Tag Archives: scottish fiction

Tony and LaFlamme have been arrested for a crime they didn't commit. At least they don't think they did. One of the prison guards is an American and during the long night this prompts an unusual dream.

 

I had no sooner drifted off than Mitt Romney was asking me to assist him in his presidential campaign. I told him Republican Party races were just about who could oppose abortion and gay marriage most vociferously and that he didn’t need me for that. But Romney insisted.

I knew Romney’s body had been taken over by body-snatchers and that he was a dangerous threat to civilisation. Unfortunately, in my dream this was also the case. He was trying to convince me I paid too much tax, his wide eyes and fixed grin reminding me of a cryogenecised Ted Danson. I told him it wasn’t so much that I paid too much but that he didn’t pay enough and that if he really wanted to give something back to the country he could start by contributing more than the paltry 13% of his ludicrous investment income he did at present.

But it was clear the real Romney had left the building years ago. This Mormon husk was all that remained and you could no more have a conversation with him than an eggplant. Not that that has stopped candidates in the past. There is nothing in the constitution to prevent eggplants taking office, as was demonstrated by the 43rd president.

Romney persisted, telling me that although socialised medicine was considered the red menace, he had an idea for a national health service. Rather than be paid by the government through collected taxes, it involved individuals paying large multinational insurance companies for cover. I said it sounded interesting but was clearly in its early stages.

Before I could ask for more detail, he was handing me a gun, saying: “Welcome to America.” It was at this point my dream became a nightmare. I was greeted by a marching parade as I stepped off a ferry. Somebody presented me with flowers, and a garland was draped around my neck. There were calls for a speech. I panicked.

“This is all happening a bit fast,” I said in a terrified whimper. “I love your movies, but I’m not sure I’m ready to live here. I think you’re probably all quite nice, but whenever I see any of the people you vote for and the insane things they have to say in order to get you to vote for them, I feel frightened.”

The crowd began chanting: “One of us, one of us.” I turned and tried desperately to get back on the boat. Unfortunately Romney had me by the legs and was clinging on for dear life. I was frozen to the spot, probably an extension of the cryogenic process that fixed his grin.

“Are you having a seizure?” said LaFlamme in her caring way, waking me in our cell.

“Oh, thank god I’m in prison,” I said.

I Dream Of Romney

Tony and LaFlamme have been arrested for a crime they didn't commit. At least they don't think they did. One of the prison guards is an American and during the long night this prompts an unusual dream.   I had no sooner drifted off than Mitt Romney was asking me to assist him in his … Continue reading I Dream Of Romney

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In which Tony encounters a feline with an unusual pronunciation of the word ‘meow.’

 

The Admiral had found a particularly fascinating episode of ‘Extreme Trams’ on Youtube and was glued to his monitor. It wasn’t such an unusual state for The Admiral and it was best not to interfere, as this was preferable to his frequent bouts of boisterousness.

“Don’t you have any milk?” I said, trying to find things to combine that might result in a refreshment.

“On the fridge,” he said.

On the fridge? You know milk ought to be stored in the fridge in order to keep it cold.”

“Ordinarily, yes,” he replied. “But I was experimenting and it’s now behaving like a reverse hotplate.” I ran a finger over the fridge’s surface and sure enough a layer of frost had developed. The milk was practically stuck to it.

I heard a scratching at the front door followed by a thin high-pitched voice, as if a ten-year-old had been compressed within a shoebox. I thought it might be Cyndi Lauper.

“Could you put a little milk in that saucer?” said The Admiral, rising and, without removing his gaze from the monitor, stepping to the front door. For a shoebox, it was large and had very long hair. And whilst its skulking demeanour was typical of its species, it had a most unusual cry.

“Noooo,” said the cat, in a plaintive monotone.

“Yeeees,” said The Admiral.

“Noooo,” said the cat.

“Yeeees,” said The Admiral.

“Excuse me,” I said. It’s not that I wasn’t bemused by an apparently talking cat, but I felt if this was the level of debate we were going to have, I might as well watch Scottish Questions. “Since when do you have a cat?”

“It’s not mine,” said The Admiral. “I believe he belongs to that chap around the corner.”

“What kind of person teaches their cat to speak?”

“I think you’ll find,” said The Admiral, “that the results of most experiments with verbal communication in cats have tended to be negative. This is not so much a talking cat as one with an unusual pronunciation of the word ‘meow.’”

“But when you said ‘yes’, he said ‘no.’”

“That’s not really a conversation though, is it? More like a Beatles song. Were I to ask him about Boyle’s Law, he’s unlikely to explain that, assuming temperature remains unchanged, the absolute pressure and volume of a confined gas are inversely proportional.”

“Isn’t that just because he didn’t study thermodynamics?” I said.

“Hmm,” said The Admiral. “Admittedly, he may have spent more time on Kinetic Theory. Why don’t you try talking to him?”

“Ok. What’s his name?”

“I don’t know,” said The Admiral. “Let’s call him Boyle.”

I crouched down to welcome the visitor. “Hello, Boyle,” I said, and immediately felt ridiculous.

“Noooo,” said the cat.

“Would you like some milk?” I poured a little into the saucer.

“Noooo,” said the cat, rushing towards it and eagerly lapping it up.

“You see?” said The Admiral. “His response is not necessarily negative. In fact, we don’t even know if he is speaking English. Were he a native Pole, this would actually mean ‘yes’. Or were he Japanese it would mean ‘of.’

“He’s multilingual?” I said.

“I don’t think you’re quite grasping this,” said The Admiral, doing his best to hear an explanation of electrical conduits whilst continuing our discussion. “He’s just an eccentric verbaliser, a bit like yourself.”

“But he must have been trained to talk like that.”

“Actually,” said The Admiral, “I believe it may be the other way round. The chap around the corner is quite the curmudgeon and I suspect the cat has trained him to take a negative view of life. He may have become so accustomed to hearing the word ‘no’ that it now plays a huge part in his daily discourse. In which case, Boyle has a lot to answer for, don’t you, Boyle?”

“Noooo,” said the cat.

It was a very intelligent cat who could not only speak several languages but had trained his master to behave in such a manner. I began to have some sympathy for the man who had simply been conditioned, and it made me wonder about those whose only notion of positivity is to continually repeat that we are positively screwed.

 

 

Not So Much A Talking Cat

In which Tony encounters a feline with an unusual pronunciation of the word ‘meow.’   The Admiral had found a particularly fascinating episode of ‘Extreme Trams’ on Youtube and was glued to his monitor. It wasn’t such an unusual state for The Admiral and it was best not to interfere, as this was preferable to … Continue reading Not So Much A Talking Cat

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