.... about
life in general, but the upshot was that I decided that I would try to hold a
conversation with this lad, to offer the proverbial olive branch so as to
speak.
I
stacked my cases of Guinness in their usual place against the wall and turned
to face my sworn enemy. He was standing
at the coffin that he had previously been working with prior to my arrival. His little transistor radio was playing in
the background and he was blowing perfunctory smoke rings in my direction.
“Well
how are things?” I began.
There
was no reply from the young man so I tried again, cracking the usual joke that
we always said to old Hugh McCrink, who was in a similar profession to this
lad.
“Have
you any empty boxes that would fit me?” I
enquired.
After
he had blown another smoke ring in my direction, and with a crafty smile on his
face, the young man waved his hand majestically along the top of the coffin he
was working on and replied,
“Why
don’t you try this one?”
I
smelt a rat. I could sense that this guy was planning
something nasty. It was written all over
his face.
The
coffin he referred to was the one that he had just been working on. He had been fitting a brass nameplate to it
at the time that I interrupted his work. It sat on a low wooden trestle, almost fully
complete with its lid propped up against the wall alongside. The lid was suspiciously close to the coffin
and just perfectly positioned to slam shut.
But
the gauntlet had been thrown down. This
was a challenge now. I couldn’t lose
face! Honour had to be upheld. So I accepted.
“Ok”,
said I, as I kicked off my footwear. “I’ll give it a try out”.
This
guy had a little stool that he used in the course of his work. I used it as a step to get me up to the
coffin and rather hesitantly I stepped into the box. Carefully I lay down full length inside the
coffin. With one arm still outside the
box to prevent him closing the lid on me I stretched out and tried to make some
remark about it been comfortable indeed.
The
young man looked down at me inside the coffin, and then he shook his head and
said,
“No!
No! Not like that! Do the thing right! Put your hands like
this”.
And
so saying, he crossed his two hands on his chest to demonstrate how a corpse
would be laid out in a coffin.
I
complied with his request, and placed my hands across my chest as he had just
demonstrated. At this point I was
banking on my speed to keep me out of bother, but I was too slow in
reacting. He was the faster.
Down
went the lid with a bang! I was plunged
into darkness. I felt him hop up to sit on the coffin lid and
I was trapped.
….. 2 of 4 The Coffin …..