Part 2. The Shard of Broken Glass
I
grew up in rural North Yorkshire. It was a lovely way to spend a
childhood and a beautiful place to live, if very rural. The nearest
town was 12 miles away and transport links were scant and mistrusted. There was no live music or live comedy. There
was livestock but that is not as good. All our school field trips
were trips to actual fields, to help out with the Spring harvest
because farmer Mansfield had got drunk off moonshine scrumpy and
accidentally ripped off both legs off in a threshing machine again.
Ol' Clumsy Mansfield was just one of the many, what were kindly
referred to as “characters”.
I
also remember a time when a young teacher, who had grown up in a town,
came to teach IT and all the parents were so suspicious of his
computer that they put him in a giant wicker man shaped like a
Commodore 64 and only let him out again when he gave some trinkets
he'd bought from a nearby Morrison’s to the village elders in a
bizarre three hour ceremony involving candles, twelve virgin goats and an
effigy of popular entertainer Robson Green.
One
of my school friends was at such a loss for something to do one summer that he
spent the whole holiday digging a big hole in his garden
and then when it was finished he just went and sat in it and drank
Babycham he'd stolen from his parents drinks cabinet.
(I'm not even
joking about that last one, my mum came to pick me up one day and found us
both in this massive, unstable crater in the ground and told me I
couldn't go round there any more and that one day I'd understand why, that day has arrived.)
But
I digress in a way that sets the scene...
The
greatest social injustice of the 20th century (yes
including that one) happened when I was in year 7. I was happily walking from
Remedial Calf Birthing on my way to Applied Being Suspicious
of Outsiders when I noticed a small piece of glass on the floor,
possibly from a bottle, possibly not. Being a conscientious little boy, I picked up the piece of
glass and took it over to the bin to safely dispose of it. Pausing
only to jokingly threaten one of my best friends in a way that
was clearly a joke and only a stupid, and probably now ex maths
teacher, would ever misconstrue as anything else.
So
half an hour later I was sitting alone in the headmistresses office,
teary eyed and scared. I had a form in front of me and had been
instructed to write my own account of why I had
been pulled out of lessons for threatening to murder a fellow student
in cold blood with a broken shard of glass that, as far as Mrs
Harborne could tell, I had smashed myself. I was only 11 but even I
knew things had looked better.
I was scared, confused and
annoyed and in no state to come up with a witty, sardonic response
like that one about making an ass out of you and me. So I wrote a
pathetic whimpering apology to all concerned and explained that I was
a nice boy really.
But I've had 14 solid years of stewing the bitter curds of resentment
and fermenting the curdled grapes of injustice. I've been supping
shame from the broken cup of heartache and chewing on the couscous of
misery. For pudding I've been dining alone on a flambéed banana of
psychological scarring and vomiting back up cheese course after cheese course of
mistrust of authority figures.
It is an unsatisfying meal filled only
with the empty calories of hurt and of no nutritional value.
To exorcise my demons I have written a letter to my old school. I am hopeful this will put right the greatest injustice of the 20th
century (still yes).
Dear
Mrs Harborne and Mr Byrne,
Hello.
Gareth here. You probably don't remember me because I came to what
you call a secondary school in 2001 and then left again in 2003 to
move to Birmingham. The reason I am writing to you in newspaper
cuttings and blood is to rectify the greatest injustice of the 20th
century (yes including that one) where you gave me detention and sent
me home early for allegedly threatening a child with glass.
I
have several problems with your accusation. First right, why would I
even want to stab my friend Harry? As far as I can recall we
were like best mates and got on like a house on fire. And even if I
did want to do him harm why would I wait upon a chance encounter with
a tiny piece of glass by the netball courts? I find it insulting
that you think I would take such a slapdash approach to a brutal
playground shanking. I find it insulting that you considered me not
only a potential psychotic killer but the sort of incompetent, ad-hoc
psychotic killer that stumbles upon their opportunity without
thinking it through.
I
don't know if you've read We Need to Talk about Kevin but in it Kevin
doesn't just stumble across his weapon on the way to his lessons, and
think “fuck it, when in Rome.” He premeditates the whole thing.
He really puts some thought into it and does it based on a symbolic
moment from his childhood in a satisfying literary device. That's
what I would do if I was going to do a high school massacre. But I
wasn't going to do one anyway.
Also
while we're on the subject maybe if the Dinner Ladies that you
employed had been doing their bloody job rather than smoking rollies
round the back of cricket pavilion and bitching about their ex
husbands this whole sorry situation would never have happened. Maybe
it was ill advised to pick up the glass myself but come on, I was 11
years old and they were in their forties probably.
The
problem, Mrs. Harborne, is that you saw me with a shard of glass and
assumed the worst. And what happens when you assume? That's right,
you make an ass out of you and me. You also generalised the children
in your care as thugs. And what happens when you generalise? That's
right, they're general lies.
Fortunately
I'm not the litigious, violent or arsonist type otherwise you'd
currently be finding yourself in a whole world of pain, lawsuits and
fire. What you may not know is that I write an incredibly successful
and popular blog, and I doubt my legions of fans are going to be
happy when they hear what happened to me. I don't wish to alarm or threaten you so all I'll say is "Rodney King". I think you know what I mean.
All
I require is a full apology in writing and I will call them off.
Thank
you for your attention, or whatever the Yorkshire equivalent of
attention is. Being arrogant yet surly probably.
Yours
Tedious
Clown (Gareth Edwards from class 1b)
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