Things Get A Bit Testy
On the twenty second day of Advent my 3-D tree gave to me...another owl! It's beginning to look a lot like Hogwarts here, never mind Christmas. Meanwhile, action in the Much Malarkey Manor Christmas Story2025 is hotting up. Brace yourselves...
...they say you haven’t lived unless you’ve witnessed an
enormous dolphin being wheeled onto a stage in a massive tank of water to the
tune of ‘The Liberty Bell’ played on bagpipes and drums. And it is truly a
sight to behold. It’s not a glass tank as such, like an aquarium, which would
be the obvious choice for a sea-faring creature, but more like a large oak
barrel filled with water.
‘A bit like the barrel of malmsey wine that the traitorous George,
Duck of Clarence, was drowned in by his brother Edward IV,’ says Mrs Poo.
‘Duke,’ says Mrs Miggins. ‘He was a duke, not a duck.’
‘Pity,’ says Mrs Poo, ‘if he’d been a duck he might have
survived.’
‘And what a waste,’ says Mrs Slocombe. ‘I don’t expect they
would have been able to use the wine, not after someone was drowned in it, would
they?’
‘I would,’ says Mrs Poo, but then she’s been known to drink
puddle water before now.
‘Let’s not get too surreal,’ says Mrs Miggins, who is a tad
concerned the Christmas Story is fast running out of days, which happens when
you don’t properly plan the darned thing.
The Dauphin Dolphin is sitting in the huge tank-barrel of
water, with only his top half on show. He’s an impressive figure, all sleek and
glossy grey, with dark, sharp eyes and an enormous hooter. He is wearing an
ermine-trimmed cloak in white silk trimmed with gold, and a cavalier-style hat,
also white, decorated with three large ostrich feather plumes. He nods and
makes little bows to his audience who are clapping and cheering in what can
only be described as a massive act of sycophancy, because if they knew the true
nature of this creature, they would be pelting him with rotten fruit and fish
heads instead.
But for Kenneth the Phantomime, the Dauphin Dolphin a.k.a
the Lord General Porpoise, is all he ever dreamed he would be.
‘He’s like a glowing emblem of truth and beauty,’ he sighs,
taking in the dazzling white and gold apparel and the confident air of a fellow
egomaniac who knows he’s got away with hideous crimes against humanity, and
then some.
‘Don’t be fooled by his magnetic aura and enigmatic clicking
noises,’ says Juan, slapping Kenneth on the cheek. ‘You know what he has done
and you know he has to be brought into the authorities to face justice. But
what Mrs Glossop is doing here, I don’t know.’
‘Perhaps she’s come to help?’ says Enrico. ‘You know the
trouble the Lord General Porpoise has caused in Olden Glish over many years so,
of course, she would want to see him behind bars.’
‘Or battered and served with chips,’ says Juan, grimly,
knowing that Mrs Glossop, for all her sweet and cheerful nature, can prove to
be unpredictable if provoked. He turns
to the three French hens. ‘We need to keep our eyes on Mrs Glossop,’ he says.
‘We don’t want her to scupper our plans of capturing the Lord General Porpoise and
bringing him to justice.’
The three French hens nod in agreement and it is decided
that they should all get as close to the stage as possible which is a fairly
easy thing to do when you are the size of a turtle dove and a chicken.
‘What do we do about him?’ says Enrico, nodding at Kenneth
who, like a majority of the crowd, is standing in rapt admiration of the
Dauphin Dolphin’s on-stage antics. The Dauphin Dolphin is now juggling mackerel
as an example of the standard of performance he expects to see at the festival
to celebrate his greatness.
‘I think we can safely leave him here,’ says Juan.
‘It’s okay,’ says Mrs Miggins, appearing at the turtle
dove’s side and making him jump out of his combat gear. ‘We’ll look after him
from now on.’
‘Mrs Miggins!’ says Juan. ‘What are you doing here?’
‘Contrary to all common sense and rational thinking, we
decided to come and rescue Kenneth and take him home for Christmas,’ she says. ‘I
know he’s a nuisance, but he is our nuisance and we have grown rather fond of
him over the years. It’s been a bit of a malarkey tracking him down, but here
we are. We could just take him away now, if you like. Mrs Slocombe has a very
potent combination of paracetamol, codeine and fig rolls which will knock him
out and make him easy to carry.’
‘Tempting though it sounds,’ says Juan, ‘I think he needs to
find some sort of closure before he’ll give up his quest to find his life’s
porpoise.’
Mrs Miggins hates pop psychology, but she knows that Kenneth
the Phantomime doesn’t and that Juan is probably right. ‘Okay,’ she says.
‘We’ll hang around until you’ve captured the Porpoise, then Kenneth can ask his
questions, and we can be on our way. How ARE you planning to capture him,
exactly?’
Juan opens his beak to reply but his words are drowned out
by a sharp and sudden gasp of horror from the crowd.
‘Oh heavens to Murgatroyd,’ says Juan, looking at the stage.
‘EVERYONE STAND STILL OR THE PORPOISE GETS IT!!!’ shrieks
Mrs Glossop, for she has taken charge of proceedings and her theme tune is
‘Going Loco Down in Acapulco.’
‘She’s got a harpoon,’ says Mrs Miggins.
‘An enormous harpoon,’ says Mrs Poo, admiringly.
‘A harpoon that is pointing directly at the Lord General
Porpoise’s jugular vein,’ says Juan. ‘This is NOT good.’
The Lord General Porpoise – let’s call him that, eh, because
that’s who he is and not the fancy Dauphin Dolphin – has stopped juggling and is
sitting very rigidly in his barrel with the point of Mrs Glossop’s harpoon
resting in a passive aggressive way on the side of his neck. He is making
frantic bug-eyed movements at the colley bird guards as if telling them to do
something urgently, and they are making helpless rolling eye movements back as
if to say, ‘Are you crazy? She’s got a harpoon, for chuff’s sake.’
Mrs Glossop is looking wild-eyed and dangerous. Her arm is
quivering because the harpoon is heavy and she’s been neglecting her push-ups
of late.
‘I’m warning you,’ she says again, ‘no one move a muscle unless
you want sushi for supper.’



My goodness! A bite nail biting!
ReplyDeleteKJ
I’m trying to keep control of things, KJ, but sometimes the inner thriller writer in me comes out!
ReplyDeleteAnd my English teacher rotation in his grave. He tried, he tried.
ReplyDeleteKJ