Angie's Diary | Online Stories & Articles

Angie's Diary | Online Stories & Articles

A Monologue - Of Memories

Posted by on Oct 17th, 2012 and filed under Flash Fiction, Short Story. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

 

Of Memories...

As electric toasters go, it was a classic. All Australian mined metal and made by Aussies in blue overalls somewhere near Glebe probably. Weren’t they the days? When Aussies made stuff for Aussies and played for the local footy team on Saturday. I can only wonder now what ever happened to my Aussie toaster. It was a Breville I think.

Orange seems like a poor description of the colour because after years of faithful service, and prompt and actuate popping, it had taken on more of an ochre tinge. Darker at the top of each side due to heat and the embedded residue of burnt toast crumbs. It was still shiny chrome on top, with its two orifices ready for the next two slices, however the wide black bakelite pusher that lowered the sliced bread did show the wear marks of a long and hard working life.

The clunk-cum-click sound it made when its work was done, sometimes perfectly, sometimes a little over done, was the wake up call for my old dog to wearily rise from her prone position and wait. The breakfast ritual always meant a crust or two for her, before she went back to her rest of the morning snooze. Unless I felt the urge for seconds.

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The electric cord was of the fashion at that time. A patterned black and white cotton covering, frayed near where it joined the toaster, and at the other end near the plug and  was surely likely to catch fire in the event of an electrical short – but in those days we didn’t worry so much about what could happen. We were much more content to just accept what did happen. Even if not a lot actually did.

Its two mouths on top were made for the time when bread was bread and needed slicing with a serrated bread knife, making a little dip at the end of the kitchen table over the years. Wide and welcoming of a thick and roughly cut slice of white bread that had been delivered that morning by the baker. He had a Ford if I remember correctly, but the milkman stayed true to tradition as he still had his horse and cart. 

One had to be quick to collect the bread in the morning as the little verandah of our house abutted the footpath. If the freshly baked half-loaf stayed in the one gallon can (which was nailed on the verandah post just below the letter box) for too long, kids passing on their way to school couldn’t resist pulling little out little lumps of fresh bread to supplement their breakfast. By nine o’clock, only the outer crust would be left. At least the noise of them running a stick along the corrugated iron of the verandah stopped by nine as well.

It could well have been a Pye in fact. A company in Victoria if my memory serves me well. They made the best radios my mother always said. 

I wish I knew what happened to my toaster. It just seems that it disappeared one day without me even noticing that it had gone. Well, I suppose I’ll just have to accept it and move on. It’s no use wondering and wishing about the past now.


 


Angie Recommends:
The-Bounty-Hunter-by-MF-Burbaughasap by Patricia E. GittTHE GHOST OF WHISPERING WILLOW



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2 Responses for “A Monologue - Of Memories”

  1. Jack Eason says:

    Those were the days Derek. :)

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Derek Haines

Derek Haines is an author of genre fiction, essays and poetry. His works range from historical fiction with Louis, to The Glothic Tales, a trilogy of science fiction farce, to dark contemporary romance, including One Last Love, Dead Men and For The Love Of Sam. His satirical essays and novellas such as My Take Away Vampire and An Uneducated View of Sex, Food and Politics then clearly fall into the tongue in cheek genre.

His passion for writing started with poetry before moving into essays and then later, genre fiction. Although his works cover a wide range of settings and genres, his writing style and voice communicate with, and engage readers through his characters, who are always less than perfect, yet have an endearing appeal.

Most of all, the stories told by Derek Haines are about people and their feelings, regrets, hopes and struggles with life, love and sometimes calamity. His characters never take the classic hero and heroine form Just ordinary people, but with extraordinary qualities that makes their story worth telling. With splashes of black humour and satire, his stories can develop from the simplistic to the complex and back again, leaving the reader to decide if it is time to laugh or cry. Or both.

Born in Australia, but now living in Switzerland with his wife and black cocker spaniel, his stories cross a wide geographical range but often draw from elements of his life and experiences in the two countries he calls home. From the rugged, dry and hot desert country of Australia and its crowded cities, to the cafés of Europe and the peaks of the Swiss Alps. The hustle and bustle of Sydney to the quiet life in the Swiss countryside.

When not writing, he is usually doing what he equally enjoys. Teaching English.

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