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    Marty
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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. 

The Charmed Life Of Danny Murphy - 5. Chapter 5

Chapter Warnings: None.
Danny and his new friends decide to go over the top.

The Arts Tower had only been opened in the previous year. It was a twenty story building just across the road from the Students' Union building, to one side, and slightly behind, the old red-brick university buildings where we were doing our Integrated Biology course. It is often said that Sheffield was modelled after Rome, having been built on seven hills. And, since the university was near the top of one of those hills, the Arts Tower could be seen from almost anywhere in the city.

It had stairs to all the floors, as well as a high speed lift system. But you might have to wait a long time for that lift to actually arrive at the floor where you were standing, and then you might find it was going in the opposite direction you wanted when it did finally arrive. So it also had what was known as a paternoster lift system, which basically consisted of a chain of open carriages, each just large enough for two people, that moved in a loop up and down the building without stopping. The cars travelled slowly so that passengers could step on or off at any floor they liked. There were two entrances side by side on each floor, one with carriages moving slowly upwards, and one with them moving downwards. It had apparently been given the name paternoster since the carriages could be thought of as being similar to the individual beads on a set of rosary beads.

When I had been in Sheffield for my interview the previous February it had been one of the things that the university had seemed keen that I should take a look at, even though I had applied to study Botany and wouldn't actually be using the Arts Tower. I'd even travelled up and down a few flights on the paternoster.

"I've already seen it. When I came up for interview at the beginning of the year" I said.

A few of the others said they had too.

"Yes, but have you gone over the top on it yet?" asked Nick.

"Over the top? What do you mean?"

"Have you stayed in it when it gets to the top floor. It goes up, moves across, and starts down again."

"Are you sure?" asked John. "Doesn't it turn upside down?"

"Well I was talking to someone who's doing Architecture on the top floor. He claims it doesn't actually go up and over, but moves across."

"Wow, sounds like fun to me!" exclaimed James. "I'm up for giving it a go. Will the tower still be open?"

"Looks like it," said Alison. "There's plenty of lights in lots of the windows."

So we crossed the road and headed round the side of the old red-brick building and a few minutes later the gang of us were standing inside the front entrance of the Arts Tower. Since we would all be able to fit in the main lift together, and especially as it was already at the ground floor, we decided to use that to take us up to the top floor so we could try going over the top on the paternoster. When we eventually got there, Nick deliberately placed his briefcase so it would block the lift doors. That way the doors couldn't close, so should someone try calling it from another floor, the lift couldn't go back down until we were ready to leave.

We all carefully studied the paternoster. To the left the carriages were slowly moving upwards, and to the right they were moving down.

"I'm not sure," said Elizabeth dubiously after a few moments. "The roofs and floors basically look the same. Maybe it does turn upside down at the top."

"Well I've heard that it doesn't," stated Nick. "I was told it moves sideways when it gets to the top, and then starts coming back down the other side."

"Don't reckon we could actually fall out if it did turn upside down, anyway," I announced. "And the carriages are only about eight foot high. Reckon you wouldn't hurt yourself if the roof suddenly became the floor. I'll give it a try."

I think the three pints of cider might have clouded my judgement slightly as, before anyone could say anything to dissuade me, I had stepped into the next upwards moving carriage. Nick jumped in beside me.

"That's what I like to see," he exclaimed. "A man who's not afraid to take a chance in life."

As the lift continued upwards the interior got very dark. We could hear an occasional sort of juddering sound above our heads.

"What's that noise?" I asked.

"Haven't a clue."

Although it was probably only five seconds or so, the upwards journey seemed to take forever. And the juddering noise seemed to be getting louder and louder.

"Scared yet?" asked Nick from the darkness beside me.

"No. You?"

"I think apprehensive might be the word," he said, just as the carriage seemed to come to a halting stop.

Just as I was beginning to worry that it may have actually broken down, the carriage started to move sideways in a series of jolting movements.

"Just don't fall on top of me if it does turn upside down," he laughed. "The parents might not too be happy if I finish up in hospital after less than two weeks away from home."

"I just wish we had some light," I said.

Nick found a box of matches in his pocket and struck one. All we could see was the inside of the carriage; but the mere fact that we could actually see anything made me feel a bit better.

Then, without any prior warning, the carriage started moving slowly downwards again. And, probably not much more than fifteen seconds or so after we had first stepped into the carriage, we were standing back on the twentieth floor with the rest of the gang.

"God! I was so worried," said Alison. "It didn't turn upside down on you, did it?"

"Don't worry, Ali," laughed Nick. "I was with him all the time. He was in no danger."

I reddened slightly. It seemed that everyone knew that Alison was flirting with me. I just wasn't used to the whole boy meets girl thing, so wasn't sure how I was supposed to react or behave.

"No, Nick was right. It moved sideways. " I said.

"Okay, who's going next?" I then asked, mentally kicking myself for changing the subject.

There followed about ten minutes or so of absolute silliness as different pairs of people got into the carriages and experienced going over the top. Someone then said that they wanted to try going under the bottom, so we took the main lift back down to the ground floor where we all took turns getting into the downward moving carriage. I have to say that the over the top experience seemed the better of the two to me.

Not many minutes later we were all back out on the street again, where I was saying a slightly drunken farewell to my new circle of friends. Some of them, Alison in particular it seemed, wanted me to stay a little longer. But I was worried that if I didn't get back to my digs soon, Mrs Moseley, my new landlady, might have locked the door and gone to bed. I hadn't planned on staying out late when I had left the house that morning, so hadn't actually told her that I might be later than normal getting back in the evening. I didn't know her well enough yet to know how she might react to being woken up by a slightly drunken student demanding that she get out of bed to let him in. And the fact that she hadn't actually offered to give me a key also rankled somewhat. After all, my mother had given me one when I had started working late nights at the café.

As it was, she was sat watching television when I finally arrived back shortly after eleven. She coldly informed me that, if wanted a cup of cocoa before I went to bed, I was welcome to make myself one. But she didn't even offer to let me sit in the living room and watch the television with her.

I was rapidly deciding that I didn't really enjoy living here. And that fact wasn't lessened in any way when, after I had drunk my cocoa, and washed and returned the cup to its hook, I got to my bedroom to find Derek, my room-mate, sitting in his pyjamas in the only chair in the room with a pair of earphones on his head, listening to a record on a portable record player which he'd brought with him from home, along with a number of LP's. But he had informed me, and in no uncertain terms, that they were his property, so I'd better keep my hands off them. I could just barely make out that he was listening to Good Vibrations by the Beach Boys, but he didn't even acknowledge my presence.

I sighed and got ready for bed. I had a little difficulty trying to get to sleep because of the background noise from Derek's headphones, but I lay there happily enough, thinking about the good night that I had had, the potential new friends that I had been chatting to, and the hope that I may have actually finally met a possible future girlfriend. It seemed as though university life was going to suit me.

Derek finally closed the lid on his record player and went to bed. But, just as I was about to fall asleep, his loud snoring brought me back to full consciousness. I sighed, turned so I was facing the wall, and pulled my pillow over my ears to try to block the noise. He sounded like a motor bike with engine problems. I decided that I would buy some cotton wool the following day to stuff in my ears before going to bed in future. His constant snoring was starting to play havoc with my sleep pattern.

© Copyright: 2019; Martin Cooke; 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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Chapter Comments

Marty

Posted (edited)

12 hours ago, Geron Kees said:

Hmm. Lots of things going sideways at the top here! :)

I had a roomie once that snored. Most godawful thing there is. Makes a night last a thousand years!

Interesting progression in the story. Eagerly waiting for more!

 

Hopefully, if Danny actually remembers to buy the cotton wool, his sleep won't be interrupted so much in the future. :)

I have Chapter 6 basically finished. Really just needs a careful edit now. Hopefully it won't be too many days before it's ready to be uploaded.

Thanks for the comment, @Geron Kees :thumbup:

Edited by Marty
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Marty

Posted (edited)

19 hours ago, Talo Segura said:

Another good chapter with a diverting scenario well written. It can be odd what throwaway things can get picked up from a story, but you mentioned Mrs Moseley hadn't or wouldn't give him a key even though he'd had a key at home when he started working late. Which made me think about at what age people, children, get given a key to their house? I had a key when I was eleven, maybe a bit before, I'm not sure if before it was a permanent thing, but at eleven I had my own key.

Thanks for the comment, Tal. :thumbup:

I actually got a key when I was still at school, around 17 or 18 years old, and working sometimes till late at night. Before that I was expected to be home in time, before everyone else had gone to bed. I'm not sure whether any of my other friends had one earlier than that. I certainly remember a song that would be sung at someone's 21st birthday party that included two lines that went something like "Now you've got the key to the door, never been twenty-one before" in it. In my early childhood, in England, twenty-one was the age at which a person legally reached adulthood.

Having said that, I do remember that, when I was much younger, my mother would sometimes leave the house key tied to a piece of string hanging inside the letter box of the front door. That way, if she knew she wouldn't be home by the time myself or my siblings got home from school, we could let ourselves in.  I think the term latchkey kids is sometimes used to describe such a scenario.

Edited by Marty
  • Like 5
2 hours ago, Headstall said:

I had a key long before I was a teen... probably about eight or so, but that is neither here nor there. :)  Danny has had some good and some bad, but building friendships helps the transition to independence. I think I would like to go over the top. :D  Good chapter, buddy... cheers... Gary.... 

Just you be careful of that shoulder of yours if you're thinking of going over the top, Gary! ;) 

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What an entertaining evening with new friends. Nick must have stepped up a notch in Danny's friendship rankings (nothing else implied) enjoying the risk of taking the lift over the top. And interesting things are definitely developing on the Ali front. 

Pity it was all spoilt by the anti-social landlady and Derek situation. I'd certainly be prioritising a move out of there ASAP.

 

Edited by Bard Simpson
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On 9/2/2019 at 1:04 AM, Bard Simpson said:

What an entertaining evening with new friends. Nick must have stepped up a notch in Danny's friendship rankings (nothing else implied) enjoying the risk of taking the lift over the top. And interesting things are definitely developing on the Ali front. 

Pity it was all spoilt by the anti-social landlady and Derek situation. I'd certainly be prioritising a move out of there ASAP.

 

Thanks for taking the time to comment, @Bard Simpson :thumbup:

Danny is only finishing his first week at university in this chapter, and this was his first night out actually socialising. He's not really met anyone other than the people doing the Integrated Biology course yet (with the exception of Alison, who just happens to have gone to school with Jane, who is also doing the Integrated Biology course). So whether these friends will turn out to be long term friends or not, perhaps remains to be seen.

As for Danny's digs, I'm sure that were Danny able to find affordable accommodation closer to the university, he would snap it up. Remember, though, that he is trying to survive on a £10 per week maintenance grant and, as he pointed out near the end of Chapter 3, there is no spare money at home to help him pay his way. And Shefield is a strange place for him; he knows absolutely nobody local.

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