Sitting alone in a Ford Cortina

Mak­ing faces at the bus-stop.  I like to bur­ble at the spar­rows and tell jokes to the neigh­bour­hood cats.  They feign dis­in­ter­est but I know they’re crack­ing up inside.  Poker-faces.  That’s what cats have.  Yet they’re no good at cards as they’re too eas­ily dis­tracted by mak­ing your hand into a tun­nel, or spin­ning your chips so they shine in the light.

The Cortina doors are rusty and creak when they’re opened.  I think Elvis should have oiled them when he did his first post-humous tour of Basil­don in ’78.  Corti­nas were big then.  As were the neigh­bour­hood cats.  It was tougher in the sev­en­ties.  There hadn’t been years of Garfield to acclimi­tase peo­ple to obese pets.

There’s an old tape machine that likes to chew up tapes.  Some peo­ple say it’s because it’s an old heap of junk.  I like to think it’s exer­cis­ing its musi­cal con­science.  Super­tramp and Dana are chewed,  the funny com­pi­la­tion tape my uncle made of Poly­ne­sian folk music for my christ­mas present once is not.

The Cortina has a body in the trunk.  It is not mine.  I do not know how it got there.  But it has made a new home inside the spare tyre, and talks to me on long trips.  It talks about high­ways it could have been on.  And fish­ing.  And where ghosts go when they’re tired.

I’m sit­ting alone in a Ford Cortina.  Wait­ing for my mojo to turn up.

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