Showing posts with label Debz Hobbs-Wyatt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Debz Hobbs-Wyatt. Show all posts

Saturday, 5 April 2025

Saturday Sample: Because Sometimes Something Extraodinary Happens by Debz Hobbs-Wyatt, Learning to Fly, weak tea


 

My brother always cried when he watched TV movies.

            “I thought scousers were supposed to be ’ard,” I told him.

“Everyone’s got a sensitive side, Jen.”

“Not me,” I said.

“Even tomboys are allowed to cry.”

“Yeah, whatever,” I said.

 

It was my brother that found the blackbird’s nest that spring. It was my brother that taught me to believe in happy ever after. And it was my brother that was killed in Afghanistan.

We found out on a Wednesday. It was raining. Mum said the rain meant something. Yeah, it meant the washing was wet on the line. It meant the blackbirds didn’t fledge. And it meant I was never gonna see our Robert again or make fun of his bright orange cagoule.

      Dad was standing in the doorway holding a plastic milk bottle and saying all we needed was another cup of tea, like that would bring him back; like that would make everything alright.

      “I don’t want any more tea,” Mum said.

      “Nor do I,” Nan said. Then she said, “People always do that.”

      “Do what?” Dad said.

      “Make tea.”

      “Who?”

      “On the telly. When someone dies they always make tea.”

“Oh,” Dad said.

And then he just stood there fiddling with the green lid of the milk bottle and looking at me. So I said “Go on then, I’ll ’ave another brew” even though I never wanted one. But I didn’t know what I was supposed to do. I didn’t know anyone that had died before, not really. Floss died, our dog, but that was different, she was old and she died in her sleep. That’s how I want to go. I don’t want to be blown up by a bomb in Afghanistan.

      It went quiet for a bit when Dad made the tea, we heard him clinking a spoon and it was ages before he came back in. When he did he looked liked he’d been chopping onions again. Mum looked up then and said, “I knew.” She was sitting at the table looking down at her hands, holding a photograph of our Robert. “I dreamed about it last night.”

“Don’t be daft,” Dad said.

“I did,” she said. “I dreamed our Robert was standing by the bed telling me he had to go. He was with Grandad Harry.”

“But Grandad Harry’s not dead,” I said.

“I know,” she said. Then she added, “Best give him a ring to make sure.”

“I wish ’e was dead,” Nan said and she got that look when she thinks about the trollop from the chippy – the one Grandad ran off with.

“He was there,” Mum said. “I’m telling you, he was really there, stood at the bottom of the bed.”

“Shut up,” Dad said.

 

They buried Robert in a box with a flag draped across it, while some fella played the trumpet, only Dad said it wasn’t a trumpet, it was a bugle. I told him I didn’t care what it was.

 “It’s to do with the shape of the bell,” Dad said. “A bugle is conical.”

 “Conical? How can a bugle be funny?”

 Nothing about that day was funny.

 “Anyway, what does it matter?” I said. “What does any of it matter?”

 “Everything matters,” Mum said. Then she sat in the dark and cried.

And Dad got drunk.

And Nan said she would stay with us for a bit, until we felt better but Mum said we’d never feel better. So Nan sat in the dark and cried too. And she said it was a pity Grandad Harry wasn’t dead and then she started talking about the trollop again. That’s when I went outside to see the blackbirds because I promised our Robert I’d look out for them.

But I was too late. The blackbirds were gone.

Our blackbirds had all left while some fella in a poxy uniform played the bloody trumpet. I felt CRAP.  Crap in bold and underlined. Only really I felt worse but I couldn’t think of a word for worse.

“It’s not fair,” I said. I said it out loud, in the garden with no shoes on and wet grass between me toes. I said it as I looked up at our Robert’s bedroom window, where we used to watch the blackbirds making their nest. And I said it to God, not that I believed in God anymore. What kind of God lets people like our Robert get killed? Mum says it’s not God’s fault, she says it’s the Prime Minister’s. But it’s too late now. I hate God and I hate the Prime Minister.

“It’s not fair,” I said. “None of it’s fair.”

I don’t know if I meant about the Prime Minister, not seeing the blackbirds fledge or our Robert getting killed in Afghanistan.

It all felt the same.

 

My brother said the Latin name for the blackbird is Turdus merula. I laughed. “It can’t be,” I said. “Turd? You’re making it up.”

But he wasn’t.

Robert put on his Birds DVD and David Attenborough said, “Turdus merula is one of the commonest British birds.” I couldn’t believe David Attenborough said the word turd; and on the TV. He also said, “It’s only the males that are black, the females are brown.” And he said, “The female is the one that builds the nest.”

“That’s the same as girls,” Robert said. “When I get back from Afghanistan I’m gonna find a nice girl to marry and start a family.”

“I’m never building a nest with a boy,” I said.

“You will,” he said.

“Won’t.”

“You’ll find your wings one day.” And then he looked at me really hard and said, “Til then you’ll ’ave to share my nest.”

“Yeah,” I said and he hugged me.

“Don’t get killed in Afghanistan,” I said. Only I never said it out loud. I whispered it into the hood of his sweatshirt when he was hugging me.

     

Nan stayed for the whole of the summer after our Robert got killed in Afghanistan. I don’t even know where Afghanistan is. My mate says it’s where them dogs come from, the ones that look like greyhounds with long hair. I said I hope none of them get killed because of the Prime Minister. Our dog, Floss, would’ve been dead scared of guns. On bomby night Robert used to sit with her under the stairs and hold her till she stopped shaking.

 

Dad said he was fed up not being able to watch his programmes on the TV when Nan was there. “Why do we have to watch Emmerdale Farm?” he said.

It’s called Emmerdale,” I said. “They dropped the Farm.”

“Oh,” he said.

“Not like Corrie,” I said. “That’s still called Coronation Street it’s just that everyone calls it Corrie.”

“Oh,” he said. Then he said, “We ought to watch educational things.”

“Like David Attenborough?” I said.

But Dad said he didn’t like David Attenborough so he wouldn’t watch Robert’s Birds DVD. I reckon that’s not the real reason though.

But even when Nan left, Dad still watched Emmerdale. And he still called it Emmerdale Farm. And Mum still sat in the dark. She would watch home movies of me and our Robert. She cried all the time so I told her David Attenborough said we ought to use recyclable tissues. She looked at me weird.

“It’s about being ecologic,” I said. “We get through loads of tissues in our ’ouse.”

But then I wondered: if we did, would Mum’s tears come round again on the recycled tissues. So I told her I’d changed me mind.

 

I talked to Robert every day that first year. I told him who was in the Jungle for I’m A Celebrity, and I told him at least he didn’t ’ave to pretend to like Nan’s Christmas jumpers. And I said it was weird on his birthday without ’im there. 

“Nothing’s normal anymore,” I said.

      “Things change, Jen,” Dad said. “It’s what happens.”

      “I won’t change,” I said. “I’ll always be a tomboy.”

      Then he hugged me and I thought he’d never let go.

 

I still bought Robert a birthday present. I bought him the latest David Attenborough book, so I could read up about the blackbirds.

David Attenborough says, “Turdus merula breed from March to July.” But even before March I started keeping watch. There are always blackbirds in our garden so some of them must have been our birds, the ones we never got to see fledge.

We all said we wouldn’t go in Robert’s room, not after what happened, but in the end we did. Besides, he had the best view of the garden. But the first time I just stood there by the window, waiting for the blackbirds to start building a nest, and pretending it was last spring and our Robert was still here. I started remembering things, like the way he pegged wool on the washing line and watched the birds peck at it. And sometimes the blackbirds would carry twigs bigger than them and try and get in the hedge and we used to laugh. So I pulled some wool off our Robert’s Christmas jumper, the one he used to tell Nan was his favourite when really he hated it. It was just hanging there in the closet like he was still coming home. I thought it might smell of ’im but it never. Later Dad watched me peg some of the red wool on the line. I thought he was gonna kick off but he never said anything. And nor did Mum.

Then a few days after I saw the female blackbird take some of it and fly into the hedge. So I went down to see and there she was – I could see her when I bent down and looked through the hole in the privet. She was just sat there watching me back. She was there all the time after that and the male blackbird was always hanging around. Even Dad came into our Robert’s room to watch and one day I came home from school and there were binoculars on the window ledge.

I should’ve been happy but I kept thinking about Robert; that he was missing it all. Nan’s new boyfriend, who works on the till in Tesco, says if you’re in heaven you get to see everything. I hope he doesn’t see me on the toilet. That would be gross. But Nan says it doesn’t work that way.

 

Mum doesn’t sit in the dark anymore, even she started watching the blackbirds, especially when they hatched and the male started bringing bits of food.

Dad says he might have got it wrong about David Attenborough. But I guess he was right about one thing: things do change. Last week I wore a skirt and I’ve been thinking I might like to build a nest with Jason Palmer. Not yet though, I’m not even twelve.

Last night I told Robert I’ve decided to move into his room. I said Mum thinks it’s okay, even she says we have to move on. Then I said I might have found my sensitive side because last week I cried watching a TV movie.

I told him if he sees Floss he’s to give ’er a kiss for me.

And I told him the blackbirds have fledged.

It happened yesterday. Dad took photos with his new digital camera, as each one came out of the nest, even Nan was there. The baby birds flapped their wings and crept across the grass. David Attenborough says they won’t be able to fly for a week though. No one said anything but I know what they were thinking, that this time last year some fella was playing a poxy trumpet. But this summer it’s been different. This summer it never rained.

And this summer we were all there when the blackbirds fledged.

About this story

Winning Story in the Bath Short Story Award, 2013, first published in Good Reads: The Bath Short Story Award, 2013, Hearst Magazines UK, 2013.

Find your copy of the complete collection here  

About the auhtor

Debz Hobbs-Wyatt lives on Canvey Island in Essex with her husband, cocker spaniel and two cats. She is a full-time writer and editor and has an MA in Creative Writing from Bangor University. She gave up her day job as a scientist to pursue her writing career in 2010.

She has a writing blog where she talks about all things writerly and calls herself ‘Writerly Debz’ – the official WordzNerd. Link: www.wordznerd.wordpress.com

She edits and mentors clients of all levels: from full manuscript appraisals to final proofreads. She also does manuscript appraisals for Cornerstones Literary Consultancy. Check out her website here: www.debzhobbs-wyatt.co.uk

Her debut novel While No One Was Watching was published in 2013 by Parthian Books to some great reviews. She has a few novels in various stages of completion and hopes to have a new novel out very soon. Do check out her pages for news.

www.facebook.com/DebzHobbsWyattAuthor

@WriterDebz (Instagram)

Debz says writing for a living isn’t about the money or the fame – writing is a passion. If you have it, you can’t ignore it. If those other things come as reward for the hard work –– then it’s a beautiful bonus. But, the most important things is doing what you love every day; that is the greatest blessing of all.

 

Saturday, 25 March 2023

Saturday Sample: Transforming Communities, Forward. spring water,

 

Foreword by Debz Hobbs-Wyatt

 As part of the small team at Bridge House Publishing, I have had the pleasure of being able to read and help select the stories for the Waterloo Festival Writing Competition for the past three years. The theme has always been connected to the idea of transformation: transforming minds, transforming being and this time transforming communities. Of course, at the time the theme for this year was announced, we could never have anticipated what 2020 would bring or the impact that would have on all our communities globally.

Covid-19 has clearly had a major impact on what it feels to be part of a community. It has touched all aspects of our lives, including how even this collection is launched and how the 2020 festival is run. The good thing is that at no other time in history have we had so much technology at our fingertips to make that possible. In modern life, we already know about virtual communities, some even fall in love that way, and now we have realised the real importance of making our connections through different means. Of course, that is no substitute of the warmth of a real hug – but those days will return when we will once again close the two-metre gap and understand that part of community we are closed off to at the time of putting this collection together. If that has happened, go hug someone right now and appreciate something as simple as that. Perhaps not if you’re reading this on a train full of strangers!

Community for me is connection. We connect, we come together, we support, as you will see in the stories in this collection. But connection also has its dark side, as we will also have seen at this strange time in our history, perhaps non-conformity is equally part of community.

You will see community explored in the most diverse of ways in this little book. From a mining community trying to save the planet but at the same time killing its workers, children who disappear, segregation according to colour but not as we know it, though disturbingly similar. You will read about a book club for the elderly, about storytelling, about communities who come together at times of adversity…each story unique and exploring the theme in new and interesting ways.

There were stories I loved that I almost chose for the collection but this for me had everything I felt a collection about transforming communities needed. At this current time of transformed communities one thing you can always rely on – writers will write, stories will be read and people will find ways to come together.

Enjoy and well done to all of those who made this collection possible. Even if you did not make it into the collection this time, we enjoyed reading the stories and there’s always next time!

 

Debz

May 2020

     

Wednesday, 16 September 2020

Tread the Air Softly



by Debz Hobbs-Wyatt

instant coffee


It’s a gentle sound; a whirring sound; a slowly building humming sound.
It’s a loud sound; a drilling sound; a can’t-go-to-sleep annoying sound.
            And it won’t leave.
I’m the only one who can hear it.

I still go through the morning ritual though; like fumbling with the Christmas tree of leads behind the telly, unplugging the stereo, lowering my head flat to the table so I’m cheek to cheek with your broken laptop. I see the world sideways: the room, the spine of your book, the pile of postcards.
            As I flick the kettle on, I picture the fella in the blue overalls, the one who came last summer when it started. He shook his head, clicked air like there was a polo mint stuck on the end of his tongue. “Electrics are fine,” he said. He didn’t even know me but he was standing there in my kitchen in muddy boots slurping cold tea saying, “Must be in your ’ead.”
“Sod off,” I said.
            But it’s what they all think.  

I spoon coffee granules into a chipped Sesame Street mug, your chipped Sesame Street mug. You said Elmo was your favourite. I said you were far too old for Elmo. You said lots of students like Elmo. What even Anthropology and American Studies students? Especially Anthropology and American Studies students. Sesame Street is American history.
 Sod off I said.
            I prefer Jemima Puddle Duck. She is definitely more English Lit with Social Studies. When I said that you told me to sod off.
            I don’t wait for the kettle. I push open the back door and a bolt of cold air rushes at me, like an over-zealous ice sculpture with puckered lips and outstretched arms. Or Aunty Mish (God rest her soul) staying give us a kiss Twinkle.
            Why did Mum have to name me after a verb? To twinkle? It’s not a verb Mum said, it’s a name, a noun. It’s a verb I said. Then she added it’s what she was gonna call her guinea pig when she was five, until her mum changed her mind and they got a new toaster instead.
I suppose it could’ve been worse. You said your rabbit was called Engelbert Humpalot.
 But thing is, as I stand here in nothing but me jim-jams and Big Foot Slippers (your Big Foot slippers) I pretend it’s you. You with puckered lips and outstretched arms and I don’t even mind if you call me Twinkle. Or Twink. Or my little bird (your favourite). I don’t even mind if you call me Engelbert Humpalot.
But it’s not you, is it? And it can never be you, can it?
I wish this humming would stop.

I try to picture your face. I look for you in the clouds. I used to spend hours lying on the hard concrete of the backyard because of something you said. About how you saw your nan’s face in the clouds after she died.
All I could see was what might’ve been Santa if you looked at it upside down (with a squint).
You said something about stars once. Remember? Lying drunk on Brighton beach on your twenty-first birthday. You said it was weird to think so many of the stars weren’t really there. Of course you then started philosophising, Native American folklore, some astrophysics thrown in for good measure. You lost me at light years. But it’s what you said next that stuck in my head, like this sound. You said: “No matter what happens, even when we’re gone, you’ll still see where we were.”
It was lovely, deep, insightful, until you started singing, Twinkle Twinkle Little Star.  
I hear the phone ringing. It’ll be Mum. Or him. I bet it’s him.
I don’t go in. I throw my head back and start twirling circles until I feel dizzy; until the phone stops ringing.
Your face is smudged; like a watercolour melted into itself.
Now all I can picture is him.
Not you. Him: Gary James.
 The one who looks like Ewan McGregor; which isn’t so bad. My mum knew his mum, remember? Gary not Ewan (shame). Remember how I always told you Ewan McGregor was my idea of heaven and you said yours was BeyoncĂ©. I told you her ass was too big. You said I was jealous. Then you asked me why I gave Gary my number. I said it was for a lit project; we had to pair up. Oh you said.
I liked it when you got jealous.  
He keeps phoning. I don’t mean Ewan McGregor (pity). I mean Gary. He saw us once outside the doctors, me and Mum. Can he take me to the pictures he said. Said the same thing on my answer machine three days later. Can I take you for coffee? the week after that. And that last time: can I take you to that fancy Italian on the High Street?  
But that’s our place. You and me. Mum says he wasn’t to know.
I pressed delete.
I don’t want you to be deleted.
The only way I know you were here, isn’t from clouds or star-gazing but from the clothes in the wardrobe that don’t smell of you anymore. And from your socks in the drawer. You used to leave them all over the flat – remember? Same with your books; hundreds of bloody books on Native American Symbolism. Your obsession.
Mine is the sound. It never stops.
And you.
There’s a gaping hole the size of North America and I wish I could fall into it and disappear.
 I want your face.

I hear the kettle switch off. I stop spinning. As I shuffle I leave a trail in the snow. My feet are wet but I don’t feel it. I don’t feel anything. It’s like I float from day to day. That’s what Mum says. You’re drifting, Twink. You need to go back to work, Twink. People don’t live this way, Twink.
And last week she said: why don’t you have that drink with Gary? What can it hurt? Twink.
But everything hurts.
Sometimes the sound is the only thing that drowns it out.

Mum says I should take all your books to the Red Cross shop. But who wants to read about Shamanism? Would they even know what it was? You’ve seen the types that go in there. Maybe the types that would wear second-hand socks?
Nutters go into that shop: nutters like me. Or I did: when I went further than the doctors at the end of the road.
            There goes that nutter who lost her fella.
            But I didn’t lose you. You’re not wandering around Tescos looking for the toilet or down the back of the seat on the number 78 like my missing iPod. You’re not lost in a crowd at a Take That concert looking for me... are you?
            Am I lost?

I’m still in my jim-jams. The ones you bought me that last Christmas. The ones with ducks on.
You’ll catch your death, my little bird, you’d say if you could see me. But you can’t see me, can you? Or catch death and God knows I’ve tried. It sneaks up on you, like Aunt Mish eating her fish and chips in front of Corrie. Never even finished and they were from that posh chippy with the crispy batter.  
Gone.
Just like that.
Just like you.
But I don’t want to think about what happened to you. Not wanting to think about something is the same as thinking about it though. Like the sound.
Sometimes I think it’s my own thoughts as they whir in smaller and smaller circles.
Make them stop.
It’s part of grief they say.
It’s a reaction they say.
What after eighteen months? they say.
But it’s not a reaction.
 Wishing I could get to the end of our road without feeling like the word is closing in on my head: that’s a reaction. Wishing I could go to sleep and never wake up. That’s a reaction.
And blaming myself for what happened; that’s a reaction.
Why did I let you go?
“It’s a once in a lifetime trip,” you said. “Live on a reservation with real Cherokee Indians. I’ll only be gone a year.”
But a year became forever.
Your last postcard’s still on the fridge, next to your photo. Ten little words scribbled on the back. Ten little words on a rainy Wednesday morning but biggest ten little words I ever read. I was getting ready to go to the Co-op. Lousy job for a graduate you’d said. But what else was I supposed to do with English Lit and Social Studies? And what were you supposed to do with Anthropology and American Studies?
Exactly what you did do, I suppose.
I think of the postcard now.
It’s started to snow.
When I get home let’s get married, my little bird.
Did you get my reply? I put it in a card. Not a cheap one. A posh one from Clintons. One little word.
I didn’t see it; the card, in the plastic bag with the things they sent back.
What were you thinking riding a motorbike? How could you forget they drive on the other side? Was I your last thought?
           
Maybe it’s the earth that’s humming. You told me the earth hummed; on another postcard. You said it hummed at F sharp, or was it B flat? You said the Native Americans often lay with their head on the ground. Nutters – I thought, but now when I think about that all I can see is you. On some highway, under the stars. And a big shiny American truck.
The phone’s ringing again.
That’s when it happens.
Is it an angel?
            No.
A bird. The smallest bird I’ve ever seen; small as a butterfly and it’s hovering along the fence.
The phone stops ringing.
A trail of purples, pinks and yellows hang in the cold air; like a rainbow. You told me the Indians said the rainbow is the symbol of hope. See – I was listening.
I shuffle closer. And that’s when I realise the humming is coming from the bird.
It’s the same little bird on the postcard; the one pinned to the fridge next to your photo; the one I put there so I couldn’t forget your face.
Don’t cry. Don’t cry Twinkle.
The wings move so fast; like it’s walking on air.
I don’t move, can’t move, won’t move.
The snow is falling faster, settling on my hair and my nose and the cold is seeping into your slippers, burning my toes. But I still stare. I stare until I have to blink.
Until it’s gone.

The red light flashes on the answer machine. I’m sipping coffee from your chipped Sesame Street mug. Your slippers are soaked.
Gary’s voice: “Can I come and see you? Your mum says you find it hard to go out. Sorry. I didn’t know.”
He does look like Ewan McGregor, doesn’t he? Don’t be jealous, eh?
This time I don’t press delete. I’m still thinking about that bird and somehow I press to return the call.
I say one word, “Yes,” then my throat closes.
One little word that hangs there like that little bird. It’s what I wrote in that Clintons card.

Your book, the one by your laptop, says the hummingbird is a bridge between worlds. I’ve read that part twice. It says it’s a message from the departed:  open your eyes and start to live again. You’ve ringed it in red. Like you knew. But you couldn’t – could you?
            I look out at the yard. It’s snowing harder. Soon I won’t see the trail I made in the snow in your Big Foot slippers. But I will see the colours. Every time I close my eyes I’ll see them. And that little bird that wasn’t really there – was it?
            But now there’s no sound, only peace.

About the author

Winner Bath Short Story Award 2013
Shortlisted in Commonwealth Short Story Prize 2013
Debut Novel While No One Was Watching published by Parthian Books
www.debzhobbs-wyatt.co.uk @DebzHobbsWyatt 
Writing Blog http://wordznerd.wordpress.com/ 
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