I
think I'm dead.
I
awoke a few minutes ago.
I'm dressed in a pair of familiar, faded Dangermouse pyjamas,
and I'm lying in what looks very much like my old bed, with my
old Star Wars duvet and my collection of bingo markers stacked,
labelled and hermetically sealed in their special containers just
under the photo of Carol Voderman.
Mother
came in just now with a tray. Scrambled egg on toast, a cup of
sweet tea and a little gingerbread man with a smiling face.
Just
the way I like it.
All
as it should be.
Except
last time I checked, I was inside a stolen plane, plummeting towards
certain death... my mother was dead and I'm sure I threw away
my Dangermouse pyjamas sometime during the mid nineties.
I'm
both confused and hungry. I'm going to eat something.
I
have eaten my scrambled egg, toast and gingerbread.
I
have drunk my tea.
It
was very nice, although the crusts had been cut from my toast.
I always used to eat my toast sans crust, but I tried asking for
the waitress to cut the crusts from my toast once in a roadside
diner in Birmingham, America, early on in my travels.
She looked at me as if she had just popped a Werther's original
in her mouth and forgotten to take the wrapper off, and suggested
cutting off something else entirely.
So over the past few months of hard travelling I have grown accustomed
to taking my toast straight, and coping with whatever crusts life
threw at me, both figuratively and literally.
Mother
always used to cut the crusts from my toast.
It's this attention to the little details - like the crusts, like
the stain on my duvet just over Han Solo's blaster, like the crack
in the bedroom window where the badger dropped from the sky, like
the loose floorboard (under which I keep the bingo marker reputedly
used by Sir Thomas Telford himself in the bingo marathon of 1893)
- that concern me.
If this was, as I first thought, some sort of elaborate copy of
my bedroom created by the Americans or the military or Country
Life, then I would notice subtle things wrong with it, but it's
absolutely perfect in every tiny detail.
Except
my Mother is here, and my pyjamas are here, and that's impossible.
So
I must be dead, and heaven looks exactly like Shropshire, which
really just confirms what I've been saying all along.
I'm
not dead.
It
turns out there is a more rational explanation.
The
plane did crash, but we had two important factors in our favour.
It had run out of fuel, so we didn't explode, and we crashed into
the swamp that extends from my old back garden to the edge of the
Bletchley Road, which lessened the impact of the impact.
To illustrate, try dropping a marble into some thick soup, or a
trifle, or some mushy peas, or a tub of hair gel, or now I come
to think of it, try dropping a marble into some swamp.
Then try dropping the same marble onto a concrete floor. You'll
see how important the swamp factor was in our landing.
From
my bedroom window I can see the last of Morris One's fuselage slowly
sinking into the marshy ground just behind the greenhouse, like
Artax in the Neverending Story, conveniently and completely destroying
any evidence that I borrowed a luxury jet.
Yet again, Shropshire provides.
My
Mother is alive. It turns out she faked her own death so I would
come home. Which, when you think about it, is perfectly rational
behaviour for a loving Mother who misses her little poppet.
And
I did throw away my Dangermouse pyjamas in 1996, but Mother retrieved
them from the bin bag.
At
first I was angry that my Mother had faked her death.
Angry that she had lied to me, angry that she had concocted an elaborate
story that made me blame myself for her death, angry that she didn't
let me do my own thing.
Then
she told me she had recorded every single episode of Countdown I'd
missed while I was away, and to be honest (with the thought of all
those unwatched hours of conundrums awaiting me) it was hard to
stay angry.
Even
using long play, she used sixteen E180 VHS tapes.
Jim
Hawkins of ´óÏó´«Ã½ Shropshire interviewed me today. My words will be
going out on the airwaves to the good people of Shropshire, and
I expect a significant media frenzy following the broadcast.
I may
have rambled a bit on the radio show. I remember pointing out that
even the gravel in Moreton Say seems that bit more special then
the gravel anywhere else.
It was just the excitement of media attention, the professional
studio, the complimentary cup of percolated coffee and the little
visitor's badge that said "Morris Telford - ´óÏó´«Ã½".
I could feel the buzz of excitement in the radio studios as I arrived,
the receptionist...
I've
arrived on the Local Radio scene and the world is once again my
oyster.
From
now on I'm Mr Action, Mr Go-Getting-Day-Seizing-Super-Achiever,
Mr Man of the Hour.
Morris
Telford - Media Dynamo.
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Spent
the day watching Countdown.
20
episodes back to back, one after the other, a non-stop Countdownathon.
It was one of the happiest days of my life.
It's
funny, when you watch Countdown in bulk like that, you can tell
which episodes are filmed in groups.
For a few episodes Carol's hair will look one way, then it will
change for the next few and so on. It was quite fascinating.
I wrote a brief email to Channel 4 suggesting they re-run old episodes
of Countdown back to back all day, every Wednesday. I'm sure it
would boost the ratings.
During
the salad years, when I was saving up (preparing for my Salopian
Odyssey), I fashioned a rudimentary life-size replica of the Countdown
studio out of farmyard machinery and scarecrows.
The big clock was made from the flywheel of a combine harvester,
the desks were bales of hay, the scoreboard I borrowed from a local
cricket club.
And I spent ages altering some scarecrows to look like Carol Vorderman,
Richard Whiteley and Richard Stilgoe... Well, I spent ages altering
some scarecrows to look like Carol Vorderman and Richard Whiteley.
After spending all yesterday watching Countdown, I dreamed about Countdown.
I dreamed of a world where every corner was dictionary corner, every
woman looked like Carol and on the hour, every hour the church clock
rang out the countdown theme tune - "Da-da da-da diddly-dumÂ….
Doooo!".
It
was beautiful.
Watched more Countdown today too.
To
be fair though, I had to watch Countdown, I can't go out.
As an expression of her love for me, my Mother has hidden my passport
and locked me in my bedroom. She isn't very keen on me setting off
again to change the world.
When I say she isn't very keen, if I start to talk about travelling
again she puts her hands over her ears and starts screeching "Mother
can't hear you" in a sing-song harpy lilt that makes my teeth
itch.
Talking
of teeth, Aunt Felicity just got back from the dentists. Aunt Felicity
suffers with 'dry sockets', which is only slightly more unpleasant
than it sounds.
I'm not sure if they actually re-moisten the sockets at the dentists
or just fill them in, but I do know that it affects everything that
Aunt Felicity says for the week or two after the dentist appointment.
Trent,
Obican and the remaining Alaskans came round again this morning and
interrupted Countdown.
Aunt
Felicity answered the door.
When they asked if I was in, I could hear through the gap under
my bedroom door that she was trying to say "Yes, come in, he's
in his room".
...But it came out as a sort of strangled, retarded sound and they
left presuming it was some local dialect they were unfamiliar with.
I'm
sure they'll be fine anyway. I've bought them a barn and they are
equipping it with items salvaged from Morris One.
They will soon have one of the few barn conversions in the area
to boast a Jacuzzi, a home cinema, an inflatable staircase, an open
fireplace built from a converted jet engine and enough complimentary
peanuts to last nine lifetimes.
I'm
going to break out tomorrow, but while I'm here I may as well watch
the rest of the Countdown tapes.
Da-da
da-da diddly-dum Doooo.
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