It’s not without a touch of trepidation that I open a party invitation. A requirement for themed ‘fancy dress’, for example, may have been conceived by its author as a spiffing idea to pep things up (and it usually does, in the end) but the thought of it can intimidate people who are shy, introverted, imaginatively challenged or just plain lazy. One's flutter of excitement at the prospect of a fun evening is likely to be followed by a groan of faux despair on contemplating the stipulations,
Thus did the
invitation to an upcoming family do induce in me a tiny touch of anxiety.
There was to be a theme: sparkles. Not too onerous, I thought, but a challenge,
nonetheless. Still, it was weeks away and the effort required to come up with
an idea could be spread over the intervening period. There would be plenty of
time to think about it and seek inspiration. In other words, I could procrastinate.
Nevertheless,
the nagging need to conclude the matter kept popping up. One day, I even found
myself looking into the window of a shop I had never taken notice of previously,
Pandora, an emporium devoted entirely to sparkly things. It was not a
helpful experience. In fact, it led me down the path of pedantry all too
quickly, where I obsessed over the difference between sparkle, twinkle, glitter
and outright bling. It got more complex when I began to explore the grammatical
niceties differentiating sparkly from sparkling, etc. Whatever. Taking note of Pandora’s
price tags, I decided a better option was to trawl the charity shops for things
that glister (but are not gold).
Meanwhile,
we had a week away from Devon. My Other Half had some business up north, so I
tagged along to share the driving and keep her company (though the latter was
notional, as she was too busy even to notice). The trip would mean spending a
few days in the faded coastal resort town of Southport, where I knew there
would be an abundance of opportunities to resolve my sparkle dilemma. In its
heyday, Southport’s Lord Street was lined with jewellers’ shops, many of which
remain, though in reduced circumstances. More to point is the large number of
charity shops that are stocked with the goods of the now deceased but formerly
well-off retirees who retreated there from Manchester and Liverpool.
I set about
my search with high expectations but, after a good deal of diversion into
mid-century furniture and glassware, I realised that I was getting nowhere. In
conversation with a stallholder, I was directed to a small shop in a Victorian
arcade. “He might have something suitable”, she said.
He was on
the phone when I walked in and I detected a hint of annoyance in the tone of
his, “Anyway, I’ve got to go”. Then he put his phone down and said to me,
“You’re in the wrong shop”. Given that the main display in front of me was a collection
of fascinators (for weddings), I assumed he was kidding and replied, “It looks
like it, but…”. “No, you’re in the wrong shop”, he said, sternly. “You want the
one next door”. “But you don’t know what I’m looking for”, I said. “You’re in
the wrong shop!”, he repeated. “Look, I said, you sell sparkly things, right?”
“Yes, but…”. He remained convinced that he was right; so, to prove him wrong, I
explained my dilemma. He softened, but only to the extent that he recommended a
few other places, so keen was he to get me off the premises.
I left him,
no doubt, to resume his phone call then, jaded and weary, I tacked off to the Bottle
& Tap, an idiosyncratic little dive where I knew I would get
satisfaction, albeit of a different kind. “Got any dry cider?”, I asked. “Sure”,
said the affable proprietor. “We have Hunt’s from Devon. Still or sparkling?”.