The road to Mizen head
We're dependant on the network's reach.
It's been a while, a week, or more, or less. My head's been killing me and my shoulders ache in synch. I got a signal outside, he says. How are ya? OK, I say and pause. Continue: moody, up and down like usual.
He says I need a break. I know, I say. I've got one coming up in August.
What are my plans, he wants to know. I stretch out on the sofa and listen to his footsteps and the wind blowing as he walks the road to Mizen head. Any further out West and he'd be in Americay.
Marseille, 'cause I like harbours, I proclaim, or maybe Nice, the flights are cheaper. I don't know and I've no money either. It's tough on your own, I confess.
That's life, baby.
I remember Mizen head and the journey home -- how that man and I listened to the radio as they took Diana to Westminster Abbey. That was the end of that, the golden girl and our tryst laid to rest in one sad week.
Take a train, he says, like he's read my mind. Like he always does. ("Why don't you move to Amsterdam?") I might just do that. Take a train. Travel.
There's no train to Mizen head.