Copyright Oggbashan March 2003 The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
This is a work of fiction. The events described here are imaginary; the settings and characters are fictitious and are not intended to represent specific places or living persons.
File: practice Final Version b 5 March 2003
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INTRODUCTION
I was standing in the middle of a large sitting room in Pimlico wearing nothing but my best underpants. I was facing an old fashioned hospital bed that had been pulled to the middle of the room. Stood around it were four young women dressed in student nurse uniforms from the 1950s, with calf length hems, black stockings, starched aprons, headdresses and cuffs.
At that moment I knew that I had been set up and I was about to lose my bet. The attitude of the four women convinced me. They knew I had no chance of winning. How had I got myself into this?
CHAPTER 1 DOVER
It started just after I had taken some friends across to France. They were a group who were to play at a club in a Parisian suburb for a few nights. Their van had broken down but they had been able to arrange to be picked up in Calais. I took them from Pimlico across to Calais and met the French van.
I had agreed to take my friends mainly because they paid me but also because I wanted to take my new vehicle a run. I had recently bought it from my brother who was getting married. It was a customised van that he had modified to be a passion wagon. He had fitted it out beautifully and I had coveted it for months. He had only just completed the conversion when he met his future wife. Now he didn't really need it so I bought it for a bargain price and a promise to help them decorate their new home.
I had enjoyed the run to Dover and the ferry trip to France but now it was the early hours of Sunday morning and I had to drive back to London through a torrential downpour. I left Dover's Eastern Docks through the town because the usual route was blocked by an accident. I was approaching the roundabout that leads to the hill out of Dover towards the A2 when I saw four burdened figures trudging along. As I looked I realised that the four were not only female, they were young women and very wet. Even if they were just going to the top of the hill they might appreciate a lift. I stopped just ahead of them, turned on the inside light, and leaned across to lower the nearside window. A face appeared.
"Want a lift?" I asked.
"Yes, please!" was the instant reply.
"Hop in, then."
Four girls climbed in. Three spread across the fitted seating and one sat beside me in front. I noticed that all had their hair plastered flat on their heads. I pointed to the back of the van.
"You'll find dry towels under the washbasin in the toilet. You look as if you need them."
"Yes, please."
The towels were grabbed and there was furious drying of hair. I kept the van stationary with the heating on full.
"Where are you going?" I asked the girl beside me.
"London."
"London? In this weather?"
"Yes. We are on duty noon tomorrow or rather today. We went to France for the day but missed our ferry and then the train. We had to hitch and we were going to start at the top of the hill. How far are you going?"
"I'm going back to London. I've just taken some friends to France, now I'm going back home. Where are you going in London? It's a big place."
"Pimlico" answered a voice from the back seat.
"Then, ladies, you are in luck. I'm going to Pimlico too."
I turned off the inside light and started up the hill. The van pulled away smoothly as if the weight of four extra people was not worth noticing. My old car would have had trouble doing a hill start with five on board.
I was curious. Four girls living in Pimlico who had to be "on duty" in the morning. I made a guess.
"Are you nurses?" I asked.
"Yes," said the girl beside me. "We work at (name omitted) Hospital."
"You do? And you live in Pimlico? Were you there as student nurses?"
"Yes" was the puzzled reply from my side.
I made a big jump in my thinking.
"Does your flat have a practice bed in the main room?"
There was a silence for several seconds. Then a voice from behind spoke.
"How did you know? We don't know you, do we?"
"No. But the elder brother of one of my friends was engaged to a student nurse at your hospital. They are married now with a family but he told me about the practice bed."
"What did he tell you?" The voice sounded wary and suspicious.
"Just that it was a prominent feature of the main living room and the student nurses used to use it to practise making beds properly. Apparently it has been there through many generations of student nurses. That's all I know."
I detected some relief around me. What didn't I know about that bed? There was silence as I turned at the top of the hill and headed towards London. I turned the headlights on full and increased speed. There were no other vehicles around but I kept the speed down to a steady sixty miles an hour (100kph). Even at that speed it was possible to talk without shouting because of the sound insulation my brother had built into the conversion.
We talked in generalities as I drove. I learned that they were all qualified nurses and that soon they would be splitting up in a couple of months to find their own places in London. Their flat would be passed on to a new intake of student nurses in September. I was beginning to separate them by their voices. I couldn't see much of them because I had to concentrate on my driving. I didn't even know their names and I hadn't mentioned mine.
CHAPTER 2 MOTORWAY SERVICES
The driving rain made the wipers work hard and I had to watch out for pools of standing water. My eyes were getting tired so I suggested that we stopped at the service area on the M2. There was a whispered discussion before they agreed. The woman beside me added:
"We can't afford to buy anything there because we had to pay an extra fare to get back from France. We're cleaned out until pay day next Friday."
"In that case, ladies, allow me to offer to buy you a warm drink at least."
I was feeling cash rich because my friends had paid me well for running them to Dover. I could afford to buy a few drinks at least.
That caused another whispered consultation before they accepted.
I pulled into the service area and we got out under my large golf umbrella. As we entered the foyer I had my first real look at the four of them. To be fair, they weren't looking their best. They were bundles of damp clothing, their hair had been hastily dried and their make-up was showing signs of wear and heavy rain. They rushed into the Ladies room like frightened rabbits bolting for their burrow.
While I waited I searched my wallet. As I thought I had some two for one vouchers for the burger bar. With those and the cash from my friends I could treat them all to a burger meal with their drinks.