Family Feud
In the smallish box that passed for a sitting room of number
36 Lumpslap Close, the air was thick with summer heat and several other smells
that are probably best not to identify or put into categories – you know, the
way your Science teacher would, before proclaiming something about global
warming or carbon footprints.
Or global footprints caused by carbon warming.
In any case, only Morgan was holed up in there, fiddling in
an irritated fashion with the knobs on their old television set.
Box brownie, Ma called it, on the rare occasions she was not
at work.
Grandad Patches poo-pooed her sarcasm. “Pon my soul,” he
would say, “Why, it worked good enough in the sixties, Morgan, my boy, and it
will work good enough now.”
“What’s a box brownie, Grandad?” Morgan had asked and
instantly wished he hadn’t. It was the
sort of question worthy of Faith.
“Po, po, po, po. Why, back in the sixties, I had the good
fortune to be acquainted with Mr Brown of the Highways and Byways department. I
was part of his team of stevedores. We were called ‘Step We Gaily’ and, by
Jove, do you know what?”
“What?”
“I do believe, on our way to some wedding that old Browny
was tasked with checking…”
“Checking?”
“The grit. He had to check the grit, you see?”
“No.”
“Being, as he was, the foreman of the Highways and Byways
department…”
“This is rather a long explanation, Grandfather…”
“Yes, but you see, he’d forgotten his box. To put the grit
into. My, my, my, there was a lot of rib tickling that day, I can tell you.
‘You forgot your box, Browny!’ We chortled, all the way to the Isle of Mull, where
there were Tadcaster Sandwiches and shrimp paste.
“But it doesn’t get satellite or Netflix.”
Morgan hadn’t wanted to know what on earth Tadcaster
Sandwiches might be. So, he didn’t ask. And he had given Faith a sharp kick
before she opened her mouth.
In any case, back in the here and now, the television was
taking ages to warm up. And Morgan had been hopeful there might be some
wrestling on the box.
He was pragmatic about the whole affair. Ever since he could
remember, times had been tough. None of his friends had satellite or Netplus.
Only Timothy Beagle, who lived in one of the big houses up Sparken Hill had
satellite or Netplus.
It was rumored.
But no one had seen Timothy Beagle for quite some time –
ever since Doctor Snaptor had caught him cheating during an end of term
examination.
How? Well, you see, he’d pretended he had a cold and written
some equations on his handkerchief. Every time he’d snorked into the cloth,
he’d have a quick look. During the inquest, he’d protested that nobody could
even make anything out – it had looked rather like some raw eggs.
Unlucky for him, then, that the exam was a Biology one, all
about chickens.
Morgan squinted at the television.
At last.
Something white, static and hopeful was beginning to bloom.
Rather like some flowers. Damn. Morgan had wished someone had been around to
hear him think that. Instead he thumped box brownie. Not too hard, in case
Patience heard.
He looked at his schoolbag, on the other side of the room.
The white stuff finally morphed into a picture. Morgan
grabbed a cushion, propped himself against the old sofa and waited, with a
satisfied smirk. Wrestling.
“Darn and blast!” shrieked Morgan, then stuffed his fist in
his mouth.
Why? You might very well ask.
Well, to his extreme irritation, instead of Big Mac Mac Tufter
hurling Hulk Hankins against the ropes followed by a satisfying thud as he hit
the floor, some prancing old people, in gnome suits had appeared, clumping up
and down a wooden stage to the tune of ‘Step We Gaily, Off We Go.’
“Them again,” hissed Morgan, knowing exactly what he’d like
to do with some octogenarian heels and toes.
Hearing the shriek of pain, Patience had poked her nose into
the sitting room from where she had been parked at the kitchen table, looking
gloomily at homework. She spotted Morgan, hunched and seething, about to hurl a
large hardback book at the screen.
“Don’t.” She commanded.
Reluctantly, Morgan put it down. “But it’s them. Again. Evey
time I turn it on, they turn up. It’s as though they somehow know.” And Morgan
stole a furtive glance at the school camera. But it was not working, as usual.
“Anyway, you should be doing homework.”
Morgan stared enraged at the television. “Look at them.”
Rubbing her eyes, Patience focused, and the gnome aged
pensioners sharpened into view. Oh, they were having a super time – skipping to
the left, skipping to the right, nodding their heads up and down to the music
and occasionally executing a foolhardy pas de deux.
“Why are they always on?”
“It’s the recession.”
Then, as usual, the picture panned left to reveal a
smirking, bearded face who was clapping along approvingly, downstage by the
curtain cords. “Why, hello there, viewers,” he cooed, in the smarmiest way
possible, causing both Patience and Morgan to cringe, even though they’d
probably seen it a dozen times. “Say howdy to my Mincing Meters! Here for your
delectation and delight. Let’s dance and enjoy this happy sight!”
And there was a clunky, amateurish crash zoom close-up on
one particularly elderly, sweaty specimen – before the camera returned to the
host.
But now his face was crinkled up and earnest. “But,
seriously folks. Stay tuned. To receive some excellent promotions during
these…difficult times. From Farmer Mick Summer McFudniss!”
And, horribly, he began singing: “Oh, recession, recession,
don’t make it your obsession, there’s plenty o fun and plenty o gifts, with
Farmer Mick Summer McFudniss.”
With a shudder, Morgan turned it off. ‘You know what,
Patience, that bloke reminds me of someone.”
“Yes,” agreed his sister. “Reminds me of that idiot Farmer
Pies and his mince pies. That’s what. Now, why not do your homework like you
promised?”
Morgan scowled. “Because I’ve got no paper, that’s why.
There’s a recession on again. Weren’t you paying attention to Farmer McFester?”
But Patience was having none of it. She flourished a pale
brown sheet in front of him. “Well, what’s this then?”
“Call that paper? It smells.”
“It’s perfectly adequate for the job. Grandad spent a great
deal of time making this, you know.”
“I’m not using his recycled paper. I don’t know where it’s
been.”
At that precise moment, there was a howl of pain from the
garden.
Morgan and Patience hurried from the sitting room, through
the kitchen and leapt out of the back door that led into the garden.
At the far end, past the cucumbers, mung beans and peas, and
adjacent to the loblolly tree, smoke was billowing into the air. Sparks, too,
and small flames licking hungrily at some booted ankles. “Oh I say,” somebody
was spluttering, “What a pretty peach of a predicament this is indeed.”
“Grandad,” snapped Morgan, grimly. “He’s on fire again.”
“I’ll get a bucket of water.”
“OK.”
As Patience hurried back to the kitchen, Morgan pulled a
tatty looking cloth from his pocket and fashioned it into a mask, which he
fastened around his mouth. As prepared as he could be, he strode calmly towards
the smoking pyre. “Well?” He demanded. “What have you done this time?” And he
resisted adding ‘stupid old duffer’ to the sentence.
“Morgan, my boy. Am I pleased to see you? I appear to have
glued my hand to the fence.”
“And set fire to your legs.”
Grandad Patches looked down at his ankles. “Why, so I have.
Yes, I should imagine that those dried leaves and twigs acted as kindling.”
Something heavy and metal fell from the lowest branch of the
tree. It hit Grandad Patches on his forehead, leaving a dent there, before
tumbling to the ground where it was obscured by smoke from the crackling twigs.
“Oo-yah!”
“What’s that?”
“Po, po, po, po…I think it’s my solar heating lamp. Yes, my
boy, that’s definitely what it is. I
tied it up there to dry the paper…”
“But, instead, it set fire to your feet?”
“It would seem so. Why, during the sixties, I now do recall
I had a friend called Ray. Ray Beamish. He sold me this very lamp.”
“What an extraordinary coincidence.”
“What is?”
“That his name was Ray Beams, and he sold solar ray lamps.
Did he live in Infraredington?”
“Infraredington? Where’s that? I don’t recall a place of
that name, my boy. However, he did tell me to be careful due to the strength of
the beams emanating from that infernal device. ‘Patches,’ says he, waggling a
long and bony forefinger, ‘I must hereby issue notice that any individual
planning to use my ‘Infra Red Sonic Sunray’ should do so with extreme
prejudice’. He was right.”
“Was he indeed?”
Patience had returned. She flung the bucket of cold water at
Grandfather, with a secret smirk, extinguishing the pensioner. “Take off those
smoking socks.”
“Po, po, po and a picketty spot. I say, Patience old bean,
I’m not sure these socks have ever smoked – bad for the health, don’t you know?”
Grandad Patches spluttered, because water was splooshing all over his head.
Some had gone up his nose.
“No, she means socks that you wear when you smoke.”
“Smoke? I don’t smoke. That’s the sort of thing Grandad
Biggert would do.”
“Shut up the pair of you and you - take your socks off.”
“But my hand is stuck to the fence.”
Weighing the situation up with an expert eye, Morgan pushed
the wooden panel carefully. With a slight tearing sound, Grandad was free –
even if he had splintered piece of fence attached to his right hand. “I say. I
wonder how long before that falls off?”
“I wouldn’t know.” Morgan waggled his eyebrows as though
he’d said something terribly clever.
Ignoring him, Grandad looked crestfallen, at several tatty
bits of burnt paper that littered the garden. “Oh dear. Your homework sheets
are all brown and crispy.”
“So they are.”
“Never mind, Grandad. You come in the house and have a nice
cup of bean-leaf tea.” Patience put her arm around the old fellow and guided
him back towards the kitchen, whilst Morgan remained behind to ensure none of
the recycled paper was useable by grinding it with his trainers into the smoky,
muddy puddles left behind.
From above, it looked as though he was doing some sort of a
war dance. In fact, the more that Morgan got into it, the happier he seemed to
be, even issuing a sort of ‘Lord of the Flies’ chant – you know: “hi-yi-yi-yah, hi-yi-yi-yah, hi-yi-yi-yah.” That sort
of thing.
As he did so, he looked up, hearing a wheezing, groaning
creak, as a window above him was thrust open.
“Munton! Munton!” It was a familiar voice that hailed him,
booming across the garden. “Stop that at once do’yah hear? If you don’t, I’ll
come down there and poke you in the eye with a tuning fork. You’re disturbing
the whole neighbourhood, you chanting cabbage soup bowler.”
Bowl of cabbage soup? Morgan sighed, muttered something,
then answered with a fetching grin. “Sorry, Granddad Biggert.”
“You will be. If you don’t stop this instant, tomorrow
you’ll go to school with newspaper for shoes.” And he slammed the window closed
with a satisfied glare in Morgan’s general direction, as though he’d delivered
a threat so vile, it had not even been thought of yet.
Feeling a bit ticked off, because he had been, Morgan
wondered what had happened. He must have wondered aloud, because, almost
instantaneously, Grandad Biggert’s window was flung open again. “I saw the
whole thing.” he snickered. “Through my sonic Biggert-o-scope.” And he waved a
cheap looking piece of dandy pants plastic in Morgan’s direction.
Morgan scratched his chin. “Did you?”
“Why, yes. That pith-helmeted pumpkin soup dispenser was
drying wet clumps of mashed up pulp with a sonic death ray. Trying to make
paper, if you please. By recycling old tat and sweepings he found in my gutter.
That I had tossed away. During the worst paper shortage since Mademoiselle
Papier got mâché raffia matting caught in the doorway of John Menzies’ shorts.”
“You mean this?” By now, Morgan had picked up the old sunbed
lamp and was about to take it back to the kitchen. He hadn’t a clue what
Grandad Biggert was talking about but thought it best to be agreeable.
“Yes, that’s exactly what I mean. You tell that sieve of old
spud peelings there’s plenty of good paper where I live.”
“Who’s John Menzies?”
“Go away, Munton.” And the window slammed shut again.
Shrugging, Morgan sauntered back up the path, towards the
kitchen. Looking through the window from the outside, he could see various
violent movements and motions within. No doubt Grandad Patches trying to
extricate himself from his sticky situation with the fence.
Not wishing to involve himself in what he considered might
be a trying twenty minutes, Morgan cut down the small path that led to the font
garden, via the side of the house. It was a hot day, after all, and now there
was less likelihood of any paper being available, recycled or otherwise, he
figured he might be able to sneak off and play football.
No such luck.
There was a high pitched shrieking and gibbering heading
towards him. It was coming from the end of the close and getting louder in
volume. Morgan recognized it instantly.
Two small girls were racing at full speed towards the garden
gate. They were waving something excitedly above their heads. Faith and Fenton.
He pursed his lips, irritated. Faith was beginning to get
noisier these days, and, if combined with Grandad, was more than capable of
ruining what could have been a fine summer evening.
And all Fenton did was argue, in a most obnoxious fashion.
Morgan wondered if Grandad Biggert would heave himself downstairs to put a stop
to the noise with a carefully judged swot of his newspaper.
Upon reaching the gate, the two young girls gazed in
contempt at him. “Out of the way, Morgan,” snapped Faith, rather rudely.
“He’s soooo stupid,” sniggered Fenton.
“Watch your lip. And who are you calling stupid?”
“Shut up. I’ve got some very exciting news to tell Grandad.”
“Oh, have you? Well, I’m afraid Grandad is too busy to see
you. He’s glued himself to a fence. Again. In fact, if you disturb him now, he
might take…offence.”
“That’s not even funny.”
“No. You suck.”
But Morgan folded his arms, leaning against the gate,
barring their access to the front garden, somewhat smugly.
He instantly regretted it. “Yowch!”
“Move away from that gate, Munton, if you please.” Grandad
Biggert raised his newspaper. “I’ve had more than enough noise from you lot for
one day. I intend to remonstrate with that wooden handed timbertop, Patches.
“Patches!” He screamed. “Get out here this instant, you dough bellied ninny, or
I will release my hounds of doom.”
Pushing Morgan in the chest, he raised the latch.
“But Grandad Biggert, you haven’t heard their exciting
news,” Morgan protested, rubbing his head ruefully and hoping to buy some time.
“Exciting news? Pah!”
Grandad Biggert, snapped. “What is it this time? More rubbish about the
return of the Muffin Man?”
“No Grandad Biggert.” Faith answered, wide eyed and
innocent, obscuring Fenton behind her back. “Better than that.”
Rubbing his beard, Grandad Biggert glared at her, his hand
still on the latch. Hesitant. “Well?”
“Well, what, Grandad Biggert?”
“What exciting news? By Jove, it had better be good.”
“It is Grandad. Very good news indeed.”
“You see? I told you, Grandad. Well worth your time.” said
Morgan, with a conviction he could not truly get behind.
Faith was hopping up and down in her sandals, beside herself
with pleasure. “The Baguette Man is coming.”
“What?” snapped Grandad Biggert. “Baguette Man? That sounds
a lot like Muffin Man, with Muffin swapped out for Baguette.”
“I thought baguettes were banned – seeming as they come from
France.”
“Hold your tongue, Munton. When I want the opinion of a
stuffed onion, I’ll ask for it.”
“Ha, ha, ha, he called you a stuffed onion,” snickered
Fenton, maliciously. And then yelped in pain as Grandad Biggert swotted her
with his paper.
“Robert? Robert? What’s going on?” A high pitched, elderly
woman’s voice was drifting downwind from the direction of the corner shop. It
was accompanied by the sound of squeaky wheels.
Grandad Biggert, his hand still poised on the latch of the
gate, looked suddenly shifty, his eyes darting from left to right. “That’s not
the Baguette Man, you stupid girl, that’s Irene Adder. Did you two lead her in
this direction? You malingering, hobbledehoys…”
But, it was too late. Irene Adder had arrived. She assessed
the situation with all the swiftness of a snake – which is rather apt, isn’t
it?
Grandad Biggert’s tone changed to that of a silken scarf
blessed with a newly appropriated tongue. “Irene. My petal. How delightful.
Have you brought me my afternoon sweetmeats?”
Morgan, Faith and Fenton looked suspiciously as though they
were stifling giggles.
Irene glared. “Sweetmeats? Talk properly, Robert. Would you
eat in somewhere like the Station Café? Would you? Hmm? Well, neither would
we.”
Munton could feel somebody approaching him from behind. It
was Grandad Patches, now free from fence panels, but sucking at splinters
noisily. “Po, po, po. Ms Adder, how delightful. And why, it’s my Faith. Who’s
this hiding behind you? Goodness gracious, young Fenton. Well, this is all
rather jolly, isn’t it? Shall we all skip, up and down the close, singing
‘Mango, Banana, Coconut?’”
“Grandad, Grandad! Guess what? The baguette man’s coming,”
blurted Faith, unable to contain herself.
“Well, pon my soul, how splendid. I must say we might all
benefit from a stuffed baguette, mightn’t we? Yum, yum.”
“I know where I’d stuff your baguette. Heh, heh, heh.”
“Watch your language, Robert Biggert, or there’ll be no
sausage for supper.”
“But, Grandad? You told me that baguettes were banned.”
“Did I?” Grandad Patches rubbed his chin. “Ah yes. I suspect
the problem lies in your use of the verb in the simple passive tense. They were
banned. But now they are not, it seems. We should most probably change to the
perfect: ‘had been banned’. Yes, yes, by Jove, that’s the ticket.”
“Why you are clever, Grandad Patches,” replied Irene,
approvingly.
Grandad Patches blushed.
“No, he’s not,” snapped Grandad Biggert, swotting Morgan
with his newspaper, because he was closest and at the right height to receive
it about the ears. “He’s a grammatically challenged monkey stuffer, with wooden
plates for hands.”
“Now then, now then, po, po, tiddly pom,” Grandad Patches
replied, while Morgan rubbed his smarting ears. Ï do not, and have never held
with monkey stuffing. Why, back in the 60s, when I used to work for Gerald
Gerbil, well known zookeeper and collector of animals…”
“Shut up, Patches.”
But before anymore unpleasantness could unfold, there was a
cheery jingle of bells and the clippetty-clop of donkey’s hooves on the road’s
hard tarmac. Coming towards them was a gaily coloured caravan, all gleaming
brasses and rainbow paints. It was making slow progress towards number 36, but
as it gathered steam, the excitement was palpable.
“Look, Grandad! The Baguette Man!”
“Wow!” Fenton added, scuttering out from behind Faith.
“Look, how pretty he is.”
The assembled party did indeed turn to look.
Even Patience had appeared from the kitchen, upon hearing
the commotion.
On top of a seat that fronted the caravan, an elderly man,
dressed in raggedy clothes was flicking the reins gently. As he did so, the
donkey – wearing a straw boater with the legend ‘kiss my carrots’ stuck to the
front – responded in kind, swishing its tail to and fro. And behind them both,
another elderly man, similarly attired was following with a battered metal
bucket and trowel.
Morgan pointed him out. “What’s he doing, then?”
“Best not to ask, my boy.”
“Baguettes, baguettes!” cried the first, in a voice so
crackily and hoarse, the donkey could have borrowed it.
Patience prodded Morgan in the back. “Here,” she muttered.
“There’s a recession. How did he come by bread? Grandad has to make ours.”
“Don’t know. But it’ll be nice to have something doesn’t
taste like flour and water with salt for once. Let’s hope Grandad has some
pension left.”
But, before anybody could act, Grandad Biggert pushed past
rudely and accosted the oncoming cart. “I’ll deal with this, if you please.
You. Smelly fellow. Let me see your bill of fare.” He turned to Irene Adder.
“Now, my petal, what would you like? Do you enjoy a particular filling?”
“Baguettes, baguettes,” croaked the man, again.
Grandad Biggert scowled, producing a metal implement from
inside his black cloak. “I know, you blind old fool. Heh, heh, heh. Show me
your menu. Don’t make me repeat myself or I will subject you to the deadly rays
of my Hades-Driver and condemn you to permanent exile on one of those benighted
outer ice worlds.”
The old man rubbed his head confused. “Baguettes. Baguettes.
Baguettes and bin its”.
Watching this from a safe distance – relatively speaking –
Grandad Patches rubbed his chin. “Ah, yes. I think I’m beginning to grasp this.”
He leant over and rubbed Faith affectionately on the head. “Why, Faith, my
dear. You and Fenton have been silly-billys, haven’t you?”
“Can we have a baguette, Grandad?”
Grandad Patches chuckled. “Now, Patience. Why don’t you take
these youngsters into the house? And come back with any trash, if you please.”
Morgan watched bemused as they hurried indoors. “What’s
going on Grandad?”
But, before he could answer, there was a howl of pain from
Grandad Biggert. Several in fact.
“Er, Grandad?”
“Yes, my boy?”
“Why is Irene Adder hitting Grandad Biggert with her
brolly?”
“I’m not sure.”
“Oh look, now she’s pulling him by the ear into number 34.”
“So, she is. My, that does look painful, doesn’t it?”
Both of them ducked, as something the size of a boomerang
and made of jagged metal came hurtling in their direction and clattered onto
the path. Morgan picked it up. “Look. It’s Grandad Biggert’s Hades-Driver.”
From the doorstep, just before he was yanked inside, Grandad
Biggert screamed something nasty in their direction. “I’ll get you back for
this, Patches, you battered metal pail of donkey droppings.” The door slammed.
By this time, Patience had arrived with some large paper
sacks. “Will this do?”
“Splendid, my dear.” Sweating a little, Grandad Patches took
the bags across the street to the donkey and cart. There was some discussion, a
little waving of arms and then a handshake. The old fellow chucked the bags
into the back of the caravan.
Grinning triumphantly, Grandad Patches returned. He was
holding two or three shiny coins and a gaudy looking leaflet.
“You see,” he explained, “In their excitement, dear Faith
and her rapscallion friend misheard. This man does not sell baguettes.” And he
waved, as the donkey and cart had now turned, and was leaving Lumpslap Close. “He
is the ‘Bag-It’ man.”
Patience rolled her eyes at Morgan. “Well, of course he is.”
“His only interest is in our old bric-a-brac which, I
imagine, he can turn into a tidy profit.”
“You forgot to give him the Hades-Driver.” Morgan and
Patience looked crestfallen. “I was looking forward to a nice sandwich,”
muttered Patience.
“Better than that!” Grandad Patches exclaimed, clinking the
coins. “He paid me enough to buy fish and chips all round!”
“Well, that’s more like it!” Patience replied, cheerily.
But Morgan was looking at Grandad Patches’ other hand. The
one that was clutching the brightly coloured leaflet. It was a little difficult
to make it out – but there were words printed across the top – in a red, gothic
font. And fire. Lots of fire. And, in blood coloured crimson-scarlet, the title
‘Coming To You - Ding Dong Fuego!’.
Now…what on earth could that be? And even though it was a
hot day, Morgan shivered.
Two days later, a brightly coloured circus big top was
erected plumb in the centre of Purridgeton park. My, it did look gay, all
coloured streamers flags and stripey canvas and large model animals –
elephants, tigers and lions to name but a few, all hand carved from finest
plastic and pegged into the earth with large nails through feet.
On the sides of the tent and at the entrance, huge signage made
grand proclamations. The words Robert’s Brother Circus had been scribbled out
and replaced by: ‘He’s here. Nothing to Fear. Go! Go! Go! Ding Dong Fuego!”
And all around the big top? It was carnival.
The ‘Purridgeton Pensioners Paper and Combers’ were striding
up and down, blasting out their finest tunes, whilst local schools had turned
out their very best marching bands – all xylophones, glockenspiels and those
raspy things you run sticks up and down that don’t take much time to learn.
It was a fabulous sight indeed.
Even the Mincing Meters had turned out, fresh from the
filming of another splendid commercial.
Therefore, today was a very special day, it was the
day. The day that had been promised on the handbills and leaflets bestrewn all
over Purridgeton High Street.
The grand prize. The 15 minutes in the spotlight. Relief for
somebody from the grinding engines of recession. But, who would it be?
Why look! What’s this?
From the far end of the park, a large cloud of sand and dust
was whipped up into a frenzy and heading towards the big top, full speed ahead.
From within the dust storm, some wheezing and groaning accompanied by shouted
commands. “Faster, Scrynge, faster!”
“I be going as fast as I can, Master.”
As they came over the rise, all was revealed. It was Grandad
Biggert, reclined on the back seat of a tandem tricycle. He was rather grandly
puffing on a cigar, surveying the park in front of him, whilst an elderly
gentleman pedaled furiously in the direction of the carnival. This was Brother
Scrynge, the tobacconist, proprietor of the finest tobacco shop in all of
Purridgeton.
“Hold hard, Scrynge.” commanded Grandad Biggert.
“Hold hard, Master? What fancy dandy-pants words be these?”
“Stop, you nincompoop. And don’t get fresh with me.”
“No, master. It be well known around these parts, your
command of English be second to none.”
“Unlike you, you lexically challenged codpiece grinder.”
Quite relieved, the tobacconist braked and the tricycle
contraption came to a halt. This jolted Grandad Biggert, who scowled. “Careful,
Scrynge. Do you want me to get whiplash, you cringing cur? Anymore insolence
from you and I’ll report you to the Monk-Lord Ministers of the Recurring
Apocalypse of Handriginous 4.”
“Baint be my fault, Master. Them be rocks in the path.”
Grandad Biggert took a mighty suck on the cigar, hissing the
smoke through gritted teeth and consulted a map. “Here,” he cried, jabbing the
map in triumph, “The big top is here!”
“But I be seeing it, Master.”
“Shut up, Scrynge and pedal. And next time be sure you
supply me with fresher cigars. These taste as though they are past their smoke
by date.”
“But they are, Master. You took them from my ‘used by’
bargain bin.”
“Insolent dog. Faster. Faster.”
As the tricycle mounted the small hillock and rounded the
curve, it was obscured from sight. But, behind it, a small party of pedestrians
were picking their way more slowly through the sun-drenched park, also on their
way towards the big top.
“Keep up, Fenton,” Faith giggled, trailing behind Grandad
Patches.
Fenton had a large stick she’d found in the hedges, beneath
a tree. She was pushing it in front of her onto the crazy paving, so that the
friction of the wood against concrete made it skitter and bounce.
Morgan cast a sideways glance at his sister’s irritating
friend. He jabbed Patience sharply in the side. “What’s she doing now?”
“Ah. Yes. I asked her. It’s her ‘banderlog’. It detects and
extinguishes ants or any other minor nuisance before they can land on her
ankles.”
“Stupid nit.”
“Well, it’s imaginative, I suppose.”
“You are being too generous. As usual. Watch this.” Morgan
adopted the tone of a concerned junior nurse, with admirable skill. “Ah,
Fenton? Fenton my dear? Your banderlog is exciting (with the emphasis on
‘is’ in caretaker language). May I see it, just for a moment?”
“Yes.” Fenton replied, passing him the stick.
Morgan grabbed it and snapped it in two and chucked it into
the hedgerow with a flourish. “Heh, heh, heh.”
Fentan began to wail, loudly. “Morgan destroyed my
banderlog, Grandad Patches.”
Faith also looked up at Morgan, crossly. “You naughty boy.
Why did you do that? I’m telling Grandad.” She stamped her foot down on his.
Aware that his party had ground to a halt and that there was
some commotion, Grandad Patches right wheeled and came up upon the rear. “I
say. Po, po, po. What appears to be the problem? We don’t want to be late for
‘Family Feuds’, do we?”
“Stupid game show. Stupid Ding Dong Fuego.”
“Grandad! Grandad! Morgan called Ding Dong Fuego stupid!”
“And he broke my banderlog.”
“Did you? Did you really, my boy?”
Morgan nodded.
Grandad Patches looked at Patience inquiringly. “Now,
Patience, my dear. Why would he do such a thing?”
“I don’t know, Grandfather. Possibly, it’s heat exhaustion.
Gone to his head. Seeing double. Feeling faint.”
Grandad Paches rubbed his chin, thoughtfully. “Po, po,
tiddly pom and blow the man down, Billy. Why yes, of course. Heat exhaustion.
Now, back in the 60s, I was temporarily engaged to work for a small company who
manufactured remedies for…”
Morgan groaned.
“…those packets that other companies put raw lemon jelly
into. Now, then, what was that company called? Hmmm. Let me think.”
“Jelly Box and Sons?”
“Why yes. Yes, that was it. By Jove. Jelly Box and Sons. How
did you know, Morgan?”
“Oh, it was just a mad guess.”
“Goodness me, you are as sharp as a button, dear boy.”
“Can buttons actually be sharp?” Patience asked, with a slight
edge.
“Yes, they can, if they are on a lemon jelly jacket.”
“How?”
“Well, some lemons can be jolly sharp indeed.”
Faith was still stamping her feet and Fenton was still
blubbing ostentatiously. “What about the banderlog, Grandad?"
Grandad Patches frowned. “Well, it is a poser, isn’t it?
Tell you what. I’ve just had a sharp idea myself.” And he beamed at all of
them, then disappeared into a huge rhododendron bush. For five minutes, there
was an enormous amount of crashing and thrashing about, and the leaves were
shaking with tremendous vigor.
Finally, he reappeared. In his hand were five decent sized
sticks. “Hurray! Now, we can all have banderlogs.” And, with a flourish, he
distributed the sticks amongst them all.
“Hurray for Grandad Patches!” Faith and Fenton shouted,
eagerly seizing theirs, and skipping on ahead. Grandad Patches followed them, wielding
his stick and grunting, trying to keep up, leaving Morgan and Faith behind,
each holding theirs.
Patience flung it away, looked and her watch and glared.
“Well done. Now we’re late.”
Morgan watched her stomp away.
The trouble is, he reflected, bitterly, was that too many
people were overindulged. That Fenton, for one. Why, only the other day at
school, he’d seen her ambling up and down the bleaches with her coat slung
across her shoulders on hat-peg Wednesday. If it had been him, he was pretty
sure that he would be on Doctor Snaptor’s carpet.
He shrugged, broke into a trot, and caught up with the
others.
It was not as if his family would be picked for the game
show anyway. That sort of thing only happened in fictions which were structured
around improbable coincidences, after all.
He joined them in a long, snaking queue for the entrance to
the tent.
Faith was skipping up and down in a most irritating fashion,
waving her stick and singing some appalling song she’d heard at school.
“Fiddle- dee – dee – mango tree – Ding Dong Fuego – big hairy coconuts.” At
least that’s what it sounded like.
Grandad Patches was gazing at the big top in awe. His mouth
was open. His hand was gripping Patience’s elbow. “Goodness gracious, Patience,
my dear. Why this is a magnificent specimen. Magnificent.”
“Yes, Grandad.”
“Po, po, po. You know, my dear, it reminds me of something.
Why, yes. Back in the sixties, I was put to service by…”
But Patience cut him short as though she were a pair of
rather sharp garden shears. “Shouldn’t you do something about Faith? I think
she’s beginning to annoy all the other people in the queue.”
“I do believe you’re right.” Grandad Patches scuttled over
to where Faith was still skipping and dancing. Of course, by this time, Fenton
had joined in by smacking her stick up and down on the kerb stones – keeping
time, loudly. She was good at that. “Now then, now then, what’s going on, Faith
my dear?”
“Fenton and I are singing the Ding Dong Fuego tune to keep
the queuing people entertained.”
“Are you?” Grandad looked at the lines of old people waiting
for admission. They didn’t look very entertained. Then, he smiled. Of course.
“You know, Faith, I think I understand why these good people of Purridgeton are
not enjoying your performance.”
“You do?”
“Of course. It’s the line ‘big hairy coconuts’. It doesn’t
scan, do you see? Or rhyme.”
Faith and Fenton looked puzzled.
“Allow me, my dear.” Grandad Patches took his stick and
waved it vigorously at the tent, then began skipping, in and out of the line. “Fiddle-
dee – dee – mango tree – Ding Dong Fuego – one, two, three.”
Well, that did the trick.
Faith and Fenton joined in, forming a line that would have
graced any Morris Dancing performance. They weaved in and out, up and down,
hither and thither – and soon, the waiting pensioners were chortling, snorting
and clapping in time. My, it was a heartwarming sight.
Patience shivered. Somehow, they looked like the walking
dead.
But it was drawing admiring glances from Farmer McFudniss
and his Mincing Meters who were making preparation for later, by gnoming up.
Before he could sidle over to them to enquire if Grandad
Patches had ever fancied becoming a gnome, there was a loud clatter followed by
a hideous scream from the other side of the big top. Quite nerve shredding it
was, too.
“Blast your hide, Scrynge, you peddling peasant. I’ll dock
your wages for this indignity.”
“Oh no, it’s Grandad Biggert,” snapped Patience. “He must be
in some kind of trouble.” Quickly, she sprinted around the tent’s circumference
followed by the rest of the queuing pensioners – Grandad Patches, Faith and
Fenton bringing up the rear.
They were greeted with a pitiful sight.
The tricycle had somehow up-ended. Perhaps a ditch or a bump
in the tarmac? Grandad Biggert was splayed all over the road, shaking his arms
and legs in rage. But worse? His cigar had somehow ignited a fire by his ankles
– no doubt burning summer’s dried leaves. It was a clear and present danger. A
danger to Grandad Biggert’s inglorious life.
“Help! Help!” screamed Faith. “Grandad Biggert’s on fire.
Someone call the fire brigade!”
“Po, po, po,” muttered Grandad Patches. “You know, that
reminds me of a magnificent song from the sixties…”
“Be quiet, Grandad, and fetch a pail of water.”
“That, too.”
“Where’s Grandad Biggert?”
In all the commotion, Grandad Biggert had vanished. But they
heard his voice. A gloating voice it was, too. “Heh, heh, heh. Gullible
idiots.”
Morgan had seen it all. He nodded in grudging respect. A
reluctant sort of admiration, to be sure. Scrynge and Grandad Biggert had run
around the crowd, got to the front of the queue and had disappeared inside.
Quite…masterful.
“Now Grandad Biggert will be the first to meet Ding Dong
Fuego,” he chuckled. “No doubt he will win the grand prize.”
Once they had realized that some fraudulence was involved,
and the panic was over, the queue shuffled back to the entrance of the big top.
“I think,” said Grandad Patches, “It might be…ah…safer, if you allowed me in
first. There might be mischief afoot, dear people of Purridgeton.” But no one
was buying that, were they?
So, one by one, they entered into the dark depths of the big
top.
And eventually, it was Grandad Patches’ turn to be swallowed
up.
Inside the tent, there was an unmistakable scent of damp
canvas – you know that smell?
It sends you back to lazy days fishing in streams for
sticklebacks, using old, half painted, abandoned wooden doors for rafts and
setting off to explore, before toasting damp socks on forked sticks over small
fires.
You lay on your back, looking up at the canvas, dreaming of
days to come.
Now, here they were, those days arrived, inside the biggest
top of all, waiting for the ringmaster.
Patience and Morgan sat side by side, somewhere in the
middle of everything – alongside Grandad Patches, of course. They were
squinting around the colosseum of seats in the semi-pitch, because, far
overhead the spotlights were set to half-light.
What could they see?
Rows of old-age pensioners, of course – fans of ‘Family
Feud’ - munching and mumbling over hashed up corns, sucking bottles of sugar
waters through straws and murmuring excitedly to each other.
If they listened hard, they might hear the snatches and
gobbets of chatter: oo, I hope I get to meet Ding Dong…no, Betty, if you
compete, you might get 2000 pesos…really, Agnes…well I would spend it all on my
cat…imagine the knitting needles such a sum could buy…knitting needles, pah! I
will buy crotchet hooks…crochet hooks, pah!
It was hard to deny that there was a building sense of
expectation.
Ding Dong Fuego. Here in Purridgeton.
And his game show – the most popular in the Philippines – on
tour. Who would have thought it?
But where was he? Where was the great man himself? And who
would he choose? Which families would be the lucky ones? Which families would
get to feud for that star prize?
Patience thought she knew. She nudged Morgan. “Look.” She
pointed downwards to the circus ring.
Below them was the unmistakable silhouette of Grandad
Biggert, his black, high collared cloak pulled tightly around his neck.. He had
managed to secure some of the best seats in the house, no doubt hoping to
influence the outcome in some way – even get picked to play, being so close to
the action.
After all, there was a recession. And 2000 pesos was more
that just a hill of beans on top of a small potato.
But he seemed to be berating Scrynge about something.
Unusually, it was hard to hear his words, because, as you
know, he has a big, deep, booming voice. Patience strained and thought she
heard something like ‘use the unicycle.’
Rudely, Grandad Biggert now pushed the hapless Scrynge into
the circus ring.
Some of the crowd stopped mumbling and began to take
interest.
‘Oh, look, Agnes, a lion…That baint be a lion. That be
Dickie Scrynge…Is Dickie Scrynge a lion now? Oo no…I can tame him with a whip
and chair... Watch your mouth, Betty…OO, look Petunia, he’s mounting a
unicycle…’
Faith nudged Grandad Patches. “Is that Ding Dong Fuego,
Grandad?”
“Who dear?”
Fenton snickered. “Your Grandad is silly, Faith, isn’t he?”
Sniggering back, Faith jabbed Fenton in the rib. “Which Grandad?”
“They’re both silly.” She raised her voice. “Mr Patches? Mr
Patches? Is that Ding Dong?”
By now, Grandad Patches had reached into the pockets of his
romper smock – the nasty one with the purple foxglove motif – and had found a
decrepit looking spyglass that looked like it had seen service in the battle of
Trafalgar.
He clapped it to his eye the wrong way round, then grabbed
Morgan’s sleeve. “By Jove, Morgan, we’ve shrunk. We appear to be in ‘Fantastic
Voyage’ with Raquel Welch driving the submarine. Po, po, po, I say, she’s
damned attractive, isn’t she?”
Wisely, Morgan ignored him and clipped Faith around the ear
with his handbill. “Stop being rude to Grandad, you horrible midget,” he
snapped. “You know very well that’s Grandad Biggert, up to some nonsense.” He
glared at Fenton, too, for good measure. But his eyes were irresistibly drawn
back to the ring.
Scrynge had mounted the unicycle and was now racing around
the circus ring, rather skillfully, arms held aloft. There was a whooping and
cheering from the toothless crowd as Scrynge whipped down the tunnel that led
from the ring into the interior. Minutes later he had returned, holding a torch
of blazing fire, peddling furiously.
Grandad Biggert hopped from his ringside seat with a
nimbleness that belied his age. Scrynge was heading straight for him.
“Grandad, Grandad,” Morgan whispered, urgently. “Look.
Scrynge is going to torch him!”
“Oh, no!” Sitting bolt upright, Grandad Patches snapped his
spyglass into action. Then, puzzled, he passed it to Morgan. “You’re wrong my
boy. All I can see is a glow worm on a miniature cocktail umbrella.”
“Never mind that now. We’ve got to do something. Hurry up,
Grandad.”
Patience watched, holding Faith and Fenton back as Morgan,
followed by Grandad Patches hurtled down the steps towards the circus ting.
Everything seemed to be happening in slow motion. The camera
was being undercranked. Morgan was getting flashes, as though through a
stroboscope.
As he arrived, Scrynge was upon Grandad Biggert, like some
infernal octogenarian devil-peddler, smoke billowing from his ears. But, to
Morgan’s consternation, Grandad Biggert stood his ground, unperturbed amidst
the general commotion and screams of horror.
“Heh, heh, heh,” snickered Grandad Biggert, producing a
cigar. And, as he passed by Scrynge balanced masterfully, igniting the tobacco,
and zooming away with a flourish as Morgan watched his Grandfather take his
first, mighty lungful.
Seeing him, Grandad Biggert rudely thrust the cigar in
Morgan’s face. “Want some, Munton?”
“No, he does not, Grandad Biggert. He does not indeed. You
filthy old man, encouraging smoking in public places. This isn’t 1997, you
know.” Grandad Patches spluttered, sizing his old nemesis up.
“Patches, pah!” Grandad Biggert spat. “I should have known
you would not pass up such a chance to make merry with my money. Get back to
your pots of lemon curd, you fruit fondler.”
“Fruit Fondler? Po, po, po, po, how dare you, sir. It is you
I have seen rubbing pears on ‘poke-a-plum-Sunday. You are well known for it in
these parts. What are you doing in the ring anyway? No doubt you hope to curry
favour with Ding Dong Fuego and be picked to be a family in the forthcoming
feuds.”
Grandad Biggert took a enormous suck, blowing smoke into
Grandad Patches’ eyes. “Blast you, Patches. That money is my certain right. Think
you have rumbled my ruse? Well think again, you whey faced dandelion clock with
fish fingers for hands, pointing at the round window.”
“Round window? Pah. Only you know what is to be found by
going through the round. Hah. You don’t even have a family. Irene Adder does
not count.”
“Gah. I will have a family. I will use yours. Patience,
Morgan and Faith.”
“Shah! Never. They will never agree to such a dastardly
machination!”
“Spah! They most certainly will, when they see what I am
offering. Dominion. Mastery over the entire five systems!”
Before Grandad Patches could respond, however, from the
tunnel a sight and sound emerged to delight the onlookers, and, lest you
forget, they were indeed delighted. With the hooting and clamoring of bells, a rickety
cart emerged, disguised as a fire engine, trilling with a ring-a-ding-ding,
powered by five or six clowns.
Oh, if only you could have heard the crowd, eh?
And, of course, by this time, Faith and Fenton were
ringside, followed by a grimly thwarted Patience. They had arrived just in time
to hear Grandad Biggert’s nefarious proclamations.
Faith screamed.
Clowns with fire buckets were swarming towards them with
intent. But they ignored Grandad Patches, instead throwing the pails of water
all over our puffed up Grandad Biggert. Their accuracy was a bit suspect.
Several pensioners were drenched and began to retreat.
Grandad Biggert, however, was extinguished. There was some
thick smoke followed by a soggy mess where his cloak had been.
The chief clown spoke. He had a sinister tone. He hissed. Dripping
in venom. Rather like Grandad Biggert was, at this moment. “Kindly return to
your seats, sir. Ding Dong Fuego. He is arriving.”
And the chief clown grasped Grandad Biggert’s shoulder.
Firmly.
“Unhand me, you painted pebble,” snapped Grandad Biggert,
“Or tomorrow, you will be going to clown school with ship’s biscuits for your
snap.”
Morgan sniggered, nudging Patience. “And he will go to
school with only bread and dripping,” he whispered. Emphasizing the word
dripping, as though he has being terribly witty.
Patience rolled her eyes.
Grandad Biggert’s threat had no effect on the chief clown
whatsoever. If anything, his grip tightened.
Due to the buckets of water that had been randomly flung in
Grandad Biggert’s direction, the pensioners in the ringside seats had scuttled
back, leaving several vacant seats. Grandad Patches wasted no time in mopping
them free of water with his bandana and beckoning his family to sit.
They watched with interest.
“Damn your hide,” blustered Grandad Biggert, “We’re not
finished yet.” And he snapped his fingers at Scrynge, who passed him an old tin
that once held toffees. It looked like it was from the 1930s and had rusted
hinges.
Nevertheless, Grandad Biggert opened it with a cunning look.
Inside, several small shapes were squirming in sawdust. “Try one of these
sweetmeats,” he urged, pointing at the tin, and extracting a wriggling grub
with some tweezers. He held it in front of the chief clown.
“What is it, Grandad,” asked Faith, excitedly. “Can I try
one of those sweetmeats, too?”
“Po, po, po, po, I would not advise it, Faith my dear,”
Grandad Patches replied. “It looks like that maggot has been impregnated with
some sort of luminous chemical designed to rob the eater of sleep.”
And the clown was not impressed either. He swept the tin
aside with an imperious gesture. “Be seated,” he insisted. “If it is that you
will be wanting to take your participation of this to be Feud.”
“Damn you. I’ll turn you into a tree.”
“No, you won’t.”
Finally, then, Grandad Biggert and Scrynge sulked back to
their seats, noticing, with a glare, that Grandad Patches had taken full
advantage of the diversion.
But for once, Grandad Patches had no interest in Grandad
Biggert’s proclivity. Instead he’d extracted an oily old notebook from the
pocket of his romper smock, had licked the end of the pencil for maximum
blackness and was scribbling something furiously onto the stained pages.
“Don’t do that, Grandad,” snapped Patience, “It’s not
hygienic.”
Faith and Fenton tittered. “Dirty old Grandad. Patience?
Tell Ma.”
“Licking pencil stubs went out with Enid Blyton,” added
Morgan, who was, nevertheless interested in Grandad Patches scrawling.
“Look at this, Morgan, my boy.” He passed the notebook and
pencil over – as though offering him a lick.
Morgan pushed the pencil away but read the words. “What is
it, Grandad? Hieroglyphics?”
“No, my boy. Indeed no. This is proof positive, if proof be
needed.”
“Proof of what, Grandad? Come on spit it out.”
“What? The pencil?”
Morgan leaned left, smirked, whispered to Patience ‘stupid
old duffer’ and then leant back. “Tell me what you’re on about.”
“It’s the clown. His syntax was all wrong. He said ‘if you
will be wanting to take your participation.’”
“So?”
“That, my boy, is not even close to an English
construction.”
“Grandad Biggert says stupid stuff like that all the time,”
Morgan pointed out, correctly.
“My dear boy, I suspect a foul play. We will, I fear, have
to play this one very, very carefully indeed.”
“You suspect alien spies? Again?”
“It is not beyond the bounds of possibility. We should be on
the look out, my boy.”
“As usual,” snapped Patience, who had been listening with a
growing sense of irritation. “I mean, why can’t this family just have a normal
day out for once?”
Faith and Fenton had managed to seize hold of Grandad
Patches’ spyglass and were playing some irritating game that involved nearby
pensioners, a stick and passing it to them the wrong way round. Fenton was
chanting a rhyme along the lines of ‘avoid a beating by spotting someone
cheating’.
The pensioners looked scared.
“Give that spyglass to me before I get Grandad Biggert to
swot the pair of you with his newspaper,” she snapped, snatching the offending
piece of brass from them.
Talking of Grandad Biggert, who was just a few seats along,
the lights were finally going down.
In the crowd, an expectant hush descended.
And from the tunnel, to the sound of klaxons and marching
music, the chief clown and his minions reappeared in triumph. “Behold,” cried
he, with a flourish, “Family Feud!”
Curtains fell with a whoosh and a drum roll; the spotlights focused
on a grand looking set that had been previously concealed.
“Wow!” screamed Faith, clutching her Grandad’s hand. “Family
Feuds!”
“Po, po, po, oh, I say.” Grandad Patches replied. “Look, my
dear. This was worth the price of the entrance tickets, wasn’t it?”
In front of them, looking beautifully gaudy, the set had two
arms that seemed to beckon the onlookers forth – two elongated desks with four
microphones poking upwards like sunflowers reaching skywards. These, no doubt,
for contestants to stand behind.
Between these two limbs, the podium, where upon contestants
beckoned forth would answer those devilishly hard questions. ‘We asked one
hundred people what sort of insects they would most like to be in another
life,’ or ‘which flavour of jam or jelly was most popular on a Saturday during
Grandstand back in 1976’.
No tinsel had been spared. No sequins had been forgotten.
Only the sturdiest cardboard had been used.
And, balanced on the top, a flashing police car light bathed
the audience in blue, illuminating the grand placard that proclaimed, in
gigantic dayglo letters, ‘Family Feud!”
The audience sucked in so much excited breath, there was
barely any left in the tent to breathe.
Was this the moment?
The chief clown looked at his watch, shaking it as though it
had a fault.
Grandad Patches stiffened, clutching Morgan’s shirt.
“Latelys and Gentlemums.” He announced. “I have been
informed of…a delay.”
There was a collective grown from the audience and a lot of
breath expelled simultaneously.
The Chief Clown continued. “Ding Dong Fuego he has delayed
been. He stuck behind tractor on A721 near Uddingston.”
Grandad Patches was nodding calmly, his eyes narrowing, as
though he had been expecting this news.
“He will be here within the hour.”
Grabbing Morgan’s sleeve a second time, Grandad Patches
muttered. “I doubt that, Morgan my boy, I doubt that very much indeed.”
“What’s a delayed bean, Grandad?” asked Faith, loudly.
“Yes, what’s a delayed bean?” Fenton shouted, unnecessarily.
As if he had heard then, the Chief Clown glared at the two
children, causing them to shrink back a little. “Fear not,” he snapped, “I
bring glad tidings of great joy. We entertainment will have until Ding Dong
arriving. Please welcome…Father McMudniss and his Mincing Meters.”
“Oh good,” said Patience, in a tone of voice that suggested
it was bad. “A commercial break before the show starts.”
If there had been a band, it now struck up a jolly dancing
tune. There wasn’t. Morgan suspected a tape deck or CD Player was hidden
somewhere behind the set.
The tune was familiar, though. ‘Step We Gaily.’
He groaned as a familiar set of bearded gnomes were shunted
onto the stage. They looked reluctant to be there and had to be prodded and
poked with sticks in order to start dancing.
“This is hell, nor are we out of it,” he muttered, gloomily,
wondering how long it would be before Patience set off for home. She had a
lower threshold than him. That was her secret weapon.
He gritted his teeth.
Looking to his left, here was Faith and Fenton, banging
banderlogs clumsily on the circus ring, in time to the music, jumping up and
down on their bucket seats. To his right, here was Patience looking grim. A few
seats along, at a non-too safe distance, Grandad Biggert was about to explode.
And in front, the Mincing Meters, in a long showtune line,
huffing and puffing, looking as though they might faint and any moment, beads
of sweat dripping onto the sawdust.
Even as the oldest Mincer stumbled forwards in a swoon,
misplacing his old bamboo cane, the tune ratcheted up a tad in volume and he
was once more energized by a glare from the Chief Clown: ‘Step we gaily, off we
go, heel to heel, toe to toe, off to Farmer’s Market…’
“Yes indeedy!” a familiar voice called from behind the line
of prancing oldsters, “Indeedy, Indoodly! It’s me, your favourite Farmer.
Farmer McFudniss! With my farmer’s market of recession free goods. Come on
down! The price is right! We won’t split hairs over a gross of pears!”
“Yaaaay!” screamed Fenton and Faith as though it was the
most exciting thing they’d ever seen. As one, they bounded into the ring and
did a victory lap, waving their sticks like spears, narrowly avoiding Mincing
Meters, some of whom scuttled for cover, whilst the other tried vainly to hold
their shape for the ‘Gay Gordons’.
“Get back here,” snapped Patience, and she looked to Grandad
Patches for support, but he seemed preoccupied, rummaging around in the nether
regions of his romper smock and occasionally grunting. He has paying no
attention to his beloved Granddaughter, now on her second victory lap.
The crowd were whooping it up, rattling beads in approval.
This, if anything, seemed to encourage Faith, as Mincing Meters scattered like
nine pins smacked by a billiard ball.
Morgan was sniggering uncontrollably.
“Grandad,” Patience wailed, in despair, then hopped over in
pursuit, narrowly missing Farmer McFudniss who was fondling two oversized
beetroot. “Beat the route to depression and recession,” he was shouting.
Through a tin megaphone he’d pinched from the chief clown.
A siren began to wail and a hypnotic voice boomed over
loudspeakers, menacing in pitch and almost in slow motion. “No contestants in
the ring,” it proclaimed. “Emergency, emergency, we are invaded. Dispatch the
clown cart, immediately. All clowns to the ring now.”
“Grandad! Grandad!” Morgan cried, with urgency, and snapped
his fingers. “They’re sending in the clowns!”
“Yes, yes, my boy. There ought to be clowns.” At last he
finished fishing around in his smock, having found whatever it was that was
making him grunt. He whipped it out and held it up. “Look, mt boy.”
Morgan wasn’t sure he wanted to. Reluctantly, he ripped his
gaze from the chaos in the ring. Grandad was holding up a gigantic, leather
bound book. Morgan squinted and read its title. “AA New Book of the Road. I
say, Grandad, couldn’t you have used Google Maps?”
“Google Maps? Po, po, po, po, a recipe for shortcuts and
wood shaver-me-snappers, my boy. With this, we can be sure. No trap streets in
this beauty.” And he began thumbing through its grubby pages.
“But, shouldn’t you be doing something about all that?”
Morgan jerked his thumb at the cacophony in front of them.
“But, I am, my boy, I am.”
The clown cart had, by now, appeared and had joined in the
chase. It’s warning sirens wailing malevolently over the chaos and disorder,
heightening the panic.
As if hypnotized by its flashing lights, several pensioners,
befuddled and bemused, began climbing into the ring, arms outstretched,
dribbling uncontrollably, risking live and limb. Why, they could be hit by
sticks, clown cars, Mincing Meters…anything might happen.
Some of them were muttering, over and over, like a mantra
“2000 pesos, 2000 pesos, my kingdom for 2000 pesos.”
The Family Feud set was struck with a mighty force. Faith,
Fenton, the Clown Cart and two or three Mincing Meters ran, full pelt, into the
cardboard construction and it collapsed in chaos, burying the populace beneath
several inches of cheap tat.
Grandad Biggert had seen quite enough. “Scrynge!” he
commanded, imperiously, “Bring forth the Hypersonic Transmat of Trundos!”
“Yes, Master.”
From beneath his jerkin, Scrynge unwound a coil of knitting
yarn and passed it to Grandad Biggert.
“No, you fool! Not the Cobalt Cob Webbing of Nebulous Nine!
The Transmat!”
“Sorry, Master, I think we be leaving your carpet back at
Biggert Mansions.”
“Darn and Blast. Well, so be it. We will proceed with
Contingency Plan Omega Cygnus.”
Grandad Biggert leapt into the ring, his black cloak
trailing behind him, looking rather like a penguin plummeting from the sky
after it had been tossed from an Antarctic Environmental Survey Helicopter.
“Push off, you straw haired carrot cruncher.” He shoved
Farmer McMudniss, who had graduated from fondling beetroot to squeezing pears,
violently in the chest, snatching the tin loud hailer from his grasp. “You’ll
sell no turnips here.”
Grandad Biggert now spoke loudly into his mouthpiece. His
voice boomed across the circus ring. Even Grandad Patches looked up from his
road atlas.
“Wretched citizens of Purridgeton,” he snarled, “You turned
your backs on the lord of the fire mountain and listened to his enemy.” And he
pointed dramatically at the Chief Clown. “Now, there will be no two thousand
pesos for you. Or you. Or you. Return to your dwellings. Return to your abodes
and abase yourselves before the Headless Monks of Minkus, late of the Nebulus
Systems of Minkus Minor.”
Everything stopped.
As if by magic, the hypnotized and the transgressors started
to shuffle back to their seats in a woebegone manner.
Then he felt a sharp tap on his shoulder. “Give that to me.”
It was the Chief Clown.
Flanked by Farmer McMudniss, who was brushing sawdust
delicately from his tunic, he seized the
loud hailer and booted it firmly in the direction of Scrynge. It did a couple
of forward rolls, executed a back flip, then struck the tobacconist square in
the jaw, with a hollow echo.
“Ladies and Gentlemen of Purridgeton. Behold. Ding Dong.”
The lights went down.
Morgan jabbed Grandad Patches in the ribs. “Grandad. Ding
Dong arriving.”
“What’s that you say? Ding Dong Rising? Po, po, po, po. No.
No. dear me, no. That can’t be right. Can’t be right at all.” He tapped his
book. “The clue’s here, do you see? Here, my boy.” And, finally, Grandad
Patches stepped into the ring.
Grandad Patches’ foxglove romper smock billowed like a
magician’s cloak. He strode forth, with his stick and huge road atlas then
checked his progress.
From the other side of the ring, The Chief Clown, Farmer
McMudniss and Grandad Biggert watched, suspiciously.
Turning towards the huge pile of cardboard, tinsel, balsa
wood and flashing light, Grand Patches bent down and tugged some of the debris
aside. “Patience? Faith? Fenton? I say, po, po, po, are you in there?”
“Yes Grandad.”
“Well, jolly well go back to your seats.”
He watched until he was sure they had returned, then strode
purposefully towards the other side. Sizing up the Chief Clown, Grandad Patches
gave him one of his hardest stares. “Where is this Ding Dong Fuego, then”
“Blast you, Patches, you putrid plum plucker,” snapped
Grandad Biggert. “I’m not finished yet. It is I who will lay claim to that 2000
pesos.”
“Oh, will you, indeed? Well, we will see about that, dear
me, yes.”
Father McMudniss was seized by a compulsion. “Bring on my
Mincing Meters!”
“No thank you,” replied Grandad Patches, firmly, “We’ve had
quite enough of their nonsense for one day. Try harder.”
The Chief Clown glared with a deep, snake-yellow malevolence
in his eyes. “Ding Dong, he will decide of all this business.”
And then, at last, what was left of the spotlights converged
in a blinding, angelic halo of light, tracking forward as somebody approached.
The drums rolled, as if they knew. The crowd gasped once again, each seat was
gripped, each togue was stilled.
The somebody, the man, broke through the meniscus of light,
still bathed in a throbbing of power.
Grandad Biggert raised his hand to shield his eyes, palms
outward, staggering slightly backward towards the exit. “Back,” he commanded,
“Approach no further. Back to your echoing void! Back, I compel you by
summoning the power demon of Zantos Major!”
But his words seemed to have no effect.
Morgan hurled himself over the barrier and into the ring, to
join Grandad Patches. He was in a fever pitch of excitement. “Grandad!
Grandad!”
“What is it my boy?”
“That’s not Ding Dong Fuego.”
“I know that my boy. Dear me, yes. Po, po, po. Tiddly
pom-pom-pom. Why the clue was here, like I told you.” He showed the assemblage
his road atlas. “You see, the A721, is merely a spur route of the A72 that
crosses Lanarkshire, on it’s way to Peebles and Biggar. It’s nowhere near
Purridgeton, my boy. Now, if that had been the real Ding Dong Fuego, he would
have known such a thing, wouldn’t he?”
“You mean he would have been stuck behind a tractor on the
A379?”
“Exactly, my boy. Exactly.”
“Or the A381?”
Grandad Patches nodded, impressed. He sized up the newcomer
with a critical eye. “Now then, young fellow. Would you like to tell us exactly
just who you are?”
The Chief Clown interposed himself between Grandad Patches
and the others. “That is Ding Dong Fuego.”
“No it isn’t Ding Dong Fuego.” Grandad Patches replied,
firmly. “And I doubt you’re even a real clown.” He leaned forwards and took
hold of the clown’s left ear with his right hand. He gave the ear a sharp tug –
and – behold – a mask peeled off in his hand and dangled limply in his grip.
“It’s the baguette man!” Morgan shouted.
“Yes. It’s the baguette man. I suspected as much when I
noticed the clown was wearing Ma’s old makeup. I’d only placed in the trash
that very morning. This whole thing has been a travesty and mishmash of lies,
no doubt perpetrated by enemies of the state. Spies. Sent here to do mischief under the cover of a game show. Perpetrators
of chaos and Farmer McMudniss saw this whole enterprise as a way to increase
his profits. Worthy of Grandad Biggert himself.”
“Damn you, Patches,” snapped Grandad Biggert. “Always one
step ahead. If you weren’t so infernally clever we could have taken that 2000
pesos.”
But now, the stranger himself stepped forward. “You still
can.” he said, smoothly. “Grandad Patches is wrong.”
“He is?”
“Yes. I may not be, as you say, Ding Dong Fuego. But I am,
how you say, Ding Dong Flamingo.”
Grandad Biggert scratched his goatee. “Hear that, Patches?
as usual you’ve muddled up the entire thing. He’s Ding Dong Flamingo.”
“Yes. Grandad Biggert. With your supernatural wisdom and
arsenal of hi-tech gadgetry, you have it right. Now. Let’s play Family Feud!”
And he strode off towards the piles of collapsed set and lights, no doubt in an
attempt to erect a podium to play on.
Then, he seemed to vanish.
For a while, there was a confused silence.
Then Morgan coughed, quietly. “Ah. Grandad Biggert?”
“Shut up, Munton.”
“Who actually is Ding Dong Flamingo?”
“I don’t know, do I? Fuego’s younger brother, probably. That
pink one.”
“Pink one?”
But it was too late, In the confusion, they had all
scarpered. Farmer McMudniss, The Baguette Man and Ding Dong Flamingo had
completely disappeared.
Grandad Patches smiled. “Never mind, my boy. We may not have
won those 2000 pesos and beaten the recession, But it’s not all doom and gloom,
is it? We foiled an international plot and you’ll never see Farmer McMudniss
and his Mincing Meters ever again.”
Morgan nodded. Well, that had to be something, he supposed.
And he followed the merry citizens of Purridgeton as they
snaked back home.
Later that evening as the summer sun was just arcing below
the horizon and number 36 Lumpslap Close was settling itself for the night,
Morgan was still fiddling with the television controls.
Patience was in the kitchen, helping Grandad Patches and
Faith clear away the supper dishes.
They all stopped when they heard an outraged shriek from the
living room. “It’s them! It’s those Mincing Meters!”
All three rushed in and joined Morgan, focussing on the
smallish black and white screen.
Sure enough, there was a familiar sound of the accordian and
fiddle; the strained sound of a heavily accented male singer. “Ohhhhhh. Yeel
tak the hee rurrrd, and eel tak the laargh rurrrd…”
“Grandad? What’s a hee haw?
“Po, po, po, po. Well, pon my soul, I imagine it’s some kind
of motorized donkey, Faith, my dear.” replied Grandad Patches, without
conviction.
They watched miserably as the Mincing Meters bumbled to and
fro, back and forth.
Then, a sly looking face appeared in front of them from the
left hand side of the screen. He held a microphone.
“Grandad? Look. That’s McMudniss, isn’t it?”
“I’m not sure, Morgan, my boy.” Grandad Patches was
squinting at the screen, somewhat puzzled. His eyes are not what they were, you
know?
Anyway, they were soon told: “Howdy, dear viewers. It’s me,
Green Grocer Gordon O’Clumpoland! Say hello to my Prancing Porkers!”
Morgan switched the television off in disgust. “He’s not
fooling anyway, is he?”
Patience sighed. “You cannot fight the power of the
capitalist. You just have to grin and accept it.”
“Well, dash it all, I won’t” snapped Morgan. “I’m sick of
those Mincing Meters ruining the television schedule. I’m mad and I’m not going
to take it anymore.”
Before his sister could reply, the doorbell sounded, shrill
and insistent.
“Well, po, po, po, po, who could that be at this time of
night?” Grandad Patches wondered aloud. “It’s almost bedtime, isn’t it?”
And all four of them trooped to the door to find out. As
Faith opened it they looked, as one, in utter astonishment.
In front of them, dressed in the finest designer clothes,
was a man they all instantly recognised.
“It’s you!” Faith shouted.
“It is indeed my friends. Ding Dong Fuego. Tell me, do you
know the way to the Family Feud Big Top? I was delayed, you see? On the A721.
Somewhere near Uddingston.