Coronavirus: Don’t whack me with a baton, Frank! I’ve got carte blanche to walk on Ferry Road – Susan Morrison

Peter Lorre in Casablanca might have preferred to get a ticking off from Lord Provost Frank Ross (Picture: Moviestore/Shutterstock 1565930a)Peter Lorre in Casablanca might have preferred to get a ticking off from Lord Provost Frank Ross (Picture: Moviestore/Shutterstock 1565930a)
Peter Lorre in Casablanca might have preferred to get a ticking off from Lord Provost Frank Ross (Picture: Moviestore/Shutterstock 1565930a)
The triumphant text from mum summed it up: “Been out. Was careful. Got spinach and parsnips. Good haul!” I could practically hear the Ride of the Valkyries in the background.

The image of my mother bearing down on the checkout of the local Scotmid holding aloft bags of greens like a deranged vitamin-C hunting Norse goddess was hard to shift.

She shouldn’t have been out, I retorted by text. My mother, however, has two failsafe cures for just about any ailment. A wee ten-minute lie down and a donder out in the fresh air.

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It’s no use me telling her to stay in, when even Boris, a man who’s clearly as comfortable in the glare of the ­midday sun as a busload of vampires, tells us that we should go out once a day for exercise.

Admittedly, this was enough to send many of my fellow Scots into a tailspin. Was this exercise compulsory? Once a day? Every day? As a nation, we’ve had issues with the whole let’s get physical movement for a while.

We once might have cried, “Step we gaily and on we go! Arm in arm and heel for toe”, but these days if Mhairi wanted a crowd at the wedding she’d need to lay on a coach and a stretch limo.

I had an excuse to get out, and I was thrilled. Months ago, appointments had been made by the NHS to have me scanned and probed and have ­needles stuck in various bits, and all this was at my good friend, the ­Western General.

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It’s about a 45-minute walk from Leith. Now that’s a donder. I filled my little water bottle, donned my little backpack and set off like a little explorer.

Despite assurance from Boris that I could go out, I was still a bit unsure. After all, things could change in a heartbeat. We’ve all seen footage of Spanish police whacking people from a safe distance. I assume they’ve issued longer batons for the duration. Channel 4 showed film of Italian ­mayors shouting beautiful sounding abuse at sanction-busting citizens.

The last thing I wanted was for Lord Provost Frank Ross to suddenly pop up and give me a ticking off on Ferry Road. He’s bound to have more important things to do right now.

So, I carefully folded my appointment letter and put it in my pocket to wave at anyone who asked to see my papers. For a spilt-second I felt like Peter Lorre’s character in Casablanca. I had the famous carte d’ passage that would let me through and on the plane to freedom, or, at the very least, if I got fed up, on the No 21 to Crewe Toll.

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