4 July Fireworks – Part 3

As the United States of America celebrates two and a half centuries since its founding, one family grapples with its own issues…

We’d just set our feet on the tiles of the kitchen floor when the joyful sound of fiddle music split the air. Cotton Eye Joe played noisy, swiftly followed by the sound of feet stamping in time with the tune.
Felix looked down at me with devils dancing in his eyes.
“Line dancing?”
Indeed it was. Two lines of dancers, uncles and aunties, cousins and teenagers, and even littles led by our barefoot sons. All stomping on the stones of the patio following in the gigantic footsteps of cousin Cletus and his sprightly wife Maybelle. The music was being provided by my daddy, a man whose fiddling prowess is known in ten counties, accompanied by…
Felix’s mom playing a concert Stradivarius that followed pa’s lead with elegant precision and surprising gusto, Ophelia finger picking an old banjo, and Felix’s dad who had appropriated Cletus’ washboard bass. The band was having a blast and so were the dancers. My side were competent line dancers, though I was pretty sure none of Felix’s family habitually visited the sort of places where bawling fiddles, duelling banjos, and lots of beer, offer a backdrop to dancing until you drop. But they were giving it a real go, helped along by Bubba’s deep throated impression of a square bashing caller. It was riotous and joyful and completely unexpected.
I pinched Felix’s arm.
“Your mom and your sister playing bluegrass? And your Pa doing some damage to a washboard bass.”
He grinned down at me. “Mom isn’t a surprise: she’s always played anything that you can play on a violin. She just keeps the less high-falutin stuff for when she’s among friends. And I shouldn’t be surprised by Ophelia as I’ve never seen an instrument she couldn’t coax a tune out of. But Pop? That’s a facer. In all my born days I’ve never seen him drop his dignity outside the four walls of home. But he surely seems to be having the time of his life.”
We watched quietly as joyful noise welded two groups of people into something resembling family. As Cotton Eye Joe wound to an untidy end, Daddy grinned at his bandmates and swung straight into Achy Breaky Heart.
Felix whistled softly before bending to speak in my ear.
“Two things. Cletus and Maybell. Them two are leading without a moment’s thought, and with never a look at each other…”
“Yeah well they’ve been state champions since the early nineties and they were national champs until they decided they were too old to compete at that level. But they’re still darned good.”
“That’s an understatement babe. And Bubba. I’ve never heard him string more than three words together until today.”
“That’s coz he says his wife and daughters talk entirely too much and somebody has to listen.”
Felix laughed. “Supplementary question. He isn’t really called Bubba is he?”
“No. But when him and Cletus teamed up to terrorise the speakeasies and dancehalls of four counties, Grandpaw thought Cletus and Bubba was a very good joke. And Bubba prefers it to his real name.”
“Which is?”
“Clarence.”
Felix winced. “I see his point.”
“You wanna dance?” I asked my two left-footed spouse as demurely as I could manage.
“About as much as you want to snowboard.”
The dancing didn’t last much longer as the sun was high in a copper-tinged sky and not even my family is mental enough to keep jumping about when the mercury hits eighty-five.
Felix found more cold beers and I liberated two huge pitchers of lemonade from the garage refrigerator. Everyone got a drink and, even without the music and the need to pay attention to their feet, the atmosphere remained friendly with little groups of chatting people lolling about the place.
It was both strange and peaceful at the same time. Daddy came over and helped himself to a big glass of lemonade. I grinned up at him.
“That ain’t gonna do your reputation a lot of good.”
“Maybe not, but if your mom finds me getting hammered while she’s seeing to Portia I’m gonna wish I’d never been born.”
“Whose idea was the line dancing?”
“Bubba. He looked at me and said something about idleness breeding prejudice, and dancing feet bringing joy. I had a quick think and enlisted Fenella quickly. The rest is history.”
“Fenella?”
“That’s my mom,” Felix offered.
“Why’d I not know that?”
“Because you call her Momma, like we all do.”
I nodded.
“Guess I do, but whatever we call her, she and Daddy rescued what could have been awful and made it something warm instead.”
“They did. And without breaking a sweat.”
Daddy lifted one meaty arm and squinted at his shirt.
“Nope,” he said, “Fenella may not have sweated any, her not being the type of female to sweat, but I’m as damp and soggy as I can hold together.”
“You want a dry shirt?” Felix offered.
“Thanks but no thanks. I really would get ribbed if I was girly enough to change a sweaty shirt.”
We lapsed into friendly quiet, just waiting, but patiently and hopefully. When Mom finally came out into the garden, she was grinning from ear to ear.
“We did it. It’s a girl. Nigh on nine pounds. Mom and baby are doing fine. So is daddy even if he has cried a lot.”
Felix’s dad waved a hand in a gesture of celebration and relief.
“Nine pounds isn’t a premature baby, is it?”
“Nope. She’s full term and right now her momma is feeding her.”

More of this tale by Jane Jago tomorrow…

4 July Fireworks – Part 2

As the United States of America celebrates two and a half centuries since its founding, one family grapples with its own issues…

I whistled two notes and Felix materialised.
“Mom thinks Portia is about to have her baby.”
“What? Sooner than she thinks?”
“No. Round about now.”
“Shit. What needs doing?”
“I’ll get her to sit in the shade and have a nice cold lemonade. You go talk to Anthony. Tell him to get the stick out of his ass because he’s about to become a daddy.”
He sighed. “Wouldn’t you like to talk to him?”
“Nope. He gets right on my tits.”
“Mine too but I’ll brave it.”
I put my hand on his arm. “Can you also send your mom over here?”
Felix’s mom arrived carrying the quiet she always brought with her. She grasped the situation quickly and without fuss.
We got Portia into a comfortable chair in the shadiest part of the garden. When I got close I didn’t reckon she looked too good, her natural pallor had a greyish tinge and her eyes looked as if they belonged to a cornered deer.
“What’s up?”
She looked at me as if surprised I would notice her discomfort.
“I’ve just got a little backache.”
“You sit quiet and rest a bit.”
As she sat her filmy dress lay flat against her stomach and I saw the ripple of a contraction.
So did Mom.
“How long have you been having contractions?” she asked gently.
“Since about breakfast time. It’s only braxton hicks. I called my doula and she assured me it’s too early to be anything else.”
I could feel Mom’s anger, but she kept her voice gentle.
“Have the contractions been getting closer together?”
Portia nodded.
“Then it’s not braxton hicks.”
Portia’s idiot of a husband spoke from behind my left shoulder.
“And you know better than a doula attached to a nationally acclaimed natural birth program?”
Mom looked at Portia’s sweating face and at the contractions moving under the flimsy broderie anglaise of her dress.
“Yes,” she said. “Yes I do.”
“An uneducated redneck woman, whose daughter married above her?”
Before I had chance to retort, Felix’s mom leaned across and clipped him smartly round the ear.
“Quiet Anthony. I expect better manners. Even from spoilt little boys.”
You could have heard a pin drop – until Portia gave a strange little cry.
“I think my waters broke.”
Mom knelt in the grass at her feet.
“Let’s have a look shall we.”
Felix’s mom and I formed a human curtain while Mom spoke gently to the frightened girl.
Anthony opened his mouth to say who knew what, but a large red hand covered his mouth. My cousin Cletus spoke for all of us I think.
“You just hush up now. Auntie Ella-Mae is a community midwife. Been delivering babies for better’n forty years. Right now she’s the best hope your wife and child have.”
You could feel the fight leave him and Cletus removed his hand.
“It’s too soon.”
Mom stood up.
“Soon or late this baby is coming. And it’s coming fast.” She looked Anthony straight between the eyes. “Do I have your permission to assist your wife and child?”
“Yes. Please do. Please take care of them.”
Mom softened.
“I will. You call her obstetrician and tell them she’s dilated two and a bit inches and her contractions are strong.” Then she turned her attention to me. “Half fill your big bath with water nice warm water. And get all your big towels out.”
“Water birth, Mom?”
“Probably not. But she’s scared, and a float in warm water will calm her fears.”
I ran to do Mom’s bidding, leaving behind a plethora of questions but no actual shouting.
By the time our big sunken tub was half full of water Mom was in the room with her delivery bag and the quiet air of confidence that has smoothed countless children’s way into the world. I stood up and went to lay my face against her shoulder.
“How I remember,” I said softly. “I hope Portia has a gentle birth and a strong child.”
Mom touched my cheek. “I remember too. I especially remember how many swear words it took to bring two boys kicking and screaming into my hands. But now. Towels.”
I opened one door of a big linen closet full of towels.
“How many do you need?”
Mom let out a small squeak of surprise. “How many do you have?”
“I’ve never actually counted. Felix’s granny had a thing about towels. She left her collection to him in her will. This is about half. We donated the other half to a shelter for mothers and kids.”
Mom rubbed a hand over her face. “Can you spare a dozen?”
I chuckled and pulled out a pile of soft, thick bath sheets.
“You need me?”
Mom shook her head. “No. Only me, Portia, and her wet weekend of a husband I think.”
I grinned. “Besides which she’s a bit scared of me. It’s the tattoos I think.”
Mom grinned back. “One of the many nice things about having you for a daughter is that I never have to explain things.”
“I love you too Mom.”
Footsteps on the stairs heralded the arrival of Felix, who was carrying his sister, and being followed by a grey-faced Anthony.
“Her doctor is rattled, and desperately trying to claw back the initiative,” Anthony said in a voice devoid of pretension. “Demanded we bring Portia to the birthing centre. But we can’t. There’s a Fourth of July parade happening and the road is closed.”
Mom smiled the smile that has reassured hundreds of expectant parents.
“We’ll just get the baby born and worry about logistics later.”
Felix set Portia gently on her feet and Mom moved into action. Me and Felix left, shutting the door quietly behind us.
On the landing he pulled me into his arms and held on tight. He spoke into my hair.
“You know that I love your Mom.”
I nodded.
“And you know how much respect I have for her.”
I nodded some more.
“But right now all of that pales in the face of the relief I feel that she’s here for Portia. I was pretty unsettled by the idea of a place where they seem to think burning sage leaves will ensure a safe birth. Now I know my silly sister will be okay.”
I looked up at him. “She will. Now we’ve a job to do downstairs. We have to avert class warfare.”
Only we didn’t need to do anything.

More of this tale by Jane Jago tomorrow…

4 July Fireworks – Part 1

As the United States of America celebrates two and a half centuries since its founding, one family grapples with its own issues…

Felix and me have been married for five years. We met in the middle of a particularly messy post football match fracas. I was standing on the edge of a fountain defending my honour with a chair leg and he came to my rescue. He was six and a half feet of menace, built like a linebacker and obviously in no mood to take any crap from a crowd of overstimulated college boys. He extracted me from the melee just in time to make ourselves scarce before the boys in blue arrived with riot sticks and short fuses. It seemed entirely natural to hunt up a bar well away from the frat boys and have us a quiet drink.
We must have talked for four or five hours, discovering that a tattoo artist from the boonies and an architect whose partnership in a prestigious practice was still new enough to be making him grin could have so much in common, while being sufficiently different for our discussions to have fire and the sharp edge of two minds sparking off each other.
In the end he slept at mine that night, with his big feet hanging over the end of the sofa.
He pretty much never left, and we married the following spring. Our wedding was quiet and informal and kept deliberately low key because of what people of a delicate disposition refer to as family friction. Which is the sort of understatement that makes thing both less and more complicated than they actually are.
Put bluntly, the two families hate each other.
Only they don’t, what they hate is the idea of each other.
Felix’s family thinks my lot are loud, uneducated rednecks, though most of them are too polite to say so. My lot considers Felix to have sprung from a long line of effete, inbred pseudo-intellectuals none of whom has ever done a hands turn of real work, and they aren’t polite enough to keep their opinions to themselves. Thing is neither lot is completely right or completely wrong.
My lot runs long on tow-headed good ole boys with shoulders like brick walls and apparently indefatigable appetites for beer. I even have cousins called Cletus and Bubba.
Felix’s family, by contrast, is mostly slim, and pale, and as bendy as willow trees. His father is a university professor with soft hands and a wispy beard, and his mom plays violin in a semi-professional string quartet. Felix’s sisters are called Portia and Ophelia.
On the other side of the coin, both lots are hardworking, honest, and morally grounded. It’s just that neither of them can see the common ground for the morass of misunderstanding that divides them.
And that’s our problem in a nutshell.
Things have never descended into open hostility from my side for a couple of very good reasons. One: my mom, who is a community midwife and possessed of a glare that could melt stainless steel, would personally disembowel anyone who caused me grief. Two: none of the cousins fancies taking a pop at Felix because they ain’t entirely sure he don’t bend iron bars with his teeth.
From the other side of the divide, politeness is a given, even if there is a certain hauteur about the relationship.
Which is why we don’t go in for much in the way of family celebrations, spending Christmas with one family and thanksgiving with the other.
This worked fine until we bought the house. It’s nothing fancy, just a suburban arts and crafts villa with blue shutters, a big sheltered yard and a swimming pool. And the yard was nearly our undoing.
Our moms ambushed us. Mine appeared at the play park, where I take our three-year-old twins to burn off some of their innate soddishness, while Felix’s took him to lunch at a wholefood restaurant. Different women, different approaches but the message was substantially the same. July fourth was our ‘turn’. We were, like it or not (to be brutally honest ‘not’), hosting a family day in our big shady yard.
When I got home, trailing two sticky, overstimulated, candy-fuelled, argumentative children in my wake, Felix was already there looking as shell-shocked as I felt. But he gave me a hand with bath and pasta duty before throwing himself theatrically onto the big squishy sofa in our family room.
“My mom came visiting,” he announced.
“Mine too.”
“July fourth?”
I nodded.
“Do you think,” he asked carefully, “this was a coincidence?”
“Nope. This was a coordinated matriarch move.”
“They coordinate?”
“Of course they do. They’re both cut from the same cloth.”
He frowned, but then he thought a bit and his grin spread.
“They really are, ain’t they. I just never thought of it like that before. Well. I’ll be jiggered.”
“It does seem odd. But I’ve noticed it a bit before. It’s subtle but the steel magnolia and momma bear are very far from being above collusion.”
He nodded. “So what do we do?”
“First of all we call out their trickery. Then we give in and host July fourth. With stipulations.”
Fast forward to a steaming hot July day, to icy cold beers and a sandwich bar lunch, and to two families dancing carefully around each other like feral cats on a trash tip. But the atmosphere was at least polite.
Felix and the dads kept close eyes on a gaggle of teenage cousins of both genders, thereby keeping flirtations to an acceptable level of touchy-feely, and preventing showing off from degenerating into dangerous dares.
Felix’s younger sister, Ophelia, merry faced and married to a man who had sense enough to step aside from family judgements, happily herded children and prevented any inter-cousin flare ups. I was grateful and brought her a beer. She smiled.
“This was brave of you.”
“You think we had a choice?”
“Nope. Not if mom got involved.”
“Both moms did. Caught us in a pincer movement.”
“Ouch!” Then she touched my arm. “There is something…”
Before she had chance to say what was bothering her my mom appeared beside us. She looked at Ophelia.
“Portia. How far along is she?”
“Eight months.”
Mom shook her head. “She’s gotten her dates muddled. That girl looks to me like she’s about to give birth.”
My mom has been a midwife for close to forty years, so if she says someone is about to give birth you better believe her.
Ophelia frowned. “That’s what I was thinking. And it would be just like her. I have never met a vaguer human being than my sister. She is kind, sweet and loving, but she drifts through life like a rudderless boat.”
I had more immediate problems. “When you say ‘about to’, mom?”
“This very afternoon if I’m not wrong.”
When it comes to pregnancy and babies wrong is a place Mom doesn’t inhabit, so I braced myself for a bumpy ride.
“What should we do?”
“Right now. Get her to sit in the shade and maybe bring her a cool drink.”

More of this tale by Jane Jago tomorrow…

Summer is a-coming in!

Summer is a-coming in
So quickly now go you
Down the pub to down a beer
And drink a pint or two
Love that brew!

You now chase the beer with rum
And after hours too
Get it as they call last orders
Got to love that brew!

More beer, more beer,
Get in a pint or two,
Ne’er cease to drink that brew!

Eleanor Swift-Hook

The Shifter’s Sign – 17

Being a true shifter isn’t the blessing it may seem. But through pain and darkness Perdita seeks to find her own life despite the ambition of others…

In the meantime, Mandrake was carefully herding an increasingly terrified orc back to where his pack awaited him. The screams came closer and Gobshite broke out of the treeline at a shambling gallop. When he saw his packmates he hurled himself facedown on the frozen grass.
“Dragon,” he yelled. “Look out there’s a dragon.”
Behind him, Mandrake made the change and dropped the final few feet to the ground in human form.
Knut’s mate grinned so widely I thought her face might crack in half.
“Mega cool.” She offered Mandrake a hugely knotted fist and they bumped knuckles. “Can all dragons do that?”
“No. Only the most highly trained of battle dragons.”
“Useful trick, though.”
“Indeed.”
The rest of the pack had gathered around Gobshite’s quivering figure. One poked him with a booted foot.
“Get up, asshole, there ain’t no dragons here.”
He peered suspiciously about him before he sat up.
“Did you chase it off?”
“Chase what off?”
“The dragon what was hunting me.”
One of the ones I had pegged as female put her face close to his.
“There weren’t no dragon fuckwit.”
Mandrake and his companion came over to me.
“I take it Gobshite is in for a bit of razzing,” I said.
“Was about time that one learned some humility. This hadn’t happened me or Knut was gonna have to kill him sometime soon.”
“In that case…”
“You ain’t like any human I ever met,” she said.
Knut had come across, walking quietly enough so she hadn’t heard his approach.
“May I tell my mate?” I nodded. “Lady isn’t human no more than her mate is.”
“What you saying you old fool? She ain’t no true born critter I ever seen.”
“No. She ain’t. She’s a True Shifter.”
“Don’t you be razzing me. Them’s just a fairy story.”
Mandrake made as of to say something but I put a finger across his lips.
“Mate of the Pack Leader,” I said formally. “Will you show me your fist?”
She looked confused but proffered a huge, scarred and knotted appendage. I laid my own hand on the air beside it and concentrated briefly. The hand and forearm I Shifted was a complete simulacrum of hers. It felt as if it weighed nearly as much as my human body, but I managed to hold it still. She stared, and I let it dissolve back into a human hand.
“Your fist weighs a lot,” I said and I could hear the physical strain in my own voice.
Mandrake moved to the buffet, returning with a thick slice of buttered bread. I sank my teeth in gratefully.
“Shifting uses a lot of calories,” I explained, not caring that I was talking with my mouth full.
The female orc bent her neck in a gesture of respect. “I never thought to meet one such as you.”
“There is only one so far as we know,” Mandrake said.
I swallowed the mouthful of bread and butter I had been chewing.
“There won’t be any more. I refuse to put another being through what I went through to gain my powers. It really isn’t worth it.”
The big she-orc looked into my eyes for a breath, before turning way as if embarrassed. “I don’t believe,” she said to nobody in particular, “that I would like to have the Shifter’s memories.”
Knut, who had stood in unusual quiet while his mate and I worked things out between us, actually tasted the atmosphere with his thick, red tongue. Finding it unthreatening he looped an arm over his mate’s shoulders.
“Not all her memories are bad,” he offered. “I remember a wild ride through the night with a band of marauding orcs streaming across the sky behind a lone female with blood in her eye and The Dagger of Death in her boot top.”
“She got the Dagger of Death?”
“She do and that little bastard don’t miss wherever she throws it.”
The she-orc pushed out her lip in thought. “You led a shitload of orcs on The Wild Hunt.”
“Yup. Must have been seven centuries past. And I never knew Knut was in that raiding party.”
He grinned and farted loudly. “I was on my first pack ride, and when the bikes rose into the sky I all but pissed myself. Fun though.”
His mate turned to him, and I understood that whatever she had to say it was not about anyone but their own selves. I listened anyway.
“Was that the last time the Wild Hunt rode out of the sunset?”
“Last but one. It was not The Lady who led your father to his death.”
“I wasn’t thinking it was. According to Mother it was likely his own stupidity.”
“Likely. He was growing old and unwilling to accept that.”
“And you, Knut. You became Pack Leader in the void.”
“Only after I made a few orcs get dead. But yes. I won the Pack in a void, but I rule it because there is none among the members who can best me.”
She looked at him and her mouth twisted bitterly. “So why did you need to mate with me then? I was told it was to consolidate your hold on the pack.”
He made a harsh sound in his throat. “I mated you from need for you. There is no other reason than that.”
The smile she gave him was so bright as to hurt the eyes, before she thumped him hard on one of his meaty arms.
“Why did you never tell me?”
“Because I thought you mated me for status.”
She groaned as he dragged her into his arms. The female bit her mate’s lip and I saw the blood flow.
“Mine,” he said thickly and she licked his bleeding lip.
I looked away to find Mandrake smiling down on me.
‘Love orc style,’ he whispered in my head, before turning up the music and encouraging me into the dance.
And that was pretty much how the night ended, with drunken dancing and a sense of recklessness.
The orcs finally fell asleep where they dropped from sheer exhaustion and Mandrake and me crawled into the open store and wrapped our tired bodies in thick northland quilts.
Dawn came and our guests awoke. Mandrake helped me to break out loves of bread and slabs of pre-cooked bacon. The orcs made huge sandwiches and rode off munching. I think Mandrake carried me up the stairs to a proper bed.

Jane Jago

The Knight: Inspired by the art of Ian Bristow

Writing inspired by the art of Ian Bristow

Dying might not be so bad. It was living that had broken him. Taken from his family at eight years old, vowed to celibacy before he understood what the word meant, and sold to the highest bidder time after time. His sword had eaten the blood of so many enemies that he felt today was no more than reparation. As the hooded figure came to his side he looked into its compassionate eyes.
“Am I dead?”
“Nearly. Say farewell to your loved ones.”
The Knight spoke the saddest three words under all the stars.
“I have nobody.”
Then he died.

Jane Jago

Ian is an awesome artist and cover designer, you can find his work at Bristow Design or watch him in action creating this picture on ART with IAN.

Whimsies – Favourite Things

Some whimsical words on whimsical themes…

Sonnets on sunsets, and quatrains delightful
Odes to beloveds and limericks frightful
Poetic thinking that dances and sings
These are a few of my favourite things

Perfectly pitched prose and vocabulary
Fiendish acrostics to trap the unwary
Tender love stories whose heroines cling
These are a few of my favourite things

When the plot stinks and the words ming
When the Internet’s down
I simply remember my favourite things
And then I forget to frown…

Jane Jago

Much Dithering in Little Botheringham: Eight

An everyday tale of village life and vampires…

Earlier that same afternoon, Em had been debating which of her quietly coloured jersey dresses to shove on for the monthly meeting of the Ladies whilst wondering to herself what this Cropper woman was going to be like. From the voice – she assumed wispy, middle class, and somehow not happy. The phone breaking into her thoughts was, for once, a welcome distraction.
“Emmeline Vanderbilt speaking.”
“Ah. Good afternoon. Christopher Charles Cassington here.”
For a moment Em was at a loss. Then she remembered. This was the bat man. Injecting her voice with a warmth she was far from feeling she responded.
“Good afternoon Mr Cassington. To what do I owe the pleasure.”
“Your colony of bats.”
“Hardly ‘my’ colony, but what about them?”
“The colony is being registered with the authorities as we speak, theoretically ensuring its protection. But I’m not a trusting man, and I have my ear to the ground. I heard rumours that the bats may be in danger, so I have taken a few precautions. This evening, before the bats awaken fully I’m bringing in a ringing team to ring and weigh and record. In addition to the volunteers there will be: a team from Natural Nation taking photographs, a journalist and photographer from Batty about Bats magazine, and a crew from Middle England TV filming a piece for the local news.”
Em began to feel truly fond of the odd little man. “Oh. Well done,” she said fervently.
“I thought you might want to come along and speak to the telly people. I’m not good with that sort of stuff. And you look. Ummm. Imposing.”
Em laughed. “Very well. What time?”
“Six-thirty.”
“Very well. I’ll be there.”
She put the phone down. Grinning. The jersey dresses would have to wait, as would the Ladies. Casual, she thought, if impeccably tailored.
Promptly at six-thirty a smallish convoy of vehicles drew into the village street. There was a minibus full of earnest bat-ringers, a Land Rover emblazoned with the Natural Nation logo, a bulky outdoor broadcast van, a white Volvo she guessed was the Bat magazine, and a Frog-Eyed Sprite she recognised with a wry grin. The vehicles disgorged their passengers and Em quietly tagged onto the end of the crocodile which made its way into the church. 
Erasmus briefly appeared on her shoulder. “The small bats will cooperate. Once I made them understand this would spike the vicar’s guns.”
“We hope. But thanks.”
He flapped off and Em made her way into a church that was now a hive of activity. The television reporter was a fattish man in a loud sports jacket, and Em wasn’t looking forward to speaking to him. But he had his eye on different bait. There was a coltish teenager with dimples among the bat-ringing crew and he already had an avuncular arm about her shoulder. She caught Em’s eye and offered the suspicion of a wink before gazing soulfully at the reporter.  Em retreated to a quiet corner and prepared to watch the show. The pretty teenager managed to tactfully shake off the reporter, who straightened his toupee before giving a piece to camera about the colony of rare bats found in the belfry of St Barnabas Church in Little Botheringham.
He was in full spate, and the comely teen was displaying a newly-ringed bat, when the church door banged open.
The vicar stood in the doorway, he was breathing heavily and his face was puce with rage.
“Get out of my church,” he bellowed. 
The television cameraman, with the faultless instincts of his ilk, turned his lens on the furious clergyman in the doorway.
“Switch off the camera. Switch off the camera. Switch off the camera and clear off.”
He was all but dancing with rage, and Em wondered what he might do next. She wasn’t due to find out, though, because a gentle voice spoke from the back of the church.
“Do calm down, Reverend Turner. All necessary permissions have been granted.”
The vicar jumped as if he had been stung as the owner of the voice stepped towards him. Bishop Esmond’s principal secretary arrived at his elbow and placed an admonitory hand on his biceps. 
The secretary turned his practiced smile into the lens of the camera.
“My colleague and I will just clear up this little misunderstanding. Carry on.”
He waved a white hand and steered the fulminating vicar out into the churchyard.
Em found Arnold at her side and they high fived. 
“Get out of that you bastard,” she crowed.

Part 9 of Much Dithering in Little Botheringham by Jane Jago and Eleanor Swift-Hook, will be here next week.

Random Rumination – Make Hay

Because life happens…

Exploring the mysteries of life through the versatile medium of limerick poetry.

Make Hay

The secret of life they do say
Is always find time to make hay
If there’s work to be done
Finish that and have fun
Make the most out of every day

Eleanor Swift-Hook

Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone: A review by Moonbeam Farquhar Metheringham IV

Sometimes I wonder if my maternal parent is indeed all she claims to be on that account. Could it be, perchance, I was secretly adopted and hail from a genetic line in which the aesthetic principle is celebrated more absolutely? Alas no. The results of the DNA test were pretty clear on that point.

But you will understand my confusion, nay – my utter bafflement at the birthday gift I received from Mumsie last year. I had hoped it would be yet another copy of one of the vibrant tomes by She Who I Am Not Worthy To Name, but instead it was a children’s book – in Latin. When I challenged her choice, suggesting that whilst I was ipso facto her child, I was no longer in childhood, quod erat demonstrandum. But she was not impressed.

“Moons,” she told me, “stop pratting around. Your father paid for you to have an expensive education so use it. Read the book.”

Needless to say ‘Harrius Potter et Philosophi Lapis’ still sits unread in my writing den where it’s presence is discreetly muted by shadows. However, so I could convince Mummy I had read the blasted thing, I was compelled to procure an English edition.

My review of Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone by J.K. Rowling.

A boy who is being generously raised by distant relatives, shows extremes of ingratitude and against their wishes takes off for boarding school seduced by the blandishments of those who try to persuade him he is some kind of messiah.

The school, called Hogfarts or something similar, is the educational facility of a secret cult which regards normal people as an inferior breed and calls the ‘muggles’, whilst endeavouring to promote a master race of magic users. Hogfarts uses a hat to choose which house a pupil should be in and the unfortunate child, who is called Harry, is not selected for the superior house and thus has to make do with some rather second-rate companions.

Amongst his adventures, Harry finds a mirror, a dog and a chessboard. He turns out to be quite good at sports, which was not something I had expected as he seemed the geeky sort. He also finds an invisibility cloak but uses it for the most boring things like sneaking around the school. Harry eventually succeeds in stopping a two-faced individual from getting hold of some pebble, but despite his dramatic victory he still finishes the book back where he started.

Two stars for being available in both Latin and English and thus sparing me Mumsie’s scathing vitriol.

Moonbeam Farquhar Metheringham IV

You can find more of IVy’s profound thoughts in How To Start Writing A Book courtesy of E.M. Swift-Hook and Jane Jago.

Start a Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑