The Tall Girl from Somerset 24 'Anne. More battles'
Anne
More battles.
Anne struggled on. 'Work helps me.
It helps a lot.' But it was precisely when she was at work that her thoughts
let her down. It seemed that her mind knew that the job in hand was important
and so distracted her just when she needed to concentrate most. She
remembered a really important case from March the year before. It was one
that she had desperately wanted to win.
It
was a blustery day and the constant wind dried the fields and tired everyone
who worked outdoors. Just before entering the courthouse she parked very near
another car. She was in a hurry because she wanted to check a couple
of facts before the case began. She parked quickly in the last space (thank
goodness there was one left), but this gave very little room for the person in
the next car to get in through the driver’s door. She quickly looked
to see that he (She never thought of “she”. It was always “he” in
the court, and it was always “he” in the car park.) had enough room to open his
door on the passenger side, and then she dashed into the
courthouse. It stayed in her head, though, this question of the car,
this question of the space. Had she parked too near the other car?
Would he, whoever he was, be able to open his door?
'Come
on, Anne. He can use the passenger door. It doesn’t matter
anyway. It doesn’t matter.'
She
did her best to persuade herself of this, but the question 'Can he get back in
his car?' came to her again and again throughout the morning. Just when she
needed to concentrate most on her work was when the thought attacked her
hardest. 'But this shows it’s just nerves or whatever. This shows
it. It’s precisely when I need to think most clearly, that something
stops me.'
But
she still had to think about it, to sort it out.
'Ah
well, if it hadn’t been the car, it would have been something
else. If I were doing something easy, like watching a film or going
for a walk, this wouldn’t bother me.
OK,
just make some excuse, and go outside, and move the damn car!
No,
that’s giving in to it. That´s giving it importance. You have to
resolve this in your mind.'
All
this was going through her head as her turn to speak was approaching. She
finally resorted to her usual last resort strategy.
'Postpone
it. Finish the morning’s work, and deal with the car thing later.'
From
this moment, this delay in dealing with her worry, she could concentrate on her
arguments, on her client and on the trial, and work 100% for the next two
hours.
'What
a relief to be able to work, to be able to devote myself to what I have to do!'
'If
only I could be like Percy,' she thought, as at the end of the morning she
walked to her car, which was now splendidly on its own in the car park, with
yards of space around it. 'He doesn’t worry about car doors; he doesn’t
worry about anything. He just concentrates on what he has to do, and
then he goes off to the pub and has a beer.' 'How easy life is for him,'
she thought, as she drove out of the car park towards the Anchor Head, where
she hoped for a quiet corner table, where there would be no lawyers who would
want to talk to her and who would break in on her rest after the morning’s
struggle.
Percy
Hamilton Greaves was well-established in Anne’s chambers and was over ten years
older than her. From the first he had helped her with advice
whenever she had needed it, and had given her a lot of support and
encouragement with her first cases. He was relaxed, cheerful, and
clever. Words came easily to him, and he never seemed pressed for
time. All day he seemed to walk about on that plateau that Anne had
to climb up to by arguing herself into readiness. In chambers, as an
advocate, he was regarded with great respect, partly because of his results but
mainly because he managed those results so effortlessly. He walked into court
in the morning with a relaxed amble, exchanged pleasantries with the judge, was
effortlessly witty through the case and generally appeared to have an easy
life. This only goes to show how often we create a mask which misleads
everyone, as Anne found out many years later, one evening, over a beer with him
at the end of a long and difficult day, when he confided in her. But that is another story, as so many things
are.
Anne
lost her case in the end, and then she worried that she had lost it because of
her worrying. Would she have lost it anyway? She thought
so, beyond reasonable doubt, but she couldn't be sure. Beyond reasonable
doubt! 'Reasonable!' ('Aye there’s the rub.')
'Keep
within the bounds of reason, Anne and leave it at that.'
She
tried, but for the rest of the day she had the nagging feeling that she had
failed her client. She went home, exhausted and angry with
herself. Was this life?
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