Autumn Leaves
Novels and Novellas Story

Autumn Leaves

by Tonyspencer 9 min read 3.3 (452 views)
fiction humour contemporary
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Chapter 5: Round and Roll Up

After the morning round of nines holes, four ball, Mabel and Claire having won their match by five holes at the ninth, so had rejoined one another, having rested and refreshed themselves with showers and fresh underwear before enjoying their lunch. Mabel calls up the Songlebridge Golf Club website on her mobile to check on the updates.

"Ellen and Evie's only one up against the Robertson sisters going into the eighth," Mabel told Claire.

"Oh, that's good news," Claire responds with an evil cackle, maybe they will end in a tie and have to play sudden death, they might even miss lunch altogether!"

xXx

Boris had a bank credit card in his Belgian name 'Boris Wouters' that had arrived in a plain envelope a week earlier. He had never had one before and wasn't really sure how to use it. He had always been paid cash before, which always arrived in the form of a monthly magazine subscription package, with some of the inside pages neatly cut out and a bundle of notes in various denominations from £5 up to £50 buried inside. The title of the magazine changed from time to time but the amount was always consistent, with 10% annual increases, starting at £1200 every month in 1990, and continuing for 34 years up to the present day. By 2010, after all those annual increases, he was getting five magazines every month, and the contents in notes totalled £8600 per month, adding up to over £100,000 a year.

Boris' living expenses were minor, he hadn't had to pay any rent because the housing he was placed into was fully furnished and owned by the KGB, so by 2010 he had filled three suitcases with paper money and had them locked away in a nearby rented secure storage.

After he had suffered the minor stroke which, in the hospital doctor's opinion meant that he had to go into the care home, he had no way of contacting the KGB, he was after all a "sleeper" over here waiting for instructions, instructions that never came until last week.

However, after he had been in the care home for a week he started getting redirected magazine subscriptions, within one magazine was a bank deposit book showing £769,920 had been deposited there in his name. Boris deduced that this was the total cash in the three suitcases in the security lock up, the key of which had been left in his "rented" flat. He had never counted the cash, in fact the volume of cash received had become an embarrassment to him because he couldn't spend it and he thought depositing it in a bank account would be investigated by the authorities.

He also received a suitcase containing some of his clothes and a few personal items from the flat. Boris was at least relieved that he didn't have to worry about the flat, but the money kept coming in, by then up to £10,410 per month. The magazine subscriptions changed to a book club subscription, in which many more high denomination notes could be secreted. He got a nurse to buy him a new suitcase and on request the care home found him a bigger bookcase. The KGB knew he had moved to the care home and took care of the money he had accumulated, but they were still sending him an amount of money that he couldn't possibly spend, he couldn't even give it away without blowing his cover. However, he silently thanked the KGB Intelligence branch operative who wisely chose a Belgian book company, so all the books which had the centres carved out were in Flemish and no-one among patients or nursing staff ever asked to borrow any of his books.

He took up smoking cigars and took to burning some of the notes and flushing the ashes down the en-suite toilet, which worked for a while, even though he actually hated the cigars and the nurses did frown on his decision and were mightily pleased that he was forced to give up smoking by his doctor in 2016.

When the new plastic notes came out he discovered he couldn't burn them. By 2016 the monthly income was up to £15,250 and he soon had to request a second bookcase and buy a second suitcase. He estimated he had £1.7 million in those two suitcases.

But now, he reflects, as he sits in the M5 motorway Food Hall eating a sandwich he'd bought from the Fresh Food Cafe and drank from his bottle of water, that at long last his "sleeper" days were over and that his money problems would be no more.

He had received his instructions, no, call that orders, not from the KGB as he expected but directly from the man who recruited him in 1989 in Dresden and who had sent him to Britain all those years ago to await the call to serve Mother Russia. Yes, his then commanding officer, now the President of the Soviet Union, Vladimir Putin himself, had sent him his final orders.

xXx

Monty and Sofija saw George and Sally walk away from the counter at the Cornish Bakery each holding a pasty. They were stood three or four people in the queue behind the pair of them, having been delayed getting to the food hall by having to lower Elsie and the rather odd foreigner Boris in the lift at the back of the bus.

"They've both opted for pasties too," Monty observes to Sofija with a knowing smile, "I think it's nice that something seems to be developing between them."

"I zink zat Claire, ze care home manager might have had somezing to do viz zis arrangement," Sofija suggests, "she vorked out ze seating plan. Sally has only been viv us for a couple of veeks und is only likely to be here for maybe a veek or two more, because she is a lot steadier on her legs zan she voz ven she first came here. George haz been here longer zan I haff been vorking here. Although he is alvays pleasant und quiet, and pretty vell knows everyvun zat goes on in ze care home, he keeps himself to himself und isn't close to anyvun, it is nice to see zat he is getting to know Sally but vot vill happen ven she leaves us?"

'Well, they both live in the same village, Sally can't live too far away, they could still go out on dates or meet each other for coffee."

"Vell, I hope so," Sofija says, "George seems to have grieved for his late vife for much too long."

xXx

Elsie has a packed lunch that the care home kitchen had made for her early in the morning, just a little salad and grated cheese. She has her water bottle to sip from so she really didn't need to shop for anything. She looks around the food hall for her friends, thinking that they must've gone to the loo by now and would be shopping for lunch somewhere.

Elsie did a circuit of the outside of the complex first, both to get her bearings and to get some fresh air, knowing from previous experience that most of these places had an external circuit accessible by wheeled vehicles be they baby buggies or wheelchairs. Once she did a circuit, which was very pleasant for an autumn day in October, she decides to enter the food hall. Mind you, she was well wrapped up, being mostly immobile and using an electrical vehicle, she wasn't able to generate body heat by burning calories so she would quickly get cold if she wasn't careful. Through the window she couldn't see the girls in the seating area so assumed they were still getting their food. She didn't carry a watch so she knew that it would be useful to be with someone from the bus so she'd know when to go back, but was confident with the generally reliable Sofija being on the bus that they would never leave her behind.

As she reached the automatic doors, they opened up before she reached them and the tall man George Bryant emerged with the new girl, Sally Benstead.

Elsie knew George and knew quite a bit about him and his history. After all, he was often the main subject of gossip among the girls. Men were always in short supply at the care home and most who came to the residences above and around the care home element were usually married. George was a widower living on his own who didn't seem to want to change his situation at all, yet was always approachable and pleasant company who was in the same happy state whether alone or in company, Elsie had observed. She was aware that the group, that she would usually attach to if they were on the same trip, had agreed between them that the only girl in the group who had any chance with George was Ada, a widow who desperately missed being in a relationship; Rosemary had always been a spinster and simply didn't want a romantic relationship; while Dot had long ago declared that George was not her type.

Elsie really didn't know Sally Benstead at all. She heard that she was staying in one of the rented upstairs flats that was due to be sold in the spring, so her time at the care home was limited. Sally only came down in to the ground floor for her three meals a day and for the morning physio sessions, after which she tended to go back to her room. Now she was sitting next to George on the bus, that much Elsie could clearly see from her seat at the back of the bus, and now they were walking around the motorway service station, almost certainly after they had dined together.

This was an interesting development, Elsie thought, and certainly more interesting than listening to the girls' usual overly repeated gossip.

Elsie determined that she could eat her packed lunch on the bus on the last leg of the journey, she had her water bottle and drinking straw, it wasn't that cold out ... so she decided she would do the circuit again and follow the newly-formed couple at a discrete distance instead. So that is exactly what she did.

Doreen and Oscar had their meal quietly away from the rest, with Doreen insisting he take his Dementia-Away tablet, which was part of several daily medications he was obliged to take.

xXx

The 'girls', as Elsie calls them, had been watching George and Sally until the couple got up, disposed of their cups and empty food wrappings and walked towards the exit doors together.

"Sorry, Ada." Dot was the first to comment, "but you've lost this round, it looks like the new girl has him wrapped around her li'l finger. I can guarantee they'll be in one room swapping spit straight after dinner tonight, mark my words."

"That's disgusting, Dot," Rosemary chimes in with her two-penny-worth, "That Gorge is almost as old as I am and she's well, she must be twenty years younger than he is, it would be like cradle snatching."

"No, Rose, looks are deceiving, I looked at her chart in physio therapy," Dot retorted, "she was born in 1955 so she's 67 and can't be that much younger than George."

"Damn, she's five years younger than me," Ada groans, "and George has never even looked at me, yet he's cosying up to this woman as if he's known her for years. I can't look round without making it obvious, Dot, are they going back to the bus early?"

"No, the bus'll be locked up, The Right Honourable Deputy Speaker is chatting up the nurse," Dot chuckles, "just wait until I tell his wife that her Monty might end up as someone else's."

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