Having
proffered the excuse of lack of roadworthy transportation at the last minute, I
didn't let the young newspaper journalist get away with it that easily, and
picked him up to take him to the practice. To his credit, he pranced around
with them best of them and did a pretty good job of it, along with Joel the
cameraman. I somehow managed to successfully juggle my two young men and make
sure they felt welcome and had a good time. I even let Joel plant his goodbye
kiss on my cheek - the things I do for the Morris. (Although I did politely
decline his invitation to join him skiing the following week.)
The other
way in which I was more than willing to whore myself out for the greater good
was in agreeing to write a couple of articles for the very newspaper that had sent
along the young prancing journalist (I'll whip his job from under him yet). The
funny thing was, I'd lined up a meeting with the paper's co-founder, who just
happened to be the same reasonably handsome young man whose office window I
used to walk past when I lived in Wilton the previous year, casting the occasional
flirtatious smile in his direction. My admission of this sparked no
recollection on his part. I am now pretty sure he's gay.
It hasn't
been all work and no play, however; this week I have been brewing my own beer.
An issue arose, however, upon realising I had miscalculated (ok, not bothered
to calculate in the first place) how many empty bottles I would need, nor how
quickly I would need them. Taking samples and recording the specific gravity of
my two vats full presented me with the challenge of needing to find something
to put it all in for the secondary fermentation, and fast. A fellow middle-aged morris
dancer heroically came to the rescue with his enormous plastic barrel (a
gesture made less heroic, however, by the fact that he let himself into my flat
without knocking while I happened to
be sitting on the loo with the door not quite shut).
I still
needed more bottles, though. It was late, and it was dark, and I really had
nothing better to do on a Valentine's Day night (the Snowbobbing group I had
signed up to on the internet had been cancelled), so I nipped out to check my
recycling box. Nothing; I'd been on the sloe-gin-and-tonic last week. So,
headtorch affixed, I crept around the street, braving the rain and howling
winds, surreptitiously raiding my neighbours' recycling boxes. To my dismay and
disgust, it appears that the only things my neighbours digest are wine and the
Telegraph.
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