How to Convey the Professor to the Station by Geraint Jonathan

How to convey the Professor to the station? That was the question. Tell him a train was waiting for him – and for him alone? Remind him of his duty to the hopeless of Europe?

The landlady could not have been more obliging; she practically tiptoed around him. She blushed to remember his dancing naked in his room. But she knew an educated man when she saw one.

So: how convey the Professor to the train station? ‘Collude lightly’ is generally the advice in these situations. But more was called for in this instance, it seemed to me. The Professor was excitable, his gestures expansive. The landlady did her best, but her voice tended to rise several modulations whenever she addressed the Professor, each word enunciated for maximum comprehension. “The – Professor – likes – to –take – long –walks. Don’t you Professor? Long walks?” On this occasion, however, the Professor replied with a kiss, and blood drained from the poor woman’s face.

It was the promise of flowers did the trick, the prospect of welcome down the line. And so, come dusk, the Professor was conveyed to the station. He laughed at the faces the houses made along the way. When he saw the train, he wept for the way it waited with such distinction.

Geraint Jonathan

(Image by CJA)

One thought on “How to Convey the Professor to the Station by Geraint Jonathan

  1. Geraint

    This creates many questions. I see some thinking dementia, and as some form of “ridding” by the Landlady. But I would rather think he was needed for the “hopeless of Europe”–an eccentric genius, the last hope against the Reich (heaven forbid “for”). Since it is up for interpretation I pick the happier scene. Greer Garson will greet him with flowers.

    You have done so much with so few words!

    Leila

    Like

Leave a comment