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Village Squire, 1976-03, Page 15The Bicycle Winner Take one civil servant, one newspaper photographer and one bicycle and create havoc A short story by Keith Roulston It seemed like an ordinary Monday morning. The sun was shining through the window gleaming off the chrome pen holder on my desk and reflecting in my eyes, stirring the aching memory in the back of my head that I had committed a few too many indiscretions on the weekend at Barney's bar, across the street from my office. The clacking of Joe's typewriter across the desk was already beginning to endanger my sanity and it was only 9:45 in the morning. The last thing I needed was a visitor. But the buzz on the intercom was presistent and Joe growled "Can't you answer that thing. I'm the one who's busy." It was Jane, the -receptionist -clerk -bookkeeper and champion instant coffee maker of our little establishment. "There's a Mr. Howard here who'd like to speak to someone about doing a story," she said. I looked at Joe, hopefully. He ignored me. "All right, send him back", I sighed. Joe typing busily ignored my glare. "Hello I'm Harry Howard," he said. He had the smile of a politician, the confidence of a good lawyer and the dress of an accountant: I figured he was a bureaucrat. "Have a chair," 1 invited, then scampered over to lift the Toad of press releases that had arrivedin this morning's mail off the only chair available in the little cubicle set aside as the newsroom. "It's a nice, ah, little office you have here," he said. "The boss keeps trying to convince us of it," 1 said. "This must be a fascinating business, the weekly newspaper business," he said. "Well, that's one word for it," I said, "although we often use stronger language." "Ha, ha," he said in his hollow laugh. I knew he was a bureaucrat. Finally, when it seemed the small talk might go on all day I asked him just what he had in mind. "I work for the government,"'he said conspiratorially. "I'm here on a special mission". I expected him to check my desk Tamp for hidden microphones. "You see we had a contest down at the Royal Winter Fair for the Ministry of Transport. The kids had to colour this drawing about a safety rule and sign their name and address. We'd pick out the best and there's be a prize." He leaned forward and almost whispered, "I wouldn't want this to go far but actually we didn't judge them, just threw them all in a big drum and pulled one out. Can you imagine judging 25,000 scribbled crayon 'drawings?" said I couldn't. "Well", he said, "the winner just happens to be a lad from over on Market Street, a nice young man called Mervin McEvan. Do you know him?" I said I did. 1 should, that nice young man had let the air out of my tires twice last week when I parked the car outside my rooming house. "I'm here", he said, "to set up the presentation of the bicycle...the one that was first prize in the contest." "How do you mean 'set up'?". Well the minister is going to come up to present the bicycle and we want to make a little bit of an event of it. Nothini elaborate, just his parents and a few friends. And where, I wondered, did I come in. "Well, I was hoping, Mr. Johns, that you being a newspaper reporter and photographer would come and take some pictures. We need some for publicity down at the Ministry. We'll be glad' to pay you for it." He had said the magic word. With the money old "Short change Hopkins" our publisher handed out on payday, you needed anything you could get to supplement the income. What time and where,..1 asked. Thursday night, he said, location still unknown. There was a problem. Thursday night, I said, .was the night I taught photography at nightschool. Couldn't I miss one night, he asked. Not this Thursday I said definitely. This Thursday we were doing photography of the human form with a very special live model, a shapely blonde from the class who had volunteered to pose et al. He said he understood. Well, he said, in the way of one used to solving problems, there must be some way around it. He thought. and thought and thought maybe he'd fallen asleep before he jumped to his feet. "I've got it," he said. It the photographer can't come to the celebration than the celebration skill go to the photographer." "You think the Minister would like to see the blonde ter,? I asked. "Certainly not!" he said in .h0r1. There must be wmes�here VILLAGE SQUIRE/MARCH lire. 13