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THE GIRL IN THE LANE
In our younger days my wife, Jan, and I liked to round
off the working week by driving out into the beautiful
Kent countryside in search of a nice little country pub
and having a snifter or two, and maybe a bite to eat. A
good friend had recommended a pub, the Amazon and Tiger, I
believe the name was, and he said the food and beer were
excellent. To assist us he had drawn a map complete with
numerous landmarks and information to help us on our way.
One gorgeous Friday evening we set out to find the
pub. I followed the directions to the letter until we came
to a fork in the road, and I took the right branch instead
of the left as per the instructions. I realized almost
immediately, but the lane was too narrow to turn our car
around in, so Jan suggested finding a farm gateway or
similar to give us a bit more room. As we slowly drove
along the lane looking for a place to turn around we both
noticed a girl of about twenty walking towards us. We both
remarked that she was dressed in the 'flower-power' style
of the 1960's, in a sheepskin coat, tie-dyed T-shirt and
wide flared jeans. She had a shock of bright ginger hair
reaching well down her back and what looked like an old
school satchel over her shoulder. She was smiling to
herself, almost as if she knew we had taken the wrong
turning, but how could she?
We carried on up the lane for about another two
hundred yards until we found an entrance into a field on
our right, and turned the car around. I drove carefully
back the way we had come, looking for the lass with the
ginger hair, so that we could ask her directions to the pub.
We arrived back at the fork in the road but had not
seen the girl. This prompted Jan and I to wonder where she
could have got to. The lane was too long from where we had
seen her originally for her to have beaten us to the fork,
and the high banks and tall hedgerows precluded her cutting
across the intervening fields. There simply were no gaps to
dive through.
Once more I turned the car around at the fork and went
back up the lane, very slowly this time, looking for any
sign of the girl with the ginger hair, but there was no
trace of her at all. I even got out of the car at one
point, climbed the banks and tried to push my way through
the hedges either side of the lane to no avail. Yet once
more I reversed into the field entrance, and set off back
along the lane again, to finally try to find the pub we so
eagerly sought.
This time I turned off along the correct lane at the
fork, and about half a mile down the road we reached the
pub. We both felt we deserved the drinks we ordered that
evening!
As a postscript to this tale, we returned several
times to the Amazon and Tiger over the course of the next
few years and asked a few discreet questions in the bar
about the hippy girl with the wonderful hair, but always
met with either unknowing shakes of the head, or on one
occasion, a blunt request not to be so nosey!
So Jan and I will probably never know what became of
the girl, or what her story is, or was. The only certainty
remains that she apparently disappeared in thin air. There
was absolutely nowhere to hide along that lane, nor was it
possible to reach the fork in the road before us in our car.
If, (and I stress the if,) she was a spirit, I hope
she is still there, leaving other motorists to ponder her
fate as indeed my wife and I still do from time to time.
And now that the summer is upon us once more, I think
another trip out to the Amazon and Tiger is on the cards
again, and another ride up the lane hopefully to renew our
acquaintance with 'The girl in the Lane'.
Contact me here: shaggy134812@aol.com
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