“I need to know whether Roy’s
dead or not” declares insomniac Fiz, distressed in dressing gown, and more
femme fatale than fraught friend as Roy is still nowhere to be found.
Meanwhile Amy’s master stroke of getting
Tracy and Steve to accompany her to the Museum of Science and Industry is
upgraded to platinum as it transpires that there is no requirement to attend Victorian
Day in costume.
Tracy’s maid’s outfit, with more pins than a porcupine, may be ripe for mockery by the likes of Tina,
but the real star turn is Steve’s crushed blue velvet suit. Something of a singular
sighting in Victorian times I’m sure, he earns the title of pimp and Amy learns
a new word. Tracy makes amends by telling her it’s a kind of salesman, and this
nugget of information is confidently passed on by Amy to a surprised lady at the museum
who asks what Steve is dressed as.
Tracy feels all warm inside at Amy’s
trickery over the costumes, seeing something of herself in her daughter, but it’s
short lived as she becomes bored silly by steam engines. Steve is enjoying his
suit too much to be all that put out that nobody but the staff are dressed up,
and revels in being mistaken for them, posing for photos and offering some
woolly commentary on the exhibits. All are shocked to hear Roy interrupt to supply
the detail lacking in Steve’s description of a particular engine. Steve and Tracy tell him that his friends, of
which there are plenty, fear he may be dead. Tracy is typically unsympathetic,
and as she bickers with Steve, Roy leaves. Amy alerts the pair and shows that she’s
actually more like Steve after all when she turns down her mother’s offer of a
trip to the gift shop in favour of running after Roy.
When Steve reports back to the café
that Roy is alive but alas missing once more, routine hysteric Fiz shows no
relief or gratitude, but roundly accuses Steve of scaring him off. Mary has
other things on her mind, namely the hypnotic lure of both the steam engine and
Steve’s suit. As the velveteen Victorian embarks on a further search for Roy, the doff
of his hat is enough to necessitate smelling salts.
No sooner is he gone than Roy
appears at the café accompanied by Tyrone who claims all the credit for
accompanying him 100 yards. Anna, Fiz, Mary, Jenna and Tyrone press Roy for answers.
He’s been staying in a B&B and explains that his bag, found in the canal,
was stolen on a bus; “One moment it was next to me and the next it wasn’t” he
tells them, a poignant articulation of his recent loss. He’s
truly sorry for the worry caused. Steve is relieved to see him back, despite continuing to search in the absence of an update from the café, and tells Roy the place wasn’t the
same without him before resolving to return his suit to its rightful owner,
Austin Powers.
Once alone, Roy’s solitude is striking
as he looks upwards at the prospect of revisiting the flat. As he slowly and
quietly enters, his first difficult encounter is Hayley’s red anorak.
He is a solitary figure surrounded by shared things, and it’s truly the first
time that both Roy and the viewer feel the permanence of Hayley’s passing. He browses
through her book of photographs before opening the parcel she has sent him. He
is surprised, moved and grateful, thanking her aloud after reading her note.
It doesn’t take much convincing
by Todd for Marcus to ditch swimming with sniffly Liam go for a drink on the
premise of talking about his Dad. Marcus tells Todd things are easier with his own
Dad since he got with Maria and declares, “I’m still gay Todd, I just happen to
have fallen for a woman”. Todd later tells Sean that he’s in love with someone
else but won’t reveal the name.
Tina is unruffled by Owen’s icy demand for overdue rent and insistence that she contact Steph with regard to becoming her flatmate.
Gloria is hurt after overhearing Stella tell Rita
and Dennis that she’s not a bad person, but can be ruthless when it comes to
men. As W.B. Yeats would have it, “Tread softly because you tread on my dreams”, and Stella would do well to think of this. Telling Gloria her venture
with Ritchie and Dennis was a pipe dream that was never going to work out, and to
stop chasing rainbows is unfeeling, no matter how unappealing Gloria’s
behaviour can be. In a rare moment of revealing her true heart, she asks Stella, what if chasing
rainbows is all that’s keeping her going, and declares herself determined never to
give up on her dreams.
By Emma Hynes
Twitter: @ELHynes
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All original work on the Coronation Street Blog is covered by a Creative Commons License
Contrived scenario du jour: since when is Tina unable to pay her bills? She has a job and babysat on the side and must have some of the surrogacy money left. She's not wealthy, but hasn't mentioned being unable to pay her way. We needed Owen to bully her into getting a flatmate???
ReplyDeleteAmy was great. Nice con, kid! Welcome home, Royston. You've been missed although it seems you still want to be left alone.
Yeah agree - Tina also has Rita and her pot of gold to bail her out. Not a few months since Owen was fawning around Tina as she was surrogate to his grandkid, but that seems to be forgotton for him to badger her for rent on the Street. Cue for the annoying Stephanie to move in
ReplyDeleteAnd of course when Tina shuffles off, Steph will be able to afford the rent all on her own.
ReplyDeleteI must say I do like Steph's sassiness, and hope she soon gets a proper storyline of her own.
I wondered about the money too. I can understand her not wanting to use the money to live on week to week but surely to back-pay her rent until she gets paid again? She wouldn't have been working for those couple of weeks so it might be a week or two before she gets paid again.
ReplyDeleteI might be wrong but didn't the money from Owen go to pay Tommy's debts?
ReplyDeleteOnly the first part of what he paid her went for Tommy's debts. Even after Tommy left she's mentioned about still having some of that money.
ReplyDelete