Chapter 4 Stops and Starts
The Moto Rugby comfort break station on the M45 just south of Rugby was better serviced than George and Molly had expected but was far from what they would call comfortable. The place was filled with hard plastic chairs and tables and, being a Saturday at mid- to late morning, it seemed it was a convenient stopping point for two full coaches of football supporters heading for two different games that coming afternoon.
George was no longer particularly interested in football and didn't follow the professional game. Once he had stopped playing the game himself, not long after his Army service, when he found that Saturday afternoons were busy working times as many companies had their trucks, vans and cars serviced at the weekend, he lost any interest in participating in the sport or watching it.
George noted with more than a little amusement that, although each set of supporters tried to out-sing each other in support of their own teams, there was no real animosity between the two sets of fans, just a cheerful acknowledgement that one day their paths might cross again should they ever play in the same division. In fact George found himself even more cheerfully amused when the the two sides discovered that today's opponents for one of the teams turned out to be the historical rivals of their own team and they were soon harmonising through the same derogatory songs about a common foe and learning fresh insults that were assured would be used to unsettle the opposition during the upcoming game.
The shopping and dining area was right next to a rather basic fuel station, which the bus didn't need as the tank had been filled with diesel the day prior to the trip and they only used a fraction in the short distances between the two stops so far.
The dining area did have a busy Burger King and an even busier Greggs, as well as a Marks & Spencer shop, so there was a wide choice of snacks and hot drinks available. George only wanted a simple cup of coffee, but Sally persuaded him to indulge in a bacon sandwich from Greggs in lieu of breakfast, which he told her he never normally ate, so they queued up at Greggs together for their refreshments.
Rosemary, leaning on her four-wheeled Walker, queued up just behind them. George knew her slightly, having exchanged the odd greeting before, but Sally didn't know her at all, although after her usual hour of physiotherapy every other morning she had seen her act as an independent, bright, independent and acerbic individual as Sally had recovered in the care home lounge and dining room. George introduced them and, before leaving with their purchases, George's treat he told Sally, he offered to help carry Rosemary's hot drink to her table for her, but the independent old lady declined, insisting that she could manage that herself.
George and Sally left Greggs and they sat companionably at one of the sets of hard chairs and tables as far away from the chanting football fans as they could manage in such a small place.
The half hour refreshment stop went by quite quickly as Sally told George about her little house and her particular worries about the present state of her garden without being home to tend it.
"Although I grow my veggies in the back garden, I mostly grow flowers in the front garden, particularly dahlias and they should still be flowering well. It is quite a small front garden in an old pre-open plan estate, with a low wall and double wrought iron gates separating the garden from the pavement and a short drive long enough to park one car in front of the garage and still have room to open the garage door in order to get to the chest freezer that I keep there. Dan had filled the garage up with all sorts of junk, intending to buy and sell antiques and bric a brac that he planned to sell for a profit one day. He used to go off to auctions and bring back all sorts of rubbish that he would try to repair and sell on in local free ads. So much junk was kept in that garage that he had to park the car outside in all weathers. He didn't need our car for work, so I used it for shopping and ferrying the girls to school and their evening and weekend clubs. It used to annoy me that I had to get the girls ready for school on winter mornings and then have to scrape the frost and snow off the car as well as everything else. When he died I had the whole lot of junk cleared out and now I can get my little Ford Corsa safely inside the garage."
"So, who's looking after the garden while you are here?" George asks, being urged on by Molly whispering in his inner ear.
"No-one,' Sally replies. "It is an old estate, built on the east side of Songlebridge Green, just after the First World War; 'Homes for Heroes', they were supposed to be. They are quite small three-bed semi-detached houses with short front gardens and large back gardens with room between each pair of houses for bicycle sheds and garages. Our house had a garage with wooden double doors when we bought it and Dan had the doors replaced with an aluminium up-and-over door once we moved in. Because they are older old-fashioned houses, the people in the area are older people, many of them widows and there aren't many people that keep up their own gardens let alone look after anyone else's. My neighbour Gina, breeds dogs, has her back garden laid to lawns with shrubs and small trees; she has a contract gardener come in to mow the lawn once a week and trim up the shrubs during the winter. I hadn't planned on being away, just an accident falling off that stupid ladder meant I went into hospital as an emergency and haven't been able to sort out anything with Gina. I will probably be here at the Care Home for another three weeks or even a month, my GP told me, so I may have to write a letter to Gina and see what she can arrange for me with her garden service."
"I'd offer to help, Sally, only Molly was the one with green fingers in our household, if left to me everything would turn into brown sticks."
"That's all right, George," Sally smiled, "I've got some potatoes, onions and carrots to lift and store, but so long as I do them before the first frosts, they should be all right. My GP said I should be able to go home in a matter of weeks."
'So why is she convalescing in one of the flats and not the Care Home itself, George?' Molly wondered in his ear. 'Go on, ask her, George.'
'You know that it's none of my business, Mole,' George quietly thought back at her, knowing that she seemed to pick up his thoughts without any additional effort on his part, 'but this sounds like I'm grilling her here. Why do you want to know anyway?"
'Because I want to know why she is staying in one of the flats and not the Care Home,' Molly stated clearly in his inner ear. 'and I can hardly ask her myself, George, can I?'
'That would freak her out for sure,' George smiled to himself, 'oh well, anything for peace of mind, or in this instance: peace inside my mind.'
"I was just wondering, Sally, if you don't mind me asking," George asks with a nervous smile on his face, knowing he'd never get any peace from Molly until he asked.
"I don't mind," Sally replies with an even warmer smile, "ask away. What were you wondering?"
"I was wondering why you are staying in one of the flats at the care village and not in the Care Home rooms itself?"