The doorbell was insistent. It rang and rang. Then it rang and rang again. When it rang a third time following a pregnant pause, and commenced continuous ringing, I roused myself from my nice warm divan bed, despite one broken corner supported on a pile of books, and stumbled the five or six feet to the front door of my crappy one-room studio flat, where the rent was three weeks overdue and the bailiffs expected any day. I rubbed and unglued one eye and looked through the peep hole.
That was a relief, it wasn't the bloody bailiffs or the lowlife loan sharks, just the unmistakeable flat-nosed face of Eddie Griffiths, who I used to attend school with, back when I had something to fully occupy my daylight hours. I opened the door. Brrr! It was bloody cold out there. I looked at Eddie with one eye open and the other still glued tightly shut.
"Come on, sleepy bones," Eddie growled and, as usual, not mincing his words, "Some of us've got jobs to do."
"Well, what'yer doin' wasting' time an' effort round here for?" I summoned the effort to reply, surprised that my dry throat made any sound at all.
"I got summink for yer, Jack, that's why!" he said, all snarky-like, "You should be up an' about be now, it's gone ten o'clock."
"So?" I bitched, remembering now that Eddie worked as a delivery man, and just noticed the bloody great white van blocking up my ground floor flats's natural light, with 'FedEx' painted on the side in big bold letters. "Ain't got nothin' to get up fer, 'ave I? Yer bangin' on the wrong bloody door, Eddie, mate, I don't ever get no letters or parcels, only bills and you kin keep them buggers, smoke 'em for all I care."
"It's a little package," he announced, like a snappy male midwife after a long labour, telling an exhausted mum that her infant was ginger and ugly before giving the looked-for gender-specific verdict, "An' it's come all the way from the USA."
Now he was starting to annoy me. Eddie always was a kidder at school, only he never knew when to bloody well stop kidding, that's how he got that flat nose.
"If it was just a little package, yer could've stuck it through the bloody door instead of wakin' me up, yer bastard."
"I need yer to sign for it, otherwise I 'affter take it back to the depot, an' I don't get paid if I takes it back. Bein' self-employed I only gets paid for delivering, not for bringin' the buggers back, sunshine."
"Alright, Ed, g'us it 'ere," I gave in, wondering what this bloody thing could be.
"Sign first!" He thrust a thick sort-of mobile phone at me with a stylus, pointing at a box near the bottom, "Sign there, Jack."
I took the stylus and deliberately inscribed an X.
"Yeah, like that'll do," Eddie sneered, "I coulda signed the bastard meself."
"Then why didn't you, an' then put it through the bloody door?"
"Regulations," he grinned, as he handed the light package over. "By the way, you gotta flat offside rear." He indicated with a thumb towards my antique rusty cherry red Peugeot 206.
"Bugger!" I exploded, "An' I've got a fuckin' job interview later this morning."
Well, it wasn't really a job, just a Father Christmas in His Grotto gig for three weeks at Walker's Department Store.