Tuesday, 31 July 2012

(Sketch) The History Teacher

History Lesson

sound: School bell

TEACHER
Good morning, class. I'll be taking today's history lesson since your normal teacher, Mr Matthews, is helping the police with a murder investigation. If any of you saw Mr Matthews with a large knife on the night of the twenty-third, the police are urging witnesses to step forward. Now could you please open your textbooks to page fourteen.


SOUND: pages turning

TEACHER
Now, as you can see from the pictures, all Aztecs were skeletons who lived underground and ate off of broken plates.

STUDENT
Sir, Sir?

TEACHER
What is it?

STUDENT
We're not doing the Aztecs, we're doing the Soviet Union.

TEACHER
Right, then turn to page one-oh-three. Now you, you there?

STUDENT 2
Me?

TEACHER
Yes. You say that you're doing the Soviet Union, what do you know about it so far?

STUDENT 2
Erm, they were experimenting with nuclear energy, and had an accident

TEACHER
Exactly, which explains all the double-headed eagles around at the time.

STUDENT
Sir, sir?

TEACHER
Yes? Can't you just put your hand up to get my attention?

STUDENT
I would, sir, but this is radio, so you wouldn't notice me.

TEACHER
Fair point.

STUDENT
Well, sir, it's just. Are you sure that's right?

TEACHER
As sure as I am that the Majority of the World was buried beneath a layer of Red Paint in the nineteenth century..

STUDENT
But Mister Matthews said that the Red on the Map was the British Empire.

TEACHER
Well, I suppose you have to tell children something.

STUDENT
You mean it's not true?

TEACHER
It's one opinion.

STUDENT
What about this? Is this all paint?

TEACHER
Don't wave that around! Are you trying to get us all killed?

STUDENT
What?

TEACHER
My god, did Matthews teach you nothing?! We all know that large, multi-coloured maps start wars. Quick, we need to find a large, empty field with a memorial in it. [start to fade out] Soldiers tend to stop fighting once you build a memorial. It seems to drain their powers.



Sunday, 29 July 2012

Did go to specsavers

It's funny how people tend to gain one thing after losing another. I, for example, gained glasses after losing my sight.


Saturday, 28 July 2012

The Restaurant (part six - the end)

We had just settled down when the kitchen exploded. It broke with a noise, well, a noise not unlike a high-end restaurant kitchen exploding.

The waiter, who had but five minutes earlier taken our orders, rushed out into the throng of startled customers. “Everything’s fine”, he said, his British instincts kicking in. Being British ourselves, we didn’t question this statement; these were the words of authority, released through a stiff upper lip. Which was, coincidentally, what I had as a main course.

You see, the kitchen staff were, in typical British fashion, mortified that they might not be able to provide for their diners. Falling on their swords wasn’t an option – swords weren’t allowed in the workplace (some nonsense about health and safety), and besides, very few chefs owned swords, what with it being an archaic piece of weaponry. And so, partly in desperation, partly in ’96 Cabernet Sauvignon, they were cooking their late co-workers.

The couple on the table next to us were presented with a pile of waiters’ fingers, served on a melange of plaster, shrapnel, and wedding rings. I was surprised to find myself feeling almost jealous; my lip of sous chef in a sauce of red wine and tears paled in comparison. And in tone, as it sat there untouched.

“Is everything okay, sirs?”. The waiter had returned to our table. Until this point, the patrons had been silent, watching the specs of concrete that had formed the main wall of the kitchen fall to the ground.
“Erm, no, actually” Michael started. The tension in the room was palpable, electric, elastic. “I would quite like some salt and pepper.” The waiter breathed a huge sigh of relief.
“What did you say that for?” I hissed “You aren’t seriously going to eat it?”

“Look,” said Michael “If they’re going to pretend that the situation is perfectly normal, the least I can do is play along.”
“You’re going to eat it?!”
“Yes, and then I shall order desert and settle the bill. It’s British fashion – you have to be polite”.

In the deathly silence, Michael’s comments had been heard by all of the other patrons. There was a murmur of agreement – they were, indeed, British and it was their responsibility, nay, their duty not to offend their hosts. Conversation resumed, punctuated by the clatter of steel on ceramic, and the occasional cough as someone bit off more alabaster than they could chew.

--

Michael was true to his word. After finishing his braised waiter, he ordered a slice of chocolate gateaux, which he ate despite the dusting of particulate concrete, and settled the bill. As we walked out onto the street, I was shaking slightly. Michael looked at me with a mix of pity and contempt. “Look, mate, trauma is so not in. Blasé’s where it’s at. Also, think it’d be a good idea for you never to mention this to anyone.”

Friday, 27 July 2012

The Restaurant (part five)

Walking down the street to the restaurant, we passed a cluster of CCTV cameras. “Hold still” said Michael, before proceeding to punch me in the face. “What did you do that for?!” I protested, yelping and wiping blood from the corner of my mouth onto my cuff. “Sorry, mate” Michael shrugged, “But casual violence on CCTV is experiencing a big revival this autumn. Don’t want to be left behind, now, do we?” I sullenly admitted that we did not, and Michael continued to rain a volley of blows. I was slightly uncomfortable with the people who gathered to stare at us in the street, but Michael reassured me that “being ogled at by a crowd of bemused onlookers is bang on trend”. I reassured myself that they were probably watching the man naked except for a tie and glasses.

--

Standing outside the restaurant was a tiny waiter, no more than three feet high. What I took at first glance to be a tiny waiter was, upon second, third, and fourth glance a normal sized waiter quite far away. The waiter smiled as he greeted us. It was that special, nervous smile reserved for greeting a man with a large black eye, and his naked companion.

We were given a table in the corner: near to the bar, close to the kitchen, and far from the sight of any potential customers. I didn’t really mind. In the gloom of the corner, it was just dark enough for me to imagine that Michael was wearing a t-shirt. A pale-pink, skin-tight t-shirt, but a t-shirt nonetheless. The fission cuisine concept was an interesting one. In place of a bread basket on the table there were small piles of flour, yeast, sugar, and salt, accompanied by shot glasses filled with water and oil. I glanced over to the couple on the table next to us; in place of their glasses of wine there were small thimbles full of grapes, water, and antifreeze.

“I think I had better go for a cocktail” I said to myself and, since I had voiced the thought aloud, the other patrons of the restaurant. “I don’t normally talk to myself” I quickly stuttered “I mean, not that I’ve stopped talking to myself and that I’m ignoring myself, but” the crowd had stopped listening.

I ran my finger down the inside of the menu, stroking the unfamiliar names. “I think I’ll have a Molotov” I said, this time to the waiter. “Me too” said Michael. “Making decisions for yourself is so outdated. Sheepish crowd following is a timeless classic” Here he nodded sagely, stuffing handfuls of dry flour into his mouth.

Thursday, 26 July 2012

The Restaurant (part four)

When I arrived at the door he opened it with a flourish (I was impressed, flourishes don’t come cheap) and waved me through. He was wearing a bright purple tie of crushed velvet. I had to admit that it was rather striking, but I wish he’d worn something with it.

“What do you think?” He asked, throwing his arms wide.

“I think it’d go nicely with a shirt and some trousers” I replied.

“Nonsense!” he barked “Conspicuous displays of nudity to provide the illusion of confidence are ‘in’ this season. Now where are my bloody glasses?”

“By the door, next to your normal glasses” I replied.

“Ah. Thanks,” he said, donning the specs. “Body fluids are in this season – homicide chic is so now”

He explained that his new job was as a restaurant critic. “But you have no experience of fine dining!” I protested. “Your favourite meal is a fish finger sandwich, Served with nutella!”

“I know... It’s perfect!” he said “having unqualified opinions and sharing them with anyone who’ll listen is so in right now”. He adjusted his tie. “That’s actually why I rang you. I thought you might like to join me for a meal. I was thinking we could go to this new place in Soho, the Cólvért. It’s very trendy, It’s got a gimmick and everything.”

“What’s the gimmick?”

“Duck pond dining. There aren’t any tables or chairs, you just sort of mill about with the other patrons, and the waiters throw bread in your general direction.”

“No tables? But what if you were to order soup?”

“You don’t order”

“It’s a fixed menu?”

“Yes. Just bread”.

“No thanks” I said. I didn’t feel like spending the evening standing up – if Michael insisted on going nude, the least I could do was get him behind a table. “How about that literary place? You know, the Byron Bar”

“I’ve reviewed it before. The food’s not great but the cocktails are good – especially Tequila Mockingbird and Pride and Prejudisaronno.” He was preening in the mirror, applying hairgel to the tips of his fingers, like a peacock, applying hairgel to the tips of his fingers. “I know,” he said, giving a thumbs up to his reflection. “We can go to ‘Split’. It’s a new experimental place that does fission cuisine”

Wednesday, 25 July 2012

The Restaurant (part three)

I didn’t have to wait long for an opportunity to present itself. My phone rang, and I answered it immediately (because that’s what you’re supposed to do when your phone rings). It was Michael. “Meet me in ten minutes”, the tone of his voice seemed to say. “Meet me in ten minutes” his actual voice said.

Michael and I worked together on an assembly line several decades ago, when the phones were like bricks, the bricks were like other, bigger bricks, and there were assembly lines at which one could work. It was during the teacher’s strike of 1994. Children’s essays would move in front of us on the conveyor belt, and I would pepper them randomly with ticks. Michael would then put a scrawl at the bottom of the page that, when viewed from the correct angle and with the right type of lighting, may have been interpreted as handwriting. We were good at our job. So good, in fact, that few people have heard of the teachers’ strike of 1994.

Michael’s life was ruled by fashion – he followed trends doggedly, to the extent that trends started taking out restraining orders. When I met him, and his tie-dye shirt, denim jacket, and nose-piercing, he’d just stepped on to the property ladder. Since then he’d landed on the property snake, and when we last spoke he’d lost his job (as was de rigueur in 2008) and was consolidating all existing debts into one easy loan (in skinny jeans, a crisp white shirt, and red patent brogues).

I wondered what he was doing for a living now. Statistically, I suppose he's probably involved in trying to get people to claw back PPI.



Sunday, 22 July 2012

Villains' convention (sketch)


SUPERVILLAIN
And you're ready to send the invites to the printers?

ASSISTANT
Yes

SUPERVILLAIN
Good, then that's the preparation for this year's Villain's convention sorted.

ASSISTANT
Erm, sir.

SUPERVILLAIN
What is it?

ASSISTANT
Well, there was one thing I wanted to bring up...

SUPERVILLAIN
Yes?

ASSISTANT
It's about the venue.

SUPERVILLAIN
Yes? Well I've said it before and I'll say it again, we can't do underwater because that's where Lex hosted it last year. The flaming skull-shaped volcano was very decently priced, and it was one of the few places that would accept pets.

ASSISTANT
Pets?

SUPERVILLAIN
Yes, Dig Dastardly won't come if he can't take his guide dog.

ASSISTANT

Won't that be a problem if Cruella comes?

SUPERVILLAIN

Oh, no, Miss De Vill will never accept - it's an island, there's too much chance that her suede will get ruined.

ASSISTANT
Well, sir ... just take a look at the invite

(Here the assistant reads off the invite)

"The hotel can be accessed by helicopter, speedboat, galleon, or death star. Parking permits can be obtained from reception. Once parked, it's just a short three - hundred metre vertical climb up the cliff face to the main complex."

(short pause)

SUPERVILLAIN
And?

ASSISTANT
What about Long John Silver? Could a man with a wooden leg really make the climb?

SUPERVILLAIN
I'm sure he could try.

ASSISTANT
And what about Sauron? He's at least 50, 000 years old!

SUPERVILLAIN
It didn't stop him from terrorising Middle Earth.

ASSISTANT
Okay, well what about this?

(The assistant again reads from the invite)

ASSISTANT
"The hotel also features a golf course and swimming pool. These can be accessed using the rickety rope bridge spanning the lava-filled crater"

SUPERVILLAIN
Yes, and?

ASSISTANT
Do you really think that's a good idea with Emilio Largo and Blackbeard on the guestlist?

SUPERVILLAIN
What do you mean?

ASSISTANT
Well, they don't have any depth perception.

SUPERVILLAIN
It'll be fine, we'll pair them up with someone who can hold their hand.

ASSISTANT
What, like Darth Vader or Captain Hook?

SUPERVILLAIN
Oh.

(short silence)

ASSISTANT
Boss?

SUPERVILLAIN
Yes?

ASSISTANT
Are all villains disabled?



Saturday, 21 July 2012

Ten lesser-known idioms

1. You can take a horse to water, but you can't take the water out of the horse.

2. Don't count your hatchets before they're buried. It takes all the fun out of owning a metal detector.

3. It's time to pull your socks up, get your skates on, shift this thing into gear, turn the volume up to eleven, and question what this mode of transport is, exactly.

4. Put a bee in a man's bonnet, and he'll be annoyed for a day. Teach someone else to put a bee in a man's bonnet, and he'll be annoyed for a lifetime.

5. You can't teach old rope new tricks.

6. Don't teach eggs to suck your grandmother.

7. A fly in the ointment is worth two in the bush.

8. I shall wear my sleeve upon my heart. It has a silver lining, and I would hate for it to get dirty.

9. Some are born into office jobs, some achieve office office jobs, while some have office jobs thrust upon them.

10. There's no such thing as a free lunch, but if you get there early enough I hear you can catch a worm.

Friday, 20 July 2012

Mister Existential Angst

Mister Existential Angst had a nagging sense that life was fraught with contradiction, and quite possibly meaningless. Hence the name.




He lived in a small house in Happyland with a yellow bird, a white cat, and a cloying sense of unease.



One day, Mister Existential Angst was making a cup of tea when he realised that he didn’t have any milk. Oh dear!



He resolved to go to the shops to get some more. Then he remembered that he didn’t have a wallet.



“Come to think of it,” said Mister Existential Angst “I can’t remember ever paying for anything. Take this house; I don’t think I have a mortgage. Oh, god, am I a squatter?!”. He began to run in tight, panicked circles.



He was still running when the doorbell rang. “It’s us, your good friends Mr Petty, Mr Mute, and Mr Clumsy Exposition,” Mr Clumsy Exposition cried.



“Oh god,” sobbed Mister Existential Angst, “all my friends are completely one dimensional.”



Mr Mute said nothing.



“We’ve come to see if you were okay,” said Mr Clumsy Exposition. “After all, you have had four mental breakdowns in the last six days.”



“Six days, four hours, and twenty seven minutes” corrected Mr Petty.



“Don’t you see?” shouted Mister Existential Angst. “You’re all endowed with a single defining characteristic. Don’t you think that’s unusual?” He continued. “There’s something strange going on here, put I can’t seem to put my finger on it. Wait a minute,” Mister Existential Angst glanced downwards, face contorted in shock “I don’t have fingers! I don’t even have arms! How was I making a cup of tea?”



Mr Mute said nothing.


Thursday, 19 July 2012

Books that publishers rejected

Harry Potter and the Ofsted inspection (J. K. Rowling)
“Mr Dumbledore”, the inspector continued “I have no doubt that you provide these children with a riveting environment, one in which all sorts of marketable could ‘adventures’ occur, but don’t you think that you should adhere to some sort of curriculum?” Dumbledore shuffled awkwardly. “And what about fire exits?” the inspector continued. “Surely you should make some sort of contingency plan for premises that can be accessed only by a single train”.

The Dragon with the Girl Tattoo (Larsson)

Mr Ennui (Roger Hargreaves)
Mister Ennui had a nagging doubt that no aspects of his life had any real significance, hence the name. He lived in a small house in Happyland, which he shared with a budgerigar, two white cats, and a growing sense of unease. “All my friends are one dimensional,” thought Mister Ennui, as he checked his post, discarding postcards from Mr Happy, Mr Strong, and Mister Tall.

American Physio (Bret Easton Ellis)

Fifty Shades of Grey,
or ‘An almost comprehensive guide to the tarmacs, aggregates, asphalts, and concretes of Greater London and the Lower Lee Valley’

Wednesday, 18 July 2012

Five things that you may not know about the Olympics

1. Before the introduction of mandatory drugs tests in 1967, most competitors, spectators, and umpires operated under the influence of hallucinogens. This may go some way to explaining why the winner of the 1908 100m sprint was noted down as ‘a massive vermillion caterpillar with the face of Julius Caesar’.

2. The Five Rings of the Olympic logo were originally thought to symbolise the five chemical states of matter; solid, liquid, gas, mush, and served chilled with a slice of lemon. This was proved incorrect in 1939, when an archaeologist found evidence that it was, in fact, the result of the outlines of the five coffee cups used by the first Olympic organisers.

3. Historically, Olympic athletes competed barefoot, and without expensive nylon and lycra uniforms. This is a tradition that Greece are thinking of resurrecting for the 2012 games.

4. At the first modern Olympic Games in Athens in 1896, silver medals were awarded to the winners and bronze medals to those who obtained second place. The judges denied the existence of any gold medals.

5. Discontinued Olympic events include tandem cycling, pistol duelling, and pass-the-parcel.


Tuesday, 17 July 2012

The Restaurant (part 2)

I didn’t really know what to do with myself. Normally on my days off I would call my best friend Steve. I’ve known him since we were at school together, when he was just a slip of a thing, with soft, short, blonde hair, big, brown eyes, and ill fitting uniform that was clearly several sizes too big. He was the teacher’s pet. A Labrador, I think. But he never let that get in the way of his work; Steve may have been a Labrador, but he always came second in tests. Small class sizes were something that my school valued immensely.

When Steve and I meet up, we tend to play a game of air badminton. It’s a lot like normal badminton, except instead of a shuttlecock, you use a parcel of air. And instead of rackets, you use parcels of air. And instead of a net, you use an empty crisp packet. Not many people have heard of it, but it’s definitely a real thing. We always played it at school with Mr Williams, the sports teacher who owned the Rolls Royce, personalised number plate, and was also in charge of the sports equipment budget.

I wonder what happened to that kind, generous man... He was always so very encouraging during sports lessons. Although I never quite got the hang of landing in the air swimming pool (I was always injuring myself during air diving) I was brilliant at air hurdles, He spent hours training me for track and field events, and said that I threw the air javelin further than he had ever seen! He said that I could go far in long distance running. And he was always so sensitive. I remember him comforting me after the regional athletics try-outs, his Rolex-weighted wrist sitting heavily on my slender shoulders. I just couldn’t understand what had happened. I was the best at my school in the air pole vault, but all the entrants from the other schools went so much higher than me. Mister Williams said that my air pole must have got bent when it was loaded into the air trailer that he used to transport the equipment, towed behind his Rolls Royce.

I believed him – after all, I often misplaced some of the air equipment myself. But Mr Williams, that kind gentleman, was always very nice about it. He’d get me to write a letter to the headmaster explaining that the equipment had gone missing, the headmaster would allocate some funds to buy a replacement and Mr Williams would return, in his newly-washed Rolls Royce, with the new equipment.

But air badminton with Steve was out of the question; he was an accountant now, and would be in work until five. Besides, I couldn’t remember where I’d left my air racket.

Monday, 16 July 2012

The Restaurant (part 1)

It was 2014, the year when the British government admitted that there was no such person as ‘David Cameron’ and that for the last nine years the leader of the Conservatives had been a balloon with a smiley face drawn on it taped to the top of a suit. The public knew that they ought to feel outraged, but had to admit that it still had more charisma than Ed Miliband.

It was a Tuesday, and I should have been at work. The office, however, was currently out-of-bounds, experiencing a flood of biblical proportions. It really was a bad flood, only about 16 centimetres by 12 twelve centimetres by 3 centimetres. Bibles aren’t that big. It was really more of a puddle but, technically, and in the eyes of the management, it was a flood, and so the building had to be evacuated. The health and safety officer was beaming. It was his moment to shine (below a hundred watts, ensuring that all employees were wearing grade five protective sunglasses).

And so it was that I was wandering round London’s streets, watching the pigeons milling about, the tourists watching the pigeons, and the CCTV cameras watching the tourists. The lamp posts were... well, the lamp posts weren’t doing very much. Forget I mentioned them.

Sunday, 15 July 2012

You have 17 new messages

You have 17 new messages. Main menu. To listen to your messages, press one.
First new message received today at 9.02 am.
[beep]

Hi Dan, it’s Rob. Can you please tell Karen to pass the remote?

[beep]
Second new message received today at 9.03 am.
[beep]

Hi Dan, it’s Karen. Can you tell Rob that if he wants the remote, he can get it himself?

[beep]
Third new message received today at 9.04 am.
[beep]

Hi Dan, it’s Rob. Can you tell Karen to stop being so petty?

[beep]
Fourth new message received today at 9.05 am.
[beep]

Hi Dan, it’s Karen. Can you please tell Rob that there’s nothing quite so petty as refusing to talk to your wife and so going through the charade of leaving messages on your best friend’s phone?

[beep]
Fifth new message received today at 9.06 am.
[beep]

Well, Dan, I wouldn’t have to ignore Karen if she’d stop smoking in the flat.

[beep]
Sixth new message received today at 9.07 am.
[beep]

Dan, can you please remind Rob that this is my flat, and I’ll smoke where I want to. If he doesn’t like that then he can shove it up his –

[beep]
Seventh new message received today at 9.42 am.
[beep]

Hi Dan, it’s Rob, again. Karen is driving me crazy, so I’ve gone for a walk to clear my head. Remember what I used to say? ‘I like my women like I like my films; beautiful, silent, and lasting for about 90 minutes.’ Karen was perfect.

Where did it go wrong? I remember when we first met, our eyes locking across the room, me walking into the ice sculpture of Silvio Berlusconi, and not caring, brushing the shards of ice into the laps and faces of the guests sitting below, her plunging head over heels onto the table of novelty miniature hats. Us both apologising profusely to the manager of the establishment, and agreeing that we should probably have our pay docked for the evening. (I never did work out quite what that event was supposed to be celebrating.) Karen is the only woman I have ever, truly, walked into an ice slupture of Silvio Berlusconi while pursuing.

It wasn’t long before I asked to take her hand. I later gave it back, upon the discovery that three hands are not very useful when you only have two arms to which to attach them, and instead asked her to marry me. She said ‘I do’, and we tied the knot in Great Haste. It’s a lovely little village, you really ought to visit it some time.

It’s only recently that her bad habits have come through. I love her, really, I do, but they’re starting to get to me. Like biting the nails – I’ve had to call the carpenter out four times this month to repair the wainscoting - and her smoking keeps leaving scorch marks on the sofa. I appreciate that she’s a special, amazing, dazzling, radiant, cultivated woman (who bought me a thesaurus for my birthday) but I think I’ve had enough.

[beep]
Eighth new message received today at 9.45 am.
[beep]

Hi Dan, it’s Karen. I’ve got the flat to myself, now. If you wanted to ... come over... I know that Rob won’t be back for quite some time.

[beep]
Ninth new message received today at 2.17 pm.
[beep]

Hi Dan, it’s Rob again. I think perhaps I was a bit emotional earlier. Now I’ve calmed down, I see exactly what I have to do. I’ve bought everything that I need, and I’m on my way back to the flat.

[beep]
Tenth new message received today at 2.23 pm.
[beep]

Hi Dan, it’s Karen. If you hear from Rob, can you let me know? He usually rings to apologise by now.

[beep]
Eleventh new message received today at 2.24 pm.
[beep]

Hi Dan, it’s Rob. Could I borrow your overalls?

[beep]
Twelfth new message received today at 3.25 pm.
[beep]

(Rob) Forget the overalls. On a completely unrelated note, could I borrow your hacksaw and your car?

[beep]
Thirteenth new message received today at 3.26 pm.
[beep]

(Rob) Also, do you know how to remove bloodstains from a carpet?


[beep]
Fourteenth new message received today at 3.28 pm.
[beep]

(Rob) Oh, god, sorry, I realise what that must have sounded like. No, Karen’s fine, I can explain everything. You see, erm, when I went out earlier I bought her a few presents: some roses, a few heart-shaped helium balloons, a puppy. What happened was this, erm, you see. Basically, the puppy ate the balloons and, er, then he managed to burst himself on the roses. Yes, that’s what happened. Karen is fine.

[beep]
Fifteenth new message received today at 3.31 pm.
[beep]

(Rob) And... erm... to explain the clothing. I , er, thought it would be cute to dress the puppy up to look like her. Yes, that was it.

[beep]
Sixteenth new message received today at 3.32 pm.
[beep]

(Rob) Dan, I could really use some help. What if someone sees the flat like this?

[beep]
Seventeenth new message received today at 4.52 pm.
[beep]

Hi Dan, it’s Karen. Do you know why the flat smells of bleach?

Saturday, 14 July 2012

Timothy Bell

Timothy Bell was impressionable. Like warm playdough, or a newborn swan, he absorbed an imprint of everything around him... and looked out of place on a takeaway menu.

One day, while sitting at home watching daytime TV, surrounded by a pile of books from the Richard and Judy book club, he saw an advert urging him to claim compensation for an accident experienced at work. He googled ‘most dangerous jobs’ and discovered that joining the army gave him favourable odds of suffering some form of injury. He enlisted that very afternoon and, thanks to his extreme malleability, rose through the ranks with speed.

He was the ad-man’s dream. Unfortunately for the corporations, the banks had told him to save.

Friday, 13 July 2012

The Actor Sanctuary




A
I don't suppose you know where I am?

B
The actor sanctuary, of course.

A
Actor sanctuary?

B
Yes. You've heard of donkey sanctuaries, haven't you?

A
Well, yes –

B
Well, this is similar. These actors are old, out of work. We looks after them, we does. Except most of our incoming stock has two legs, and we don't let you ride them for £2 a go.

A
Ride them?

B
No, it's nearer £40 for that sort of service. Shall I give you a tour? Yes, much like a donkey sanctuary we give them a stimulating environment in which to live out the rest of their lives. Over there we have the female newreader's paddock.

Both men look to the left, and a sound effect plays. It is the sound of many female voices saying things like "Now, the headlines", "coming up later in the show" and "now, let's turn to the weather".

B
And, over there, the RSC pen.

Both men look to the left, and a sound effect plays. It is the sound of many male voices reciting the (in)famous Hamlet line "Alas, poor Yorick! I knew him, Horatio" slightly out of sync.

B
For just £2 a month, you can provide them with skulls to perform it properly.

A
And what's that over there?

There is an uncomfortably long silence.

B
The Pinter enclosure.

Thursday, 12 July 2012

The Post Office

On my days off, I take the opportunity to visit the Post Office – seeing as its opening hours are incompatible with full-time employment.

While I’m queuing, I tend to fantasize about the end of the world. I project seven years into the future, following a nuclear war between Ecuador and Tesco. The denizens of the post office, who, after seven years, have finally reached the front of the queue, are the only humans left. By queuing, and remaining indoors, for so long, they manage to avoid the fallout, and venture into the wasteland only once radiation has fallen to safe background levels. It would be one of life’s ironies that their letters would never be delivered, despite queuing for so long; all postmen, and, indeed, the recipients of their letters, were reduced to dust, limbs twisting in blinding light as they conceded that ‘every little helps.’

And then my mind turns to survival. The sole inhabitants of the rest of the world consist of three pensioners, two cashiers, and a large, rugby-playing type. I reckon I could fight the pensioners off if I needed to secure food, and make a mental note to be extra-friendly to the cashier. Who knows, he might share?

Would we repopulate the Earth? Why would we want to repopulate the Earth? Before the crisis, young couples rejected the idea of raising children in Dagenham. I wouldn’t want to raise a child in a post-apocalyptic wasteland – for one thing, there are a considerably larger number of sharp edges, unburied corpses, and gangs of looters. Also, there are hardly any well-staffed C of E schools.

Just as I'm deciding which one of the three pensioners, two cashiers, and large, rugby-playing type I would choose as my post-apocalyptic mate, and ethereal voice interrupts.

"Cashier number four, please."


New Boardgames in 2012

Cluedoku
Britain’s most popular murder-mystery-themed logic-based number-placement puzzle. Was it Colonel Mustard with the lead piping? Can the six go next to the four in the corner?

Monotony
Players travel round the board paying imaginary rents with imaginary money, winning second place in imaginary beauty contests, and occasionally landing in imaginary jail. This repeats for several hours until the youngest player faces imaginary bankruptcy, and liquidates their imaginary assets.

Horseback Chess
Chess, but played on the back of a wild stallion. Galloping optional.

Scrbbl
Much like ‘Scrabble’, but with all the vowels removed.

Oedipus: The boardgame
Fun for all the family. Except dad.



Monday, 9 July 2012

Life on the Rising Limb (extended)


The year was 1878, in that awkward in-between phase between the invention of the car and the invention of the petrol engine. Everyone owned one, but kept it in their stables and couldn’t really see the point.

I was aboard ‘The Rising Limb’, a scientific research vessel twice as high as it was wide, half as wide as it was deep, and built by someone who had got the plans the wrong way around. Said ship-maker had tried to conceal his error by floating the vessel the “right” way up. This wasn’t an ideal fix; it had the unfortunate side effect of turning all of the corridors into chutes, the chandeliers into wall hangings, and the kitchens into death-traps, with open hearths forming the floor. Besides, since the boat was constructed, and the sails installed, vertically, she now had to be tugged by an upright boat. Unfortunately, the Captain had not been informed of the ship’s rather unique architecture and so, when he came aboard to survey the vessel he fell down – or should that be through? – the corridor, coming to an abrupt stop on the wall of his office. His leg was broken, and replaced with a rather fetching wooden model.

The Captain, in pain and concussed, stumbled out of the medical bay and onto the deck. “Hoist the cannons! Polish the rigging! Prime the mainbrace!” Although he was concussed he was still our captain, so we obliged. We were just hoisting the cannons when the – freshly polished – rope snapped. The cannons crashed to the deck, raining down like large, predominantly brass raindrops. The captain, unable to run for cover on account of his new wooden leg, found his hand pinned to the deck. He passed out instantly, and was carried to the medical bay, where the ship’s doctor fitted him with a metal hook.

The Captain lost his eye the next morning; he awoke and rubbed the sleep from his eyes – unaware of the hook.

--

It was two days before we were due to set sail. We were still waiting upon the arrival of Doctor Cross and Doctor Monk. As I mentioned in passing, we were a scientific vessel, set to collect specimens from the island of Santa Rosalia. Doctor Cross’ reputation preceded him. He had sent a telegraph. He was known for his unusual choice of headwear, expertise on the reptiles of the equator, and vile (and violent) temper.

Smith, the ship’s geologist, and I were arguing over who should greet him. We couldn’t decide who would expose themselves to this volatile man; I argued that the ship wouldn’t get very far without an engineer, so I should be saved. Smith contested that he had a wife and kids at home. I countered that they weren’t his, and he really should return them at some point. Having hostages shouldn’t mean that you are automatically safe. In the end I flipped a coin and, while Smith was distracted, punched him on the nose. He agreed to greet Cross.

When we went up on deck there was an enormous man, almost as wide as he was tall, with a thick, bushy beard, and darting eyes. He looked like his mother had been a bear, and his father had also been a bear. He was a bear. He stepped aside and Doctor Cross introduced himself; “Good morning, fellows” he said. “Is it okay if I bring aboard my pet bear?”

It was not an ideal situation; I was inclined to say no, but then we weren’t going to say no to someone with a pet bear. But, then again, if we said no, there would be no pet bear. So we’d be safe. It was one of those terrible logical quandaries. In the end, we reasoned that the bear could stay; that Doctor Cross had managed to get it across the gangway deserved some form of recognition.

In hindsight, we probably should have told the captain about the bear.

--
The last of our crew to arrive was Doctor Everest Monk. Our mission was to collect specimen samples, and no-one was better at trapping animals than Doctor Monk. He was an ingenious inventor, and had made his fortune from perforated bread (the best thing since sliced) and double-sided paper. He demanded to see the captain, so we gathered some rope and lowered him down to the captain’s office.

It should, at this point, be explained that a man doesn’t lose an eye without any minor repercussions; a complete loss of depth perception, for example. And so it was that when Monk and I arrived in the Captain’s office, we found him in the process of spreading the navigational charts with marmalade, buttering his compass, and writing a letter home on some toast. “Ah, Monk,” he called to the doctor. “What a pleasant surprise to see you.” He made to get up, but Monk gestured him to sit. “Would you perhaps like a cup of tea?”
“Yes, Captain, that would be lovely” Monk replied. Monk sat down, and the Captain set a teacup before him. The Captain retrieved a teapot from his desk, and proceeded to pour the scalding hot liquid down Monk’s front. To Monk’s credit, he did not flinch. He did scream though.

After regaining his composure, Monk spoke up. “I was wondering, Captain, whether we might speak in private.”
“We are in Private.”
“No, sir, I meant without” – he gestured towards me.
“Oh!” the Captain exclaimed. “I didn’t see you there. Would you like some tea?”
“No!” I shouted, rather too loudly and quickly. Monk shot me a furtive glance. I like furtive glances; they’re my favourite type of biscuit. I left without complaint. As I ascended the rope back to the deck, I heard some snatches of conversation.

“unique opportunity... you will agree... enormous amounts of gold... collateral damage... the men ... for the best.” And then, somewhat ominously, the Captain’s voice “It is agreed”.

--

We sailed for weeks without Incident - before realising he had been left at port. It didn’t really matter, though. Incident’s role was as a deck-cleaner, and now that they were all vertical, there was no real call for him. Also, we could store the bear in his cabin.

What was worrying, however, was Smith’s disappearance. He hadn’t been seen since the six hour charades game of the night before. Our games don’t usually last so long, but the captain guessed correctly and then it was his turn to act. It turns out it’s quite hard to play charades when you have hooks instead of hands.

I was searching the deck for Smith, when I ran into Monk, dragging a large sack across the wooden planking. “Have you seen Smith?” I asked.

“No,” he replied, “and he certainly hasn’t been murdered, and his body’s definitely not in this sack.” There was something suspicious about this, but I couldn’t quite put my finger on it. “How about you try his cabin?” Monk suggested, pointing in the direction of Smith’s lodgings. As he pointed, he let go, momentarily, of the sack. Due to the tilt of the deck, it fell, barrelling into the captain’s back, and coming to rest in a heap on his shoulders.

The ship’s doctor did a great job on the bandaging.

--

Over the next few days, other members of the crew started to disappear.

First there was Cross, who went up into the crow’s nest and never came down, then there was Timpson, who was tragically cut loose from his support rope on the main deck, and Sargent, caught in a terrible accident accident. Something didn’t feel right. I kept thinking back to that meeting with Monk on the deck. Something about what he had said was unusual. The phrasing of it had seemed so strange, so stilted. Then it struck me, hard, like a funny metaphor.

I abseiled to Monk’s cabin, and burst in “You, sir.” I pointed my finger accusingly. “I know your dirty secret. You thought you could hide it from me, with your burlap sack, and your offer of help, but to no avail.” I paused here, dramatically, “You, sir, are a Frenchman”. But instead of gasping and crying ‘sacré bleu’, as I had expected, he began to laugh. It was a rasping, panting laugh, like the sound of a thousand pugs trying to catch their breath, or a very old steam engine, or a hundred pugs catching their breath on a relatively new steam engine.

“You don’t understand, do you?” he said, wiping the tears of laughter from your eyes. “I was worried there, for a second. But I might as well tell you the truth, my true secret. If all goes to plan, it’s not as if you’ll be able to tell anyone. I am the reason that the crew are dead”.

“How?”
“I killed them”.
“But why?”
“Because I intend to turn The Rising Limb into a ghost ship. Scientific voyages just aren’t profitable. People aren’t interested in science unless it can help them to lose weight.”


“What about Darwin, The Origin of Species?”
“It says it’s okay to be fat, because you stand a better chance of survival”.

“Newton’s treatises?”
“Gravity, and mass, are out of your control.”

“Einstein’s theory of relativity?”
“You’re relatively slim.”

“Oh.”
“Yes. Now if you’ll just go quietly,” he said, reaching for his sword, “the captain is taking care of Incident, then we may return to London.”
“But Incident never- ” I started, before we heard the Captain’s scream.

There wasn’t much the ship’s doctor could do this time.

--

Epilogue

Monk did end up setting up his own ghost boat. Unfortunately, he forgot to remove the bear from Incident’s cabin, so over time the number of ghosts built up, until he was done by the RSPCG for owning over 100 with no breeding licence.

The surprisingly effeminate cabin boy, who escaped the ordeal by hiding beneath the Captain’s desk, grew into a surprisingly effeminate man.

Smith’s son back in England grew up to write biographies for epilogues. They are brilliant, and he’s a very talented young man.

Friday, 6 July 2012

A Recipe for Disaster

100g flour
175g caster sugar
3 politicians
4 eggs
1 badger
2 tiny pairs of brogues
Half a teaspoon of baking powder
Half a teaspoon of uranium


Alternatively, if you’re on a low sodium diet, omit one of the politicians and substitute an apple (with a gift tag reading ‘to the most beautiful’).

Thursday, 5 July 2012

Families

Families are a lot like French cheeses; there are a lot of them, and almost all are unpleasant.

Families are a lot like nuclear missiles; you make a big fuss when they leave, but you genuinely don’t want them to return.

Families are a lot like scented candles; they don’t fare well in house fires.



Wednesday, 4 July 2012

Yours sincerely, That Cyclist

To the motorist I met this morning,

I am writing to apologise for our brief and unfortunate meeting.

It could have been averted if only there were some way for drivers to indicate their desire to turn. I don’t know, perhaps a system of flashing lights? But I should give you the benefit of the doubt; after all, it’s not as if such a system comes as standard in all automobiles, and you might not have been able to afford such a complicated and exclusive system (you obviously couldn’t afford a hands-free phone set).

I am sorry for delaying your arrival to a location of great importance. I mean, it must have been an emergency; I can see no other reason for a car to drive into the bike lane in order to overtake a turning bus. If that one set of traffic lights was going to make such great difference, you must be a nuclear scientist, or a superhero, perhaps a hostage negotiator. (In which case, why did you have two children in school uniform riding in the back? Are they also hostage negotiators?)

I concede that the dents in your metalwork were definitely caused by the impact between your vehicle and my bike. Mea culpa. It was very selfish of me to limp off to the nearest open café to wash the grit out of my cuts. I should have stayed and given you my details so as to pay for the repair work to the side of your bonnet. I mean, now you’re going to have to pay for it out of your own pocket you won’t be able to afford that system of flashing lights you were saving up for. I suppose, as consolation, you could always sell what was left of my bike for scrap; it’s not much good for riding anymore, and I hear that metal sells for quite a bit nowadays.

Perhaps it’s for the best that we didn’t exchange details. I’m of the student persuasion – I might not have been able to offer you much money, but how about a political placard? An academic diary? Some new fangles? But then, you probably wouldn’t have been able to stay and chat.

You had some hostages to save.

Yours sincerely,

That Cyclist.

Tuesday, 3 July 2012

Life on the Rising Limb



The year was 1878, in that awkward in-between phase between the invention of the car and the invention of the petrol engine. Everyone owned one, but kept it in their stables and couldn’t really see the point.

I was aboard ‘The Rising Limb’, a scientific research vessel twice as high as it was wide, half as wide as it was deep, and built by someone who had got the plans the wrong way around. Said ship-maker had tried to conceal his error by floating the vessel the “right” way up. This wasn’t an ideal fix; it had the unfortunate side effect of turning all of the corridors into chutes, the chandeliers into wall hangings, and the kitchens into death-traps, with open hearths forming the floor. Besides, since the boat was constructed, and the sails installed, vertically, she now had to be tugged by an upright boat. Unfortunately, the Captain had not been informed of the ship’s rather unique architecture and so, when he came aboard to survey the vessel he fell down – or should that be through? – the corridor, coming to an abrupt stop on the wall of his office. His leg was broken, and replaced with a rather fetching wooden model.

The Captain, in pain and concussed, stumbled out of the medical bay and onto the deck. “Hoist the cannons! Polish the rigging! Prime the mainbrace!” Although he was concussed he was still our captain, so we obliged. We were just hoisting the cannons when the – freshly polished – rope snapped. The cannons crashed to the deck, raining down like large, predominantly brass raindrops. The captain, unable to run for cover on account of his new wooden leg, found his hand pinned to the deck. He passed out instantly, and was carried to the medical bay, where the ship’s doctor fitted him with a metal hook.

The Captain lost his eye the next morning; he awoke and rubbed the sleep from his eyes – unaware of the hook.

--

It was two days before we were due to set sail. We were still waiting upon the arrival of Doctor Cross, and Doctor Wick. As I mentioned in passing, we were a scientific vessel, set to collect specimens from the island of Santa Rosalia. Doctor Cross’ reputation preceded him. He had sent a telegraph. He was known for his unusual choice of headwear, expertise on the reptiles of the equator, and vile (and violent) temper.

Smith, the ship’s geologist, and I were arguing over who should greet him. We couldn’t decide who would expose themselves to this volatile man; I argued that the ship wouldn’t get very far without an engineer, so I should be saved. Smith contested that he had a wife and kids at home. I countered that they weren’t his, and he really should return them at some point. Having hostages doesn’t automatically mean that you are safe. In the end I flipped a coin and, while Smith was distracted, punched him on the nose. He agreed to greet Cross.

When we went up on deck there was an enormous man, almost as wide as he was tall, with a thick, bushy beard, and darting eyes. He looked like his mother had been a bear, and his father had also been a bear. He looked like a bear. He stepped aside and Doctor Cross introduced himself; “Good morning, fellows” he said. “Mood fawning, gellows”.

He had just learnt of epigrams, and was trying (with limited success) to create his own. Had he explained this to the rest of the crew, they might have sympathised. But as it was, they considered him mad.

--

(tbc)

Monday, 2 July 2012

Gold (or 'An Apology')

Dear future generations,

It was 2042, the year when the BBC admitted that Bruce Forsyth had died in 1970, and what viewers saw on their sets was his taxidermied corpse being manipulated by members of the Jim Henson company. It was also the year that the metal finally ran out. Governments had seen the crisis coming for some time, lumbering over the horizon like an overweight buffalo. Indeed, they had taken the threat quite seriously; a summits was held upon the matter, with all G20 countries (except the USA) agreeing that something must definitely be seen to be done to be seen to agree on reasonable and equitable targets for aims – by March 2045. Everyone agreed that the conference had been a huge success. In the UK sandwiches were made illegal so as to save on aluminium foil. In Sweden Rayleigh switched from making bikes to unicycles.

Gold was the metal that they most wanted to conserve. Gold, with its 79 electrons, superconductivity, and extreme opacity to UV light. Space travel would only be possible there were enough gold, for superconductive wiring, effective insulation, and motivational bling. And so, in the early 2000s, the government decided to start its cash for gold programme. When this proved to be disappointingly slow, they set a new breed of alchemists the task of distilling goldfish into their constituent parts; gold, and fish. The RSPCA shortly stepped in, objecting that this was their remit.

So what was my role in this story? Well, I’m an employee of the Royal Mining Corps, and I was, in 2042, on a mission to prospect gold. That’s the last that I’ll say on my job, as I don’t want to be repetitive. I really hope I don’t come across as repetitive. I don’t want to be repetitive.

--

My crew were Motley, Unprepared, and Cowardly. Unfortunate surnames, but dependable chaps. The plan was for us to travel to the wastelands of South America (uninhabited since the nuclear war of 2030 between Ecuador and Tesco), and from there to search for the ever-so-precious metal. When we stepped out of our plane, it was like stepping into another world. The ground, bare and ashen, stretched featureless into the distance. No plants forced their way through the tough, grey mantle. It took us several days to realise that we were in Milton Keynes.

To this day I have no idea how we ended up so far off course. My first instinct would be that the ship’s flight computer had a bug. It did happen, from time to time. You would open an email, a perfectly respectable business proposal from a Nigerian prince, and then the next week your craft would confuse Malta with Yalta, Dublin with Lublin, and Slough with a municipal oil rig. I excused it for the last one; most humans could not discern the difference. Over time, however, I came to suspect my crew; I could tell that Motley disliked me. I could read it on the sharp creases of his voice, smell it on the floral notes of his expression, and taste it in the rolling of his eyes. I also came to suspect that I had synaesthesia.


And so we were in Milton Keynes. The mission had not required us to carry any form of civil identification, or money, for that matter. We had radios, but I didn’t want to use them. We were supposed to be half way around the world. I was at a loss for what to do – the mining corps academy teaches you many things – how to discern a vein of lignite from a seam of haematite, how to correctly set a depth charge, how to pretend that you’ve attended a sixteen part lecture series on the involution of Permian and Triassic shales – but not how to escape from Milton Keynes. Fortunately, Cowardly had some experience in this area. He suggested that we follow the river.

--

We had just reached the riverbank when we passed a huddled figure, wearing an enormous pair of gloves and an uneasy grin. He introduced himself as Mister Michael Midas, and informed us that he had been burdened with a terrible curse; all members of his family found that things they touched were transformed. Everything Mister Michael touched turned to polystyrene packing chips. He had found gainful employ at a delivery company; they would pack the products in Greek bonds and the memoirs of ex-Big Brother contestants, then he would convert them to packing chips. It was a far cheaper service than any of their competitors could hope to offer.

It was as he was regaling us with this tale that he tripped, knees collapsing into ankles, ankles collapsing into silt. I instinctively, foolishly, bent to catch him. His glove came off, and his bare hand touched the surface of the river. With a deafening rustling sound, we watched as the stream grew pale and polystyrene-y.

In conclusion, sorry for the lack of drinking water.

Yours sincerely,






Roger Bivand