Manchester United, 1931

It was the first day of Christmas, and nowhere around lay thick snow. Nevertheless transport was proving to be an issue. But for the odd puncture, some near-fatal speed-wobbles on Yarlet Bank, north of Stafford, and a chilling encounter with a spectral lollipop lady in Sandbach that left us paralysed with fear and sickening for home for nigh on three hours, the journey up to Old Trafford with the Honourable and Worthy Pedallers had been uneventful. We’d arrived in good time for beer before kick-off, and enjoyed the ninety minutes, although the referee had deemed it part of his duties to reward Manchester United a Christmas victory at all cost, and the Major’s men travelled south empty-handed for the return fixture. Arriving at Piccadilly Station we were faced with more bad news: rail services south of Manchester had been cancelled at short notice for some emergency engineering.

Of course, we would be able to reach Molineux in time for the kick-off, though we would have to negotiate unfamiliar terrain in the black of night. We had lights. We had sufficient puncture repair supplies. And, if we were lucky enough to find some out-of-the-way country hostelry willing to serve us, the money saved on train fare would come in very handy indeed – especially if they had some pork pies. The problem was that every single one of the Honourable and Worthy Pedallers had arranged to be at his mother’s house by seven-thirty that evening, and every one of the mothers had agreed to time her Christmas dinner accordingly. Not only might the whole society miss its Christmas dinner; there was also a distinct possibility that mothers would hold off serving until their son’s arrival, leading to dry turkey, lumpy gravy, cold sprouts, black parsnips, greasy roast potatoes, overcooked carrots, burnt Yorkshires, crabby babies and consequent domestic unjoyfulness. Most of us had planned to spend large portions of St Stephen’s, St John the Apostle’s and Holy Innocents’ Day down the pub (Christmas Day having fallen on a Friday that year), but having to do so in order to avoid an angry family would take some of the shine off the experience.

Of the fifty members who’d made the trip to Manchester that day, only George Forge (of Tettenhall, of course) had a telephone. He placed the call from a booth in the station while we stood smoking cigarettes (the station café was closed).

‘You look glum, mate,’ said Neville Proudlock as George rejoined the group.

Far-from-perfect timing…

‘Yes,’ said George, accepting one of Neville’s Woodbines, ‘Far-from-perfect timing, as it turns out. Mummy says the bird has already been in twenty minutes, and she’s busy peeling the potatoes as we speak. Katherine is peeling the sprouts and Alexandra is carving the little crosses on the stalks, while Mrs Collier is obviously….’

‘Why do they do that?’ asked Dicky Toolan.

‘What?’

‘Why do they carve those silly little crosses into the stalk of the sprouts?’

‘So that they roast perfectly,’ replied George.

‘But what difference does it make?’

There was silence among the Honourable and Worthy Pedallers. In the rafters of the enormous station, a pigeon fluttered its wings.

Ezekiel Graves came to his senses first. ‘Dicky – does he look like Mrs Beeton?’

‘How would I know?’ said Dicky.

‘You were saying, George….’

‘Ah, yes. Well, Mrs Collier is with her brother’s family in Tipton, it being Christmas; Tristan is out on his new bike – a future pedaller, no doubt – and father is entertaining Uncle Lawrence in the drawing room.’

‘Is that his uncle or your uncle?’

‘Christ, Dicky: does it matter?’ said Ezekiel Graves, immediately turning to George, ‘This Arcadian mise-en-scene you’re putting together has a purpose of some kind, presumably…?’

‘Well, y-yes. There’s nobody free to relay messages to anybody else’s mother, I’m afraid.’

‘Are you sure there isn’t a stray gardener or valet hanging around below stairs? Maybe a lady-in-waiting at the bus stop?’ asked Ezekiel sardonically.

‘Mummy was quite adamant…’

‘Quite sure,’ said George blankly, ‘The gardener doesn’t live in. I left Gonby’s address anyway, in case something changed, but Mummy was quite adamant there could be no interference with the Christmas agenda. She does tend to run a very tight ship.’

‘Well,’ I said, grinding my Woodbine into the floor, ‘I suppose we might as well saddle up. We’ve got a long night ahead.’

‘Ar,’ said Jack Dudley, and we all thought immediately of his Margaret, ‘And a long bloody Boxing Day.’

Return journeys with the Pedallers could be rather tiring affairs, but, though we were all rather miserable about missing Christmas dinner, the melancholy was balanced by a sense of anticipation, being as we were playing the following day. It was almost like another away trip, and we sang to keep our spirits up:

 UNTIL OUR WHEELS REACH THE GROUND
 
 Go we east or west
 Or north or south
 Or any combination thereof
 We will reach our destination
 Without any hesitation
 Whatever distance is involved, because…
 
 REFRAIN:
 A pedaller’s a pedaller’s a pedaller’s a pedaller -- 
 He pedals and his wheels go round.
 A wanderer’s a wanderer and he will not stop his wandering
 Until his wheels reach the ground
 Today that ground is Molineux in Whitmore Reans
 But be it anywhere from Aberdeen to Rome
 We will pedal there, drink beer there, cheer there and sing  
 And then we’ll saddle up and ride back home! 

With only incandescent bulbs and the tips of our cigarettes to light our way, we pedalled on south through Cheshire. Though the winter was mild, we began to freeze in the early hours, and alighted our vehicles on a piece of common land near Nantwich to gather fuel for a bonfire. Spirits lowered and the mood was sombre as the flames caught; the look in the eyes of those around the fire spoke of loss and longing for home. It was the plaintive tenor of George Forge that began the song that, though rarely heard due to the generally upbeat character of the Honourable and Worthy Pedallers, was known by heart by every rider in the group.

 SONG TO WULFRUN ('TO HEAR THAT WHISTLE BLOW’)
 
 Our wheels have come such a long, long way
 And they yet have a way to go.
 Our hands have gripped their handlebars for more than a day
 And our prostates suffered terrible blows.
 And now we are alone in the still of the night
 In a place without a name
 And our journey has been made for the mere sight
 Of a simple football game.

 REFRAIN:
 Am I a fool, Lady Wulfrun, to travel so far from thee?
 So far from the Ball, the Fox and the Stile and the bosom of my family?
 Am I a fool, Lady Wulfrun, to push my bike through snow
 And rain and fog and winds just to hear that whistle blow?
 Just to hear that whistle blow…
 Just to hear that whistle blow… 

As we harmonized the minor seventh on the refrain I began to make out the sound of a motor, pitched somewhere between Jack Dudley’s strident baritone and Ezekiel’s booming bass. It was the first engine I’d heard in perhaps an hour, and it grew continuously louder until a pair of headlights appeared around a bend south of where our fire roared. They belonged to a lorry, which slowed as it approached us, coming to rest with the motor idling. There was a pause before a tall man descended from the cab and walked towards us with erect posture. The face was illuminated by the glow of a churchwarden pipe, but I didn’t recognize it. When it got to within ten yards of us, however, a tenor voice cried over my shoulder.

‘Uncle Lawrence!’

‘Thought it must be you!’ came the reply from the man, whose face was was finely-featured, with an aquiline nose and a thin moustache.

‘What are you doing here?’ asked George.

‘Well, your mother let it slip that you would be delayed, and I had a driver arriving at the depot that evening. I decided it wouldn’t hurt to take the wagon around to Gonby’s and get some more addresses.

‘You’ve been to our houses?’ asked Ezekiel, with trepidation.

‘Indeed I have. And I’ve not come empty handed.’

We followed him to the cargo doors of the wagon. Inside were some fifty oval packages of silver foil, with names written on them in felt tip, to the left fifty smaller, more circular-shaped packages, to the front of them an assortment of gravy boats, thermos flasks, measuring jugs and serving jugs, also labelled (and covered where necessary), and at the back a large cardboard box marked ‘Silver and Cruet’.

‘Right,’ said Uncle Lawrence, taking the first of the oval packages, ‘Which one of you is Dicky Toolan?’

Margaret Dudley had been sour to say the least…

When all the plates had been distributed, and the correct gravy added to the correct parts of each, we sat by the fire and tucked into our Christmas dinners. Uncle Lawrence indulged George with idyllic tales from Tettenhall, before giving generous appraisals of the comings and goings and Christmas scenes he’d encountered at each house he’d visited (Margaret Dudley had been sour to say the least, but Dicky Toolan’s mum had sent along an extra portion to compensate). Pudding was served, along with a warming brandy, before we loaded the dishes and then the bikes into the back of the van, climbed in and headed home to Wolverhampton. The food had been cold, and the gravy rather lumpy, but the occasion was one of the most joyful Christmas meals I’d ever had, though if we’re honest it had fallen well after the midnight chimes had struck in all the pretty villages of Cheshire.

All in all, a memorable day out with the Pedallers, and better was to come that very afternoon as a United side bloated with turkey and overconfidence met with a seven-nil drubbing at the hands of the Major’s mighty Wanderers. With the best goal average in the league we would go top if we could win our game in hand on Leeds; it felt as though 1932 really could be the year we returned to the First Division, after a long, cold quarter of a century.

Burnley, 1962

They call them “plastics” these days, but they’ve gone under many names over the years: glory-hunters, cup-hunters, May-wonders, one-season diehards, Match-of-the-Daydreamers, Ferguson Televisions, Fickle Prats, SW6000s, Revie’s bitches, the Scouse-in-his-house, Arse an’alls, the Double bubble, Half-day Wednesday, all the way back to Suddenerland and Hey! Preston. Back in the fifties, we were still calling them Bakelites, and Wolves, it must be said, had more than their fair share.

Now it never really mattered to me whether a chap had supported the Wolves for a day, a season, a decade or a lifetime. Neither did I care whether he was born within the sound of the bells of St Luke’s, how he pronounced ‘grey peas and bacon’, or, for that matter, whether he could digest grey peas and bacon (though on that matter I do have one simple rule: if you can’t digest it, don’t bloody eat it). True, as the last of the Stafford Road diehards trundled down Fox’s Lane and up the Waterloo Road during the cup run of ‘49, it was natural to feel a certain resentment, but when it came to converts further afield, why not? Armchair fans could be generous hosts and helpful allies on tricky away days, and, let’s face it, accent and dialect matter very little when you’re all cheering an away goal.

‘Eh yiw frum Wolv’ramptin?’ said a little voice as I alighted the train whose loco stood hyperventilating before it’s next dash onwards.

‘Yes we are,’ I said, lifting my trilby to the old lady in greeting. Jack Dudley and ‘Chimdy’ Potts joined me on the platform and followed suit.

The woman turned to walk with us and the nasal voice recommenced. ‘It’s mah kneebour. A wunder if you can help meh?’

‘Your neighbour?’

‘Aye. He’s mad on Wolves.’

‘Since when?’ asked Jack (who didn’t quite share my spirit of inclusiveness).

‘Ooh, years now. A good five years.’ I didn’t need to glance over at Jack to know that he’d be rolling his eyes by now.

‘What’s his problem?’ I asked.

‘Well, we don’t have many Wolves fans around where we live: Pike Hill. There are some over a bit further west, oop bah cemetary. But they in’t very, sociable like…’

‘What, does he want to join us for a drink?’ I asked, looking for a pub as we stepped out of the station.

‘He would. I know he would. It’s just that…’

‘I’ll buy him one.’

‘Very kahnd, Ah’m shooer. Nor. Problem is he warn’t leave ows. Freed o’ bein’ bollied.’

‘Bullied?’

‘Since summer o’ sixty. Warn’t leave ows.’

We stopped short. Being pipped to the championship that year still held a vicious sting. A hat-trick of titles, it would have been, and the first double of the modern era. ‘Took it hard, did he?’ I asked.

‘Aye. Warn’t leave ows.’

‘Lambs’ kidneys fo’ hotpot.’

We agreed to look in on him. There was plenty to see. Mrs Glover watched on with a kind of maternal pity as Norman tried to switch his weight from one enormous buttock to the other, on the three-seat sofa into which he had somehow been squeezed. ‘Greengrocers don’t deliver,’ he said by way of explanation, ‘Butcher does but it’s all cheap cuts.’

‘You not working, Norm?’

‘No.’

‘What do you expect him to do, Gonby? Crush cars at the scrap yard?’

‘That’s enough of that, Jack.’

‘I knoo ah’ve put on a bi’ o’ wheat…’

I looked at the mantle. It was a relief. Next to a carriage clock, the photo of a much thinner man wearing Norman’s spectacles looked back at me. ‘Is it just scratchings the butcher sends you…?’

‘Bit o’ tripe. Lambs’ kidneys fo’ hotpot.’

‘Can you still get through the front door?’

‘Prob’ly not. Don’t reelly want teh.’

‘Got any clothes?’ he currently wore a king-size bed sheet tied around his neck like a barber’s cape.

‘No.’

The room fell silent. I thought about the pub.

‘What d’yer think?’ said Mrs Glover, nervously. Norman shifted his wait towards her. Towards pretty much everything, in fact.

‘Well,’ I said, lighting a Senior Service, ‘I’m no doctor, Mrs Glover, and I’m a Wolves man through and through. I don’t know what I should do without me babbies, and so what I’m going to say, well, you need to understand it doesn’t come out easily. It’s no glib refrain, like the offhand remarks Harry Lumm uses to avoid buying a round.’ (Jack and Chimdy hummed and nodded in recognition at this remark) ‘For that reason, I think you should both listen, and listen carefully.’

A muffled sound came from toward the door.

‘Could you pull your stomach over towards the window, please, Norman? I think Mrs Glover is trying to say something.’

Norman heaved a stone of midriff up from the floor and over the arm of the couch.

‘You’re pathetic, mate, to be honest….’

‘Very well, Mr Gonby,’ said the less-obstructed Mrs Glover, ‘That’s all reet, Norman, in’t it?’

‘Yes,’ said Norman, his eyes looking floorwards, their gaze obstructed by masses of fat loosely pertinent to his pectorals.

‘I think he should stop supporting the Wolves,’ I said.

‘Never!’ said Norman, raising his blubbery arms with such force that Chimdy and Jack hugged their overcoats tight against the draught, ‘I’m Wolves thriu and thriu!’

‘But what good’s it doing you?’ I said.

‘It dun’t matter! It’s a passion! I can’t control it!’ his voice raised in volume and pitch, and his eyes pleading with me for recognition. I turned to Jack Dudley. He knew what he had to do.

Lighting a cigarette, he surveyed the bedsheeted figure, ‘You’re pathetic, mate, to be honest,’ he began, ‘You have nothing at all to do with Wolverhampton Wanderers, or with Wolverhampton,’ a gust of Senior Service accompanied these opening shots, like the rumour of an arson attack in some textile warehouse or paper mill. Or a fireworks warehouse. ‘You’ve never even stood on the South Bank, let alone gone where the real fans go. We talked more Wolves on the train in from Preston than you have in your lifetime. I’ll bet you pronounce Trysull “Try-sull” and “Whitmore Reans” “Whit-more Reans.” You and your kind make me sick! They’re called “Wolverhampton Wanderers” for a reason! Their victories are our victories! Mine! Gonby’s! Chimdy’s! Not Dave from Shoreditch’s! Not Klaus from Düsseldorf’s! Not Madame Marie-Charlotte of the Dix-Huitième Arrondissement’s! And not fat Norman from bloody Burnley’s! One of these days you’re going to have to get used to that — might as well be today. Yow ay welcome. I mean, what made you think you would be? I’d rather watch the game with Gonby and Chimdy here, surrounded by Burnley fans, than fill an entire Bee Hole End with one-game-a-season diehards like you. Not that we’d get anybody else on there, once we’d shoved you in through the exit gates.’

‘But…’

‘I haven’t finished yet,’ snapped Jack, drawing deep on his cigarette, ‘I work in a tyre factory. You ever been in one of them?’

Norm shook his head, still gazing downwards. I thought he might start to cry.

‘You know when you’m a kid, and you walk into a shoe shop or a carpet shop, and you have to catch your breath because of the smell of rubber? It’s like that, but a thousand times worse. First time you go in, you think everybody’s keeping a secret. “They’m playing a trick on me,” you think, “pretending they can breathe when it’s obvious that nobody could possibly breathe in here.” You think they’ll open the doors in a minute and get some fresh air in there. But they don’t. They never do. And when you finish your shift you look like a tyre – black everywhere, even under your clothes. I get through that every day thinking about the Wolves. I replay Saturday’s game in my head, and imagine next Saturday’s game. I remember the greatest goals I ever saw, the greatest passes, the greatest tackles. That’s how I get through eight hours without going spare. And then, when I finish, I head straight to the pub and talk about the Wolves.

‘What do you think about? Norm? The colour of the shirts? How many letters are in the name? And who do you talk about it with? Mrs Glover here?’

He was crying now, plump tears finding deep valleys across the fat frown.

‘Ooh, I dun’t mahnd him talking about futeball tiu meh…’

‘Shut up, Mrs Glover — I’m not talking to you. Norm, you chose the Wolves because we were winning. What’s the best Wolves can give you now? Confirmation? A reminder? You might have to wait, you know. It might take twenty years, or thirty, or forty. But when they win something for us, by which I mean: the people that actually support them, they’re giving us a once-in-a-lifetime gift. A moment of true joy. If I never get it again, I’ll know I lived. That’s something you’ll never experience, and I pity you and the rest of your pathetic kind. Where are your parents?’

‘They’re dead.’

‘Well, they’d be ashamed of you. Mrs Glover’s ashamed of you. Gonby’s ashamed of you, and he doesn’t even know you. I mean, even people who spend their lifetimes waiting, and who never win anything – Blues fans, Stoke fans, Walsall fans, Stafford Road fans – at least they had a dream worth having. You’ve got nothing. You only chose us because we were champions; every year we’re not champions is a year of failure for you. You failed, Norman. You failed at being unoriginal, — imagine that! To fail at jumping the queue, at swapping a lifetime’s ambition for a smug grin on a Monday morning. How does it feel, Norm? How does it feel to sell your soul for small change, and then spend the small change on absolute crap?’

Norman didn’t answer. The carriage clock next to the photograph of the happier, slimmer Norman, ticked, and the room fell still under its metronome.

‘We’d better be going,’ I said.

‘What time’s kick-off?’ asked Mrs Glover.

‘Ask Norman,’ replied Jack, ‘He’s the Wolves fanatic, right Norm?’

Mrs Glover saw us out, leading us down the stairs as Norman sniffled and sobbed behind us. It was a relief to reach the pavement, though the November air was bitter.

‘Thank you ever so much boys,’ said Mrs Glover, effusively, ‘I really appreciate it.’

‘That’s quite all right,’ I replied, wrapping my scarf around my neck, ‘I think you’ll see a change in him over the next few weeks.’

‘What was all that about?’ asked Jack with a frown, once Mrs Glover had gone back inside.

‘Never mind,’ I said, starting to walk, ‘I think I saw a pub up here on the right.’

Liverpool, 1894

We were in Turner’s Vaults, by the Albert Dock, when they came in, their gaunt faces staring out vacantly from the hoods of their spacious grey robes. I checked my pocket watch: a quarter to twelve. Plenty of time to find somewhere else, I supposed. Most of the locals already having chosen that option….

‘The doors, Kenneth,’ said the tallest of them, in a doleful voice, ‘The doors.’

I looked at Jack Dudley, listening intently to Nathaniel ‘The Professor’ James, who was explaining in some detail how it happened that we were visiting the same Anfield that we’d visited every season, but to see an entirely different team. Jack had got about a half left, and so had Chimdy, but the Professor’s pint was nearly three-quarters full and there was never any point in trying to hurry him up. Resignedly, I watched the last of the exodus: a spindly woman who’d been selling notepads and pencils slipped out just as the landlord bolted the door and turned the deadlock. He returned to the pumps to be welcomed by a flurry of business. The hooded tribe were drinking gin. As I turned to call up another pint of my own, the tall man caught my eye and raised his glass.

‘A nip for the heirs of the Nip in the Air,’ he said, apparently expecting some kind of reaction.

‘It is a bit chilly, ar,’ I replied.

‘You don’t care for the cold?’

‘Same as everybody else, I imagine. Unless there’s a match on, I’d rather have a pint and a warm fire.’

‘Get the man a pint, Kenneth,’ said the tall man.

‘A celebration. Yes. That’s exactly what it is.’

The landlord eyed me with what looked like concern. ‘He’s not here for…’

‘A pint of… Best, I suppose?’

‘Pale,’ I said. ‘Is this some kind of celebration?’

‘A celebration. Yes. That’s exactly what it is.’

You could have fooled me. Nip after nip of neat gin was served and consumed without laughter, sentiment or even conversation. The mood reminded me of the train ride back from Paddington after losing the Cup final to Preston four years before. Finally, a good seven drinks into his “celebration” the tall man introduced himself.

‘I am the wizard,’ he said.

‘Oh, ar?’ I replied, looking for an alternative to the bolted door.

‘I am naked under these robes.’

‘Right…’

‘When night falls we shall parade these streets as Ventus intended, offering naked submission to He that Breathes Life and Cools Our Toiling Bodies.’

‘I see, well my friends and I do have to be getting off. There’s a football match…’

‘When night falls?’

‘No, mate. How could you play football when night falls?’

‘You cannot leave until night falls. This is now a holy place.’

‘We won’t make a fuss.’

‘Oh, I know you won’t,’ said the wizard, turning to order more gin.

Though it didn’t cheer up, the conversation did, in time, heat up, with the fiery gin stoking the cult fervour. A table in the corner became vacant as its occupants rose to join in the singing of what appeared to be the religion’s only hymn:

Oh great and mighty Ventus
Dear purger of these lands
We know your breath is infinite –
Our lives are in your hands
You come across the Irish Sea
To witness our submission
And see us lose our earthly robes
And all our inhibitions 

We took the empty table quickly and put our heads together, knowing our scheming would be camouflaged by the chanting. Chimdy, so often the engineer of our unlikely escapes, had no materials or tools to work with, and was anyway stymied by our location in a bar that was far too public.

Ventus, Aquus, Fuegus, Porcus

The Professor had no more formal education than the rest of us, but was a passionate autodidact, a bachelor who spent all the hours that work and Wolves allowed him in the Free Library on Garrick Street. It was to him that we turned now, and without a word he understood, taking out the pencil and pad he’d bought from the spindly old lady and swiftly filling pages, first with disjointed words, then with sketches and diagrams, and then with florid prose. After forty-five minutes and two more rounds, he was ready to divulge his plan.

In his notebook, Natty had drawn up detailed plans for a new cult that would seek to absorb Ventism into a larger, more developed cosmology borrowing heavily from Empedocles and the Ayurveda. Within the new religion, Ventus was one of four deities, the others being “Fuegus” (Fire), “Aquus” (Water, but also beer and gin) and “Porcus”, (the dust at the bottom of a bag of scratchings). Ventus would also be revered as the Grand Harbinger of the True Cosmology, whose essence was a combination of all four deities. This was a clever move, as it sought to co-opt the Ventists with flattery: their devotion to Ventus allowed them to join the new religion as adepts, but it also conditioned their special position upon total submission to the greater theology that their chosen god had presaged.

Having thoroughly prepared us in the teachings, The Professor sent us out to the four corners of the pub to convert the population. This was not easy work. Few wanted to hear our preachings to begin with, many turned their backs on us and a few even threatened violence. But with kick-off approaching we knew we had no choice but to stay the course. Chimdy attempted some theatrics to kick-start the new religion, setting Fuegus to a newspaper then dousing it with Aquus (this was not a popular move with Kenneth the landlord). Jack and I had a go at some rudimentary psalm-writing.

 Ventus, Aquus, Fuegus, Porcus
 These are the humours of the sacred corpus
 Wind and Beer and Fire and Dust
 From a packet of scratchings form the Sacred Trust 

Converts and those who appeared open to an expansion of their worldview were sent to our table, where Nate was ready to baptize them with beer and mark their foreheads with cigarette ash. As the number of converts increased, these rites became much wilder, and incorporating screaming, swearing and smashing glasses on the floor. Eventually Nate climbed onto the table, raised his arms in the air and told the assembled, “Go to your houses, put some clothes on, and worship the Great Amalgum from your most comfortable armchair!” This they did. After helping Kenneth clear up a little, and swiftly downing another round, we headed out to Stanley Park to watch the teams share the points as Ventus battered our bodies with his wrathful breath.

All in all, a good day out, although there were some lasting side-effects: Prophecy proved to be an intoxicating thing for the Professor, and he made a fool and a nuisance of himself in the Wheel Inn and the Gladstone for a few weeks after we got back home. Eventually, though, he calmed down and returned to the Free Library, and his mum immediately took the opportunity to throw his notebook on the Fuegus.