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    northie
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

Never Too Late To Change - 2. Expectations

Eric and Andy meet ...

Andy Harper stood in the chilled food aisle of the local supermarket, trying to make up his mind. He thought it would be a friendly gesture to take Eric something to eat when he visited. He'd started off by wondering whether he should buy a selection of fresh stuff, so he could prepare something while he was at the cottage. Of course, he hadn't met his first client yet, so he'd have to guess what the old man would like. His food preferences weren't one of the things listed in his file. Andy had thought of several things which could be possibilities.

In the end, though, he'd decided in favour of convenience, which was why he was standing in front of a refrigerated display of ready meals. Everybody liked a curry. Didn't they? Not that he'd ever bought one ready made. Andy decided on chicken korma with rice. Easy to deal with, and not too spicy. Good choice, he thought.


As he walked out of the town centre towards Eric's address, Andy considered what to do and say when he met the old man. His cottage was in a part of the town he didn't know very well, and he had to keep on looking at his phone for directions. He was more than a little nervous, and he wished he'd paid more attention to his training. A good first impression was important, but he wasn't sure how to achieve it.

When he reached his destination, Andy looked in consternation at the semi-derelict condition of the cottage. The whole area was unlike his part of town – he was used to the prosperous, large houses and their accompanying well-tended gardens. His professional hackles rose as he surveyed the over-grown mess of grass, brambles and bushes that was the garden in front of him.. Hmm... he could quite easily do something to make it look presentable again. That would be one topic of conversation to start with.

Andy strode up the footpath and rang the doorbell.


Eric hadn't been able to settle all morning, even though he knew the appointment with Andy wasn't until two o'clock. He was just too full of anticipation and nerves. He hadn't finished his lunchtime sandwich because of it – it had tasted like he was eating sawdust.

The sound of heavy boots on the path outside gave him some warning. Then, the chimes of the doorbell, which still made him jump. Finally.

Eric opened the front door to greet his visitor. A smiling young man was standing on the doorstep.

“Hi there, Mr Whitehouse. I'm Andy Harper. From A Helping Hand? Pleased to meet you. … Err … I couldn't help noticing the state of your garden on the way in. Needs some work, doesn't it?”

Eric frowned in annoyance. He knew the garden had gone wild, but he was long past being able to maintain it. The two lads who'd helped in the past, were at university now. He let his visitor in without saying anything in return.


Andy stood and gazed around the living room. He took in its chaotic state, which was quite unlike anything he'd seen before. And it didn't look particularly clean. His eyes widened, and he breathed in through his nose, slowly. Then he looked for somewhere to sit.

“Is it OK if I move the stuff off here? It would be better if we're both comfortable while we have our chat.” Andy pointed at an armchair which was almost submerged in a sea of junk mail and flyers. The only other chair was obviously his client's

Eric grunted in reply. So far, the visit wasn't going as he'd hoped. He'd seen the look on the young man's face as he'd first come in. Bloody cheek. He wasn't here to be judged – he did the best he could. Eric went into the kitchen to make some tea while his visitor stayed in the living room. Probably poking around and being nosy.

Andy felt himself shivering. It was surprisingly cold and damp in the cottage. When he first arrived, it hadn't been too noticeable. But now he was sitting still, he really felt it. He even thought about putting his jacket back on. It didn't appear to bother the old man, though.

“Shall I turn the heating up a bit for you, Eric? Sorry. Is it OK to call you by your first name? Mr Whitehouse seems very formal.”

Eric only heard the second question over the sound of the kettle boiling. He stuck his head round the kitchen door and nodded. “Yes, I don't mind being called by my first name.” Then he turned back, returning to the job of making the tea.

Andy waited a moment, then repeated his first question. “About the heating, Eric? It is chilly in here. Is that the control knob over there?”

Not getting a reply, he got up and headed over to the central heating controller on the wall. It wasn't on. Oh … He found that strange, given how cold a day it was. Andy looked around for any other heat source. The only thing he could see was an ancient, one bar, radiant electric fire. That didn't look safe, never mind effective.

Eric had finished making the tea, and slowly brought the cups in, one by one. Andy was still standing next to the controller knob.

The old man noticed and grunted. “I don't have the heating on during the day – it costs too much. If you're cold, I suggest you wear something warmer the next time you come.”


If there was to be a next time. Despite his resolution of the day before, Eric was losing his patience. He sat down with his tea and looked at his visitor. He saw a young man – late twenties, perhaps? Andy was quite attractive, dressed in his jeans, work boots, and a light cotton sweater.

Hnh .. No wonder he was bloody cold.

Eric tried to see anything which marked out the young man as being gay. Not that he had any real experience to go on. Neat, trimmed beard? Earring? What had he read about somewhere? … Gay… dar? Well, he didn't think his had ever existed. As for how Andy looked and dressed, he imagined many young men were exactly the same.


Andy was starting to feel uncomfortable. This wasn't going how he'd imagined it would. Where was the friendly opening chat? They'd got on OK when he'd phoned. He didn't want to get down to business straight away. The course had emphasised the importance of getting to know their clients as people. He looked up. Eric was sitting huddled round his cup of tea, trying to draw warmth from it. Andy noticed how many layers of clothing the older man appeared to be wearing. All worn, frayed, and shapeless.

He opened his mouth and started talking to fill the growing silence. “Maybe you're wondering why I'm doing this? Well, …”

He chattered on nervously for a few minutes, until he noticed that the old man had turned the TV back on. Andy rapidly changed the subject to food – everybody was interested in food.

“I was passing the supermarket on my way here, so I took the opportunity to bring something with me for your tea tonight. Oh, and I picked these up as well. I thought you'd find them helpful, Eric.”


Eric watched as Andy produced a handful of takeout menus – bright, gaudy, and almost certainly expensive.

“I don't hold with spicy food; it gives me the shits.”

“Oh … OK … There's a couple of pizza delivery places as well …”

Eric sighed in exasperation. “And how much would I have to spend for the food to be delivered?”

Andy didn't know. He looked at the Chinese menu. “You'd have to spend a minimum of ten pounds for delivery.”

Eric's eyebrows shot up. “That's my food budget for three days or thereabouts.”

Andy gulped. He and his fiancé thought nothing of ordering food in. He found the plastic carrier bag, fished out the curry and gave it to Eric.

“This is what I've got you. It's very easy to prepare, and it's only a little spicy. I hope you enjoy it.”

Eric looked at it suspiciously. “How much do I owe you?”

Andy smiled at him. “It's fine. Think of it as my treat.”

Eric insisted on paying the three-fifty. “I'm not made of money, but I have my pride.” Holding the pack in his hand, he looked at it doubtfully. “What am I meant to do with it?”

“You just need to heat it through. The instructions are on the back of the packaging.”

Eric peered at the closely-typed print, knowing that he wouldn't be able to read it. He only had a pair of cheap, non-prescription reading glasses which were no longer good enough.

“Well, young man, you'd better tell me what they are. My eyes aren't what they used to be. Better still, write them down.”

Andy got up, and found a piece of paper and a pencil amongst the clutter. He copied out the instructions, making sure he wrote in large, clear letters.


When he'd sat down again, Andy smiled again at the old man, and launched into what he was sure would be his pièce de résistance. He thought it would help Eric greatly, especially as the weather was bad, and he knew the old man didn't have his own transport.

“If you like, Eric, I'll set you up an online account with the local supermarket. They'll deliver, and I'm sure you'll find it useful. The site's very easy to use.”

Eric gawped at him in disbelief, and cackled humourlessly. It would be laughable if it wasn't so patronising. Had the young man bothered to find out anything about him as his client? He knew about 'online ordering', just about.

“Look around you, laddie. What don't you see?”

Andy flushed with embarrassment. He looked carefully at the living room and its contents. The TV looked to be at least fifteen years old, there was no DVD player, no sound system. The only phone he could see was for the landline, and it looked to be the same vintage as the TV.

With a sinking feeling, he realised there was no computer, no laptop, no tablet, in fact, nothing remotely electronic. Shit. Should he have noticed when he first came in? Probably … He'd been too busy looking at the junk. Stupid, stupid, stupid. He'd just made a complete idiot of himself.

He gulped again, then found his voice. “Mr Whitehouse, err … Eric, I'm really sorry. It looks like I've been making some assumptions I shouldn't have. It won't happen again. Perhaps we'd better leave it there for today? I'll report back to Helping Hand as I'm sure you will.”

Andy tried to smile brightly as he shook Eric's hand. “It's been great to meet you.”

Underneath, there was a thought he'd made rather a mess of the whole thing. They hadn't even got onto what he might do for the old man. Well, it was his first go. He'd do better next time.


Eric closed the front door, and wearily made his way back to the living room. The telly was still talking to itself in the background. He sat back down in his chair, feeling numb. All his hopes of yesterday in tatters. He'd been daft to make such a thing out of it.

All because one self-centred, patronising do-gooder who thought his world was everyone else's.

Eric sighed – he'd better contact the charity in the morning, and request a change. He'd accept anybody they offered instead. Eric imagined to ask for another gay man was out of the question. And, anyway, the first one hadn't been any help.

Was part of it his fault? He'd had so little practice talking to other people, being polite and hospitable. Making allowances. Although the young man hadn't exactly helped with his 'I know better' attitude. That first remark of his still grated.

He sat for quite some time, staring into the middle distance, lost in so many gloomy thoughts. The winter light faded until he was sitting in the near dark. Finally, his stomach demanded attention, rumbling loudly. Eric lurched back into the present. He hadn't gone shopping in the morning. There wasn't any food … It was stupid of him, but he hadn't dared go out, just in case something made him late. Fat lot of good that did him

Then he remembered the pack of processed gunk the lad had left behind. Better than nothing if he wanted some supper. There was no way he could afford to go to the pub again, not after what he'd coughed up earlier.


Eric got up and shuffled into the kitchen, clutching the pack and the written instructions. Once the oven had warmed up, he bent down slowly, and carefully placed the pre-filled tray inside. He looked around for something to keep him busy while it cooked. If he went back to the living room to wait, he'd only start drowning again in his own misery and self-pity. One ruined day wasn't worth it, or so he tried to tell himself. But in the end, he knew that wouldn't stop him from brooding.

Washing up. It always needed doing. Eric purposefully kept his mind on the job in hand, cleaning, and carefully handling every item. He'd lost enough things to breakages over the past few months.

Done. Everything was stacked neatly. He dried his hands. Was the food ready?

Eric bent down as far as he could to open the oven door, and reached in. He didn't have a proper oven glove, just an old cloth. It wasn't very good. Somehow, he managed to grab hold of the filled tray, then clumsily tried to remove it. His hands hadn't been good all day and they chose that particular moment to go on strike.

The container tipped up, the thin covering film peeling away from the tray, but he couldn't make his hands move. Horrified, Eric watched as the contents spilled out on the floor in slow motion – the chicken in its brightly coloured sauce, and the separate portion of rice. He finally managed to save the remnants of the rice and a dribble of the sauce. Everything else was lost; he couldn't bend or stretch that far, now it was on the floor.

That was the final straw …

Everything that was wrong about his life suddenly overwhelmed him – the silence, loneliness, fear, anger, rage even. Eric propped himself up on the counter top, and helplessly cried slow, bitter tears.

With thanks to my editor and beta readers
Please leave a comment if anything moved you.
There is now a story topic. Feel free to visit and rant, comment, discuss ... 
 
Copyright © 2018 northie; All Rights Reserved.
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 
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37 minutes ago, Freerider said:

Eric behaves as a first class arrogant *sshole. Someone is spending his time to try to get to know him and if possible help him.

Eric is doing nothing to make this easier for Andy. I am thinking the fact that he is lonely is entirely his own fault.

Eric is someone who has lacked proper social interaction for so long, he certainly comes across as surly and unwelcoming. Maybe this is only on the surface? Andy doesn't help the situation though with a preconceived solution for what he thinks are Eric's problems. Thanks for your comment.  :)

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I've been meaning to get back to this story again for a while now and reading @Timothy M.'s excellent review this morning was an timely reminder. Of course, I had to read the first chapter again. I think this was a steep learning curve for Andy. A curry probably wasn't the best idea even in England where I know it's very popular and he walked right into it with the computer.

 

I was working at a house a few years ago that belonged to an elderly couple. They just sat and watched TV for most of the day and there was no sign of any technology. They were way out in the middle of nowhere, without a car, no public transport, and the nearest store unreachable on foot, even for a young person. They relied entirely on friends to take them food shopping once a week. A few months later I was nearby and decided to check on them to see if they were okay. They thought it was odd that I should pop in, after all, we weren't friends, but they were very welcoming and thought it was kind of me to think of them.

 

"How do you manage, being so isolated?" I said. "Doesn't it bother you?"

 

"Well, we have everything we need online," she replied, and she opened up an old cabinet in the corner to reveal a fairly modern desktop PC, complete with speakers and printer. "We may be old but we're not from the stone age!"

 

True story. You can't judge a book by its cover.

Sorry not all my comments are this long or all about me. :P

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On 3/10/2018 at 11:14 AM, Freerider said:

Eric behaves as a first class arrogant *sshole.

As Eric is more like me in many ways, I could identify with him and his perception of Andy as condescending. Neither of them know the other well enough to understand how badly they’ve misinterpreted each other's motivations and intentions. But like Andy, I’ve stuck my foot in my mouth many, many times.

I pondered to my mother’s sister about the inheritability of severe memory issues after the three deceased oldest sisters suffered from those end-of-life problems. The Aunt is the fourth oldest of five sisters. She connected the (unintentional) dots and was not happy to have that pointed out.
:–(

Edited by droughtquake
12 hours ago, droughtquake said:

As Eric is more like me in many ways, I could identify with him and his perception of Andy as condescending. Neither of them know the other well enough to understand how badly they’ve misinterpreted each other's motivations and intentions. But like Andy, I’ve stuck my foot in my mouth many, many times.

I pondered to my mother’s sister about the inheritability of severe memory issues after the three deceased oldest sisters suffered from those end-of-life problems. The Aunt is the fourth oldest of five sisters. She connected the (unintentional) dots and was not happy to have that pointed out.
:–(

So you are telling me that the funny, kindhearted man we know on this site does not exist in the real world? I don't believe that. You seem to have respect and compassion for everybody...and that is not like Eric at all.

Even though the conversation with your aunt may not have been your brightest moment, I am sure there was no ill intent.

But Eric may still surprise us... or not and he is just an *sshole :P

 

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8 minutes ago, Freerider said:

So you are telling me that the funny, kindhearted man we know on this site does not exist in the real world? I don't believe that. You seem to have respect and compassion for everybody...and that is not like Eric at all.

I try to be respectful and compassionate, but fall far short of my goals too often. It’s easier to come across as a nicer person online because you have more time to think things through than is possible in person. And here you can edit to correct your faux pas…
;–)

11 minutes ago, Freerider said:

Even though the conversation with your aunt may not have been your brightest moment, I am sure there was no ill intent.

Definitely no ill intent. She is my favorite Aunt! But it was certainly ill-considered.

12 minutes ago, Freerider said:

But Eric may still surprise us... or not and he is just an *sshole :P

*ssholes can be wonderful. Being versatile, I enjoy both aspects of *ssholes. But Eric doesn’t seem to have explored any of that…
;–)

Andy and Eric didn’t get off to a good start, I would like to think that they give each other a chance, and I think that Andy needs to ask Eric what he needs help with, even though it’s obvious that he cannot cope on his own, It would seem that Eric has been living a bit like a hermit the last few years as his health has deteriorated. The aged pension in England is very low, so many older folk are living in poverty as there aren’t any real benefits, which it seems is the same in America. 

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