Fern looked down at, not one, but three broken nails and cried. Not ‘trying to get my own way’ sort of crying, but the crying that comes from genuine hurt. She couldn’t afford to have her acrylic nails repaired; in fact, she could barely afford to eat. It was only that her sister, Acacia, still had an income that they weren’t pushing their belongings in Coleses trolleys, and wearing all of their coats at once, and searching the gutters for old stogies. This wasn’t entirely true, as their mother, none other than, One-Armed Amber, owned their spacious three-bedroom apartment in Lewisham Heights. Legend had it that she had lost her arm in a gun battle. The truth was that she was a victim to Thalidomide. Be that as it may, Amber was still pretty high up in the underworld, and still carried a Charter Arms Pink Lady .38 Special, because she liked the pink frame, as well as the stopping power of a .38.
Fern was furious with Foodge. The bastard owed her nine week’s pay, plus annual leave, plus over five month’s worth of unpaid superannuation. She’d been a damned good secretary. She could type at twenty words per minute. She kept his BAS statements less than two years behind. She had developed an advanced accounting system for the firm. She’d even gone to technical college to learn about the internet, and was capable of catching up with her favourite television shows at work. She could even send an email with an attachment. God knows where Foodge would find someone to replace her. Certainly not hanging around that stinking ‘Pigs Arms’. Foodge used to come back to the office smelling of stale beer, cheap tomato sauce and that malodorous block of stuff from men’s urinals. No, he’d go a long way before he’d find someone to replace her. That’s why she was prepared to wait.
How long she could wait was a different question. She was a high maintenance lady. There was, of course, the nails, then the hair appointments, you know, streaks, cuts, placement of extensions, removal of extensions, spray tans, make-up, Zumba classes, going out Friday night, going out Saturday night, going out mid-week, shoes, and, of course, stockings, dresses, and, occasionally, a hat, or two.
Then there was poor Acacia, heartbroken by that bastard Dr James. She’d gone to work at the hospital with good intentions; to snare, sorry, marry a doctor, and ended up with a weak, spineless male nurse with a doctorate in nursing. Who’d ever heard of a doctor of nursing? That generated more expenses; lunching out, ‘just to talk’, dinners out, to look for a new man, piccolos of champers or cocktails. The costs just kept adding up. Thank God for the Viza card!
Fern realised that it was getting late, and that; it was her turn to cook dinner. She began to rifle through the freezer looking at the titles of frozen ‘weight loss’ meals, before she settled on Pad Thai for two. Was there no end to life’s demands?
Acacia had endured a difficult day, which was part of a difficult month. She’d asked to be moved from the position of Dr James’ secretary, to any other position in the hospital, so had been moved to the medical ward, to work as the relieving Ward Clerk. It was all go. The doctors and nurses demanded that she notify the Admissions Department of patient transfers within minutes of the event. She was expected to answer telephone enquiries, to go to Patient Records to collect old notes, and, to top it all off, she had to deal with patients!
Acacia decided it was time to plan for a miracle. She’d heard rumours that Fern’s boss, Foodge, was, in spite of his shambolic appearance, the recipient of a family trust, and that particular family was pretty well off. She started to surreptitiously search the patient database. Foodge’s record was pretty easy to find, and pretty unremarkable: one admission with a broken leg when he was seven years old. There were links to Foodge’s parents, and their medical records, which weren’t available, as they preceded the creation of the database, but, interestingly, it gave their address, which she quickly scribbled down on a ‘post-it-note’. A cunning plan started to foment. She couldn’t wait to get home to tell Fern.


I’ve only just noticed this…So many stories….so little time.
Yes, cheap tomato sauce is ‘orrible. I remember getting it in transport cafés in The UK. They made it last for ever, by diluting it with cheap vinegar. One could return and find the same congealed lumps around the neck──4 years later.
I had an unruly urge to change one of your sentences in my head. Needless to say I won’t do it. It sounds silly read aloud:
She began to rifle through the freezer looking at the titles of frozen trifles.
I’ll just leave it alone, Big.
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No Acacia, don’t do it!
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Sweet Fern
John Greenleaf Whittier
The subtle power in perfume found
Nor priest nor sibyl vainly learned;
On Grecian shrine or Aztec mound
No censer idly burned.
That power the old-time worships knew,
The Corybantes’ frenzied dance,
The Pythian priestess swooning through
The wonderland of trance.
And Nature holds, in wood and field,
Her thousand sunlit censers still;
To spells of flower and shrub we yield
Against or with our will.
I climbed a hill path strange and new
With slow feet, pausing at each turn;
A sudden waft of west wind blew
The breath of the sweet fern.
That fragrance from my vision swept
The alien landscape; in its stead,
Up fairer hills of youth I stepped,
As light of heart as tread.
I saw my boyhood’s lakelet shine
Once more through rifts of woodland shade;
I knew my river’s winding line
By morning mist betrayed.
With me June’s freshness, lapsing brook,
Murmurs of leaf and bee, the call
Of birds, and one in voice and look
In keeping with them all.
A fern beside the way we went
She plucked, and, smiling, held it up,
While from her hand the wild, sweet scent
I drank as from a cup.
O potent witchery of smell!
The dust-dry leaves to life return,
And she who plucked them owns the spell
And lifts her ghostly fern.
Or sense or spirit? Who shall say
What touch the chord of memory thrills?
It passed, and left the August day
Ablaze on lonely hills.
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What a place is the Pig’s Arms – because of our patrons and their wonderful contributions, one and all.
Many thanks, Waz.
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Beautiful words Waz, you deserve you own book deal!
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John Greenleaf Whittier I’m afraid M, and I think he’s probably had all the book deals he’s gonna get. But surely I must still get some points for remembering his poem, and his great diatribe against slavery, “Our Countrymen In Chains”.
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/expostulation/
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Thanks to all. Had to respond to Emmjays, ‘oh so subtle’ hint.
Men’s urinals, as oppose to lady’s urinals, do have some odd features, but I wouldn’t let my alpacas lick the block!
I’m sure Helvi won’t return from the beautician looking like one of One Armed Amber’s daughters!
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Very good BigM. Those men’s urinals do have a strange smell. What are those blocks supposed to do? We used large blocks in our paddocks for the alpacas to lick and gain valuable minerals they might lack.
I always felt Foodge was a bit of a snake in the grass and do hope Acacia will do well out of whatever devious plot she might be fomenting. “Fomenting” is a word I have re-discovered. I might start to use it more now. Expect the occasional ‘foment’.
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BM, this is LOL-funny, at parts worth a ROFL…
My new friend, the ex-nurse, is booking herself for her weekly maintenance at Beauty Salon tomorrow; she’s taking me along just have my nails fixed, according to her they look like I have done bricklaying or paving for too long…
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Dr Nurse, good one
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Look, HOO, we sent our posts at the same time, amazing 🙂
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Have to make a wish now 🙂
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Hung, I already did, I wished for Abbott’s disappearance…
What about you?
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Tutu
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