Wednesday, 4 December 2013

THE MOVING MOON WENT UP THE SKY

Hello and welcome to the December edition of The Autolycan.  In November this blog brought you possibly the smallest story ever told, so from there it seemed only natural to move on to the greatest story ever told.  This version includes a raw young police officer, and a moving star.  

Or does it?

Hope you like it, and this could well be the first blog to wish you a Happy Christmas!

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                              THE MOVING MOON WENT UP THE SKY

Messed up at work today? No matter how much of a berk you end up looking in front of your colleagues, you can always console yourself with the thought that at least you're not the police officer who called for back up after spotting the moon.

                                                                           The Huffington Post



Dear Mum,

Sorry I’ve not been in touch for a bit, me and PC Disney from down the nick has been on a secret mission, all very hush hush, but it looks like one of us at least come up smelling of roses!

It all started when the Super calls us in, and said as how we was being transferred to the Royal Protection Squad, only we wasn’t to tell nobody. Security, like. Couple of months in and the closest we ever got to a royal was a bloody corgi, but even so, a bit of a feather in the cap, something to big up when it comes to the Promotion Board.

After a bit, with nothing much going on, we was called in again and told we was being seconded to Persia, three kings off on a bit of a journey, not much protection of their own, could we go and help the local lads out? Course, nobody had no bloody idea where Persia was, or wouldn’t say more like, somewhere in the East they said. We thought maybe Barking, Dagenham, even Margate, but the Super just looked at us funny like.

What a turn up when we gets there! First thing we noticed when we gets off the boat is a load of geezers trying to sell stuff, and PC Disney goes all weak at the knees about what the bloke said was a genuine Persian rug, very cheap, what he thought would like nice in his Mum's conservatory. He can be a bit wet behind the ears sometimes, young Disney. Then he wonders if we ought to feel the collars of a load of women in skimpy clothes shaking their hips and bellies around. Since they had no collars though, nor nothing much else for that matter, I said we'd better turn a blind eye, so to speak. You get to know a bit about discretion in this job.

Anyway, little bloke bustles up, was we Sergeant Hopkins and PC Disney, come over for the Royal Protection? We says yes, and gets bundled into this basket on wheels. The bloke nips round the front, gets in between the shafts and tows us away! Straight off Disney was on about how this basket wasn't going to meet the licensed taxicab Conditions of Fitness, but I stamped on his foot, so that was OK. Discretion again, but honestly Mum they just start them too young these days.

We gets to this big palace and climbs out of the basket to be met by some top brass, before we gets whisked off to meet these three kings, all medals and big hats and sunglasses. Bloody hell, says young Disney, they don’t look like kings to me, you expect battledress, helmets, you expect them to shout ‘God for Harry’ and that half the time, if you want my opinion they look like...

I give him the hard eyes. Leave it out, PC Disney!, I instructs, authoritative like. When you've sat through as many bloody equality and diversity courses as I have you get a feel for what's going to land you in strife. He'll learn. Please God he'll learn. Then he says hang about, have you clocked what they’re carrying, that looks like gold to me, and that perfume smells a bit posh, like what the Mrs puts on for foreign invaders, only dearer. God knows what that other stuff is though.

Much bowing and clapping of hands, these three introduced as Kings Gaspar, Melchior and Balthasar and I notice my youthful colleague sucking his pencil like a primary school kid and looking long and hard at his pocket book. Me, I have enough trouble spelling kings’ names like Æthelstan. They tried and tried when I was at training college, but I never could get the hang of the diphthong.

Anyway, you won’t hardly credit this, but the gold and the perfume and the other stuff was presents for a baby what had been born bloody miles away in another country, and this lot was planning to find the baby by following a star in the sky, with us protecting them and the presents. Have you ever heard the like of it?

Funny sort of set up, it must have been that perfume addling our brains so we says OK, but we’re not sure about that other present, the third one. Is it a Hazardous Substance within the meaning of the Act? Does it need a Safety Certificate? What about an Export Licence? Don’t worry, they says, its myrrh, and me laddo stares hopelessly at his pocket book again.

I don’t suppose you’ve ever ridden on a camel, have you Mum? You don’t get many round Leytonstone, anyway, they’re horrible animals, not easy to ride and vicious buggers into the bargain. Ever vigilant, Disney was wondering if we could do these kings under the Dangerous Dogs Act, but I spotted the flaw in his thinking straight off and neither of us knew whether there was a Dangerous Camels Act, probably not. But after a bit these kings decide the star has led them to just exactly where they want to be. Don’t ask me how, but they had found a baby all wrapped in what they called swaddling clothes – in a stable of all places – and quick as you please they’re down on their knees offering it these presents. What a baby’s supposed to do with that lot was beyond me, but there was a load more bowing and chanting and hand clapping so they all seemed happy.

What with the long journey and all, we decides to get a bit of shuteye, me first with himself on watch for a couple of hours, then we’d change over. We thought his rug might come in handy, but when he unrolled it it kind of fell to bits. Anyway, useless bugger, he couldn’t have stayed awake more than five minutes after me, and then we was both asleep for ages. I woke up to find him shouting and hollering at the kings, seems he was trying to tell them the star had moved away somewhere else, they must have the wrong baby, and we’d better all saddle up again quick, we might need back up. Well, they don’t take kindly to that, they got a very nasty look in their eyes, and there’s big trouble brewing. Funny thing was, when I have a good look at the sky, I think the boy wonder could well be right for once, perhaps it has moved again, but diplomacy and quick thinking is something else you pick up in this job, bloody sight more useful than knowing the far end of a diphthong.

So I walks up to the group, and one of the kings turns to me and starts mouthing off about PC Disney. I decides not to pursue a foul and abusive language to a police officer rap, and adopts what I hopes is a calm and persuasive tone of voice. PC Disney only trying to be helpful, but in a foreign country, touch confused after long journey and a bit of kip, wakes up after two or three hours, the moon has risen, confuses the moon with their star, easy mistake, no harm done. I kick him to let him know he’s to fall in and go along with what I say, he does so, they calm down and we’re all mates again.

When we gets back home, we gets called in again. Super pleased as punch, kings happy with our work, feather in the force’s cap, all that. Then he hums and hahs a bit, shifts in his chair and we wonders what’s coming. Strictly off the record, he says, just you and me like, was it the moon or their star then? Only we’ve all got a few quid on it at HQ.

Search me, I says. Probably the moon, but could have been a planet, a star, a comet, no bloody idea really. I see, says the Super and he comes over all confidential like. You see, he says, I already got the first two bits right on a three part accumulator. I knew what swaddling clothes was, and I knew what myrrh was. It would be good if it was definitely a star. I wouldn't forget how you knuckled down to this job. Finest traditions of the service, all that. See what I mean?

At this point Deadhead Disney gets a rush of blood, thinks he's being offered one of them fast track promotions, God help us.

I see, he says, and takes a deep breath. Well, he says, when you wish upon a star your dreams comes true.

The Super looks at him hard. You're learning, lad, he starts, but then the boy
interrupts him. Unwisely, as it turns out. Does that mean that anything my heart desires will come to me, he asks.

The Super winks at me, then turns heavily to young Disney who's looking very full of himself.

…....only you're not learning the right things, he says. Your heart may very well be in your dreams, and nothing wrong with that. But don't get clever with me son, I'm not bending no rules for you, makes no difference who you are.

Have a good Christmas, Mum, mind how you go.

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ANAGRAM CORNER

Not a very Christmassy anagram, I'm afraid, but perhaps one for all you celeb watchers.......

                                         NIGELLA LAWSON, CHARLES SAATCHI


 
                                           AHA!  CLASSICAL WOES!  ENTHRALLING!
                    

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