Mister
Husband almost had a rock star moment; as in died before his time in unusual
rock star like circumstances. He was
almost killed by an electric guitar. Let
me explain. In our old house we had
those handy built in wardrobes. I think
they are great inventions. Nice and
tidy, nothing sticking out for you to crack your elbow or ankle off of as you
walk past. Mister Husband is not so
fond. He prefers the more bulky, hulking
wardrobes that take up space in your bedroom.
We’re compromising at the moment and we don’t have either in our house. What
we use is one of those cloth jobs from Argos, with the flap down the front to
hide and protect your little designer numbers.
Designer numbers from Penney’s that is.
I am a walking talking advertisement for Penney’s. Even the kids are advertising
noticeboards. If they are wearing
something that does not have a Penney’s tag on it, it means it was a birthday
or Christmas present. Penney’s
rocks! But back to Mister Husband’s obituary. The Argos
wardrobe was doing its job very nicely, thank you very much. It went above and
beyond the call of its humble duty one snowy winter when I needed to escape
from a screaming Screecher Creature before I did untold harm. I sought refuge in the bedroom but my
tormentor was closing in so I had to act quickly. I stood underneath the cloth cover on the
front of the wardrobe. My massively swollen pregnant belly and feet
(also massively swollen) were impossible to hide but I chanced it all the
same. I held my breath and the roaring
child paused in his noise making for the two seconds it took him to stick his
head round the bedroom door to see if I was in there. How he didn’t put two and two together at the
sight of the pregnant shoe wearing wardrobe, I’ll never know. But I reckon his tender years had something
to do with it. Satisfied I wasn’t in the
bedroom, he made good on his exit. The
roaring moved down the hallway and towards the direction of the kitchen but I
stayed put. I think I came out of hiding
the following morning. I bonded with
that cloth wardrobe then. I gazed fondly
at it once or twice after and whispered, “Remember the time I hid under
there. When you offered me shelter? I won’t forget that, I promise you.” So a year or so later the wardrobe was
starting to look slightly worse for wear.
There was a definite tilt to the left and the top was so laden down with
stuff (electric guitar, a boxed up GHD with a half-pound of dust resting on top,
several trouser belts, discarded clothes hangers, a photo album or two, even a pair
of shoes!) I don’t know how it stayed upright for as long as it did. Then one day a metal pole snapped and
everything was held up by the wall of the house. Getting clothes out and indeed hanging them
back up again required expertise known only to those who make safe explosive
devices. We were getting good at it,
Mister Husband and I. It was obviously
working because more stuff was being added on a weekly basis. I felt guilty and remembered my forgotten
promise to keep it safe. Mister Husband
used to look at it and say “that wardrobe looks like shite. I must fix it someday.” Someday never came and the poor wardrobe gave
up. It literally buckled under the
weight of its load and showed Janet Jackson and of late, Madonna, what a real
wardrobe malfunction is all about. I
wasn’t there to see it happen, but I imagine there were a couple of loud Titanic
like creaks followed by a groan as the last of the metal supports snapped and
it tilted forward one last time and collapsed onto the bed. Mister Husbands side of the bed. Had he been in it, the electric guitar might
have sent him to rock star heaven. At
the very least, the cuts from the shattered lamp on the bedside locker would
have required a stitch or two. The wardrobe that had served us so well for 20 months
lay in a crumpled accordion pile on the ground, clothes tangled and knotted
around each other, my dresses getting it on with Mister Husbands shirts and
trousers. Screecher Creature No. 4 and I
stood looking at the mess. My mouth was
halfway through an “oh, fuuuu…….” and Screecher Creature No. 4’s was forming a
simple “oohhhhhhh.” He kept looking at
me for an explanation. I just shrugged,
grabbed the hoover and put my trusty friend, the one that hid me from a crying
child all those months ago, into the bin.
I am nothing if not fair weathered.
You should see our new wardrobes now.
OMG if I may say so on Mister Husband’s behalf. Lovely floor to ceiling shelves with hanging space
and little squares where those storage boxes from Penney’s’ (€4 a pop!) fit so
well. My very own slide robes without
the sliding. There’s not a bit of space
on top to store anything. I might be
able to get a magazine up there but I doubt I would be able to get it back out
again. The electric guitar? None the worse for its adventure but it’s on
the stairway to heaven now. In other
words, resting on the landing. Where it
can’t hurt anyone. Either by falling on
them or by being played. But I didn’t
say that, ok?
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