Chapter 6
This is Ciane’s renovacy.
The link to the story and the download is here:
https://2sim3.wordpress.com/other/container/
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I thought little Miss Don’t-Do-That had been pretty like, rude man, about my pad. Maybe she kind of had a point though. Perhaps I should try and make it look a bit more conventional. Now I’d seen inside her place, I could see why this might have been a bit of a shock.
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If my family could see me now, they’d have like, fifty fits, never mind one. Fifty each, probably.
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But I might find treasure. Hey man, it’s buried everywhere.
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I got home bushed. Dreamt of rain falling softly – and woke up to this! Better deal with it, or little Miss Don’t Do That really will have something to complain about.
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And it hasn’t done much for my Tree Of Life. Could be a Sign, that like, man, I really do have to change my groove. Could be time for a trip to the builders’ yard.
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Yup, that flood has just about done for all my works of art. I’m going to have to do something – and, man, I found some good stuff at the junk yard yesterday. Time to transform my palace.
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And whaddaya know? I got invited downstairs for a meal! Put my best clothes on, in honour of the occasion. Hey, man, she actually said sorry. And meant it. I’d have seen that burglar off anyway – no-one’s going to pick on others while I’m around and can stop it. The food was pretty cool too – all home-grown and organic. And we talked like real people.
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I washed up, she tidied up. I can tell when neat matters to people. But, like, I never saw the need to live dirty anyway. Being smelly is just so not cool.
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I went to the gym for a swim after a day of nailing down floorboards – tomorrow I’m staining them. After I’ve painted the walls. A real cool blue everywhere. And anyway, there she was, playing chess against a real person instead of her computer. Franco’s no mean player either, and she was doing good against him.
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“So how did you learn to do all this building stuff?”
I’d been invited to breakfast – I’d had to sleep out in the tent overnight while the paint and stain stopped smelling so much, but she’d been cool with that. And then offered me breakfast, seeing as I couldn’t really light a fire and cook it. No Camping, remember? But she’d said she wouldn’t tell about that one night outside.
She was talking to me like I was a real person. Fair enough – I could, like, open up a bit about myself.
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“I worked on a building site. For, like, four years. Learnt a lot. Grew some muscles too…now I use the gym, but back then it was , like, real weights I was lifting.” I wasn’t going to tell her too much about why I was working the sites, didn’t want to bore the lady, but a little wouldn’t hurt.
“So, like, what did you do after school?”
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“College. Accountancy.” She kinda drooped, like a flower with no water. Didn’t look like college-accountancy had done her any good. I waited to see if she, like, wanted to spill a few more beans into my listening ear, but she stopped there. So I changed the subject.
“When I’ve got my place finished, you want to come see it?”
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A bit more scavenging, and I reckoned I’d find what I needed to finish furnishing my little palace.
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“So what do you think, then?” I was, like, a bit worried. I mean, to me it looked really cool, all colour and life, but this lady had her own style too.
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“It’s amazing. Such a transformation.” She could see that my furniture was a bit, like, second-hand, but she was too kind to comment on that. This lady had manners as well as style – this visit, anyway.
“I love what you’ve done.”
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She smiled at me. “I like the window box too.”
“Hey, lady, I hoped you would. I put that there specially to like, please you, lighten your day a bit.” I think she blushed!
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Summer, and I laid some slabs in the shade (moved my garden plants too: they were so, like, not cool with the shade), and added a painting that looked – to me – like that little lady’s true personality. Found a chess table and a couple of old chairs and we’d sit in the shade and she started to teach me how to play chess. Autumn was warm too, so we carried on.
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She was like, way better than me! Sometimes almost like a machine; but then I’d look at my painting and think: I’m sure that beautiful, romantic lady is inside you somewhere.
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I invited her up for breakfast – just to prove that I could do it! – and her too-sharp eyes spotted my certificates.
“You did an art degree? And got a first? And you play guitar to that level?”
“Well, yes, ma’am, I do.”
“Your family must have been so impressed.”
“Well, no ma’am, they weren’t.”
“So – if you can do that, this well, why the building site work?”
I was going to have to come clean.
“Lady, there was no way they wanted me to do art. And no way they were going to fund it. Construction’s well-paid, if you live cheap – and seasonal. That’s how I put myself through university.”
That pretty face of hers changed – lost that little mischievous sparkle. “Oh, I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have…”
“Hey, lady, I didn’t mind you asking. Like, you can say what you want to me. I grew a thick skin a long time ago.”
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By the time winter came, we were like, friends, y’know? If we hadn’t seen each other around for a couple of days, we’d check up on each other. Lady came upstairs to see me ‘cause she hadn’t heard my Briar Rose singing.
“Now I’ve got a place instead of a tent, I can paint in the winter. I can always sell my work. Someone’s always needing a bit of colour in their lives somewhere.”
Told you we felt at home with each other. She picked up my dirty plate – hey man, my muse was calling me, the plate can wait – and washed it up for me. And commented on my new windows – well, the old ones didn’t exactly keep out the cold.
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Then she sat and chatted for a bit, while I painted, talked about how she’d loved books rather than art, writing rather than painting. But she wasn’t, like, putting me down you know. I said she should write again – it’s winter, can’t go out, so go into your own world instead. Did I miss my tent? she asked. No, I said, though the cat lady had been fun to be round in a crazy kind of way. But I liked where I was now, and my new neighbour. And then I moved on to talking about painting in the spring, but the outside of the container this time: what colour did she think would look good? (Probably grey, I thought to myself).
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Well, I was wrong about the grey! Still don’t know why she like, creased up with laughter when I said did she want to look at some paint samples, but hey, she was laughing. And beautiful with it. That lady chose blue – and I cleared up the last of the railway from outside my palace. Even put a new door on.
This was working okay, this shared space. We even started talking through what to do with the garden next, now that it was spring.
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And then we came back from town together one day and we found that a third – and very ugly – container had appeared.
“Hey, Blue, I’m sorry about this. Mayor’s orders. We did move your plants rather than just ripping them out…”
I knew these guys. They were okay. But what was all this about?
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That little lady didn’t look too happy either, and I couldn’t blame her.