Ashford 2017
The peeling paint and empty shop fronts. The verandas, wide
and still fighting the fierce sun.
But there is no-one. The bustle, the busyness, the activity
has drifted away, the buildings - memorials to past glories – the days when the
local stores kept what you needed but not much more. The things that kept you
going from day to day when you would shop often for the ice box couldn’t keep
things for too long. The butcher with his daily carcasses, meat wrapped for the
evening meal. And veggies, well they came when they came. Seasons. Fruit when
it was ripe, beans when they were full and green and filled the billy can.
The local mechanic could fix almost anything – the car the
bike, the diesel, the water pump all could be pulled apart and put back
together for another day. But he is gone now, retired or given up. A sparkling
new SUV cruises past, its electronics guiding everything, service just a short
hour to the nearest big town.
Distance and time blended – easy to get the groceries once a
week now and the big freezer works just fine pulling power from the wires
stretching vast distances from the steaming power station or wind farm or from
the blue glinting roof. The local power station and the coal mine which fed it
closed years ago. People moved away. Even the pub isn’t open on a Saturday
afternoon anymore. And the theatre – the shows which packed the place now
closed. There wasn’t the TV or internet then.
Still, it remains neat and tidy. No litter, no graffiti.
Just a few spider webs in the windows of the closed stores.
RG Barnes