Sue and Peter
McCall of County Durham , England , are no strangers to the Algarve . They
have been coming on holiday here for 28 years. On their latest visit, the third
this year, they stayed for the whole of October in a rental villa near Carvoeiro.
It was particularly memorable.
“Wednesday /
Thursday was not good,” Sue said in an email to a friend back home. “It poured
so much we had a power cut. Thank heavens I was already in bed and Peter
was locking up for the night, ‘cos when I say it was pitch black, I mean pitch
black. No street
lights. Peter had to feel his way to the bedroom with the light from his iPad.”
Sue added: “We're
back to normal now. It’s 20 degrees at the moment. Nice for sitting out in the
day, but cold from 6pm on. To keep the place warm we have the radiators on
all evening.”
Apart from the
weather, it didn’t stay ‘normal’ for long.
“We had real
shenanigans yesterday morning,” Sue told me.
Peter, the more technically
minded of the two, put the situation into context. “We had rented a villa that
had recently had new uPVC windows and shutters fitted all round. Coupled with
some solid steel gates at the courtyard entrance, it was a bit like Alcatraz .
“We were told that
just outside the gate there was a digital safe containing the gate keys. Then
we were given the house keys plus a second gate key for general use. The new
uPVC main door would close and lock on a gentle push. There was no handle on
the outside of the door, a worrying combination, as we were to discover.”
Sue takes up the story: “As we closed the main
door and set off for the beach bar, Peter thought I had the door key. I thought
HE had it.”
Peter adds a bit
more detail: “‘No’, I murmured, ‘I don’t have the key.’ Three beats.... mouth starting to go dry…. she
started to get that martyred look on her face that all women develop at an
early age and use when things start to get tricky. I looked at the solid steel
gates. Locked. I pushed on the main house door just in case. Locked too. Two
choices: fall on the ground and start to hyperventilate, or call for help.”
According to Peter,
this is what happened next: “I said as
sweetly as I could, despite gritted teeth, ‘ring the house management.’ Sue
said, ‘I haven’t got the number.’
‘It’s not on your phone?’
‘No,’ she said in that careful voice you
use when trapped with someone who might be about to become unpredictable.
‘It’s on a piece of paper in the house
notes’ file they gave us,’ I said, trying to avoid a tic that was developing in
my right eye.
‘I haven’t got the paper.’
‘Well where is it?’
I tailed off as her eyes shifted to the
door of the house. It was still locked.”
Fortunately, Sue had
the number of a couple of close friends who were holidaying nearby. They came
over quickly. Peter shouted out the code and they got the spare key from the
safe.
“Freedom!”
thought Peter.
Well, no. It
liberated them from the garden, but how were they going to get back into the
house?
“Thankfully, I
found a little scrap of paper in my handbag,” said Sue. “I’d torn it from a
sheet in the house the previous day and scrawled the management number on it
rather than sit with the huge house notes’ folder on my knee when I wanted to
ring to ask them to get our maid to do some ironing. I'd turned the scrap of
paper into a shopping list. Luckily, I hadn’t binned it. It was still in my bag!”
With a mixture of
hope and trepidation, Sue rang the management number. Mercifully, it wasn’t pitch
black, pouring with rain or cold.
“The young lady from
the management company came after about 10 minutes. She had a key to the main
door of the house. But we still couldn’t get in because our key was in the lock
on the other side.”
The management
lady then rang the maid, knowing that she (the maid) had a key to the kitchen
yard and the kitchen door. The maid came over and was able to get into the
yard. The trouble was she couldn’t open the kitchen door because, like the main
door, it too had a key in the lock inside.
“We hadn’t put it
there!” insisted Sue.
Anyway, to Peter
and Sue’s amazement the maid straightened her key ring to make a wire lock-pick.
She pushed it into the kitchen lock and wiggled it about to try to push the inside
key out the other side.
“It didn’t work,
but she's wasted as a maid,” said Sue. “She had a lot more gumption than us. I
suppose we can claim that we were so dumbstruck with the gravity of our
situation - and a possible huge bill for a call out to a specialist locksmith -
that our synapses by then had suffered a total shutdown.”
The resourceful maid
fetched stepladders. She, Peter and the management lady started scaling fences,
climbing walls and putting chairs up against windows to try and find a
vulnerable spot. The new uPVC windows proved not to be of the highest quality.
The management lady managed to force one open. This set off the burglar alarm.
Happily, no one seemed to take any notice.
“The maid managed
to climb through the window and disable the alarm before the cavalry arrived,”
said Sue.
“A trusting
neighbourhood is a wonderful thing,” said Peter later while in contemplative
mood. “As for the rest, we were profusely and lavishly apologetic.”
“To say we were
relieved is the biggest understatement ever,”
Sue added. “ Sherpa McCall needed a very strong drink. And I needed a
new pair of pants!”
Invigorated by
their latest Algarve
holiday, the McCalls have already booked accommodation for a five-week stay
next spring. They will be near Carvoeiro for all of May and the first week of
June – in a different villa.