When did you feel the ground shift?
I drove the route slower than usual. 15 miles an hour. I wanted to see the dawn one last time from the driver’s seat. The sun came up over the bypass. It was a good one. Pink and gold. I finished at 7:13 AM. Last drop was a pint of skimmed to an empty house on Fern Grove that hadn't updated their order since 2014. I left it anyway. Habit.
Why didn't you quit?
But on cold mornings, residents of the eastern crescent say they still hear it, just at the edge of hearing: the ghostly whir of an electric motor and the soft clink of glass on stone.
By 2010, the depot went from 14 lads to 4. Me, Pete the Snail (he was slow), young Liam, and old Barry. We were carrying the whole route on our backs. The electric floats were falling apart. I had to re-wire my own brake lights with tape.
— End of Interview —
(Laughs, shakes his head) Cold. Always cold. But a good cold. In ’96, we had that big freeze in February. I remember the milk was freezing in the bottles on the step before people woke up. The cream would push the silver foil cap up like a little white hat.