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Window Dresser's Arms, Pig & Whistle

Tag Archives: humour

Herbal T for 2

23 Saturday Apr 2011

Posted by astyages in Astyages

≈ 24 Comments

Tags

humour

By T2

Hmmm, that story about the African
chief reminds me of the time I was sailing up the Orinoco… on an
expedition looking for medicinal herbs and native remedies for
Harrods’ health-food department. It was impossible even to say what
country we were in when we stopped at a small village that was
located in a large clearing in the Amazon rainforest. I’d heard the
shaman there knew of some particularly potent vines and ferns; if I
was lucky, perhaps I’d be able to undergo the healing ritual and
write it up for National Geographic as a bonus.

After paying the shaman in tobacco,
hatchets and knives, I persuaded him to take me into the jungle to
find some of his famous ingredients, although he was very reluctant
to go at first… He said something about the ‘spirit of the vines’
wouldn’t like a stranger who didn’t understand the sacred nature of
the vines and the ritual desecrating the sacred part of the forest
where they were found’, or something… I finally placated him by
making lots of credulous ‘respectful’ noises and, after the gift of a
dozen extra hatchets, he finally agreed to take me.

After trudging all day through swamp
and jungle we finally came to a huge vine-strewn tree, under which
the shaman lit a small fire to boil water for the billy. Good, I
thought, I could really use a nice cuppa ‘Rosie-Lea’ right now, but
instead of putting a couple of tea-bags into the billy, he cut a
tendril from the vine which grew all over the tree and after chopping
it up on a nearby stone, as one would chop parsley, he threw this
‘tea’ into the billy. Then he started to chant over it in a querulous
voice, shaking his magic rattle over it as he uttered the
incantations.

After the brew had boiled for several
minutes, he took it off the heat, and after breathing onto the brew
for a minute or so, presumably to cool it, he handed it to me.
Wordlessly,  I took it and drank it; the taste was bitter but not
unpleasant… what happened next I can scarce credit myself, for as
the shaman smoked his big cigar, I saw vines coming out of him and
wrapping themselves around the tree in a manner I can only describe
as ‘lovingly’… then I realized that the vine and the shaman were
somehow the same creature… Perhaps in my drug induced state, I was
seeing something metaphorical as if it were actually real… I don’t
really know; yet somehow I understood that this old shaman, who had
made his very existence through the power of these vines to cure
people of their ailments, had somehow become part of the vine and it
had become his spirit; ecstatically, I experienced an epiphany;
somehow the whole universe revolved around this understanding that he
and the vine were one…

Then, all of sudden I was hit by
another sudden realization… I was suffering from one of the
well-known and unfortunate side-effects of the medicinal vines; I
needed to empty my bowels… URGENTLY! I ran off into the forest and spent the next half-hour or so there; but I’ll spare you the gory details of
what happened as soon as I found sufficient cover for my western
‘modesty’…

Suffice it to say that I was both
relieved and considerably lighter when I returned to the old shaman,
who was still attached by innumerable vines to the tree. I felt both
enlightened and yet somehow tricked at the same time by this old
magician, as the shaman asked me, “Are you feeling better now? Is
your ailment cured? And how do you feel now about the Spirit of the
Vine?”

In fact I did feel much better; but
this old guy had just given me the shits… quite literally! I could
not help looking him right in the eye as I said, “I’m fine, thanks
very much, but with fronds like you, who needs enemas!”

:)

Recessional Redux

22 Friday Apr 2011

Posted by Mark in Pig Psalms, Warrigal Mirriyuula

≈ 21 Comments

Tags

fiction, humor, humour, Pig Psalm, Pig's Psalm, Pigs Arms, Poem, Warrigal

Pictures by Warrigal Mirriyuula

Merve is a proud sponsor of Glenda’s rapid deployment Emergency Makeover Team. Where ever trouble strikes Glenda and her team of expertly trained girls can swing into action and before you know it, Ladies within the evacuation zone can be primped, preened, pampered and presented anew as Princesses and Queens of the devastation.

This weeks special “Fusion Tips”!

Yes girls, hair looking a bit bedraggled after a few months in the Evac Camp? Well don’t worry, Glenda’s new patented “Fusion Tips”, now with extra Caesium for that natural glow, will having you feeling completely ionised in no time at all.

Recessional Redux by Warrigal Mirriyuula

Merve of our hotel, known of old—

Lord of the beer which tastes so fine.

Within whose red brick walls he holds

Dominion over spirit and wine,

Publican host, be with us yet,

Same again mate , lest we forget!

The tumult and the shouting dies

The roadcrew and the bands depart

Still stands Merve with broom in hand,

He sweeps and mumbles, lets go a fart.

Publican host, be with us yet,

Same again mate, lest we forget!

Home called, the punters melt away

The doors are locked, the “useful” paid

And all the beer is pissed away

To empty bladders for another day.

Licensing Sergeant, spare us yet,

Same again mate, lest we forget!

If, drunk with too much Trotters, we loose

Wild tongues that have not Merve in awe

Such bruisings as will turn to puce

Our arses, he’ll kick and say no more.

Publican host, be with us yet,

Same again mate, lest we forget!

Poor battered souls that put their trust

In reeking loo and threadbare carpet

Will all be dust that builds on dust,

So “Staffies” for all Granny, there’s a poppet.

For frantic boasts and foolish words,

Are the staples of life for dear old Merve.

Foodge 23 : Acacia’s Plan Foments

21 Thursday Apr 2011

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Big M, Foodge Private Dick

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

humour

Acacia jonesii

Story by Big M

Acacia’s plan for Foodge depended on Fern being able to carry out her part, flawlessly. Acacia had already established, from medical records and old newspapers that Foodge was the only son of Hamish MacFoodge, socialite, barrister, and philanthropist, and his wife Felicity, socialiser, Solicitor-at-Large, and professional cake contest judge. They had both been tragically killed in a ballroom accident, leaving poor young Felix MacFoodge orphaned. The rest was a mystery, wrapped in an enigma, or, was it an enigma wrapped in a mystery (or a wedge wrapped in a newspaper…ed) ? Either way, Acacia had gone as far as she could go with public records. This was where Fern had a huge part to play. Acacia had just finished explaining all of the above, over a glass, or two, of ‘Chardy’.

“So, Foodge’s dad was a famous coffee maker, right?” Fern was trying to resist the temptation to fiddle with her new acrylic nail.

“No, where did you get that idea?”

“Oh, silly, you said that he was a famous barista” Fern replied triumphantly, once having dated one. “I should know!”

“No, you’re the silly one, I said ‘barrister’, not ‘barista’, don’t you know the difference?” Acacia was starting to get short with Fern, which was a pretty common occurrence, as Fern wasn’t playing with a full deck.

“Yes, of course I do, one makes coffee, the other hangs around in bars!” Fern waved at the waitress to top up their glasses.

“That’s right, this one was the bar hanging around type. Anyhoo, what we need is for you to get back into Foodge’s office and get the name of his solicitor, so that you can find out just what he’s worth.” Acacia took a long drink from her glass, thinking it might be time to change to cocktails.

“Why do I want to find out what Foodge’s solicitor is worth?”  Fern was really struggling with this crazy plan, and hoped the waitress would return so she could order a low fat mudslide.

Mudslide

“No, find out how much Foodge is worth. He must have property, or a family trust, or investments, or, all of the above.”  Acacia grabbed Fern’s face with two hands to force her to look Acacia right in the eyes, like she used to do when they were kids.

“Above, the above.” Fern was trying to look over Acacia’s head to look at ‘all of the above’, but her head was trapped by Acacia’s hands, so Fern tried to roll her eyes upward. Unfortunately the woman seated at the next table thought that Fern was choking, so leapt up, placed both arms around her midriff and thrusting backwards in a poor imitation of the Heimlich manoeuvre. This forced all of Fern’s stomach contents upward, through her oesophagus, and out her mouth, straight into Acacia’s face.

Heimlich Manoeuvre a little bit wrong.....

Fern felt about a kilo lighter, but was still none the wiser. Acacia was covered in nibblies, chardonnay and grated carrot. The Heimlich manoeuvre lady stepped back with her hands grasped above her head, like a prizefighter, whilst the other patrons cheered. Acacia stormed out to the ladies, whilst Fern meekly followed.

Monday was a new day. Acacia had persuaded Fern to return to work at Foodge’s office. The appearance of Fern’s missing pay in her bank account gave the perfect excuse for her return. Fern had spent Saturday afternoon at the beauty salon (no, not that run down place near the Pig’s Arms) being waxed, plucked and streaked in anticipation. They had been over the plan all weekend, well, not all weekend, they’d spent Saturday night drinking cocktails, eschewing ‘Chardy’ for the first time in their lives.

Fern did everything as usual. She caught the 08:50 bus, which brought her to the bus stop right outside the doorway between the drycleaners and the kebab shop leading to the offices above. The nameplate on the door read, ‘Suite One. P.J Heinz, Esq. Debt Collectors. Suite Two. Fong Chin, Imports. Suite Three. F.Foodge, Esq. Private Agent.’ She climbed the threadbare stairs, trying not to hang onto the sticky timber handrail, but every second or third tread threatened to tip her backwards, out onto the footpath. Of course, the stilettos didn’t help!

Fern reached the landing, stepped forward to the Art Deco styled door, which she had to unlock. This wasn’t uncommon, as it was rare for Foodge to be in the office before 11:00. She entered the office and gasped. It had clearly been ransacked. Her filing system was in complete disarray. Biscuit tins of receipts had been tossed across the room. The drawers of her desk had been pulled all the way out, and threatened to collapse under the weight of spare lipstick and mascara. Her telephony headset (as she liked to call it) had been torn out of its socket, and tossed across the room, which didn’t really matter as she was unlikely to answer the telephone. She stepped into Foodge’s Private Office, at least, that’s what it said on the door. Everything was as it usually was. Spare Fedora and overcoat on a wooden stand. Row of unused pipes in a rack, next to a half empty bottle of  ‘Seven Seas’ rye and two shot glasses.

Fern sat at the desk, and started flicking though the teledex. There was nothing under ‘B’ for barista, or ‘C’ for coffee maker, then she remembered, and checked ‘B’ again for ‘barrister’ then ‘L’ for ‘lawyer, then, ‘S’ for ‘solicitor’. She was about to give up when she spied a card wedged under the edge of the Bakelite telephone. It read ‘Reid, Reid and Reid, Attorneys at Law and Notaries Public’. She was about to slip the card into her pocket, when she realised that it’s absence might give a clue to a sleuth like Foodge, so she transcribed the details into her notebook. Fern spent the rest of the day tidying her filing system, and going through old mascaras and lipsticks, discarding most of them, as they were no longer trendy.

That evening Acacia made Fern a celebratory meal as a reward for her good work; frozen calamari, steamed vegetables and rice, also frozen. They ate their meal in front of the television, laughing, whilst the ‘Fat Fighters’ struggled to run through an obstacle course whilst wearing weight jackets equivalent to their weight loss. Acacia turned to Fern. “ A toast, to Foodge, who’s gunna get a whole lot poorer”.

Foodge, meanwhile had spent the afternoon in the company of his ‘parents’ and now, his solicitor, Jonathon Reid, Solicitor at Large, as he liked to call himself, more for his size, rather than for being out and about. Mr Reid had telephoned Foodge early in the morning, around 11:30, to invite him for lunch. They met at 2:00pm at the Swindlers’ Arms, Mr Reid’s second office. They polished off steak in red wine, surely an oxymoron, as it tasted distinctly of cleaning fluid, washed down with Swindlers’ Arms Porter, a dense carbonated brew with a firm mouth feel, diesel fumes on the front of the palate, and a rather axillary nose.

“I’ll come straight to the point, not beat around the bush…you…er…know…ah…you’re, well, broke!” Mr Reid tried to soften the blow with a sardonic grin. All the while holding his pint up to the light, which was futile, as the fluid therein was entirely opaque. “Mr Swan approached my office last week. I know that you may see this as a breach of confidence, but, I am, after all, your legal guardian.”

Foodge’s little face fell. “Yes, of course Uncle Jonathon.” He started to nervously fiddle with his well-worn pack of Camels.

“Now, there’s nothing to fear. Mr Swan and I have approached the Taxation Department, and Mr Swan should have your tax matters sorted within a fortnight. I am prepared to release money from your trust fund in order to set things right on two conditions. One, you must fire that secretary. She’s the most indolent, incompetent, inept person I’ve met in my life, and, two, you modernise your office. New telephones, fax, computers, broadband, billing systems, and so on.” Mr Reid eyes moved from the glass to attempt to meet Foodge’s, who stared down at the cigarette packet in his left hand.

Foodge had failed to comprehend most of what his legal advisor had said. All he’d heard was, ‘fire Fern.’ He couldn’t fire her. She was a great secretary, punctual, always there by 9:30 or 10:00, and sometimes staying back until 5:00. She had a great accounting system, and even answered the ‘phone, sometimes, plus, she was a real good looker. Foodge mumbled some thing like, ‘I’ll think about it, thanks for lunch’ Then donned his hat, pocketed his Camels, and pushed his way through the crowd black suited legal and financial people, until he tumbled out onto the footpath. Foodge knew exactly what he needed; wedges and cold, hand brewed ale.

A Prayer for the Pigs’ Arms: The Landlord’s Prayer

14 Thursday Apr 2011

Posted by astyages in Pig Psalms

≈ 32 Comments

Tags

humor, humour, Pig Psalm, Pigs Arms prayer, Poem, prayer

By Astyages

I did promise a little entry in the Pigs’ Psalms competition, didn’t I? This is actually more of a prayer than a psalm, but since a psalm is just a prayer that is sung, and since I suppose this could quite easily be sung, and since in any case I’m more impressed with content than form, I shall, without further ado, get straight to the point, without any beating around the bushes or any further preamble like some long-winded polly or other, here it is:

The Landlord’s Prayer:

Our Landlord, which art in ‘t pub,
Merv be thy name.
Thy License come;
Or thou wilt be done
On earth, as it is
In Holden Hill magistrates’ court.
Give us this day our daily wedgies,
And forgive us our overdue bartabs
As we forgive you for your flat ale
And watered-down whiskey
Lead us not into the temptation of visiting Glenda’s House of Pain,
But deliver us from every evil,
For thine is the Leasehold,
The power and the glory,
Forever and ever,
Amen

By T2

😉

Pig’s Psalm 16: No News is Good News

12 Tuesday Apr 2011

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Emmjay, Pig Psalms

≈ 43 Comments

Tags

ABC News, Bally Pinball, humour, Pig's Psalm

PA's 1976 Captain Fantastic Pinball Machine

Keep us all safe, our Merv

And protect us from Chris Uhlmann’s barbs and pointed arrows

And wife-beater questions

Weary we are of his constant harping attacks and always negative whining about the goverment didn’t do this or failed to do that or hashed up whatever.

Sick to the navel or the Head of Defence Forces we are of him and his ABC harpies.

Release Emmjay from his prison hell in wardrobe

Turn off the pub TV

And let in a little light

And the patrons looked upon the Pig’s Arms LCD

And they saw that it was blank

It was good

It was Better than good.

It was excellent

And Merv sayeth until the multitude

I shall forswear the A of B and C

all the days of Viv and Ian’s childhood

And groweth-up they in a Pub with No Fear

For it’s lonesome away from no NEWS you can hear

By the pool table at night where the dart board’s quite near

And the News and 7:30

Will ne’er here reappear

For all the days I will walk

behind the bar you’ll recall

I will stroll straight and tall.

By the flickering light

of the Bally pinball.

There endeth the middy and the lassoo.

Hell Hospital, Episode 13

12 Tuesday Apr 2011

Posted by astyages in Astyages, Hell Hospital

≈ 13 Comments

Tags

Foodge, humour


By theseustoo

Dave struggled to free himself from the warm fuzziness which seemed to weigh him down like a leaden blanket… as he gradually emerged into semi-consciousness, he realised that someone was shaking him. “Where am I?” he asked, thoroughly bemused. An unknown voice answered him from underneath a broad-rimmed fedora, “You’re in hospital… Psych ward…”

“What?!” Dave now sat bolt upright, “What he hell am I doing here? I’m not crazy!”

The stranger with the fedora grasped hold of him and, quickly shushing him, laid him back down on his pillow. The attendant nurse, who was sitting at the desk at the other end of the ward, briefly looked up, just as the fedora slipped below the level of Dave’s bed. Satisfied that all was as normal as might reasonably be expected in a psychiatric ward, she returned to her perusal of the new roster she was trying to organise, peeved at having to be the one to do it, and knowing that no matter what she did, just about everyone would be unhappy with the shifts she allocated them.

The fedora emerged from below the bed and, with a finger to his lips, said, “Shhhh! We know you’re not crazy… you’ve been brought here for a reason…”

Now Dave was beginning to think he may be crazy after all… who was this stranger and what did he know about the situation… which Dave was only just beginning to understand anyway; last thing he knew he’d been about to punch out some quack who’d handled his previously shattered and now de-calcified foot too roughly, and then the security guards had grabbed him and then…. Oh, yes… the injection…

He looked up again at the face under the fedora and said, “Yeah… I tried to punch a quack!”

The face underneath the fedora looked puzzled for a moment, and then, still talking in whispers, said, “No… I mean… well, that may have given them the excuse they needed, but you’d have been brought here anyway…”

This was beginning to sound dafter and dafter, thought Dave, but then he thought to himself, what else should I expect in the psych ward? Then he realised what had been said and felt somehow insulted, “Hey! What do you mean, I’d’a’ been brought here anyway… I told you I’m not nuts; just a bit hot-tempered, is all… Anyway who the hell are you and what do you know about me and why I’m in here? You’re just a patient in here yourself! For all I know, you’re the one that’s nuts!”

“That’d be what they’d want you to think,” said the face under the fedora, still trying to maintain as low a profile as possible, “but don’t you be taken in by it for a second!” Then, offering his hand to Dave to shake, added, “Name’s Foodge… I’m a private dick working under cover on a case for Inspector Vinh Ordinaire Rouge; I expect you’ll have heard of her?”

“No…” Dave replied simply, then asked the obvious, “What case?”

But just then the ward’s large, swing doors were pushed aside as the doctor entered the ward to do the rounds, noisily followed by a gaggle of interns and med students learning the trade.

“Can’t talk now…” Foodge whispered urgently,”Later… my bed’s the one with the poster over it…” And with that he turned to try to get back to his bed unnoticed, but it was too late; the nurse, as soon as she’d heard the doctor enter the ward, had done a quick reconnaissance tour of the ward and had just noticed the fedora beside the new patient’s bed. With the impatience of which only nurses whose orders have been disobeyed are capable, she ejaculated, “MISTER JONES! What ARE you doing out of bed? Now get back into it this instant before you get us both into trouble!”

Aha, thought Dave to himself, as he heard the fedora-wearer’s real name… I was right… just another loony! He was even more convinced of this fact when he looked up at the poster above the beds further down the ward into which the fedora’s wearer was now slipping: the poster depicted the star of the movie, ‘Babe’ in one of its happier scenes.  Yep! he thought again, this guy’s definitely one snag short of a barbie…

And with that comforting thought, he set himself to the task of trying to think of what would be the best way to get out of here… Should he just insist on his sanity; surely they would see he was normal? Or would they see that as a sure sign of mental instability, this insistence on normality? Perhaps it would be wiser to play the game for a while and then gradually ‘return’ to normality? It was a most difficult decision to make, but he would have to make his mind up on a strategy soon, as the doctor was now only a couple of beds away from his and he knew with dreadful certainty that the doctor would want to interview this new patient… and that the result of that interview would determine his fate.

***** ******** *****

The Dark One inside Elaine’s mind felt a wave of satisfaction flood its pleasure centers; everything was going according to plan; the coven had two members already and a third was being prepared for recruitment even as more potential recruits were being gathered. When the coven was complete, the Rite could begin… the ritual that would bring the ‘Others’! Until then, the Dark One knew, he must remain unknown and unobserved to the rest of this far-too-pleasant little planet…

***** ******** *****

Swingin’Like Tiger Woods

08 Friday Apr 2011

Posted by Mark in Bands at the Pig's Arms, Warrigal Mirriyuula

≈ 16 Comments

Tags

Australia, Barry White, Benny Goodman, Big Bad Voodoo, Billy Field, Brian Setzer Orchestra, Cherry Poppin’ Daddies, Chuck “Wagon” Maultsby and The Wheels, George Melly, humour, Joe Jackson, music, Non Stop Dancers, The Porkers, The Specials, Warrigal

Jumpin’, Jivin’ an’ Swingin’ Like Tiger Woods

By Warrigal Mirriyuula

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qDQpZT3GhDg&feature=related

Duke Ellington It Don’t Mean A Thing

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iP6IUqrFHjw&feature=related

The Ink Spots Java Jive

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e0ffdwBUL78

Mary Ford & Les Paul How High The Moon (“Does that mean 24 tracks?” the host asks innocently. Yes! It Does! This was the first time this was done and it represents a huge leap forward for multi-track recording. The sort of thing you can buy 64 digital tracks of for under two hundred bucks and stick it on your computer these days.)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=027HcOsmsic

Gino Vanelli Jack Miraculous

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uk6fcGL1DI0&feature=fvsr

The Mavericks Tonight The Boogie Let Me Down (Go hard you good thing! Watch the guitarist, and the drummer, oh look, just watch them all! What a band!)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4MfDmu5WB_0&feature=related

Raul Malo A Fool Such As I (Because you simply can’t have too much of a good thing!)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BhJLqeAUcA0&feature=related

Chuck “Wagon” Maultsby and The Wheels My Girlfriend Passed Out In Her Food

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1IqH3uliwJY&playnext=1&list=PL6B48D9D21F287BCA

Cherry Poppin’ Daddies Zoot Suit Riot

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_tYFC4aWyo8

Joe Jackson Jumpin’ Jive (You can hear why FOH guys call the Entertainment Centre the “empty container centre”.)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aHWcN5YxuYc

Brian Setzer Orchestra Jump Jive an’ Wail (This Stray Cat isn’t aging well.)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=62ZSQUyU00s

Benny Goodman Sing Sing Sing

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7KLA52Xy2g&feature=related

Non Stop Dancers Shake This city (Trivia: Larry Van Kriedt, the tall angular sax player, is the son of Dave Brubeck Quartet saxophonist Dave Van Kriedt.)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1WhhSBgd3KI

The Specials Ghost Town (The Specials go cruising for Caspar in MJ’s Zephyr)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QyCjExc72Xw

Joe Jackson Beat Crazy

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VO-UdXViyo0

Barry White The Time Is Right

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iBBJZDCk6tY

George Melly My Canary’s Got Circles Under His Eyes

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xphZkAiJve0

Big Bad Voodoo Daddy King of Swing

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eETES1xP-IM

Billy Field Bad Habits

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vhtGUt703oA

The Porkers Swingin’ Like Tiger Woods (This Newcastle band should be our house band. Whaddayarekkon?)

Keywords: Chuck “Wagon” Maultsby and The Wheels, Cherry Poppin’ Daddies, Joe Jackson, Brian Setzer Orchestra, Benny Goodman, Non Stop Dancers, The Specials, Barry White, George Melly, Big Bad Voodoo, Billy Field,The Porkers

Tonight The Boogie Let Me Down (Go hard you good thing! Watch the guitarist, and the drummer, oh look, just watch them all! What a band!)

Pig’s Psalm 1: 41 – The Meat Tray Way

07 Thursday Apr 2011

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Pig Psalms, Sandshoe

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

humour, Pig's Psalm

Dodgy types going down the Meat Tray Way.....

By Sandshoe

Blessed is the one

who does not walk in mud with the weather or begrudge the weight of the Pigs Arm’s take

or sit in the stall with mockers

[mocking piglets’ passing]

But who oinks hard at the jokes of The Big Pig and who meditates on the slough day and night.

That piglet is like the mud laid down by streams of water, which yields its mud in season and whose hock does not wither —

whatever they do prospers.

Not so non-virtuals!

They are like straw

that the fox [it is written huffing and puffing] blows away.

Thus the non-virtual will not stand in judgment, nor stragglers into this assembly of our piglets.

For The Boss watches over the way of the piglets, but the way of the bad pig leads to the meat tray.

Apologies:

Psalm 1: (New International Version, 2010) BOOK I Psalms 1:41

Foodge 22: Fern

03 Sunday Apr 2011

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Big M

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

Fern, Foodge, humour

Story by Big M

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.

Foodge 21: Foodge’s Financial Crisis

01 Friday Apr 2011

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Big M, Foodge Private Dick

≈ 19 Comments

Tags

Foodge, humour

 

Gumshoe hoofs it.

Story by Big M.

Foodge was completely discombobulated. Two events had shaken him to the core. One was the realisation that he was broke. Stony broke. Great Depression, jump from the thirteenth floor broke. The second was that, for the first time Foodge could remember, Pigs Arms was closed.

Foodge was, as these things go, the last to realise that his financial situation was untenable. The story had started to unfold on the previous day. The office telephone had been cut off. Foodge pressed the button on the office intercom to raise Fern’s awareness that her employer had some task for her to attended, but the was no answer. Foodge went to the outer office to find Fern’s desk empty, except for a note, ‘Won’t come back to work til ALL wages paid, Fern.’  Next to it were overdue notices for accounts unpaid; telephone, electricity, rent, dry-cleaning, and so on.

Foodge had, initially, refused to fall into depression. He picked up his passbook and Fedora, and marched down to the bank to sort things out. There was no sorting out at all. His bank balance was $2.71, which was about to be consumed by this month’s account keeping fees. Foodge thanked the teller very kindly for her help, donned his hat, and then walked two doors down to that other potential source of income, his accountant.

The accountant’s secretary apologised profusely, that Mr Swan was at a meeting and would Mr Foodge care to make an appointment?  Foodge declined, stating that he might happen to run into Mr Swan while he was out and about. Foodge did indeed run into Mr Swan, at the Swindler’s Arms, a small tavern frequented by the accounting and banking fraternity. Mr Swan was quick to point out that, whilst Foodge’s tax return may generate a refund, the fines from seven late BAS statements would probably leave Foodge with a net loss. Foodge thanked Swanee, then shuffled out into the street, only to wander back to office. How long he’d be able to use the term ‘my office’ was an unknown, not as complex as a Donald Rumsfeld unknown, but an unknown none the less!

Foodge sat at his desk enjoying a cup of Nescafe Gold when he hit upon a brilliant idea. There must be some accounts payable to him. He began to go through Fern’s account keeping, which, whilst unconventional, was easy to follow. One biscuit tin contained all accounts, which had been paid for this financial year. Previous year’s accounts were stored in other tins. Unpaid accounts occupied another tin. Foodge picked out the accounts with the largest balances, and then proceeded to telephone his debtors. This brought him full circle to the event that initiated today’s activities. He decided to deliver the Final Notices by hand, but soon realised that the Zephyr was almost completely devoid of fuel, and that Foodge couldn’t afford to fill her. Foodge decided that a fit, young, healthy person such as himself, could easily walk to most of the addresses on his list, so grabbed the ‘Gregor’s’ from the glove compartment and, with his detective’s pencil, charted the most efficient walking route.

Foodge’s journey was seriously hampered by the fact that his 1968 edition of Gregor’s included roads that had been turned into cul-de-sacs, pedestrian paths that no longer existed; in fact, there were almost entire suburbs that Mr Gregor had failed to foresee. On the plus side, there were plenty of bicycle paths, which, once Foodge learned to stay on the left, and not stagger all over the place, became pleasant, and reasonably direct routes. He’d even spied Emmjay (the former ABC Wardrobe Manager) in the distance, clad in lime green and black, peddling at a furious pace. Foodge wondered quietly to himself about the role of Lyra and bright colours in cycling. He couldn’t figure it out, but, then again, he’d never quite mastered the concept of bicycle riding himself.

Foodge had, surprisingly, completed his deliveries by the close of business, and had even collected a couple of hundred dollars from one lady who thanked him for the photos, and told him to ‘piss off.’ The two ‘c’ notes burnt a hole in Foodge’s wallet, so he, rather wisely, invested them at a TAB. Surprisingly, ‘Carntkeepup’ came in at 42 to one.

First thing, the next day, the cheque was immediately deposited into Foodge’s bank. This should have made Foodge happy, but he was so far in debt that this would only pay for the outstanding rent utilities and Fern’s wages, once the cheque cleared, in five working days. Foodge decided that he would throw himself at Merv’s mercy, and that, in spite of Merv’s threat to refuse Foodge service until the tab was paid in full, he would present himself at the Gentleman’s Bar of the Window Dresser’s Arms, Pig and Whistle, show Merv the balance on his bank book, and hope for some compassion.

Foodge walked, or rather, shuffled from the bank to the Pigs Arms. His gait had altered since yesterday’s long sojourn, as he had a shin splint on his left leg, and had been up half the night with cramps in some muscle he was sure that even the great anatomist Andreas Vesalius had not discovered (it was Peroneus Longus, but we’ll let Foodge have his fantasy).  He rounded the corner where the old tannery stood, vacant and decaying, and couldn’t believe his eyes. The hotel was shut, blinds down, and a piece of paper fluttering from the front door:

Congratulations to Janet and Merv, Viv & Ian (not identical) were born last evening at the Royal Inner Western Cyberian Maternity Hospital and Public Library.  Mother and babies all well. Merv is now responding to the treatment.

Foodge was gob smacked. The Pigs Arms was closed. He had no money. Where in the hell would he be able to get a drink? Oh, and Merv and Janet were parents. He stood there, rooted to the footpath, staring at the doors, almost willing them to open. Then the miracle happened. One door swung open, then the other. The space was almost entirely filled by a dark shadow. Then the shadow stepped forward. “Gooday, Foodge, wanna pint, it’s on the house?” Young Wes ushered him in. Foodge never felt safer, nor more at home, than just at that moment.

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