The Aviator

Manfred, known as Fred to his friends, hates shopping and supermarkets. Fred’s trolley is empty as a woman carrying an empty basket staggers towards him. Christ, you’re a cracker, he thinks. She wears a startling multi-coloured capacious check dress that looks as if it may fall off her at any moment. Her grey and white hair is a riot of unruliness like an electrocuted character in a comic. Her intelligent face beguiles him. 

She stops in front of him. Who you gawping at? she laughs. Before he can reply she continues, My husband says he wants a new woman, like a new carpet to walk on. I told him to fuck off, she shouts. 
Shoppers ‘tut’.
Fancy a coffee in the café? Fred asks.
You chatting me up?
Would you mind?
If he wants a new fucking woman, I can have a new fucking man.

Fred brings their coffees to a table for two.
I’m Fred, he says. Short for Manfred.
Manfred? You don’t look like no German.
My dad was obsessed by Manfred von Richthofen, a German fighter pilot in the first world war. He was the ace of aces, winning over eighty dog fights in the sky.
Pull the other one; dogs don’t fight in the sky.
It’s daft. What’s your name?
Amy. She was an aviator from HulI. I often has this flying dream. Can I tell it you?
Fred nods.
I’m a bird, alone in a cage, then I’m standing in a field of deep green ground ivy. I run. The going’s tough. My clawed feet keep catching in the ivy. I fall. I’m a bird, I shout. I should be flying not running. I can’t remember how to fly, but I know I can, cos I’m a bird. Under my dress, this dress, I’ve grown feathers. I run, frantically flapping my arms, my dress flapping, like one of them windsock things. My arms ain’t wings. I rest. I start again. I run, I stumble, trip; my dress blows up in the wind with me knickers all on show. I’m desperate to fly, Amy starts to weep. I want to fly before I die, she sobs. Can’t afford it.
Hold my hand, Fred says. It’s okay. Come with me, I have an idea.

It’s raining outside. Two male security guards, in hi-vis jackets, run across the car park shouting, Hoi! You can’t do that. We’ll call the police. Amy sits in a shopping trolley as Fred races around the car park. Amy screams, Wheeeee. The hi-vis jackets lose ground as Fred pushes Amy’s trolley out onto the exit road. Christ, one says, he’s bleeding fit for an old git. Off his trolley, the other laughs.

Amy shouts, I’m flying. 

As they reach the top of the hill Fred jumps in beside her. They rattle down the slope laughing, until the trolley hits a curb. They lie on a grass verge lost in hysterical laughter.
I think I’ve found me a new man, Amy says.


I hope you enjoyed this story. Please feel free to pass it on to others who may be interested. You can read my previous 500 word stories on my website www.philcoskerwriter.com under ‘Writing’.>>>More

© Phil Cosker 2023
Phil Cosker has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs & Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the author of this work. All rights reserved; no part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted by any mean, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise without the prior permission of the author.

5 thoughts on “The Aviator

  1. People like that are a bloody nuisance… They’ve no thought for others who bugger up their backs trying to steer a full trolly such so and so’s have wrecked with their blasted thoughtlessness! Some of us appreciate a good, easy to handle trolly. You shouldn’t encourage such behavior!!!
    I’ll lay a pound to a penny that you’re one of those socialist oikes!!!
    I’ll write to my MP!!! You ruddy nuisance!

    Livid of Lincoln

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