Jump to content

Recommended Posts

*Steady Old Man, that creature isnt muzzled and could easily turn savage - see late notes on the "Dog Attack" thread - one wrong glance and the thing becomes a killer ... and the labrador could give you a nasty nuzzle as well*


*Tentatively feels DM's nose - cold and ... wet (yuk!)*


*Clearly she is out for the count, hearing champage being poured close by normally brings DM round from the deepest coma*


*Bends down and whispers into DM's shell-like - "Gary Barlow is nearby and is in need of a cup of tea and slice of cake" - stands back*

*darkness reigns*


*enters barefoot and clad in pyjamas, and waveringly holding aloft an improbable candle*


(In trembling voice) Puss, is that you making that strange scratching noise? I thought I heard you fighting with a fox earlier...and I saw a sinister figure outlined in the windowframe for a second, but decided it was probably just Mockney. Now I think I'll wander deeper into the darkness without telling anyone where I'm going...are those cellos playing?


*trips over limp body sprawled on the rug*


DM!? No!!!! Oh, the tragedy, what a fate! Has she had her last alcopop? Extraordinary, she has a smile on her face, perhaps she was welcoming her killer into the Quiet Room just as the blow fell!


*a shadowy figure on the sofa uncrosses its legs, stands up gracefully and stalks forward.*


(In relieved tone) You here? Thank goodness, I think someone may have killed Dulwichmum! What's that in your hand? But, but....


*turns to camera, and in perfectly pitched soprano honed by years of training*


SCREAAAAAM!!!

"OHMYGOD! I have one of my heads..."


*Looks up wisfully from floor, clutching head shrouded in lush glossy dark hair...*


"Whatever has happened here?"


"Oh officer! You really are frightfully manly, I love it when a chap can sweep a woman up into his large and hairy arms. Let me see your hands sweetie, you have fingers just like William Rose sausages, yum!"

*Lawks! D-M we have a mystery on our hands. Forget your swoonings over hairy sausages, for we must search for Moos*


*I was in the anti-chamber sipping on camomile tea and nibbling on a Rich Tea, waiting for your to recover from your "swoon" when I heard a piercing and rather discordant screech come from this very room. Assuming that you were seeing the giant mauve axolotle called "Turpin" again - I dashed in*


*Now we find that DM is safe, save a hang-over and insipient nymphomania, and Moos has disappeared in her jym-jams*


*Moos-minor will be distraught and Mr Moos, being German, will be a little distracted; his Prussian dueling scars will have gone pink and he will be twiddling with that odd shaving brush thing in his hat*


*This is a case for ..... The Thin Man - for it is I, nearly, if I breath in and put my corset on*

*I did wonder where you were going with this Moos - I mean you disappeared first and thus removed yourself from the potential plot*


*Now, stop messing about, you cant be dead, your chest is moving, I have observed it closely*


*Does Herr Moos have Duelling scars perchance?*


*Have a schnaps and a slice of Battenburg while you ponder the matter*

Mr. Moos is not a Prussian duellist, he's a perfectly ordinary (if remarkably handsome) 21st century Londoner who happens to have been born in a North German city, so don't you put your racist stereotypes on my man - ooh, Battenburg, LECKER.


*undermines well-meant finger-wagging lecture by scoffing inordinate amounts of cake*

  • 2 weeks later...

*careful Kel, i've been sitting here in the dark for a week now all on my own*

*enjoying the silence that is the Quiet Rooom*

*supping a beer or two (jeysus, are those really all my bottles?)*

*Just watch out for the "cultures" in the corners*

*if you listen carefully you can hear the muffled sounds of the Forum up above.....*

*still, if you must, open a blind or two*

*then come and have a drink*

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • There's not enough people talking about this - I've often worried about it too  One busy staff's mistakes will not make my pockets lighter, thank you very much. Thanks Sue and all the best for the new year. 
    • I don't want to name a shop, but I have twice at this busy time of year had an issue, and yesterday was overcharged when buying a number of small things. If you are using a shop which doesn't give an itemised receipt, or doesn't give a receipt at all, just be aware that it might be a good idea to check that you are not paying over the odds (and if using cash, that you are given the right change for what you handed over). When staff are busy they might make mistakes.
    • As I had a moan on here about the truly abysmal Christmas meal we had at The Cherry Tree last year, I am redressing the balance by saying we had a really excellent Christmas meal at Franklins last night. Every course was absolutely delicious and  really well cooked. The staff were lovely despite being exhausted and run off their feet. In particular, my sea bass was a large portion and cooked to perfection, in stark contrast to the small dried up portion The Cherry Tree provided, from which I was barely able to scrape a teaspoonful of flesh (that is not an exaggeration). And our Franklins meal cost less than half what we paid at The Cherry Tree (to be fair, that was on Christmas Day so the Cherry Tree costs would have been higher, but that doesn't excuse the appalling quality meal). Thank you again to Franklins for restoring our faith in eating out at Christmas! 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...