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Bac 2005 Anglais

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Back to England

Sam landed a job(1) as overseas sales director for a shipping company which took us in turn to

Hong Kong, Australia and South Africa. They were good times, and I came to understand

why black sheep are so often sent abroad by their families to start again. It does wonders for

the character to cut the emotional ties that bind you to places and people. We produced two

sons who grew like saplings in the never-ending sunshine and soon towered over their

parents, and I could always find teaching jobs in whichever school was educating them.

As one always does, we thought of ourselves as immortal, so Sam's coronary at the age of

fifty-two came like a bolt from the blue. With doctors warning of another one being imminent

if he didn't change a lifestyle which involved too much travelling, too much entertaining of

clients and too little exercise, we returned to England in the summer of '99 with no employment

and a couple of boys in their late teens who had never seen their homeland.

For no particular reason except that we'd spent our honeymoon in Dorset in '76, we

decided to rent an old farmhouse near Dorchester which I found among the property ads in

the Sunday Times before we left Cape Town. The idea was to have an extended summer holiday

while we looked around for somewhere more permanent to settle. Neither of us had connections

with any particular part of England. My husband's parents were dead and my own parents had

retired to the neighbouring county of Devon and the balmy climate of Torquay. We enrolled

the boys at college for the autumn and set out to rediscover our roots. We'd done well

during our time abroad and there was no immediate hurry for either of us to find a job. Or so

we imagined.

The reality was rather different. England had changed [...] during the time we'd been

abroad, strikes were almost unknown, the pace of life had quickened dramatically and there was

a new widespread affluence(2) that hadn't existed in the 70s. We couldn't believe how expensive

everything was, how crowded the roads were, how difficult it was to find a parking space now

that "shopping" had become the Brits' favourite pastime. Hastily the boys abandoned us for their

own age group. Garden fetes and village cricket were for old people. Designer clothes and

techno music were the order of the day, and clubs and theme pubs were the places to be

seen, particularly those that stayed open into the early hours to show widescreen satellite

feeds of world sporting fixtures.

"Do you get the feeling we've been left behind?" Sam asked glumly at the end of our

first week as we sat like a couple of pensioners on the patio of our rented farmhouse, watching

some horses graze in a nearby paddock.

"By the boys."

"No. Our peers(3). I was talking to Jock Williams on the phone today" — an old friend from

our Richmond days — "and he told me he made a couple of million last year by selling off

one of his businesses." He pulled a wry face. "So I asked him how many businesses he had

left, and he said, only two but together they're worth ten million. He wanted to know what I(4) was

doing so I lied through my teeth(5)."

I took time to wonder why it never seemed to occur to Sam that Jock was as big as a

fantasist as he was, particularly as Jock had been trumpeting "mega-buck sales(6)" down the

phone to him for years but had never managed to find the time — or money? — to fly out for a

visit. "What did you say?"

"That we'd made a killing on the Hong Kong stock market before it reverted to China

and could afford to take early retirement. I also said we were buying an eight-bedroom house

and a hundred acres in Dorset."

"Mm," I used my foot to stir some clumps of grass growing between the cracks in the

patio which were symptomatic of the air of tired neglect that pervaded the whole property. "A

brick box on a modern development more likely. I had a look in an estate-agent's window

yesterday and anything of any size is well outside our price range. Something like this would

cost around £300,000 and that's not counting the money we'd need to spend doing it

...

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