by Most Lee Harmless » Wed Aug 30, 2017 7:41 am
The children gathered tightly around the fire, the dark canopy of the night-sky above them and all was silence, save for the camels farting behind the tents. In the seat of honor, furthest away from the camels, was a wizen aged man : none knew his age, some said he was even older than Tom Lowe, but few of the small faces gazing at him in wonder could imagine such large numbers. His hypnotic voice droned on, in a slightly camp manner, as he told the ancient tales of heroes and villians : of Mahmood the Great, who slew the angry wasp and thus saved his tribe from certain death : of Fifi, daughter of Abu Ben Hump, who danced the prince into a deep sleep, whereupon she freed her captive lover and they fled, never to be seen again. Many tales passed his lips and the rapt faces of his audience filled with utter boredom, for he had told the same tales many times before. But, being well-raised children, beaten often and starved weekly, for the tribal leaders had found a copy of the 5-2 diet and thought it the words of some distant prophet, they listened patiently and hoped it would be over very very soon.
Suddenly, the sky was filled with hundreds of shining points of light, which streaked across the dark to fall to earth somewhere near the Great Craphouse of Bengahzeel : screams of terror filled the night air and panicked children rose, ready to run, to hide and pretend to be dead, anything to avoid yet another hour of this tedium. But the nanny's whips cracked and they were herded back to the fire. A smart whipper-snapper took his opportunity to change the subject and asked, loudly, 'Are those meteors?' The old man cuffed him angrily about the head : 'Imbecile! Fool! of course they are not meteors! They are the souls of dead magpies, coming home to rest in the bosom of Fifi!' The children gasped, for there had been many hundreds of dead magpie souls : what foul creature could have been responsible for such a slaughter? Now they were scared and thus quietly filed away to bed, from which they would not stir for fear of meeting such a depraved monster : the old man nodded wisely : job done, he thought, now for a beer.
-1 : Move to archive.