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#Busman's Holiday
weaversweek · 3 months
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Which game shows have the most episodes? Part 3, BOC-CAN
The latest part of my project to count all of the game shows.
This time, a Robert Robinson double bill, Brain of Britain and Call My Bluff.
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A deep dive into The Brains Trust, the only game show to have episodes specially made for the cinema. (Unless they showed Eurovision The Movie in the picturehouse somewhere...)
And, on a slightly less intellectual level, Bullseye.
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bandcampsnoop · 1 year
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10/16/23.
Busman's Holiday (Bloomington, Indiana) was an absolute revelation to me exactly 7 years ago. "Popular Cycles" was one of my first purchases from Joyful Noise Recordings, and I just couldn't get enough of it.
The easiest comparisons are Paul Simon, The Beach Boys and The Beatles. These songs are carefully crafted with wonderful harmonies. If you look on AllMusic you'll see that the "related artists" are mostly alt-country. I wouldn't call this music alt-country at all. This is lush, orchestrated pop/baroque pop.
I also hear a bit of Thomas Walsh (Pugwash) - reminder - his LP is due out soon on Curation Records.
"Good Songs" was released by Snappy Fun.
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jepergola · 2 months
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New story today: "How to Get the Vacation You Want"
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sweetdreamsjeff · 4 months
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Busman's Holiday For Jeff Buckley
This sideman thing is OK, but really, how about getting into the studio and recording a new album already.
By MTV News Staff April 6, 1996
The mesmerizing singer/songwriter Jeff Buckley will slip into the background next month, when he hits the road as a sideman, playing bass in Mind Science of the Mind. The group is headed by Shudder To Think guitarist Nathan Larson, and includes Joan Wasser of the Dambuilders on violin, Mary Timony from Helium on Guitar and Kevin March, also of the Dambuilders, on drums. Larson plays guitar and sings. The group will be performing Larson-penned material, and it is not expected that Buckely will do anything except hold down his responsibilities as half of the rhythm section. A source close to Buckely told ATN: "Jeff loves the Dambuilders. He's also a big Shudder To Think fan, a long-time Shudder To Think fan. And he had the Dambuilders open for him in Australia." Good enough. This is, as they say, "a oneshot." Meanwhile, in terms of his own trip, Buckely has replaced drummer Matt Johnson (who departed following Buckley's recent Australian tour) with Eric Eidel. It's expected that Buckely will use Eidel, bassist Mick Grondal and guitarist Michael Tighe when he begins recording his next album this summer.
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doublegrinch · 1 year
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Do you have a favorite bit of hypno-community media?
Oh gosh, don't make me choose XD
Okay, to even have a chance at answering this, I'm gonna have to divide by type. Get ready for an avalanche of shoutouts.
Literary media
My personal niche! The cop-out answer here is "pretty much everything Jukebox ever wrote", since there's so much to pick from.
I can't pick just one, so
Subroutine by @kallie-den is single-handedly responsible for me having a "drone phase" (yes it was a phase, mom!)
If we go older, a lot of Trilby Else's stories go waaay too dark for me, but Purpose strikes just the right balance of enticing and pitch dark. Very much CW: noncon, implied self-harm and other very dark stuff
Gotta mention the OG fave and inspiration for Mind Play, Busman's Holiday by Wiseguy
Going Down Gamblin' by @h-sleepingirl is genius
@modren83's Whiteout, one of the all-time greats
@skaetlett's Bouquet Bound is peak Skaetcore and I love it for that reason alone (and also it's very good)
And of course, The Love and Trances of Madison and Belladonna by @misscammiedawn. No I'm not just saying that cuz it's you asking, it's legit an inspiration for my personal "lovey dovey scenes between partners" style :)
I'm forgetting some others (like, I can't pick just *one* @ellaenchanting story, that's impossible). I just like a lot of smut okay??
Audios
Okay, so I have a bias for my friends here. I have a number of people I know who do files on occasion (yourself included!) that I adore. Also shout out to my friend Pling (who isn't on tumblr) for his very very good files on Patreon. And of course, the ridiculously talented and prolific @secret-subject.
My go-to "underrated fave" though is Secret's Please Hold, a very cleverly produced track about a help line with very interesting hold music. Extra bonus points for the version where the person you're trying to reach picks up the phone at the end ^^
Visual Media
There's a specific comic by Sleepymaid that's not online anymore about a "hypnosis diner" where two ladies go to dine. One asks for obliviousness, the other for robotization. Just a very nice combo.
Also this piece by Keeper of Pots. Something about the expression on the girl with the fan.
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annamaetion · 2 years
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Benoit Blanc (and Philip) Headcannons
If they were both on vacation and a ‘busman’s holiday’ happened (aka a murder or other sort of investigation needed) Philip would actually be the most enthusiastic for Benoit to join in, because he’s seen what his husband is like when he goes long stretches without a case.
Word of god (aka the author) has it that Benoit can’t afford his apartment [on his own; I blame the cost of living, and honestly Benoit’s clothing tastes cannot be cheap] and it’s heavily implied that he’s a hobbyist that is more than willing to do charity cases because he cares about the people and justice. So that puts significant weight on the ‘Philip is the biggest breadwinner of the two’ theory (fitting that his quarantine crazy project was literally making bread). TL;DR: Philip is a sugar daddy to Benoit.
Philip is actually more famous than his husband in some circles (possibly the world of finance or fashion?) and Benoit doesn’t mind at all. (Frankly Benoit would be happier if his name wasn’t the first Google result for ‘Worlds greatest detective’)
Marta and Helen are now honorary daughters to the Benoit and Philip, this headcannon is so popular I choose to believe it is just full bonafide canon.
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spreadyovrwings · 6 months
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64 Oslo Square
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"Companion' Middle English. From Old French 'compaignon', literally 'one who breaks bread with another.
Strapped for cash, John gets a job at a bakery as their new delivery boy. Juggling school and Queen and work is exhausting, but it's more than worth it. It's worth it because of you.
Warnings for this chapter: the knowledge that i started this THREE YEARS AGO FFS
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Chapter Ten
It was late afternoon on Sunday, the tail-end of a painfully uneventful weekend. But then again, these days, ‘uneventful’ was something of a relief. Boring meant safe. Dull meant no more horrible surprises or eviction notices. You were just happy to have a few hours where the world didn’t feel like it had been completely turned on its head.
You weren’t the only one enjoying the peace and quiet. Even Gladys seemed a little cheerier when you bumped into her on your way back from the shops. She was busy in the office, sorting papers and getting everything tidy, though you struggled to ignore why she was getting herself organised.
Despite her effulgent greeting and the gorgeous sunshine, the bakery kitchens still felt eerily quiet. The ovens hadn’t been switched on in weeks. Once gleaming jars of ingredients sat gathering dust on the sides, even though you often came down just to give everything a quick clean when you were feeling restless. Just because the bakery wasn’t yours anymore, that didn’t mean you should let it fade away.
The old equipment - mixers, utensils, recipes - watched you, almost accusingly, as you walked through the kitchen. The whole room seemed to hold its breath whenever you entered, as if it blamed you for what had happened, as if it was waiting for you to promise you’d fight back, that you weren’t just giving up.
You placed your palm flat against the tiled wall, letting the cold seep into your skin. An apology.
In her office, Gladys was muttering away to herself. It wasn’t her usual warbling, it was much sharper. Behind her faux smile, she was angry with herself. You knew it, but couldn’t bring yourself to talk to her about it yet. You supposed you were still angry with her too.
Pressing your cooled hand to your forehead, you pulled in a breath deep enough to settle the tightness in your chest, then headed upstairs with your bags and bags of shopping.
Mickey was supposed to pop round later with Rita and the baby. Gladys had offered to buy you all dinner, an apology for what had happened and a thank you for years of hard work. Again, you struggled not to think about the reasons for the get-together. It would just be nice to see Mickey and to have a family dinner.
Tucking your hair back behind your ears for the umpteenth time, you twisted your wrist and curved a rubber spatula around the inside of the mixing bowl. It was a bit of a busman’s holiday for you, you could admit that, but you’d spent most of the week packing up your tiny flat and it was starting to weigh in your chest.
That morning, you had awoken with a renewed sense of determination, but when it finally came to packing up your poky kitchen, you had found the cupboards stuffed with ingredients. Rather than waste them all, you’d popped to the shops for what little else you needed and baked all morning, throwing together last minute gifts for your work family.
You’d just divvied up the mixture into identical tins when the phone rang. Swearing under your breath, you brushed your hands against the front of your old work apron, streaking the dark coffee-brown material with pale cake batter.
The phone continued to trill brightly as you picked your way through the living room, carefully skirting around cardboard boxes and stacks of books, magazines, records, and Lord knows what else. You checked your palm, grimaced, then gingerly picked up the phone.
“4531?”
“Come look out your window in… Ten seconds.”
“John?” You wrinkled your nose, confused, and pressed the receiver closer to your ear. “What d’you- Which window? Front or back?”
“Er… Back.”
You glanced towards your kitchen. Set into the wall, just beside the sink, was a small square window that looked out onto the alleyway. It offered a lovely view of the bins and the graffiti-covered flank of the building next door.
“John, don’t you ‘ave an exam tomorrow? Shouldn’t you be revisin’?”
“Nah, I never really revise for anything.”
“That kinda makes me wanna hit you a bit.”
“That’s fair. Y’know, they called me “Easy Deacon” at school.”
“What, because you-”
“Nope. Exams and things are just… Easy for me.”
“Kinda wanna hit you a bit more now.”
“Just come to the window.”
The line went dead with a faint clunk. Shaking your head fondly, you replaced the receiver then went to the window, as instructed.
It was almost insufferably hot in your flat. London in July was always awful. The buildings, built for keeping the heat in, left the air inside uncomfortably claggy and close, so you had all the windows flung open already.
Sticking your head out of the one in your kitchen, you peered down into the alley, just in time to catch John jogging round the corner, travelling far faster than you would have thought possible or safe considering his chunky platform boots.
For the first time in days - in fact, for the first time since you last saw him - you laughed.
“You’re daft, y’know that?” you shouted down.
Panting and grinning, John tilted his chin up to see you better.
“Good afternoon, Skip!”
The warm, yellow sunlight lit up his face, catching in his hair and making his eyes shine. John’s tiny T-shirt hugged his slim frame. He had a rucksack slung over his shoulder, his bony elbow sticking straight up in the air, like a model on the cover of a magazine. To call it a ‘bicep’ was generous, but his upper arm looked so good tensed like that, you couldn’t take your eyes off him.
“Are you comin’ up?” you asked hopefully, letting your gaze slip up and down his body a few more times.
John smiled sheepishly.
“If that’s alright? I’ve got some work to do and there’s a big party tonight, so halls are a nightmare.”
“You’re not goin’?”
“Where?”
You laughed.
“To the disco!”
“Oh, right.”
John shrugged, then tilted his chin back even further, so now you could catch every angle of his lovely jaw and pale throat.
“I know where I’d rather be.”
Pressing down a charmed smile, you huffed and shook your head.
It turned out, you were right. When John walked into the bakery just before closing on that drizzly January night, you knew there was more to that anxious, fidgety boy with the daft hair and shabby clothes. You knew instinctively that if you just got him to relax, to smile and feel at home, he’d show a side of him that very few were lucky to know. Cheeky, silly, and divertingly charming. And it was just for you.
“Well,” You nodded your head back over your shoulder, gesturing to your living room. “You better come in then.”
John grinned.
In a blink, he had disappeared inside the back door to the bakery, then you could hear his heavy-booted footsteps on the stairs.
You wasted no time getting him comfortable. With only four weeks left till Alastair officially took hold of the bakery for good, you had begrudgingly, painfully begun sorting your things.
There were boxes piled up everywhere, some brimming with clothes for the charity shop, some packed full of bric-a-brac you’d collected over the years and couldn’t bear to part with, an all manner of books and records, teapots and cutlery, posters and jewellery. Some of it had managed to spill out from your living room into your bedroom, crowding the kitchen table and making it difficult to tread anywhere without toppling a pile of tat over.
You scooped up a stack of bills and letters from the coffee table and dumped them on the kitchen counter instead - a feeble solution but the only one you had.
“Here you are,” you said, brushing off imaginary dust from the low table so that John could place his rucksack down.
“Thanks, love. Erm, you know…” John chewed at the corner of his thumb, his gaze struggling valiantly to hold yours. “If you did wanna go out tonight, you still owe me a dance.”
“I do, don’t I.” You glanced in the direction of the boxes piled high against the doorframe of your bedroom. “I don’t think ‘ave any clothes, though.”
The corner of John’s mouth twitched. As he sank to his knees beside the table, he opened his bag and took out a few tedious looking books.
“Sounds fine to me.”
You rolled your eyes and gently hit his arm with a stray magazine you scooped up from the coffee table.
“Nice clothes.”
“You’ll look beautiful in anything.” Rubbing his arm dramatically, John smiled so broadly, it made his cheeks bunch up and his eyes shine. “I just wanna go out with you.”
It was unbearably tempting. The thought of being pressed up against John in a dark nightclub, the music thudding in your ears and his hands in yours, or on your hips, your back, wherever they wanted to be.
You could see it, John’s little curls sticking to his damp forehead and temples, his tight clothes clinging to his tiny frame, his funny mouth by your ear as he shouted over the music, asking if you wanted to get out of here.
You’d end up back at yours, falling onto your bed or even the sofa, if you couldn’t wait another second. You honestly couldn’t care less. You just wanted, needed John’s mouth on yours, on your neck, his big clumsy hands mapping your body and his pretty eyes gazing up at you, so dark and full.
He’d been on your mind since you met him, everyone knew it, even John. Dancing with him, letting him pull you into him, sinking your teeth into his neck and grabbing his hips tight - it sounded like heaven.
You smiled.
“I’d love that.”
“Yeah? Really?”
John looked so pleased, you could’ve kissed him. Instead, you thought about it, and pushed his books towards him across the table.
“Go on, you be’er get started.”
Turning away towards the kitchen, you bowed your head, tucking your chin into your chest to hide your broad, excited grin.
Your life had been turned upside down, the cardboard boxes littering your poky flat were a reminder of that, but John still managed to make you feel several stories high. Somehow, despite everything, he made you feel like the world wasn’t ending. Just having him near made you forget about life outside these four walls for a while. It was just you and him, safe in a sanctuary just for two.
“Tea?”
“Please.”
“Have you had lunch?”
You barely glanced over your shoulder. You could guess the sheepish expression on his face without needing to look.
“Stupid question,” You lifted the kettle from the stove and held it under the tap. “I’ll make us somethin’. Any preferences?”
When he didn’t respond, you frowned.
“John?”
You flipped off the tap and settled the kettle back on the stove. You twisted your wrist, igniting the hob, then turned to find John peering out of your front window. His bag and his books lay ignored on the coffee table.
“Johnny? You alright?”
He still didn’t seem to hear you.
Before you could ask what was wrong, John pressed nearer to the window, so close now that the tip of his nose was practically bent up against the glass.
“Er, Skip?”
You watched his brow furrow in the reflection of the window.
“Did you know he was coming over today?”
Bewildered, you went to join him at the window.
It was a busy day. The high street was always packed with brightly coloured people, rushing to work or flitting from shop to shop like butterflies between meadow flowers. Scarlet buses streaked past, and between them, dark cars slotted into place. They moved together, like bees in a hive, individuals all moving in one great dance.
But there was one figure unlike the others, and your heart sank to see him. He moved like a shark towards the bakery, steady and focused, his dark suit setting him unnervingly out of place amongst the sweet wrapper colours all around him. Alastair.
“What’s that bastard doing back ‘ere?”
Your teeth clenched, your jaw compressing so tightly, it began to ache. As you watched, he pushed open the door to the bakery and disappeared inside. Your hands balled into fists.
Without thinking, you immediately stormed back into the kitchen and wrenched the hob’s dial back to ‘off’.
“I can’t believe he’d-”
You couldn’t think straight. All your ideas and plans for a nice afternoon with John had slipped from your mind, as well as all reasonable and rational thought. You couldn’t remember ever being so angry in all your life.
“I can’t believe- ‘Asn’t he caused enough- He can’t just-”
You fizzled and sparked like a dying firework, your mind in a million different places. Finally, you caught John glancing towards the door. You seemed to have the same idea at the same time.
Heart racing, you thundered down the stairs, taking them two at a time. You were moving so quickly, you practically fell into the door at the bottom, with John picking his way much more carefully behind you.
“Wait, love,” he whispered, just a step behind you. “What are you going to-”
You took a deep breath, then placed both hands flat against the door and shoved.
You found Alastair leaning over Gladys, her cheek cradled in his hand. She was sitting in Mickey’s chair, her eyes closed, but her mouth was drawn into a thin line, like she was trying hard not to cry.
Alastair lazily turned his head in your direction, as if annoyed that you’d interrupted him. His dark eyes switched over your face, the way he always did, like he was assessing you, calculating your worth. This was as a man who saw the world in percentages and figures; people were just another commodity. You should never have let him into your bakery.
“Ah, the cavalry,” he drawled, already turning back to Gladys.
Alastair didn’t remove his hand, not immediately. Not until he’d dragged one long, angular thumb across Gladys’ painted cheek.
Her shoulders tensed, her eyes still squeezed shut, as if trying to take herself away from him, to somewhere safer. Gladys was clutching a bundle of folded papers, her fingers wrapped so tight around them that the paper was starting to audibly crease and bend.
“Glad, you don’t ‘ave to let ‘im in,” you said quietly.
You didn’t take your eyes off Alastair as he finally drew back his hand and slipped it into his pocket.
“Actually, she does.”
He pulled out a familiar set of keys. They twinkled and shone in the low light of the kitchen.
Beside you, John tensed.
Gladys’ spare lipgloss, a piece of pink ribbon from a dress she kept telling herself she’d fix, her own spare house key, painted purple with nail varnish, they glinted from the keyring hanging carelessly from the tip of Alastair’s bony index finger.
“This is my building,” he said, swinging Gladys’ keys back into the pocket of his immaculate jacket. “I own the lock.”
“Righ’, exactly,” You glanced at Gladys, trying to gauge if she was alright. “You already ‘ave everythin’ you want, why can’t you just leave us alone?”
“Well, I came to see my best girl.”
Alastair smiled coldly down at Gladys, who finally opened her eyes. They shone with tears.
“We have lunch plans. Don’t we, darling?”
“You’re joking,” John scoffed. “She’s not going anywhere with you.”
He was standing close behind you, his chest almost pressed against your shoulder blade. It felt good to know he was close by and just as angry as you. Keeping your eyes on Gladys, you reached back and gently took his hand, giving it a grateful squeeze.
“I’m sorry,” Alastair’s nose wrinkled as he looked John up and down. “Why is the delivery boy talking to me?”
John’s hand tightened in yours. You could practically feel the nervous energy radiating off him, but Gladys rose to her feet before either of you could speak.
She reached out a hand, as if to place it on Alastair’s arm, then seemed to think better of it.
For the first time, you thought about what it must be like for her. Forty-seven years old, a business owner for twenty-five of those, a valued member of her community, and beneath the veneer of her brightly coloured clothes and wild hair, quietly and incredibly lonely.
You, Mickey, and now John were all she had. If a handsome, rich, seemingly kind man like Alastair had come along and swept you off your feet, you probably would’ve fallen for it too.
And now it was all gone, and she was alone again. And worse than that, the man who’d broken Gladys’ heart had taken everything she’d built away too, her business, her little family.
You hadn’t spoken to her about it, not really. You’d been so wrapped up in your own selfish anger, you just hadn’t thought. But as Gladys rose up and levelled Alastair’s gaze, you couldn’t help being immensely proud of your boss.
“You should go, Alastair,” she said, quietly yet firmly. “And don’t come back again. We don’t want you ‘ere.”
Alastair seemed unbothered, though perhaps a little surprised. He chewed the inside of his cheek, as if debating whether he should try to sweet talk her round, one last deception, but eventually, he raised his smooth hands in surrender.
“Fine, fine. Fair enough. We’ve said everything we need to say, haven’t we, dear?”
He smiled wolfishly at Gladys.
She just stared at the centre of chest, unblinking, her mind probably a million miles away, somewhere better.
The bakery door swished open with a bright chime.
You looked round to see Mickey in the doorway. When he saw Alastair in the kitchen, his warm face immediately sank into anger and he stopped mid-stride, his palm still pressed against the glass in the door.
Mickey was a good half a foot taller than Alastair, and one of Mickey’s biceps was about the same size as his head. Worst of all, Alastair had upset Gladys, and you, and worried Mickey’s family. There wasn’t a safe place to stand.
Alastair seemed to realise this too. It was the first time you’d seen him look even remotely flustered.
“Well, you all have a lot to discuss. I’ll leave you to it. Have a good weekend, everyone.”
He squeezed Gladys’ shoulder, making John huff and your fists clench. Then he edged towards the door, ducking under Mickey’s enormous arm, and hurried around the road.
As soon as he was out of sight, Mickey let the door swing shut with a bang.
“What was that twat doing ‘ere?”
You ignored him, choosing instead to take Gladys’ hands. They felt cold in yours, like all the life had been drained from her just by being near to Alastair again.
“Gladys, what did ‘e say to you?”
“Nothin’, nothin’.” She sniffed and blinked away tears, turning her face to the ceiling. “He just came for the paperwork and to let me know that the builders will be in next week. And to drop off this.”
She chucked the stack of papers Alastair had given her onto the nearest counter, letting them spill out and flutter. Some even fell to the floor.
You watched Gladys, waiting for a ‘but’, waiting for her to say it was all going to be alright. Slowly, then all at once in a sickening rush, her words finally sank in.
“Next… Next week?”
You felt your stomach twist and knot, your throat so tight, you couldn’t speak. The kitchen seemed to darken at the corners.
This place that had been home to you, this place that had housed you, fed you, given you purpose, led you to your new family, to John, it was being pulled from your grasp and there was absolutely nothing you could do about it.
You looked back at Mickey.
For such a big man, he suddenly seemed like a lost little boy. His broad shoulders were low, his gaze fixed on the floor, his huge hands bunched at his sides. His second home had been taken from him too, the place that let him do the work he loved, the place that supported his wife and daughter, the two loves of his life.
Finally, you looked at John, only to find him already gazing at you.
You knew what 64 Oslo Square meant to him, what it had given him. The bakery had been an escape, from uni, from his lonely halls, from worrying where his next meal would be coming from. Oslo Square had been a warm embrace, a place to grow and learn, and a reminder that there was more to life than exams, dingy tube rides, and lugging a heavy bass guitar around.
His expression, as always, remained fairly impassive. But when you met his eyes, John softened, only a touch, but you caught it. He was just as heartbroken, and for once, logic and reason wouldn’t give him a distraction or a way out.
The ringing in your ears grew louder and louder as the kitchen began to spin around you, and all that really registered was the deep bass drum of your heart.
You were faintly aware of Gladys talking as tears streaked down her face, carving dark mascara lines into her bright pink cheeks.
“I’m so sorry, love.” She took your hand, then Mickey’s. “Both of you, I’m so sorry. I thought I’d be able to think of a way out of this but ‘e’s- ‘E’s got it all there in black and white, darlin’s .”
John’s sharp eyes fell to the papers Gladys had discarded on the counter.
“It’s alright,” Mickey tried to summon a smile as he squeezed Gladys’ hand. “Don’t upset yourself, love. C’mon, now. It’s alrigh’, Glad. We’ll be okay.”
“But what am I gonna do with myself? Eh? Without the shop I’m… I’m just a li’le old lady.”
Gladys brushed away her tears, smearing black smudges across the back of her hand.
From behind you, John held out a tissue he must’ve silently gone to grab.
Gladys took it gratefully.
“And you,” She patted Mickey’s broad chest. “You’ve got your family. And you, sweetheart, you’re-”
You looked back at John. He gave you the tiniest smile, so faint you barely caught the slight twitch at the corner of his mouth. It wasn’t warm, it wasn’t soft, but it was full of promise, and when he nodded quickly, his hazy grey eyes switching nervously between yours and somewhere near your collar, you knew what he was trying to say.
“I’ll be okay, Glad,” you said, grabbing her another tissue.
“Oh,” Gladys sobbed. “And it’s nearly your birthday!”
You exhaled sharply, taken-aback.
“Well, that’s- That’s very sweet of you, Gladys, but that’s the least of me worries, right now.”
“It’s nearly your birthday?” John asked.
You nodded.
“At the end of the month.”
“You never told me.”
“Well, it didn’t seem very important, considering...”
“And it was gonna be such a special one, too,” Gladys wailed.
You frowned, glancing at Mickey for help.
“Was it?”
Gladys sighed as she dabbed at her eyes, pressing blue eyeshadow into the creases by her nose and right up to her painted eyebrows.
“I was gonna to surprise you. Well, I- It was always gonna be- It would’ve been for your birthday or for your anniversary here, whichever came first and now…”
You have a hollow laugh, hardly listening now.
“It’s fine, Gladys. Don’ worry.”
But John frowned
“What was?”
Gladys looked up.
“Hm?”
“What was the surprise?”
“Well, I went to the- Oh, what d’you call it? Henry sor’ed it for me a few months ago.”
“Henry?”
“Her uncle,” Mickey put in helpfully. “He’s a lawyer.”
“Really?”
“Well, not legally, I s’pose.”
“Anyway, he sorted it with Companies House and…” Gladys sighed again and sank back down into Mickey’s chair, her hands folded and shaking slightly in her lap. “I’m sorry, love. I had him add your name to the deed. I thought it would be a nice present. Wan’ed to show my appreciation for all your ‘ard work over the years, y’know.”
Silence fell in the kitchen. All eyes turned to you.
“You added…”
You tried to speak but found you couldn’t actually say the words out loud.
Mickey looked gobsmacked, like he too couldn’t believe what he’d heard. You’d worked together for years, he’d heard you harping on about your dream for longer than he’d known his own wife, about how you would own 64 Oslo Square one day and how wonderful it would feel, to be your own boss, to be in control for once in your life, to make decisions and create something that you and your community could be proud of.
You glanced sideways at John. Beside you, always right beside you. He never gave much away, not when it wasn’t just you and him, so his expression remained flat. But there, there in the outer corners of his eyes, in the slightest dip of his eyebrows, his bottom lip pulled between his teeth, you knew he was thinking exactly what you were.
How cruel. How cruel to give you what you’d always wanted, but give it too late. How cruel to give only to take away again.
“When did this happen?” John asked, ever the pragmatist, needing all the information before making a decision.
“Oh,” Gladys flapped an airy hand, not seeming to realise the gravity of her news. “Months ago. Who can keep track of that sort of- Before you started ‘ere, New Boy. At least.”
“So,” John looked at you, his eyebrows pushed together. “You’re part-owner?”
You opened your mouth to respond but Gladys grabbed your hand.
“You’ve just always been so wonderful and this place is practically half yours anyway, I thought, y’know, in a couple of years, I could retire and you could take over. It’s always been the plan.”
“Oh, Glad…” You forced a smile though it barely touched your eyes. “That’s really sweet of you.”
John pointed at the papers Gladys had carelessly discarded on the counter.
“Is that the contract you signed with Alastair?”
You frowned at him in consternation but his expression gave nothing away.
Gladys had barely begun to nod when John grabbed for the papers, gathering them up in his hands almost frantically. He scanned the pages, his clever eyes rapidly darting back and forth.
“Look, it doesn’t ma’er now,” Mickey said gently. “We’re not just gonna let you fade away, Glad, I promise. When I find a new job, I’ll see if they’ve got something for you too, eh? We’ll look after you. I promise. Won’t we, Captain?”
The idea stunned you even more than Mickey’s optimism, but Gladys looked up at you so helplessly, you couldn’t find it in you to be realistic with them.
“‘Course,” you said, forcing a smile. “We’ll sort somethin’ out.”
“She could always move in with you.”
“Well, let’s not get ahead of ourselves.”
Mickey smiled genuinely for the first time that day. Beside him, still wiping away tears and trying her best to catch her breath, Gladys was starting to smile too.
“You mean you don’t want me kippin’ on your sofa?”
“I don’t even have a flat!”
“I thought you was movin’ in with ‘andsome over there.”
“I haven’t decided y- ‘Ang on, how do you know about that?”
“Walls ‘ave ears.”
“You two, I swear to-”
“He doesn’t have it.”
You all stopped bickering. One by one, you looked round to find John still staring at the contract.
His gaze was still, his lips slightly parted. His fingers were tight around the paper, just as Gladys’ had been, like he was terrified someone might take them from him.
“He-” You blinked, trying to figure out what he meant, but nothing sparked. “What?”
Finally, John raised his head.
“He doesn’t have the bakery,” he said slowly, steadily, as if he could hardly believe it himself. “Skip, you’re part-owner. Gladys put your name on the deed. She signed this contract but you didn’t. He doesn’t have anything, this is-”
For the first time in weeks, you heart began to beat again.
“Worthless,” you whispered.
John raised the papers for you to see but couldn’t take your eyes off him. If you looked, it meant everything would change, and you weren’t sure if you could take any more life-altering news.
Either he was wrong, and your broken heart would only grow heavier. Or John was right, and the world would be turned on its axis yet again. It was safer just to keep looking at John, keep your eyes fixed on his, and find your answer there.
“Wait,” Mickey shook his head, stunned. “So you’re sayin’-”
“I’m saying 64 Oslo Square is yours, Skip.” John pushed the contract firmly into your waiting hands. “Not Alastair’s.”
There was a pause, just a beat of silence, and then the bakery erupted.
Gladys shrieked as she leapt up from her chair, pumping her two fists above her head, like her team had just scored before the final whistle. She practically fell into you as she threw her arms around your neck in a hug tight enough to bruise.
Mickey grabbed John by the waist and heaved him up over his shoulder, hollering at the top of his lungs.
“Oh, you beauty!”
John gripped Mickey’s broad shoulders as they span around and around.
“Well, hang on. You’ll need a lawyer to confirm-”
“Oh, shu’ up, New Boy. You’re a fuckin’ diamond!”
You clapped your hand over your mouth as you watched the boys but your smile was far too wide to cover. You realised you were laughing with Gladys, with Mickey, laughing so loudly and jubilantly that you were sure passersby would be able to hear you outside on the road.
When Mickey finally put John down, he staggered in his heels, his head probably spinning, but you reached out and caught his hand before he could trip.
John beamed as you pulled him into you, his eyes bright and shining.
“I thought I might kiss you,” you said, just loud enough for John to hear.
His expression hardly changed. He just smiled at you, warm and gentle, but his eyes were alight. John inclined his head, his long hair falling around his face as he let you pull him in even closer.
“Yes, please,” he said softly, his smile growing wider.
“You proper little-” Gladys stuck her hands between you and grabbed John’s face, pulling him towards her instead. “Bobby-dazzler!”
Pulling him down to her height, Gladys peppered John’s face in kisses, leaving his cheeks stained with pink lipstick. She was so much shorter than him, John was practically bent in half, his face all screwed up as she pressed kiss after noisy kiss to his skin.
“Looks like Gladys has taken care of that for me,” you laughed.
John managed to shoot you a crooked grin before Gladys held him at arm’s length again.
“You,” she practically squeaked. “You are getting a pay-rise, New Boy. And another kiss, c’mere.”
Gladys pulled him down again, kissing all over his face while John laughed softly and let her.
Finally, when she had released him and John could breathe again, Gladys threw her arms around you, then Mickey.
“C’mon, pub,” she said. “I’m buyin’ everyone a drink and I’m not takin’ no for an answer.”
Her words washed over you like water on the shore. You were faintly aware of your family talking, still giggling and clutching each other tightly as they moved to the door, but you couldn’t focus properly.
Heart still thrumming in your chest, you couldn’t figure out how to make your mouth move. You wanted to call out to the others, to laugh, to cry, anything, but you felt numb in the very best way.
It was yours. 64 Oslo Square was yours.
When you finally managed to get your tongue working again, you leaned your body against the doorframe, catching the door with your foot so that you could lean out and say,
“You lot go on ahead. I’ll catch up in a minute.”
Mickey and Gladys hardly seemed to hear you. They were practically skipping down the road, singing an old drinking song as they swayed in the direction of The Gardener’s Arms.
Only John hesitated. He looked like he might protest but seemed to understand what you meant. Against the late afternoon sun, he seemed to glow as he glanced back over his shoulder. Finally, he gave you a small smile, then followed after the others.
Crossing your arms over your chest, you stood in the centre of the shop floor, waiting for the door to close behind you. The July heat didn’t seem quite so harsh anymore. In fact, everything seemed to have shifted slightly. The world was as it was, as it had always been, but the lead-like weight in your chest and on your shoulders was gone. You hadn’t felt so light in years.
Slowly, you turned on the spot, taking in what was now all yours.
The dark wooden shelves lined with tins and jars, bags of coffee, and photos of Gladys’ proud parents. The pinboard on the far wall, the step you tripped over every morning, the till that tried to bite your fingers every time it closed. The counter painted bright scarlet, just like the writing over the door, a door enrobed in bright summer flowers, lighting up the whole road. All yours.
Slipping your hands round to rest on your hips, you walked into the kitchen.
A smile tugged at the corner of your mouth at the sight of the familiar, bottle-green stove. It seemed to smile back at you. The whole kitchen did. Battered old pots and pans, mosaic tiles that remembered the Blitz, the bins out the back. It was all so ordinary, all so completely conventional and prosaic.
You pulled in a long breath, filling up your lungs until you felt your chest rise. Yours.
The bakery’s front door opened with a bright chime. You heard quick footsteps cross the wooden floor, unfaltering, sure of their destination. With no one around, they echoed so unnaturally, it set your heart on edge.
You turned, smiling, and felt two hands slip around your jaw to cup your face, then John was kissing you. You knew it would be him. He’d promised you. John always kept his promises.
Your chest lurched as you pressed your palms against the backs of his hands, keeping them against your cheeks as his mouth moved against yours. A sob sat in your throat, half relief, half joy. You knew if you pulled away it would rise up, so you pressed closer, keeping your mouth against John’s.
He groaned softly against your lips, the sound starting in his throat and ending up in yours, and all the while he kissed you so sweetly, you could hardly believe you weren’t dreaming.
You grabbed handfuls of John’s shirt, keeping his narrow little body pressed tight against yours until you could almost feel his heart thumping against your chest. His hands slipped up into your hair, sending shivers over your skin as his blunt nails grazed your skin, then travelled down your back to your waist, where they found a home and squeezed softly.
It was simple, sweet, and when he pulled back to catch his breath, you could feel John’s hands were shaking slightly.
You half expected him to look worried, like he always did, so anxious and cautious, he could barely move a muscle. But there was no fear in John’s eyes. There was vulnerability and uncertainty, but only about what to do next, not of his actions, not about you.
“Oh, New Boy.” You smiled, lips tingling from the force of his kisses. “I said you’d be good for business, didn’t I.”
When John smiled back, something warm writhed in the pit of your belly. This stupid, lovely, gorgeous boy.
“Anything for you, love,” John said softly as he reached up and tucked some of your hair behind your ear. “You know me. Always anything for you.”
The next thing you knew, you had him pinned against the kitchen counter. He gasped sharply as the metal dug into his hip, but you were kissing him again before he had a chance to speak.
John’s hips fit so perfectly in your hands, you were sure he must’ve been made for you. His chest was warm and firm against yours as you leaned your body into his, and when one of his slim legs slipped between yours, you smiled, dragging your lips around the outline of his mouth.
“Easy, honey…”
John felt all the air squeeze from his lungs, his belly clenching. The edge of the counter was digging into his back, the metal cold even through his clothes, but he couldn’t care less. In fact, he liked it, liked how you kept him pinned against it, how little force you needed to get his body to comply, how your fingertips pressed into the tops of his thighs as you kissed him and kissed him.
You angled your head, catching his bottom lip with a playful flick of your tongue, and sucked, gently first, testing the waters, then again, harder.
John whimpered against your mouth as you kept him in his place but he never once made an attempt to move. In fact, his big hands slipped around your waist, holding your body against his, and when you pushed your knee between his thighs, you were certain you felt his hips rock towards yours.
He kissed like he needed it, needed you, like he’d been longing for this for a lifetime and could finally breathe. It had been a long, patient wait, but you were glad of it. Feeling John moan softly against your mouth, his needy hands grabbing at you, the culmination of months of craving, aching, hungry love, it was unlike anything you’d ever known, and when he pressed even closer, until his nose was crammed against your cheek and you couldn’t tell where you ended and John began, you knew he felt it too.
John whined pitifully when you finally pulled away. You hadn’t expected him to be quite so vocal but it made your chest heave.
John blinked down at you, panting, dizzy. Your face was flushed, and when his eyes dropped down to watch your tongue swipe his taste off your lips, his knees nearly gave out. His breath caught in his throat when he realised he could still feel you smiling against his mouth.
You were torn in several different directions. Mickey and Gladys would be expecting you in the pub. There were countless boxes, all waiting to be unpacked, sat upstairs for you. The cake batter you’d been about to bake still sat, abandoned, on the side, and you had a nice boy to kiss and kiss and kiss. The choice was easy.
Grinning, you took John’s hand and pulled him in the direction of the stairs.
“Where are we going?” he asked, his voice low and hoarse.
You pulled open the door up to your flat and shot him a bright smile.
“Dancin’.”
//
Master List
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nohoperadio · 3 months
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35: Aisle at the grocery store you never bother walking down? and/or 41: What's the oldest thing you own? and/or 38: What's the last filter you changed?
35: Aisle at the grocery store you never bother walking down?
I think the only aisle of (at least my current) main store I've literally never made a purchase from is the beers wines and spirits aisle. I don't never drink but my interest in it fell off dramatically over the course of my twenties, now my drinking is basically limited to when I'm at gigs and even then I don't always, it's just sometimes helpful for lowering my standards if I'm seeing a band I'm not sure whether I'll enjoy. But drinking as a means to socializing doesn't appeal to me these days, and just qua beverage nothing excites me either. (Probably an influence on my indifference is that I've seen a younger sibling basically destroy his life and arguably someone else's with the help of alcohol--it hasn't made me "against" the stuff per se but it does rather take away from the lustre. Uhh sorry to bring the mood down I'll keep it light from here on out!).
(I have an unopened bottle of rum in my home distilled by the fantasy author Ben Aaronovitch which my work gave me in acknowledgement of my being just generally swell, and I have no goddamned clue what to do with it. If I was smarter at cooking perhaps I'd think of something there. Maybe you have a suggestion??)
41: What's the oldest thing you own?
I don't have anything you'd call antique, but when I'm in a second-hand bookstore (which I'm not very often nowadays because when you work in a bookshop that kind of day trip is something of a busman's holiday) I'm very easily wooed by anything that looks old as balls, and if it's not so old as balls as to be an expensive "rare book" kind of item I will sometimes persuade myself that I should buy it, regardless of how objectively low the chances of me ever reading it are. I'm not sure which of these is actually the oldest, but maybe the poster child for this genre of unwise purchase is The Complete Self-Educator:
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Which is an 800-page book designed to give autodidacts a well-rounded education, it has sections on all the major sciences as well as English, French, philosophy, "English" and "World" history and other stuff, divided into lessons with little tests after each one. Pretty fun to flick through, it's got illustrations too:
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For some reason old books don't always list publication years inside, but there's a written inscription in this one saying it was gifted to an Edward I. Bryars of Bristol (From John Bull) on October 26th 1939. Which isn't mind-blowingly old but I can't think of anything older I have.
38: What's the last filter you changed?
See I don't even really know what this question is, and I'm not sure whether that's because I'm not American or because I'm just generally unworldly. What are all these filters I'm supposed to be changing! I can't remember ever interacting with a "filter". I'm googling about filters and there's stuff about water filters which I don't really know what that is but I'm sure I've never changed one, there's stuff about cars which I don't own a car and never will (I guess not being American plays a role in me getting to decide that), there's stuff about air conditioning but that isn't really a thing in this country (okay you guys win that one). I don't think filters are part of my lifestyle! I hope that's not too disappointing. Maybe I'm forgetting something super obvious idk.
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primrosedalliance · 2 months
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Just got back from Rome and am obsessed with Peter Wimsey’s Roman experience in the time period of Gaudy Night and the opening of Busman’s Holiday.
What do we know? We know he met with the pope (Pope Pius XI) and we know he bought some gemstones. What else did he do? Did he have a Roman tailor? A favorite bookseller? A private club for learned or fashionable men like himself? Did Bunter go with him?
And where did he stay--at some expat’s villa outside the city or in Piccola Londra in the Flaminio district? Oh but wait, in Gaudy Night there is a scene at a hotel overlooking the Pincian Gardens. Quick map check to get a short list of which places (still existing) that it could be--Grand Hotel Flora? Hotel de Russie (what was it called in 1935?), Hotel Quirinale?
Any reader have thoughts or imaginings on this? 
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crusherthedoctor · 3 months
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🌹
In case you need more cheering up :>
No resources. No sycophant. No hedgehog. It was just him, and the clothes on his back. A dire situation for anyone.
"...No...hedgehog...?"
Actually, none of that was any concern to him. The doctor had been through this routine before. If he could escape from the white abyss where time itself did not exist, then this peculiar land of fungus was a busman's holiday by comparison. Give him a couple of days, he'll build himself a way back home in no time.
"...No hedgehog..."
Unless.
"No hedgehog..."
Another idea came to him first.
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6! Give them a shout out
Of course! 😁 In no particular order:
Into the Deep End by Inarikiri and Wakinyan by SummerForever on FF.net
A Busman's Holiday and Moonlight Shadows by Marion Woods on SpectrumHQ.com
Bird of a Feather by Quiller on Tracy Island Chronicles
One Year at Koala Base and Accents by @mariashades
Looking for Atlantis by @teapotteringabout
Phone's Log by @uniwolfcorn
And
Fraternal Rhapsody by @skymaiden32
Tysm for the ask! 😁🌟💙🌟
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metalsongoftheday · 3 months
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youtube
Thursday, July 11: Headhunter, "Crack Brained"
Destruction was one of the most violent thrash bands of the late ‘80s, so much so that Schmier apparently needed a breather as the new decade dawned.  That was the most logical explanation for the once and future Destruction frontman taking a busman’s holiday with the aptly named Headhunter and going for something that could best be described as cantankerous power metal.  And with something titled “Crack Brained”, it was clear that this project was more about having a good time, even as Schmier couldn’t help but bash skulls.  The tune was actually as fun as its title suggested, bashing and rollicking through the bar with momentum and some groove.  This was clearly meant to be a fun banger and little more, but “Crack Brained” banged righteously and highly effectively.
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bandcampsnoop · 2 years
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2/9/23.
Extra were a Los Angeles, California band based on the talents of Jim Mills. Mills had been a member of various bands leading up to Extra's run in the early 2000s.
"F R double E" was reissued on Joyful Noise Recording's White Label series in 2020. There is a sunny, California vibe that you might find on Curation Records today. But, here Extra sounds like an amazing combination of Grandaddy, The Beatles and Busman's Holiday.
Bobb Bruno (Best Coast) was the "curator" who chose this album for reissue. He said that "F R double E" "sounds like a lost gem from the heyday of vinyl". I'm guessing he means it could be a 1970s AOR release.
If you have VIP membership through Joyful Noise, you can pick this up in the "private stash". Or you can find copies on Discogs.
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mywingsareonwheels · 1 year
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Modern technology/works/understanding/etc. I'd like to give "Endeavour" characters...
Morse: noise-cancelling headphones, an mp3 player with a huge amount of opera on it, non-alcoholic real ales (St Peter's Without, the alcohol-free Doom Bar, etc.), a subscription to medici.tv, awareness of Joyce DiDonato's voice. Shadi Bartsch's translation of The Aeneid. Awareness of ADHD and autism as Relevant To Him and some suitable online community. Also some therapy but that goes without saying...
Fred Thursday: Fred. <3 awareness of PTSD and C-PTSD as A Thing and both being relevant in his case (from the war & work and his childhood respectively) even more therapy than Morse needs. All those youtube channels with 24/7 livestreams of various wildlife. The complete works of Terry Pratchett. I'm almost tempted to say fandom spaces because the gentler of them might actually appeal to him a lot.
Max Debryn: more recent medical knowledge. Modern queer community including the more awesome online bits. The work of recently rediscovered composers such as Barbara Strozzi and Joseph Bologne. Possibly Carol Ann Duffy's poetry. Elly Griffiths' "Ruth Galloway" novels if he fancies a busman's holiday read. ;-) Other than that I think he has more to teach us than the other way around. :-)
Peter Jakes: see Fred re: PTSD and C-PTSD awareness and a huge amount of therapy. I'm tempted to add at least the option of more recent help with giving up smoking given a lot more is understood these days. A Netflix subscription and an excellent gaming system. Instant messenger things so he can keep in touch with Oxford friends while in the US.
Joan Thursday: an environment in which it's more usual for women to not give up their jobs on marriage (or not get married at all). A lot of more recent folk rock, singer-songwriter, pop, and indie music might hit the spot for her to add to what she already loves. Yet more therapy. An awesome community of intersectional feminists. The complete works of bell hooks.
Win Thursday: oh Win. Therapy, the Open University. Really good couples therapy with Fred because they clearly love each other so much but *boy* do they fuck up towards each other (mostly him, but not only him). Instant messenger for better keeping in touch with everyone. An air fryer.
Sam Thursday: more therapy, and addiction help. Anger management help. Oh bless him. <3
Reginald Bright: grief counselling, instant messenger, Abir Mukherjee's detective novels, online ordering of Indian groceries, places online to put his art and get it fully admired, and then instant messenger once he moves back to India.
Jim Strange: honestly? he's the only one who seems to weirdly thrive in the time he lives. But I *would* like to throw intersectional feminist, LGBT+ and anti-racism literature at him to help avoid his less admirable moments. And actually some online community (fandom even?) so he has more people to bond with that aren't at the Lodge or at work...
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damailbox · 1 year
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Darkwing Duck: Busman’s Holiday
Disney Adventures, June 1995
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The page from the history of Paltryville shown in netflix asoue:
The Baudelaires were unequivocally responsible for putting out the fire. "We happened to be enjoying a lovely picnic at our favorite picnic spot at the edge of the Finite Forest when we saw the flames," Mr. Baudelaire told representatives of the Official Fire Department once they arrived on the scene. His wife added, "As good citizens, it was our duty to leap into action. Would you care for a madeleine? They're freshly baked." Eyewitnesses claim Mr. Baudelaire repurposed a large cowbell, a hammer, and a ten-foot po.e to create a makeshift fire alarm, which he rang to warn the townsfolk to evacuate their homes, while Mrs. Baudelaire re-distributed the Lucky Smells water circulation system to put out the blaze. (Rest assured, I have billed her for the use of the water. It's not like it just falls from the sky!)
As if one day of heroics wasn't enough, the Baudelaires were also responible for re-locating the survivors, and setting them up with "good jobs in the city, where they can raise their families in peace and security, knowing that their homes are protected and non-flammable and that a reliable fire department is always nearby." A lovely sentiment, but I sure hope that my tax dollars aren't paying for that!
I myself was away on a busman's holiday in the city, where I took a bus to my favorite hot wood sauna, so I completely missed the fire, though I'm happy to report that my time in the sauna was quite relaxing. In fact, it was so relaxing that I fell asleep. When I woke up, either several minutes or several hours later (the sauna did not contain a cluck), I was very hungry, and ordered a lunch of alphabet soup, which I ate with my silver spoon, and a cigarillo, which is a bit like a cigar and a bit like a cigarette. My favorite part of eating alphabet soup is rearranging the letters to form my first name, which of course you readers already know to be
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