'Do you take dogs?' the next passenger enquired.
'I prefer cash!' Streetgeezer joked.
'I can't seem to close this door properly.'
'Slam it hard and violently, it's a French car and has to be shown who's boss.'
'Isn't it a bit warm to be wearing a black suit?'
'Madam.....it's never too hot to be cool.'

He was picking up in Hampstead Garden Suburb, an old lady going to Edgware.
Streetgeezer always maintained a contentious opinion of area known locally as "the Suburb". Built before the First War and inspired by the Utopian dream of Henrietta Barnet, it has failed in its objective: namely to be a place where rich and poor alike co-exist and help each other. As it became increasingly desirable, so the poor were replaced by those more inclined to help themselves. Streetgeezer would often disparagingly describe Hampstead Garden Suburb as a waiting room for Golders Green Crematorium. Comparing its uniform red brick semi's to overgrown council houses and accusing its dull streets, devoid of advertising and unsightly additions, of being how one would imagine the compound for senior party members in a communist state.

In the centre of the Suburb is a village square that is home to two adjacent churches (one non-denominational, the other C of E) and the Hampstead Garden Institute where the locals take classes in pottery, or Spanish, or flower arranging. The strict rules laid down by the founders of the Suburb allow no advertising, pubs, shops or commercial buildings within its boundaries. This has led to an almost spooky absence of human presence. It is rare to see anyone walking across or even near the square or the churches. It is like a permanent Sunday afternoon; one of those interminable suburban Sundays from twenty years ago where yellow cellophane covered the non-perishables in the sweet shop, the only thing open. The kind of Sunday you refer to when insulting a Wednesday that is not going anywhere or a Saturday that had failed to live up to expectation saying: 'It seems like a Sunday. An everlasting placid Sunday (Spanish Opera Star 7 and 7) or a scene from "The Prisoner", after the big white balloon has frightened everyone away.

Off the main streets are hidden cul-de-sacs of quaint, charming whitewashed cottages clothed in trellises, creepers and vines, with window boxes and hanging baskets in flower. Here live little old ladies who could be childrens' authors or the widows of Army Colonels. Ex-memsahibs who returned from the Raj to find a part of England they had believed would be forever white, but ironically seems to be the only place on earth where Jews and Arabs can live peacefully as neighbours.

They exited the suburb by the parade of mock Tudor shops on Finchley Road while Streetgeezer pondered what it was that the Tudors had ever done to deserve such mocking. As he drove, his passenger spoke in the genteel tones of a forgotten era, a time of smoking jackets, cravats, and cheerful though perhaps slightly cheeky Hackney Carriage drivers who knew their place. They discussed the sad state of television. The passenger felt compelled to confess that whilst her husband would quietly spend his evenings engrossed in a book or relaxing with Radio Four, she would feel the urge to watch some TV. She would enquire of her husband, 'Darling, would you despise me if I were to watch some television?'

Like so many North Londoners Streetgeezer was born in Edgware General Hospital. Whenever he drops there he is struck by the realisation that this is where he started to exist, this is where he threw a double six and moved his token from "Go" onto the first square.
'It's a game innit?' the less imaginative passenger is inclined to repeat, confirming the driver's suspicion that the bigger the cliché the smaller the mind.
'In that case I want £200 everytime I drive past Edgware General.' Streetgeezer would reply. He always assumed he would cease to exist before the hospital did. That however was before the prophecy of Jesus that 'The meek shall inherit the earth', had started to be realised. Streetgeezer remembered the day well. He was driving three stunned American business men down the Mall and past the Palace when the LBC radio announced that Michael Heseltine and Douglas Hurd would not be standing in the third ballot, and so the new prime minister was John Major. With the arrival of the meek came Mrs Bottomley and "reforms to the health system". Her intended reforms being similar to the way a crushing machine re-forms the shape of a car into a cube.

Edgeware General