock. Sometimes it’s ten past, I don’t always get out of bed on time these days. Every
day he smiles, “Good morning,” before taking his head off with his bare hands, whilst behind
him the fiery sun explodes through the clouds. His mouth is open in, laughter? Rage? I’m
never quite sure. He does it long enough to know I have seen him, the neckless head, the
headless neck. Then he places it back, says “I’m feeling light headed today.” or some other
smart alec remark and walks away. It is no use trying to trick  him, to stay in bed, to refuse to
go out. If I don’t make it to the door, he enters the house, does his little turn and leaves me to
face up to the day ahead.

The faceless men are always there to observe our morning encounters. They stand grey-
headed on the opposite side of the street. Their featureless bodies not entirely dreary, on
account of the colour of their  suits. I’ve been seeing them every day for weeks now, but it still
never ceases to intrigue me, why, when everything else is uniform, they choose to dress this
way. There’s Mr Tartan, with his red and black squares. Next to him,  Mr Flower Power, in his
mustard-suit adorned in bold florals - pink, blue, red and white. Last of all, Mr Stripes dressed
in irregular diagonals -  greens, reds, yellows, oranges, a surprise of purple.They never speak,
but sing an early morning chorus:

“Let the drums roll out,
Let the trumpet call,
While the people shout, “Strike up the band.”

I have stopped shouting at them to shut up, it upsets the neighbours. It upsets my wife, who
asks me why  in God’s name I am standing on the doorstep yelling nonsense again. So I go
back inside,  the song ringing in my head. I take the  milk to the fridge as my wife doles out the
assignments necessary for the smooth running of Operation Schoolrun. When all are fed and
watered; have lunchtime provisions;  all teeth are clean; shoes polished fit for a sergeant-
major - I dispatch my family in  the  four by four, and I can leave the house to go to the job I
am supposed to attend each day.

The job I am supposed to attend each day, but have ceased to attend for several weeks now.
My wife doesn’t know. She must never find out. Every morning as she takes the children off, I
dutifully walk down the road to the train station. I am always pursued by my grey-faced,
colourfully-suited choir.

“There is work to be done, to be done,
Let’s have fun, fun, fun,
Come on son of a gun, gun, gun, take your stand.”

I take the train as I am supposed to, but only for two stops. At Southend Central,  I get out and
walk through the back streets, coming down the hill by Never Never Land in the cliff gardens.
I used to play there once, before the cliff falls and the vandals, in a time when every nook and
cranny spelt adventure. Now there are keep out signs, the paint is peeling off the play-houses
and I don’t want an adventure ever again. As I reach the pier, my grey  men are singing from
their mouthless faces with gusto,

“Form a line oh,oh,
Come on, let’s go
Hey leader, strike up the band”

I suppose I don’t mind them really. Some days I even quite like their singing. It gives me
something to hum along to, so I don’t have to worry about anything else. About the fact that I
am not at work. About the fact that I stopped going sometime ago, around the time my friend
with the detachable head arrived. Around the time my personal choir started following me
around. So I sing along as I start out down the pier, the tune beating my path over the
creaking boards out to sea. Through the cracks between the wood, I can see the water
deepening from the brown, muddy shallows, to the green swirly depths where the
motorboats launch. The wind strengthens its grip on me. By the time I reach the end of the
railway line, the water is grey-green, the air sea-fresh. Of course, since the fire, there’s not
much to see out here: the burnt out buildings of 2005, adding to the blackened timbers of the
previous fires further on out to sea. Only the  lifeboat station has survived the latest  
conflagration intact – still on hand to rescue those in need. I’m not sure there’s any salvation
for someone as lost at me, but l I like to sit here, tucked in a corner, out of the wind. I like
watching the fishermen and the large ships going up and down the estuary.  Sometimes,  I
pretend I’m on board a ship, far out to sea, a long way from home. It’s better than staying at
home, at any rate, sitting with my memories.

It doesn’t do any good to remember. It leads me to places I’d rather not be. Places where I
was sent by the grey faceless men. The men who make all the decisions without ever living
through the consequences. The faceless men who send others into war zones, they would
never dare enter themselves. Like the convoy on the way to the Christmas Panto. Andy, Pat
and Dean dressed as clowns in their tartan, floral, stripy suits, wearing silly noses and making
daft jokes. Alec, smart Alec, not so smart that day, poking his head out of the side of the
humvee we borrowed from the Yanks. Alec, smart Alec, not so smart that day, whose head
was lifted right of his neck. A headless neck, a neckless head, as the roadside bomb exploded  
beside our truck and we were sent helter skelter, and all the while on the radio I could hear
the sound of singing:

“Form a line, oh, oh
Come on, let's go
Hey, Mr. Leader,
Hey, Mr. Leader,
Please strike up the band!”

© Virginia Moffatt


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