Nick Bullock spends a month at Banff Centre trying to finish his second book. What does writing 40 hours a week feel like when you're following a dream?
It's half past midnight when I arrive in Banff, the last person on the white shuttle bus that had carried five passengers from Calgary Airport. I sit in the back of the bus in the dark. A freight train bullies its way through the centre of town. Red lights flash and an X marks the spot. The deep bass of the train blurts solid. A grey cat with white stripes skitters across the tracks. It's almost twelve years to the day that I walked from the door of Leicester Prison that ended fifteen years of self-imposed sentence. And in the twelve years I hope I've learnt - I know I've certainly changed.
I was about to spend four weeks at Banff Centre on a writing scholarship which I would hopefully use to compete the first draft of my second book. Sometimes, in fact most of the time, I wonder when I'll be found out and people will realize the impostor and make an example and I will stand, tied and head-hung, ashamed and lambasted, a bad joke for being a dreamer. Possibly I will wake and the cell walls will once again impose? I'm not sure of the two which would be worse.
*
Four weeks have passed. I have averaged forty hours a week of writing, and I have been fortunate to climb five days. I sit at the desk in a room that I'm about to leave - my wooden hut in the woods again stands empty. The red squirrels will no-doubt still scamper along the roof as if wearing Dr. Martens Boots, but unaware that I am no longer in residence. The nuthatch will continue to point his head down in search of spiders. I shall miss that hut.
I have fifty chapters of a second book uploaded and when it is published, hopefully it will always remind me of that hut and the generosity of the people at Banff Centre.
I cannot thank everyone at Banff Centre enough, but especially Jo Croston who helped me apply for the scholarship and of course, The Paul D. Fleck Fellowship which provides one fellowship for one mountain culture-related artist a year. The fellowship was established by the family of the late Paul D. Fleck, a former President of Banff Centre, in honour of his memory.
Below is an extract from my second book, Tides (working title).
Chaper 1. Love & Hate.
I stepped outside - out through the small prison door and the sounds changed. There was the distant rumble of a lorry, and a snatch of a far-away police siren. Cars swished down Leicester's Welford Road, furrows cut into the wet tarmac. I could hear the high dull whine of planes descending into East Midlands airport, the barking of dogs. I could hear and sense the wet clinging to branches in the trees. A few pigeons huddled in the shadow of one of the prison's turrets, briefly mumbling to each other. I turned my face upwards to feel the rain, and I imagined the stars beyond the sodium lights, fixed in a slowly spinning sky. The acidity in the rain felt cleansing. The exhaust-fumes in the air smelled of freedom. I breathed in deeply. I listened to the air enter and filter around my body. I could hear the mechanical creak of time.
I breathed out, turned and walked away.
Fifteen years. Fifteen years of aggression and violence and stress. Fifteen years to learn bitterness, prejudice. Loneliness. Fifteen years of building walls. Fifteen years. The Prison Service had given me all of these things, but in some way it also had given me life, it had given me health and fitness and climbing and the money to pay-off my mortgage. I was grateful for these things.
Looking over my shoulder, I followed the straight line of red brick. The prison wall stretched above. Rain soaked my shoulders; high level lights lit the street. Shadows clung to the corners as if scared.
I had done it. I was thirty seven years old and I had resigned from being a PE Instructor in the prison service. I had walked from the job guaranteed for life, the job which at some point in my life was everything I desired - security, pension, stability, regular wage. I had walked, and as I walked the water beneath my feet squelched and the stars, hidden behind the clouds were burning bright - close enough to grab and take hold, close enough for me to lock away, lock away almost like some of the people who were no longer a part of my life; Reggie Kray, Gary DeBasi, Hate Em All Harry Roberts, Bobby Dew, Rookie Lee, Houston, Bronson. I almost felt free. Almost.