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Window Dresser's Arms, Pig & Whistle

~ The Home Pub of the Famous Pink Drinks and Trotter's Ale

Window Dresser's Arms, Pig & Whistle

Tag Archives: humor

11.7 Sandy Goes Back to Space

09 Thursday Dec 2010

Posted by Mark in Mark

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

Australia, Father O'Way, Foodge, humor, Sandy O'Way, science fiction, Trotters Ale

Church of the Holy Bail – by Warrigal Mirriyuula

I have been invited to the bar at the Pigs Arms to have a meeting with the Bish, oh and a few beers. As we walk in there’s Foodge  with O’Hoo and Merv. Scheming up some deal I’m sure. You know lets make a million, yeah right. Bar fly’s, know what I mean.

The place is lively tonight and doing good trade given that the Trotters is off. The Bish has got our beers and ushers me into a private corner of the bar. “Sandy” utters the Bish in an unusually soft tone for him, he’s worrying about something, I can tell. “Sandy, that credit card that Gordon gave you, you know, the card that works anywhere and every time. Well

The card is carried by a Oneker

can I see it?” Crikey, this is out of left field. I’m starting to feel anxious. Sweat is forming on my brow, I don’t think I want the Bish to see or touch my card, how strange.

I reach for my wallet rather reluctantly. My pulse is racing and the anxiety is washing over me like waves at the beach rendering me virtually neutralised. With lots of difficulty  I retrieve the card and hold it up for the Bish to see. The Bish’s eyes light up light the harbour bridge on new years eve. “Yes” he says “my precious, oops, I mean yes that’s the one Sandy. That’s the One Card. It’s connected to Gordon’s account at the One Bank and is run by Onekers. You see, Gordon owns all of the money in this sector of the universe.” Who cares I’m zarking sweating like a pig here and I don’t even know why. “You see Sandy, the card has special powers. Its able to morph into the local planetary technology so it can utilise the account. It also can be used by the holder to become invisible.” These dope smokers, all this crazy talk about magic, oh and yes my farcical powers, sheez.

The Bish continues his rave “The One Card is connected to three other cards one held by Belinda, and the other two are with Throwdough and Dildough Haggins, they live in the local mire called Inhobitable, they are always pissed and throwing parties.” Hey, sound like my kinda guys. Anyhoo, what’s this got to do with me. “You must enter the card into the

A female Automaticus Tellertorian

Slot of Doom. It’s on the planet Automaticus Tellerius and is found in the heart of Mt TheKerb. The danger is it is guarded by a sect of the ICCB (Intergalactic Cricket Control Board) called The Stumps and they worship the Holy Bail.” Zark, I’m simple but what a crock of sheet. The Bish needs to quit smokin.

The Bish is in full swing now “You must use the farce Luke, er, um, Sandy return the Holy Bail to Gordon, get back the other cards and enter your card in the Slot of Doom. That resets the expiry date.” So back out into space, fighting, gun battles and navigational tactics, silent running the space ship to avoid being killed, sounds boring. “Can you do it?” asks the Bish.

Look I can’t help myself sometimes so I say “When do I start?” when I really mean “Bish I’m sheeting myself at the thought”

“Good man Sandy, Gordon will be pleased. Go the meeting has ended” announces the Bish

“Thanks be to Gordon” I reply

“And with you” says the Bish.

7. Mongrel and Runt, Monday Morning And It’s Coming Down.

08 Wednesday Dec 2010

Posted by Mark in Warrigal Mirriyuula

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

Australia, Dog, humor, Mongrel, Runt, Warrigal

Story and Photograph by Warrigal Mirriyuula

 

Chook Fowler started the day at the Central School. Best to get it out of the way early. That way he wouldn’t be able to concoct an excuse to put it off again.

As he walked across the hall after his introduction, the children all sitting cross legged on the floor, his uniform was doing all the work. The children seemed caught up in an uncertain expectation. It wasn’t everyday that a policeman came to assembly.

He stood on the low podium in front of the children, his tunic buttons glinting under the lights. Using his best policeman’s serious voice he said in a rather too stentorian tone for his young audience, “You headmaster has brought a matter to my attention that I feel must be dealt with swiftly.” conveniently sidestepping the fact that he’d been putting it off for a fortnight as not germane to his current purpose.

“Some of you are behaving like guttersnipes!”

A crash of thunder shook the assembly hall. That seemed to surprise them. He fixed the Kinders at the front in his steely gaze and looked along the entire row. Several of the children squirmed uncomfortably and twisted their little fingers together, their mouths slackly open, their eyes widening as another crack shook the window sashes.

“There have been complaints that some of you, an untidy and irresponsible minority, are throwing your lunch scraps anywhere it suits you, including over Mrs. Bell’s back fence.” Fowler’s eyes immediately darted to the little group of fifth class students, already singled out as the culprits. “It’s unsanitary, encourages vermin and worst of all, Mrs. Bell’s cat “Tinker” fell ill!” Young cat lovers throughout the hall began to scan the room for the culprit but Fowler was now looking directly at young George Cassimaty.

“She had to take it the vet. Cats aren’t supposed to eat salami and fetta cheese. Nor are they likely to thrive on olives, or bread. It blocks them up and they can’t do their business.” The children began to snicker. The stern police sergeant was talking about cats pooing.

“This sort of behaviour has got to stop right away.” Fowler said forcefully.

The children, thinking he meant the snickering, all fell instantly silent. Fowler, surprised by the sudden quiet, having thought just a moment ago that he may have lost his audience to uncontrollable scatological sniggering, recovered and went on, “The school has bins in the playground for that sort of thing and if I hear any more reports of this thoughtless behaviour, I’ll be back, and it’ll be “Goodnight Irene” for the untidy little beggars responsible.” Another shiver of uncertainty rippled through the hall as Fowler covered the room with his hard policeman’s stare.

That should do it, thought Fowler as he turned, and with a wink thanked the headmaster for “this opportunity”. The good-natured sarcasm was lost on the Head who had replied graciously, “Any time.” as Fowler walked from the hall.

George’s guilt kept him thinking. Mrs. Bell was a cranky old stick. It was only the brave that went over her fence to fetch a lost ball. She’d fly out of her back door faster than anyone her age had a right to, swinging her straw broom and threatening mayhem if you didn’t get out of her yard. She’d even turned the hose on him a couple of times when she’d caught him and his mates stealing the nectarines off her tree; but he didn’t want to hurt her cat. George liked cats and Tinker in particular.

George Cassimaty hung his head. All the kids had been doing it, but his was the only lunch with the menu described by the policeman in what George thought of as “the evidence”. Well him and his younger brother Paul, but Paul’s lunch box always went home empty. Paul had an enormous appetite and after Mum had made and packed the lunches for the boys Yaya always packed a little more for Paul; he was a growing boy she said. His mother, the junior Mrs. Cassimaty, was hoping that he might stop growing, around the middle. Young Paul certainly wasn’t little Paul and her elderly mother in law wasn’t helping by packing his lunch box with extra sweet Greek treats.

George felt the beginnings of an uncomfortable obligation begin to stir in him. It wasn’t as if he could hide from his responsibility as part of his little gang of mates. It hadn’t been their lunch scraps that made Tinker sick. He’d have to go and apologise to Mrs. Bell personally. He heard his father saying, “A good man admits his mistakes and makes amends.” George would have to go and make amends with Mrs. Bell. Finding the courage to take the first step, that was going to be the real problem.

Downtown a shop assistant tore off a good length of brown paper from the roll by the big brass cash register and wrapped Beryl’s purchases, sticking the large package down with broad sticky-tape. Porky had promised to teach Little Bill how to swim this summer so she and Clarrie had decided to get the little fellow a new pair of trunks, some flippers and goggles and a snorkel. It would be his big gift from Santa at Christmas. Beryl pushed the package down into her shopping trolley and, standing up on tiptoe and turning, she spied Alice over in Ladies Apparel and Accessories. Alice wanted a new pair of walking out gloves to go with the new summer hat she had bought in Orange a few weeks ago. As Beryl came over Alice was adjusting and admiring some new seasons cotton gloves in a mirror at the counter. Beryl stood by wondering whether she too needed a new pair of gloves and as she tried to make up her mind her eye strayed to a display that featured an elegant clear perspex arm dressed in an equally elegant silk and lace opera glove. The wrist was dripping with sparkling rhinestones. Beryl began to titter behind her hand.

“I’m sorry Alice. I’m not laughing at your choice,” Beryl said still chuckling, “they’re lovely.” she said indicating the gloves Alice was admiring in the mirror. Beryl flapped her other hand at the opera glove as she tried to explain and laugh at the same time, “It’s just that I can’t imagine for the life of me who in Molong would want opera gloves.”

Alice nodded assent but was still bound up in deciding between two different pairs of gloves.

While Alice tried to make up her mind the absurdity of the display got Beryl thinking. When it was all said and done gloves on women, particularly in the summer heat of Molong, was just another of those incredibly silly things forced on women by social convention. Out here in the country gloves were something you put on to protect your hands from the damage of hard work or against the bitter mid winter cold, not something to satisfy some unwritten social code. The Women’s Weekly idea that a woman wasn’t properly dressed if she appeared in public with out a hat and gloves and her handbag looped over the crook of her left elbow; well it was too silly; like the notion that only a certain kind of woman wore trousers. Beryl decided then and there that she’d never buy a pair of dress gloves again. Let the ladies at the CWA stare and tut under their breath. Beryl knew how good her scones were and her dark marmalade was admired at many breakfast tables around Molong. Beryl could hold her own and the CWA ladies would just have to get used to it.

Alice had been distracted all morning and finally decided she wasn’t in the right frame of mind for choosing gloves. She pulled them off finger by finger and handed them back to the assistant who enquired whether there was anything else she could help “Madam” with.

“Actually it’s Miss,” said Alice, as though somehow she had only just woken up to this seemingly incongruous fact, “and no, there ‘s nothing more I want.” though of course there was a great deal she wanted if only she could work out what it was and how to get it.

Alice turned to Beryl, “You know Bee, I think I’ve had just about enough of gloves for today. Let’s go and have our tea.” She turned and thanked the shop assistant who had already retired to lean on the cabinet at the back of the counter, her face assuming the bored teenage indifference of the universal shop assistant.

“Hhmmm.” said Alice disapprovingly, then hooked her right arm around Alice’s left elbow and they walked out of the store like two schoolgirls. Outside The Western Stores the rain was belting down on Bank Street so Alice and Beryl got out their brollies and dashed up the street towards the Telegraph, Beryl’s shopping trolley bouncing along behind.

Alice pulled on Beryl’s arm as they came under Jimmy Hang Sing’s awning. “Just wait a moment”, Alice said, indicating the two men sitting in the rain slicked, glistening green Humber pulled up outside the Telegraph next door. It was Doc and that funny German Gruber come for lunch. Alice pulled Beryl into Jimmy’s doorway.

Beryl saw the men and then turned to her friend and said, “You really must sort this out Alice. You can’t go on like this, you work with the man nearly every day.” Alice, embarrassed, turned her head away. Beryl gently laid a finger on Alice’s chin and turned Alice’s face to look into her eyes. “To be frank with you, I’m almost certain that you unsettle him as much as he does you.” Beryl smiled an encouraging smile. “Doc’s never going to make the first move. He thinks of himself as a lifelong bachelor, not the marrying kind. All that flirty ladies man palaver is just to cover his loneliness. I’m certain of it.” Beryl looked straight into Alice’s eyes. She was her best friend and apart from Clarrie and her Mum, Alice was the only other person Beryl felt she could share her most intimate thoughts and dreams with. If Alice and Doc could have a tenth of what she and Clarrie shared she’d be a lucky woman. “You really must tell him how you feel.”

Alice looked stricken. “But I don’t really know how I feel!” Alice exclaimed biting her bottom lip. She was disappointed with herself. A grown woman so discombobulated by a mere man; but then Doc wasn’t just any man. Alice let go a huge sigh.

The men got out of the car, jumped the streaming gutter, shook their coats off under the pub verandah and went inside, so Alice and Beryl stepped out of Jimmy’s doorway, finally entering the pub by way of the carriageway and the back stairs. In a few minutes the kettle was on in the kitchen and Doc and Gruber were seated in the Dining Room going over Mrs. Delahunty’s bill of fare.

This was going to turn out to be a very interesting lunch for them all.

Fine Dining at the Pigs Arms

07 Tuesday Dec 2010

Posted by Mark in Mark

≈ 17 Comments

Tags

Australia, fiction, humor, Pigs Arms, Trotters Ale

The Pigs Arms Dining Room

Here is an extract from the Mearld-Hail dated 31st June 2008 after food and wine critic Earl Sandwich and partner Jules Carrot went on a search for the best inner west pub meal. That night, they dined at the Pigs Arms.

Arriving at the hotel is indeed an experience in itself. Tucked away, just of Porcine Ave, the Window Dressers Arms Pig & Whistle, the Pigs Arms to the locals, boasts the most interesting welcome. A sign greets you at the door saying “What lies in front us and what lies behind us are huge irrelevancies to what lies out there…..”, well, what can you say to that Odlaw?

You shuffle via the Ladies Lounge through the bar into the Bistro or as the pink neon light reminds you “The Pigs Arms Bar & Grill” just in case you would forget or in fact if you are ever able to forget.

In the bar a man stares blankly at a wall, humming a tune to himself, so softly in fact that

A version of HOO

no one else could hear it. We find out later on that it was Hung One On, a 70’s rock star who had a one hit wonder with an album that nearly everyone alive brought. “One trip too many” they say.

The waitress introduces herself as Belinda, “Glenda’s little sister”. It would seem Glenda is important. I comment that my sister also has that name but often complains that she is never allowed to sit near a window.  How odd?

We are seated a table that has a picturesque view over the railway yard. Belinda gives us the menus. We order some drinks, Trotters Ale, as it’s a local brew. Served cold, it emitted a strange misty vapor and an aroma that burns imprints on your brain that are difficult to erase. Drinking this ale became a two way process. As I sipped it, it sipped me. Stranger than strange.

The menu was small however eclectic. It contained all the usual villains, prawn cocktail, grapefruits onto pasta, steak, cake and ice cream. The words “Granny’s wedges are a must for all beer drinkers” emblazoned on the front cover however the curious thing was the way the menu was written.

Prawn cocktail was described as “…innocent little Dendrobrachiata, boiled alive , stripped to the nut,  served in a sauce made of the unborn children of Gallus gallus domesticus for some fat git with high cholesterol”, get the picture!

The last know version of Merv

We asked for the wine list. A man approached calling himself “Merv”. A list is produced, listing 34 varieties of Shiraz. “Gez’s” favorite we are told, whoever Gez is. I ask for a merlot, “Mate, this pub is for locals, you know, the unleashed”, absolutely no idea what he means so we pick a bottle and I order another Trotter’s and wait. Jules and I read the menu, Mains. Wow, after the entrées, geeps, I’m afraid to look. Let’s see, Lamb Rack – “The rib of a defenseless young Ovis aries brutally murdered and marinated in the oil of Olea europaea, ascorbic acid, Allium sativum and rubbed in sodium chloride baked in a <>187.7 degree oven. Served with pan fried Solanum tuberosum and steamed piccoli bracci”, Crusted Flathead – “a portion of sample from an ill-fated platycephaliade, obtained by slicing parallel to the spine producing a fillet, pan fried in the oil of Olea europae in a coating of  sodium chloride, Piper nigrum and the dried crumbed remains of baked Triticum spp. . Served with deep fried elongated pieces of Solanum tuberosum and a salad of Lactuca sativa, Solanum lycopersicum and Cucumis sativus”, whoa.

Dessert well lets not go there. By this time the Trotters Ale was staring to have an effect. Someone came past, counting everything, “37: John Howard, 38: The GST….”, I see a Dutch couple in the corner playing euchre and drinking Shiraz and arguing in Flemish about Wagner and his Ring Cycle.

Belinda arrives, we order but to her shock and dismay, we didn’t want any of granny’s

Belinda gets dessert

wedges. The wine comes and a handsome Greek couple enters and sits in the corner reciting poetry and encouraging the DJ to play Stella Konitopoulou. From my days of researching restaurants if the local’s visit then you know it’s going to be good.

A giant orange arrived at the door shouting,  “ Is anyone going to squeeze me?” , the paint on the walls start to peel turning into butterflies, SAS soldiers break through the doors shooting randomly and yelling at everyone to get on the floor, Jules hand mergers with the shiraz bottle and she has snakes coming out of her eyes, a man enters wearing a dinner jacket with monogrammed hankerchief’s, “MJ”, his name is Mike Jones, how I know that I have no idea, Glenda approaches, I hear her say to Belinda “Didn’t order granny’s wedges, what have I told you, if I’ve told you once I’ve told you a thousands times the antidote to Trotters is in granny’s wedges, sheez”, a lion with a black eye walks up and puts his paw on my shoulder and says ”Here mate have some of this”, I look down and see a bowl of wedges, the lion says “The’ wezzes are goo, weawy goo, eat”. I shove wedges in my mouth and chew, I’m sweating, the lion is looking annoyed, a man approaches, its Jayell, “Quick”, he cries, “Get Hung to reprogram him”, I need my nappy changed and where’s  mum  I’m hungry, some one is shaking me “Sir! Sir! Sir!”

A relaxing post prandial Hung

I wake up. I’m in hospital, St Boars. A doctor and nurse are in the cubicle with the curtains around, they tell me this happens all the time to people not used to the mild hallucinogenic effects of Trotters Ale “You need to order some of granny’s wedges, didn’t Belinda tell you” he says, they smile at me in a peculiar way, they call Jules. As we leave St Boars a giant orange is sitting on the side on the road, crying, “Won’t someone squeeze me?”……..

6. The Adventures of Mongrel & the Runt

06 Monday Dec 2010

Posted by Mark in Warrigal Mirriyuula

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Australia, Dog, fiction, humor, Mongrel, Runt, Warrigal

Story and Pictures by Warrigal Mirriyuula

Sergeant Fowler rode his bicycle over the cattle grate in the entrance to the Police Station yard, coasted to the wall and dismounted. The morning sky was dark and overcast but he’d beaten the rain. Taking his wadded tunic off the rack, he pulled his bicycle clips from the serge legs of his uniform trousers and shook his legs to straighten the crease. Taking off his dry slicker then donning the tunic, doing up the shiny brass buttons and straightening his collar he said to himself, “Right, ready for action.” and walked through the rear door into the cell vestibule. Some drunk was snoring in the cell.

Young Molloy, the new probationary constable, was brewing up and waiting for him with the incident report from last night.

“Pretty quiet Sarge. There was a bit of a barney at The Freemasons just after closing. Nugget Henderson got the worst of it. Seems he slagged off that new barmaid and the other drinkers didn’t take it too kindly. He’s got a split lip and a black eye, but I think he’s gonna be all right. I cleaned him up a bit and put him in the cell to sleep it off. ‘e’s been snorin’ and fartin’ all night. His face is a fright but there’s nothin’ serious.”

“Hmphh,” said Fowler. “Nugget’s a bloody pain in the neck. Silly bastard gets all full’a’piss and bad manners and starts lookin’ for a fight. Any reason’ll do. Leave ‘im there ‘til he wakes up on his own. No point chargin’ the bastard, ‘e’ll just do it again nex’ time he gets pissed and the fancy takes ‘im. Better off lettin’ the pub punters give ‘im an adjustment ev’ry now and then.” Fowler turned and looked over young Molloy’s shoulder, “Char ready yet?”

“Jus’ brewin’ Sarge” said Molloy as he went to shovel generous helpings of sugar into the chipped enamel mugs.

Molloy looked down at the paper in his other hand. “We had a call early in the evening from the manager out at MacGuire’s place. Seems he reckons some of their prize rams have been interfered with. He wouldn’t say what he meant by interfered with. He just said, an’ I’m quotin’ Sarge, “Your ignorance on the subject of prize merino rams would be almost absolute, so there’s no point explaining myself to you. Just get Fowler out here in the morning toot sweet.” Molloy handed the report to Fowler. “Is he always that rude Sarge?” he asked with a look of frustration.

“’fraid so, Molloy. Fred Bagley’s a cast iron bastard. He’d sell his gran’mother for an extra pound of greasy superfine. Mind you, that place runs like a clock and old MacGuire’s got more blue ribbons than anybody else ‘round ‘ere. That flock’a his is worth a fortune so I better get out there and see what the dickens is going on.”

“Righto Sarge.” Said Molloy collecting up his kit. “I’m off home for some kip.” Molloy looked out through the front of the station. “I’d a thought that Chilla’d be in by now. Do ya need me to stay Sarge?”

“No son. You get off ‘ome and get yer ‘ead down. Chilla’ll get here sooner or later.” Fowler replied, distracted as he looked again at the incident report. “Hang on a mo’ Constable.” Molloy turned in the doorway, “Wha’s this about some old swaggie bein’ seen down by the silos?”

“Oh yeah. Prob’ly nothin’ but I put it in the report. Jack Tenant down at the railway station said he saw this swaggie collecting the spilled wheat from the around the base of the silos. Got most of a sugar bag full and then headed off down the creek. Just a stranger, but ya never know.” Molloy waited to see if Fowler had further questions.

“Yeah, prob’ly nothin’. Said Fowler. “You get off ‘ome…, unless ya want a cuppa?”

“No thanks Sarge. I’m beat, to tell the truth. Bed’ll do me just fine.” And with that he turned again and went out through the cell vestibule. A moment later the kickstarter on Molloy’s Matchless 350 Single could be heard as the young Constable kicked his ride into life. Soon enough the deep bass grumble of the big single could be heard as Molloy gave it some throttle. The boy obviously loved the cacophony of deep bass cut with sonic cracks as the exhaust valves opened. A moment later he heard the Matchless clubble over the cattle grate and then tear away off towards the guesthouse where Molloy had his digs.

“Temporary Australian”, thought Fowler as he sat down at his desk and got out his diary. He remembered all the dispatch riders during the war riding just these bikes. They’d all been mad keen for speed too.

“Righto”, said Fowler to himself, taking a sip of his tea and making a short entry in the diary, “Once Chilla gets in I’m off.” It looked like he’d be out most of the day. He’d have to go out to MacGuire’s. Bagley was a bastard, always looking for confrontation, but there might be some genuine situation. He’d also been trying to get back out to the sawmill for the last couple of days. There’d been a break in and he just wanted to follow up on a few questions with a couple of the blokes. There was a growing suspicion niggling at him that it was an inside job. They were hard men up at the mill and a few of them had priors for assault and theft. Thirty-Five Pounds plus shrapnel and a new chain saw might have been too much temptation for a bloke on minimum wage. “and I must drop into the Central School”, he audibly reminded himself again, as he had done all last week. He’d been asked by the headmaster to scold some kiddies who’d been throwing their lunch scraps over Mrs. Bell’s back fence. Apparently her cat had taken ill and she blamed the children’s scraps. He’d been putting it off but today he really would make the effort. It wasn’t exactly his jurisdiction but his appearance in uniform would keep the peace. Not an entirely redletter day for the law in Molong but then most days were like this.

Fowler heard Chilla’s little Morris van pull into the station yard just as the first rattle of rain on the roof started up.. He closed his diary and locked it in the top drawer of his desk, then checking that he’d left nothing sensitive where Chilla could get his sticky fingers on it, he went out to greet the painter. Chilla looked like he’d been dragged through a hedge backwards, and now he was getting all wet and bedraggled. He gingerly unloaded his paint and ladders, brushes and trays onto the verandah, pausing for a moment to rub his temples. He was here to redo the reception and interview room. The old station was showing some wear.

“You look completely knackered, Chilla mate, and the day hasn’t even begun.” Ribbed Fowler. “You need a good cuppa.”

“Big night last night Chook” said Chilla dumping an arm full of tarps and sighing as if already exhausted. “Went to a cricket do at The Canobolas in Orange. Pissed as lords we got. Singin’ blotto voce in the bus all the way home. I’d need ta shave a dozen dogs, I reckon.”

“Silly bugger,” said Fowler and returned inside while filling Chilla in over his shoulder.

“Nugget Henderson’s sleeping it off in the cell. He got a tune up at The Freemasons last night so he might sleep for a while yet. I’ve unlocked the cell. Just keep an ear out for ‘im and when he wakes up get him off the premises quick smart. No tea, no commiserations, the man’s a bloody menace to himself and everyone else.” He picked up his notebook and buttoned it in the top pocket of his tunic. “I’m gonna be out most of the day so you’ll be on your own. If I’m not back when you finish just lock up when ya go.

“Righto mate, no worries.” Said Chilla as the Sergeant disappeared through the cell vestibule to the garage out the back.

As the black Police ute pulled out over the grate Chilla went in to make himself a cuppa. It was now pelting down outside. In the cell Nugget let go an arse tearing fart, groaned and rolled over.

“Jesus Nugget, that smells like sup’m ‘as crawled up y’r arse and died.” But Nugget was still out to it.

As Chilla waited for the kettle to boil he began singing under his breath while leaning on the sink and swaying his bum from side to side, “Hi ho Kafoozalem, the harlot of Jerusalem, Prostitute of ill repute, Daughter of the Baba.” It had been a big bash at The Canobolas last night. The young NSW and Test all rounder, R. Benaud, had been the guest. There was talk he was captain material. The Molong team reckoned they’d hold off their opinion to see how he played at home against the Poms this summer. There was no doubt he was good, but just how good remained to be seen. Having made his tea he pulled the “Express” out of his pocket and went into the reception to sit and read the newspaper. There was a picture of Mongrel and The Runt on the front page.

“THE DOGCATCHER’S BEST FRIEND”

(Molong Express. Monday, Nov. 7, 1954)

“The new Ordinance Inspector for Molong, Mr. Algernon Hampton, got more than he bargained for when he took his utility for a drive along one of the Wellington Road ridgelines early on Saturday afternoon.

Though details as to his purpose there and what happened are still unclear it appears that two local stray dogs found Mr. Hampton’s unconscious body in Conway’s rye pasture. One of the dogs, a large mixed breed animal known affectionately to locals as “Mongrel”, then made his way to the Mitchell Roadhouse on the Wellington Rd. and raised the alarm.

Mr. William Martin, co-proprietor of the roadhouse, affected a rescue and the injured man was taken to the Molong District Hospital where he was attended by Dr. Albert Wardell of Molong. It is reported that Doctor Wardell was required to treat and stitch a serious head wound and that Hampton was suffering from shock and concussion.

The patient will remain in hospital until at least this afternoon, by which time he will have been seen by noted neurologist and head injury specialist Dr. Karl-Lenhard Gruber from Bloomfield Psychiatric Hospital at Orange.

Mr. Hampton has been lucky thrice in his injury. Firstly when his rescue was initiated by a dog that would normally be the subject of Mr. Hampton’s work obligations as local dogcatcher; secondly when it was Doctor Wardell who was called upon to treat his wounds; Dr. Wardell’s stitching and minor surgery skills are legend in the district; and thirdly by the availability of the renowned specialist Dr. Gruber to attend to his case.

I’m sure that all Molong will join with us here at the Express in wishing Mr. Hampton a speedy recovery.”

…and there was a picture of Mongrel and The Runt sitting on the hospital verandah looking straight at the camera. When had that been taken? The caption read, “Popular local canine identity “Mongrel” and his inseparable companion “The Runt” wait for news of the dogcatcher’s recovery.”

Mongrel looked proud and The Runt, as usual, was poking his head around from behind Mongrel. Those that knew him could almost have heard his little growl as he bared his yellowed fangs at the cameraman.

Up at the hospital Algernon stared at the photograph lost between incredulity and simple confusion. Those dogs again. His role in the affair seemed secondary, somehow uncertain; and there behind the dogs was the window, inside under which his bed was located. If he had popped his head up at the time he would have been in the picture too. He munched on his toast and marmalade, taking the occasional sip of tea. He brought the newspaper nearer to his good eye and peered closely at the picture as if hoping for some further insight to appear from between the lithographic dots. None did.

The swelling had eased considerably and his left eye had opened after a boracic bath, but his vision in that eye was still blurred and unstable. The nurse had said that this was to be expected after such a knock and said that “The Doctor” would look at it.

Outside it was raining steadily. Algernon read the article again as he finished his tea. It made much of everyone else involved, including the dogs, but left him unable to decipher his own role in the events of that afternoon.  “Details as to his purpose there and what happened” where somewhat confused in Algernon’s mind too. Mongrel’s role was emphatically clear. He’d been the hero of the hour and was now the talk of the town; there weren’t enough exalting clichés to cover his role. For Algernon things were less clear. There was a low distant rumble of thunder and the rain intensified a little. Algernon looked out through the flyscreen at the water dripping off the guttering and began to wonder why he was here at all.

He saw his father’s face in his mind’s eye and realised he’d have to call his family. His mother would be wondering why he’d only answered one of her many letters in the months he’d been away from home. He recalled getting the keys to his new ute, a graduation gift promised when Algernon had started at Melbourne University and his father still had every expectation that his only son would come into the family business and eventually take it over. His choice had unsettled his father, made him seem less certain and in the time between his graduation and his departure for Molong Algernon and his father had become somewhat distant and ill at ease with each other. Neither the young man nor the older knew how to say what they wanted to say and so it remained unsaid.

On the morning he left he had received a stern departure speech from his father full of manly advice and life tips he barely understood. His father thought his choice of job incomprehensible. A young man with an honours degree in history didn’t become a minor functionary in a distant local government apparatus; and Algernon had been completely unable to adequately answer his father’s question as to just why he took the job in the first place. His mother had sweetly kissed him on the cheek and said with a tinge of sadness, “Be your own man; it’s you life now, make your own way.” She’d hugged him like he was going off to war. “We’ll always be here.” She snuffled and wiped a tear away. Her boy was going out into the wide world. She’d never even heard of Molong. He’d seen them in the rear view mirror as he drove away. His father, stiff, straight, still with that look of incomprehension, his mother gripping her husband’s arm, her head on his shoulder. Algernon couldn’t make out the tears but he knew they were there.

Algernon’s reverie was broken by Harry walking up the middle of the ward flapping the “Express” in front of him. “You’ve made the front page, “Scoop!” It seemed everyone was trying out a nickname for him. “Good picture of Mongrel don’t ya think?”

The dog did look good in the picture. Proud and handsome. Algernon perked up at Harry’s return. He’d grown fond of the old butcher in the few days they’d been ward mates. Harry didn’t give a toss. It was all the same to him and his devil may care attitude was infectious. Algernon’s headache had receded to a minor throbbing.

Harry sat on top of his bedclothes. They’d removed his catheter and he was now dressed in his own pyjamas. He was feeling much more himself.

“You’ve got that trick cyclist from Orange th’s’mornin’,” Harry said as he turned and folded the paper to look at the sports page. “Ya wanna be a bit careful about what ya say to those blokes. A lot of ‘em aren’t right in the head ‘emselves.” There was no malice in Harry’s pronouncement. He didn’t care if they were crazy on their own time. To him this was just friendly advice. Psychiatry was obviously mumbo jumbo and you had to be prepared. “He’s not a real doctor like Doc Wardell.”

Harry found whatever it was he was looking for and bringing the small pencil down from behind his ear he began to make notes in the margin of the paper.

The nurse came in with news that Doctors Wardell and Gruber would be here shortly. She set about straightening Algernon’s bedding then began removing the main dressing over his wound and cleaning the suture lines. She worked quietly and efficiently, occasionally looking into Algernon’s eyes and smiling at him, reassuring him in a way he found very comforting. She had a fragrance not unlike vanilla.

Monday was Beryl’s unofficial day off. After getting the guest breakfasts together and getting the kids off to school, the rest of the day was her own. Alice MacGillicuddie was also enjoying a rostered day off and had called to suggest she and Beryl get together. On Mondays Mrs. Delahunty did the lunches in the Telegraph dining room and there was always a number of bookings; seventeen today including Doc Wardell and that strange German doctor from Orange. Mrs. Delahunty would enjoy that. Doc really enjoyed good cooking and Mrs. Delahunty thrived on culinary flattery. Once Mrs. D arrived Beryl and Alice MacGillicuddie where going to do a little shopping at The Western Stores and then they’d return to the Telegraph to sit down for a good natter over a late morning tea and Boston Bun. They’d been friends since Jenny’s birth and treasured the time their busy lives allowed them to spend together. Though both women were active in the CWA it was their tea mornings and shopping expeditions they enjoyed most; when they could be alone, just two girlfriends on a lark. As Beryl sorted out a few minor matters in the kitchen she could hear Alice coming through the servery. “Beryl,” she called, “have you seen today’s paper?”

Across rain splattered, gutter bubbling Bank Street at Andrew’s Newsagency Old ‘drews was tidying the main counter while Young ‘drews brought another stack of The Express out from the storeroom. They’d been moving like hotcakes. The Express at a Penny didn’t usually sell as many as The Central Western Daily at Tuppence but today, with the heroic picture of Mongrel and The Runt on the cover, it was running out of the shop like an Olympic sprinter.

11.6 Sandy Burns the Midnight Oil.

04 Saturday Dec 2010

Posted by Mark in Mark

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

cricket, Father O'Way, humor, Peter Garratt

Digital Interruption by Warrigal Mirriyuula

The phone rings “Sandy it’s the Bish, I’ve been going through my records” Hmm, this is dangerous. The Bish records everything and is always ready to use it to his advantage. “I want you to talk to Peetar Garret” Hmm, wonder what this poor bloke has done to the Bish. “You know the singer from Midday Toil. I want you to have a short jocular conversation with him, short and jocular.”  Not ringing any bells here, yawn.

“Okay Bish” I reply, anything to get him to zarking shut up. “So this bloke Peetar, what do you want to ask him him?” I ask, sighing deeply at my extreme disinterest as I really couldn’t care.

“Find out about what’s going on in Correa, you know MASH and all that.” roars the Bish. No I don’t really. MASH, Suicide is Painless, poetry ever if there was some. Series ran longer than the war.

Anyhoo enough of that lets go. I grab a cab to the airport and jump a plane to Canberra. I bribe my way into the press room with some green stinky stuff the Bish gave me. Sheet, how can people smoke that stuff amazes me but all the guards love it.

I see Peetar having a coffee at the buffet, alone, this is my chance,

FOW: So Peetar, Australia has lots of military allies around the world. In your view who do we have the strongest link with?

PG: U.S Forces give the nod

FOW: So is this a good thing for Australia?
PG: It’s a setback for your country

FOW: So on to the problems with Correa what do you see happening there?
PG: Bombs and trenches all in a row, Bombs and threats still ask for more

FOW: Will the Correan conflict effect the globe Peetar?
PG: Divided world, the CIA, say who control the issue

FOW: Do you think negotiations with the parties will help?

PG: You leave us with no time to talk

FOW: Peetar, do you have an official account of what’s happening on the ground?
PG: You can write your own assessment

FOW: Can you expand on that please Peetar?

PG: Sing me songs of no denying, seems to me too many tired, waiting for the next big thing

FOW: So for the man in the street, what should they look for?
PG: Will you know it when you see it

FOW: And the effect on our youth?
PG: High risk children, dogs of war

FOW: Do you think that the Correan conflict will affect investment brokers such as those in Wall St?
PG: Now market movements call the shots, business deals in parking lots, waiting for the meat of tomorrow.

FOW: Does this mean a refrain for the Australian economy Peetar?

PG: Sing me songs of no denying, seems to me too many tired, waiting for the next big thing.

FOW: So look, times running out but briefly would you like to sum up the current situation?

PG: Everyone too stoned to start a mission, people too scared to go to prison
We’re unable to make decisions, Politicians party line, don’t cross that floor,
L. Ron Hubbard can’t save your life, Superboy takes a plutonium wife
In the shadow of Ban The Bomb we live…..

FOW: Yes, well that’s all we have time for . Is there any message you would like to make certain the audience is in chorus with your thoughts?

PG: Sing me songs of no denying , seems to me too many tired, waiting for the next big thing

11.5 Sandy Goes to Malice Brings

29 Monday Nov 2010

Posted by Mark in Mark

≈ 35 Comments

Tags

Australia, Father O'Way, humor, Sandy O'Way, science fiction

Digital Mischief by Warrigal Mirriyuula

Hey, Sandy here. You know the Bish, Bishop bloody Bishop? Anyhoo, the Bish wants me to go to Malice Brings to investigate a major breaking story. A story about a  man that suffered minor injuries. If you scan the web for societies that protect people with minor injuries, you’ll find none.  This in-depth study shows a haunting sub class of people out there with minor injuries. Frankly, it’s scary.

Here’s my interview from my favourite Aunty, Aunt Verity Well.

FOW: So Aunt Well what’s happening?

Aunt Well:  Malice Brings police say an unyouthful  non woman has been hit by a car after trying to stop two unelderies  driving away with his vehicle.

FOW: Come on, lets get real? Just because someone wants to borrow your car, no reason to get upset. Just joking but cars are inanimate ain’t they? I know people aren’t. What injuries did this car attacking gerontic mammalian throwback receive?

Aunt Well: Police say the 78-year, yes they say 78 year a lot down the station, old non woman received injuries from the fall, well just a little bit, could even develop into minor.

FOW: Police say lots of things. 78 year old should have know better anyway if it gets to minor, press ‘ill be all over it, I mean now news is 24 seven, minor makes the news. As I said scary. Look where’s this non persons car whatever?

Aunt Well: The assumed thieves drove away but forsaken the car nearby.

FOW: It is an allegation not a fact however it was possibly neighbours or perhaps Home and Away. Anyhoo they are hardly going to drive it back and leave the keys on the front porch. Has anyone been arrested?

Aunt Well: Police have arrested two non males of the species who are expected to be charged later today.

FOW: Well lets see, expected to be charged rather than have been charged. They may also be charged especially once they get back home or if already charged then this would get them into further trouble as police hate people who are charged.

Sandy O’Way, Malice Brings.

Aardvark Me Dead, Damn those Frogs

26 Friday Nov 2010

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Emmjay, The Sports Bar

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Australia, humor, rugby union

 

 

Holy Shit !

I was shocked yesterday to see  in one of those newspapers that they give away at railway stations a photograph of a member of a precious protected species – the Wallabies – with one eye staring at the camera and the other eye having a little holiday somewhere in the back of the chap’s head.

He had some interesting facial embroidery accompanying his wandering orbit.

The story (sorry, I’m too slack to go find it – you can dig it out and I’ll post it) went on to say that THIS French rugby squad was terrifically well behaved and had almost weaned themselves off using the Christmas hold (a handful of nuts) as a primary part of their normative tactics.

But it is clear that they are certainly clinging to their other old chestnut – the digital eye massage.

 

 

 

 

 

 

One of these has got to be Os

I think that this is one part of the Australian defence sorely lacking  – the reprisal – and I am hoping that the Wallabies can enlist the services of my favourite game play persuader Os du Randt,  (through sheer force of personality) to persuade the French (who,  after all, have a chicken as their mascot) to cease and desist in playing with our boys’ wedding tackle and encouraging the Frogs to leave their opponents eyes comfortably ensconced in their sockets.

I’d like to send a personal thank you to Voice for the Aardvark joke.   Killed me.

If you missed it, you’ve either got a long search mission or you can send me an Email stapled to a tenner and I’ll explain it…..

The problem with the renos, Voice,  is stopping the car to change the flat tyre – or just putting up with the flapping until we get to the party.

11.4 Life is a Volcano

22 Monday Nov 2010

Posted by Mark in Mark

≈ 22 Comments

Tags

Australia, cricket, Father O'Way, humor, Sandy O'Way, science fiction

The name’s O’Way, Sandy O’Way

Digital Mischief by Warrigal Mirriyuula

Hi, Sandy here. Yes you guessed it, I’m on a mission from Gordon, you known, Gordon O’Donnell, the creator of the universe. See Gordon and the Bish have sent me to Sumatra to investigate some island that decided to explode. I mean as if I know anything about exploding gas, well, Belinda might tell you different.

Luckily this time the Helvi-tastic has come with me as my body guard. Do I feel heartened? You would have to be zarking mad, listen to this,

“So Helvi, how’s life aboard the S.S. Julian II?” I ask given my disquietude for the crew had become worrisome.

“We are ready to fight, to kill and to die as martyrs” replies Helvi with her typical broad grin and than determined look that could kill at five metres. Scary stuff man.

“But Helvi who are we fighting?” I enquire with such rabid enthusiasm that watching cricket suddenly looks alluring. I go on “But Helvi, I think a volcano has erupted, who’s left to fight?” I plea.

“Sssssssssssssssaaannndddyyyyy, a warrior is always ready” replies Helvi in that voice that can scare the living shit out of anything. “I have both long range and hand held laser cannons, swords, star knifes, grenades and defence shields.” Does this woman come prepared or what?

So we land and are taken to the hardest hit region. There seems to be a lot of people running around, screaming and yelling “Watch out, Java is coming!” I mean what a time to have to update my computer, I hate it when this happens.

There is an army of folk and Red Cross volunteers trying to help people from zark knows where. I say to some bloke “Hey dude, where’s a good place to eat around here?” “Eat mate, what zarking planet have you been on?” he yells. “Well mate, I’ve been on lots of planets. This is Earth isn’t it? So where’s the zarking cricket mate?” I reply using my unctuous parish priest voice. “Cricket mate” the heavily armed bloke replies “We had to declare at 4 for 328 due to the zarking volcano, I’m personally shattered.” He’s opened up now. This is the real picture of living next to a live volcano. He continues “See I was on a fivefer[1], we had ‘em nailed, out guys would have got the runs easy.”

So guys there you have it. 328 runs on the board is a concern. The score defies the underlying principal of the universe being the average number of beans in a can of baked beans divided by  the final score of a cricket innings. Some things in space just never cease to amaze me.

[1] Fiverfer – an amalgamation of the word five and for, indicating that a bowler has taken five wickets in an innings.]

11.3 Are you for real?

17 Wednesday Nov 2010

Posted by Mark in Mark

≈ 42 Comments

Tags

country drives, Father O'Way, humor, Sandy O'Way

The Bremer Valley

Writing. Is writing a skill or is it just a means of expressing ones thoughts? For example, is writing really a way of expressing one’s inner self?  Do you self talk? I do. I find it helps to have a good self talk. Yes, I ask myself all these painstaking questions. See I’m an inquisitive bastard when it comes to myself. So I say “Hey Sandy, what are you doin?” “Nothin much” I reply to myself. “Who ya gunna vote for?” “Dunno” “What ya havin for tea?” “Food, I suppose” I’ll reply with total disdain.

So yeah, I have deep and meaningful conversations with myself constantly. In fact it helps me pass the time. Time you ask? Time only occurs when there is motion. So I have this theory, lets just stop moving and we can all live forever. Right? Well maybe not and it goes without saying that this theory has some serious flaws. But who gives a zark, not this broken down parish priest. Anyhoo, that’s another story.

So writing is a group of letters that one strings together to form a sentence. But a sentence can also be a punishment, a verdict, a conviction and condemnation. So if I write a sentence am I condemning myself by verdict to convicted punishment? Gees arse, all these rules with words, this is worse than maths.

A day at the office with Hung One On

I’d like to tell you a story. A story of a country drive. For us city dwellers, the lovely Belinda and I, we need country drives, believe me, I mean I’m a priest after all.  So here goes…..

The valley stretched out before us, gradually disappearing into the distance that concluded with the looming mountain range. The sun was kind to us today as usually here in the deep south the summers are hot and dry. Today is cloudy and  rain is falling, gracing the ground with delicious nutrition for the soil.

The road, gravel of course, winds through the hills and vales crossing brooks trickling with water. Livestock dot the paddocks interrupted occasionally by crows and magpies searching for a feed of insects.

We pass numerous homesteads enwreathed by trees that provide both a windbreak and shade. Most have abundant outhouses and some farm machinery some of which are beyond their use by date.

We ascend to the top of the small mountain as the wind starts to lift. We stop and admire the 360 degree vista. We watch the rain clouds drift across the valley creating a patchwork quilt of colours and textures that stimulate the senses and purgers the soul. The wind and rain make us cold to the bone.

A vacant rotunda sits in the park. We dine under its protective roof on antipasti, dolmades, olives cheese and crusty bread. All washed down with a glass of wine. It doesn’t get any better than this. This should be everyday, should I wish for it to be my groundhog day?

Driving back home our colloquies diminish and we let the music stop on the CD player. This allows us to cherish the sounds of the rain and allow our senses to absorb the beautiful smell of water and dust and the birds. All of us enjoying the effects of the rain.

Our thoughts become reflective as we re-live our day, out in the country. We’re returning to the concrete jungle. The noise, the traffic and the congestion. This doesn’t mean it’s bad or wrong it’s just the countryside makes me feel so free and so open while the city closes me in.

The drive continues as we wind down through the hills and back to town. Other motorists are unaware of our relaxing trip and our connection with nature. The other motorists kept their aggressive driving styles while we idled through the streets in relax mode.

We return home to find nothing had changed except ourselves. Forever now, a memory of the Bremer Valley, the vista, the winding roads and the diverse  bird-life.

Life’s like that I guess!

Beach and the Video

16 Tuesday Nov 2010

Posted by Mark in Uncategorized

≈ 30 Comments

Tags

Beach, humor, Robin Hood

The Pigs Arms welcomes Mel

 

The Beach...

Sitting on the red sand, false hope at waves and shark sightings within my braggart persona. Finding my pants lack legs I stand and chase the elegant Harrods mirage to find nothing but a tree stump, chock of woodworm and a large egg with no hints as to origin or future hope of hatching. Shall I scramble? Shall I scamper? I sit and contemplate pants lacking legs and discuss my future with the woodworms, leaving the egg to rest in hope of becoming something new and big and slightly special.

 

Being warm I discovered the missing clothing appendage. I walked toward the big old green chair stolen from Le Cornu’s foyer and jumped aboard to enjoy the view, Wow, Atlantic Video within paces, think I just may, huge range of retro media. As I leap from the Le Cornu’s monument, I contemplate a name change due to massive overdue fines at every video store in sight upon boarding a Sea World helicopter. Yes, lucky I collected mail from all boxes at the stereotypical cream brick apartment block I call home. At once I settle on Nguyen Ng. Feeling lucky I carry heavy duty hair ties for faux slant eyes.

 

and the Video, courtesy http://www.starpulse.com

“Okay hero, I seek, Robin Hood Men in Tights, you have on your shelf?” “Sure, never seems to rent out longer than 15 minutes at a time” comes the reply. “Ah sooo – methinks it sounds too good, thank ye sir so much”.     Smile on face I loosen the hair, mmm, normal eyes, so Aryan, yet in a special red headed fashion.

The Royal VN Your Majesty...

Limping across the ochre terrain I locate my pants legs across the windscreen of the VN, well thank God, nothing worse than burning your hands on the plastic economy class steering wheel.

TTG at night, well sort of...pix fotosearch

On to Adelaide. Tea Tree Gully here I come, stun gun and clothesline at the ready. Hey how is it going matey? What do you what… stun gun. Clothesline confines the man to his faux leather home theatre lounge. Hey smarty, big tough man – feast your obnoxious brain on this. Sets the DVD player to repeat –“Nooo, surely my cells shall fry”. “That’s nothing shaghead – tomorrow I’m making you sit through the entire Wogs, Kings of Mykanos [sic]”. He he. Don’t mess with me boy Mel wins.

Mel Nov 2010

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