Tuesday, December 6, 2022

FOUNDATION - A Christmas Story




FOUNDATION 

By Tony Noon 


“Mr Cratchit ? ” The voice was soft. Not what he was used to hearing these days . 

“ Don’t bother me now “ he huffed without looking up “ It’s Christmas Eve , and I’ve a lot to get through before dark.” 

“ You don’t understand , I have a message"

Dan Cratchit stopped tapping the keys on his laptop and looked up. 

Usually, people only rocked up at the office if they had been turned down for a grant , or they were creditors chasing payment. Either way , they were usually angry and, at the very least, argumentative.

The young woman in front of him was calm , almost smiling , if a little apprehensive .

 “ Message ? We have e-mail and Messenger for that …" 

The visitor smiled “ I don’t think they have access over there , yet , Mr Cratchit”. 

“ Over there ? Where? Miss , Mizz …”

 “ Just call me , Angela , Mr Cratchit .” 

“Yes , Yes but where is over there and who are we talking about ?” 

“ Why , the other side , of course … the great beyond , if you like". 

Dan felt his eyes roll up and his brow furrowing. He really didn’t need this.

Not today…not any day really. 

He considered himself a fair man , even, some would say, a charitable man, but charity was hard work … and steering a charitable organisation sometimes required a hard edge. 

If the hard edge ever surfaced , the public and press were difficult to appease. 

The Scrooge Foundation had been respected and revered for more than a century now. Its pioneering ethical investments had driven change and provided unconditional support for organisations and individuals since the founder’s “ Great Change”. 

Old Ebenezer never spoke of the events which had turned him overnight from a hard and heartless money lender into the nation’s greatest philanthropist , but the change was absolute and in the years which followed , the Cratchit family helped him to create and distribute wealth in an exemplary manner.

At first it was word of mouth. Someone would hear of a family down on its luck , and a carpet bag full of money would mysteriously appear on their doorstep. This led onto the foundation acquiring slum properties and renovating them to provide acceptable living accommodation at peppercorn rents. 

In the twentieth century , they built new model villages in areas of housing shortage, taking an active lead in improving people's lives and lifestyles. All the while , they continued to make funds available to families and individuals in need , but this became increasingly difficult with each new project they committed themselves to. 

“ You don’t look like a medium .” Cratchit continued “ If you’ve brought a message from Tiny Tim , I should tell you that Sir Timothy Cratchit lived to a ripe and prosperous old age and was loved by millions , particularly in the aftermath of the Great War and during the Depression years…” 

Angela smiled. She was not , she said , a medium , although she was not sure how she should have dressed if she had been. Rather , she was dressed for the December weather, which was wet and windy , with little prospect of snow the following day. Her hooded coat was burgundy and she had a rolled up umbrella over her arm. 

Dan felt like asking her if she had used it to float in like Mary Poppins , but he thought better of it. 

“ I came by bus” she said as if she had heard his unspoken words. 

Dan chuckled and folded the top down on his computer before sitting back in his chair to give his full attention to the visitor. 

“I’m not sure how I can help you , Angela , but anyone who has suffered the indignity of public transport on Christmas Eve deserves to be heard out…” 

He beckoned to her to sit down, but she politely declined. “ I don’t have long. I need to get back.” she said. Dan Cratchit nodded as if he fully understood. 

“Okay, you say you have a message for me ? Who is it from?”. 

“ Well , I’m not exactly sure … Unfortunately that’s the way with these things. I saw your picture in a newspaper and I just knew I had to bring it to you…” 

Dan continued smiling but his heart was beginning to sink. He had a mountain of work to get through , and more to wade through tomorrow. Christmas was all around him in the streets below. Had been since September , but somehow it hadn’t reached the fourteenth floor. He didn’t even have a tree in his office suite. 

It had all become too commercial , so Christmas was just another day for him. There was always someone helping him to fight the good fight in Foundation offices around the globe on December 25th.

Angela had reached into the pocket of her coat and pulled out a folded scrap of paper. “ This was given to me by an elderly gentleman some time ago. He told me that when the time was right I would know what to do with it…” 

By now , Dan was becoming a little tired of Angela’s mysterious ways. She was beginning to resemble one of those cabaret clairvoyants who are so good at reading the moods of their audiences. 

Dan was not one of the faithful. Although he tried to be a good person and a benefactor to his family and the many people whom the foundation had helped, he believed that it was human endeavour and ingenuity which made it all work. 

He had no real time for people who believed otherwise , although his good manners prevented him from ridiculing them. 

“ And this is the right time ?” he said , slightly raising an eyebrow. 

“Well, Christmas is always a little special , isn’t it , Mr Cratchit ? Your foundation would not be here without it, after all …” 

She smiled as she placed the paper on the desk and pushed it towards him. He took off his reading glasses as he reached for it. 

Folded neatly into four , dust dropped from the folds as he opened it. 

The paper itself seemed old and the shaky handwriting could well have been scratched onto it by the old gentleman himself. 

It was the choice of words which made the note as memorable as it was anachronistic. 

It simply said “ Chill Out and take tomorrow off… P.S. Don’t forget the turkey …” 

Dan couldn’t suppress the belly laugh the note provoked. 

He was only a little surprised, a moment later ,to note that Angela had vanished quietly into the approaching evening.

Tuesday, November 1, 2022

A Gathering Of Leaves

These Autumn trees are full of witchcraft and old ways.The lights dimmed now at either side of this brief stage enable things to mingle with streams of thought emerging at the edge of vision unformed but evolving , substantiated by light and encouraged by a gathering of leaves before endless night claws them back exhausted. Tony Noon

Friday, July 29, 2022

Thunder In Chicago

 


It's a strange time. 3am. There are some who think the only place to be at this time is fast asleep. For some it is the nagging reminder that sleep eludes them and that morning and it's worries are not far away.

For some it can be a time of magic and mixed metaphors. A waking dream of an endless moment where anything is possible.

My metaphors were crashing the other night. I had fallen asleep in the chair.  I half woke to the sounds of Barry Manilow running through his catalogue of hits in a concert from Broadway a few years back.

My mind was mixing this with early holiday experiences , listening to pop music fight the sound of crashing waves on extinct transistor radios.

In there somewhere , a memory of a stereo recording of a thunderstorm over Chicago. 

Captured on vinyl sometime around 1956 , it's purpose was to sell the potential of Hi-Fi to the undecided.

Somehow , around 3am , all this meshed together into the poem below...

Thunder In Chicago - a poem by TonyNoon642 - All Poetry

Wednesday, July 20, 2022

THE GHOST FLOAT



                                                                                                                                                                  

Sizzling through in this late

reluctance to cool 

he is running on empties.


Collarless bottles give no clues.

The small hours leave him

waiting for pings as the heat slides.


Tony Noon


Thursday, July 14, 2022

Wombwell Rainbow Interview

 


Many thanks to Paul Brookes , Editor of Wombwell Rainbow online magazine for the opportunity to go on a bit about my poetry. Read the full interview by following the link below

https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2022/07/07/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-tony-noon/


The mag has lots of other interesting stuff by writers from around the world.

Saturday, June 11, 2022

FEELING THE NOISE

FEELING THE NOISE


 It was a great idea. For my sixtieth birthday, I would draw up a playlist. One record,at least, from each year of my life so far. My soundscape would encompass the whole history of popular music from rock & roll to whatever that meant in the mid teens of the twenty first century.

Over many weeks I put together a list , starting with “Roll Over Beethoven” by Chuck Berry ( in my mind the true king of rock & roll ) and ending roughly four hours later with “Uptown Funk” by Mark Ronson ft. Bruno Mars , which had kicked the backside of the UK charts in the early part of 2016 and given D.J.s a real crowd pleaser to play. 

Four hours later was key to my great idea. The List was not intended to be a reflection , some kind of memorial to good times past. It was a blueprint, to be translated into a living celebration of sound , punctuated by two forty five minute slots to enable a live band to perform. 

Bob’s Mobile Disco faithfully translated The List into living stereo and the band turned up at the venue in time to set up , sound check and do whatever else bands have to do to get in the zone. 

 On the whole , it went down well . Chuck Berry led on to Cliff Richard’s “ Move it “ . Somewhere a little further on we were “ Shakin’ All Over” and on through the sixties , climaxing with Bowie’s “ Life On Mars” before the first set. 

 After the band we jived through glam rock, punk rock , new wave, ska and disco as people feasted on pizzas , fries and garlic bread. The band performed a lively second set , perfectly complementing the disco , which afterwards moved into the nineties and beyond. The time now was heading towards ten p.m. and we had the room and the bar for a further two hours.  

To be fair , I had anticipated , nay planned for some of the older family and friends to start disappearing around now for various reasons , and so they did. This would leave the floor open to the younger age groups who may have considered even eighties music to be prehistoric. I really thought, though, that the party would catch it’s second wind, and once we got past Happy Mondays and Oasis ,  Katy Perry’s “ Firework” would have the youngsters shouting for more. 

By 10.45 pm , the room was empty except for my wife and me , and  Bob’s Mobile Disco in the corner, ready to segue into the new Millennium. Loraine and me straightened a few tables and put the last of the pizza debris into black bags before telling Bob’s Mobile Disco he could call it a night. 

He asked me if I was sure about that as he was paid until midnight but I told him that was okay. The other room of the pub had a juke box , so they wouldn’t hear him anyway. 

If I had been on the decks , I would have kept on playing even to an empty room ...but that’s just the way I am. 

Bob’s Mobile Disco ,didn’t need telling again . He unplugged his laptop , lights and speakers and he was gone 

What had gone wrong ? To everyone except me , nothing , I guess.  

They had all been invited to a birthday party and they had all enjoyed the experience. For me though , there was something amiss. I had planned an event . The music and other entertainment were integral and , as I thought , meticulously geared to suit everyone at some point in the evening. 

It seems, however, that the crowd only perceived the music as background . Also, perhaps, some of the “ youngsters”, now, sort of, serious adults in their mid thirties , saw even nineties music as part of their giddy youth , and were looking forward to bedtime once we got past ten…

We have a Ruby Wedding coming up and lessons have been learned , as they say.  

 I still have The List and am poised to use it . Perhaps I will shuffle...Maybe everyone will. 


 Tony Noon