I don’t usually bother reading the leaflets
that get pushed through my door. Like most people I give them a cursory glance
before dropping them straight into the bin. There has to be a lesson in that for
all those pizza and burger places out there producing identical leaflets: Naked
ladies sell pizza, it’s a fact of life. Much as I like to think that I am an
intelligent, sophisticated individual, when it comes down to it I’m just an
arse-man with reading glasses. I’m not in the least bit attached to stock images
of four-cheese pizza and 2-litre bottles of Diet Coke, whereas I’ve been
collecting pictures of frolicking lesbians since I was 14. Do the maths, as they
say.
A different kind of leaflet dropped through the letterbox today. It was just
a small slip of paper with slightly fuzzy black and white print, the sort that
usually heralds the arrival of yet another UNBEATABLE CARPET SALE! or an
opportunity to make a pitiful amount of money working from home. I picked it up
and took it to the bin, which incidentally smells of apples since I started
using those scented bin-liners from Poundstretcher. They’re a bit of a con,
really. The instructions that came with them say: Line the bottom of
bin-liner with fresh apple peel (not included), then use as normal.
Anyway, so I was about to toss this leaflet when I gave it the customary
inspection. I am now quoting directly from the leaflet, which I have in front of
me:
Mr Habarra, African Psychic and Medium, Problem Solver and Blocker of
Eyes.
Also, fantastic discounts on room-sized remnants and shagpile roll-ends
now in stock!
Hold it, I made that last line up. I’m sorry, I can never resist a
curve-ball. The headline is a true one, though. Trust me, I copied it directly
from the leaflet. The text goes on to claim that the mysterious Mr Habarra, in
addition to blocking eyes, will also save your marriage, cure infertility,
sexual problems, kidney infections, and in a somewhat insidious statement,
‘return your loved ones,’ which does vaguely make me want to call them right
now, just to be sure they are where they should be.
Have you worked this out yet? It took me a few minutes, I have to say. But
then it’s not every day you get a leaflet from a witch doctor pushed through
your letterbox.
There is a sizeable African population where I live. In Nairobi. Sorry,
curve-ball again. This is Leeds I’m talking about. It shouldn’t be a big deal
really. After all, I can step outside my flat and buy just about any spice and
vegetable from every corner of the globe, although the fucking fish and chip
shop is only open for about twenty-minutes every other Tuesday. Still…a witch
doctor!
So I’m thinking of having my eyes blocked. No, really – I am cursed. A friend
of mine also believed his life was cursed. He was a football prodigy in school,
one of those Wayne Rooney types who are destined for fame and fortune from the
age of about seven. As soon as he left school he signed for Leeds United, which
is unfortunate but hardly a curse in itself. He played a handful of first-team
games before being unceremoniously transferred to Hull City. From there things
really went from bad to worse. He played for a succession of inglorious
lower-league clubs in the north, including Grimsby, Rotherham, Grumbly town and
a brief spell at Strangely Athletic, before vanishing into obscurity, or the
Scottish Premier League as it is sometimes known.
The football prodigy finally ended his playing career in some godforsaken
Danish fishing town, playing right-back for the local third-division side while
working as a herring-gutter. It wasn’t quite that bad but that’s about the state
of things as far as he was concerned. He still maintains that he was cursed from
an early stage of his career, perhaps given the evil eye by a rival for his
position at Leeds.
It certainly makes you think. My own literary path has pretty much
mirrored my friend’s football career, only I never even moved out of Leeds. It
is merely my ambition, my expectations which have slipped down the leagues. If I
started off being the literary equivalent of a dynamic new Chelsea striker, I
now reside on the subs bench for the local pub side, feeling faintly ridiculous
in shorts and a stripy shirt that bulges in the middle.
So I think I will pop over to see Mr Habarra, blocker of eyes, and see if
there’s anything he can do to lift the curse on my life. I’ll mention the
naked-lady-on-the-leaflet thing while I’m over there.