Home. What does it mean to you? Is it the physical place where
you live, where you can shut the door against the world and be surrounded by
your favourite things like bright copper kettles and warm woollen mittens? Or
is it the place you grew up, maybe where your parents still live? Perhaps
‘home’ is people? Family and friends who care for you, make you laugh, look out
for you, defend you, listen to you, share themselves, become part of who you
are? Or is home more of a spiritual thing? Like when you are wholly absorbed in
a favourite past-time, for example gardening, or sewing, or writing, and just
taking part in that activity makes you ‘feel at home.’ Perhaps you have visited
a different part of the world and immediately felt like you have ‘come home.’
Perhaps the concept of home is more a feeling of calm and comfort than a
physical building? Perhaps you are really lucky and home, for you, is a
marrying together of all these things.
Jane Austen, the author and clever observer of human nature
and relationships, said, ‘There is nothing like staying at home for real
comfort.’ And she is right, isn’t she, Dorothy Miggins?
‘I’ll say,’ says Dorothy Miggins, who has just this minute
been brave enough to open her eyes and is now standing in the back garden of her
home at Much Malarkey Manor on the Three Counties Border. She drops Toto onto
the grass because her wings have gone numb, and she inhales a huge breath of
familiar countryside air. (Thankfully, it is not the Season of Muck Spreading.)
From where she has arrived by whatever magic brought her
back, she can see the sheep in the surrounding fields. She can see the outlines
of the now bare-of-leaf trees silhouetted against the late afternoon sky. She
can see smoke rising from the chimney of Much Malarkey Manor which, despite
being wrenched from the ground and carried away in a cyclone, looks remarkably unchanged
– not a brick, nor a door, nor a window out of place. Dorothy Miggins is
wondering if she has imagined everything, that maybe she went up the garden for
some reason, fell over and knocked herself out in a freak accident with the
handle of a rogue wheelbarrow, and she had just come to.
But then she looks down and on her feet, instead of the
usual wellies she wears up the garden this time of year because of all the mud
and mire, there are the ruby slippers.
‘Gosh,’ she whispers.
Toto is galloping towards the porch of the Manor. Dorothy
Miggins follows and there, on the swing are Aunty Em Bennet and Uncle Tootsie
Hoffman. They are peeling sprouts. Dorothy Miggins tries not to sigh with
annoyance. It is Christmas Day tomorrow but she won’t let a few rock hard
sprouts spoil it. She has come to realise there are far more important things to
think about.
‘Aunty Em! Uncle Tootsie!’ she shouts, flinging wide her
wings and hugging them.
‘There you are!’ says Aunty Em Bennet. ‘We’ve been waiting
for you to come home so you can finish decorating the Christmas tree with Gonzo
the Fairy.’
‘Yes,’ says Uncle Toostie Hoffman. ‘We were worried about
you after you ran off after Toto, but you’ve found him, I see. Didn’t run very
far, then?’
‘How long have I been gone?’ says Dorothy Miggins.
Uncle Tootsie Hoffman looks at his pocket watch. ‘Oooh,
about an hour,’ he says. ‘I was just thinking about getting the car out and
coming to look for you.’
Weird, thinks Dorothy Miggins to herself. But no matter –
she and Toto are safely home now, and that is all that matters.
The End…
…Or is it?
Of course it’s not! We need a wrap party! This is an event
that happens after the shooting of a film is complete and the whole cast and
production team get together and have a jolly good knees up to celebrate. And
although this story wasn’t a film, it was based on a film and for that reason –
roll out the barrel and cheesy balls! Ah, cheesy balls…remember those? Crunchy
round things covered in dust and tasting approximately of some manky rank
cheese. Essential Christmas Fayre. Well, back in the 1970s, anyway.
Mrs Miggins is very relieved to remove her Greta plaits
because they have been pulling hard on her feathers and, she thinks, have made
her look more scowly and bad-tempered than usual.
‘Well,’ she says, slipping into her favourite dungarees and
vowing to NEVER wear gingham EVER again, ‘we made it. Another Much Malarkey
Manor Christmas Story completed.’
‘Yes,’ says Hugh Gnu, grateful to be free from the stuffy
and a bit niffy Toto costume. ‘Thank you for allowing me to be part of your mad
little December world this year. It’s been…interesting.’
In the corner of the dressing room Mrs Slocombe is performing
a series of exercises she has developed herself which are a combination of
Pilates and Qi-Gong. She calls it Qipong-Latte because she likes to end with a
cup of coffee.
‘I bet you’ve enjoyed working with Mrs Slocombe again,’ says
Mrs Miggins.
‘I have,’ agrees Hugh Gnu. ‘Maybe we should go back out on
the variety circuit again. What do you think, Betty?’
‘Absolutely not,’ says Betty Slocombe. ‘It’s going to take
me a month to sort out my back after this performance.’
Tango Pete is changing into something more sartorially
elegant than his scarecrow outfit, namely turquoise velour flares and flame
orange samba shirt, ruffles and all. ‘I’ve enjoyed it,’ he says. ‘Made me step
out of my character comfort zone for a change.’ Bambino Bobble Wilson agrees
although, to be honest, he has remained firmly within his character comfort
zone, having played a large, sometimes idiotic cat creature with
hyper-sensitivity and mild bullying issues.
‘I do love a party,’ sighs Mrs Pumphrey, who has decided to
stay in her Good Witch of the North costume because it is so glamorous and
lush. ‘Where’s Ptolemy Pheasant? He’s promised me the first dance.’
‘Here I am, you delightful creature,’ says Ptolemy Pheasant,
who, now unencumbered by his Tin Man costume needs a definite eye keeping on
him and his wandering wings. ‘Come on, dearest Gloria – let’s get this party
started!’ And off the two gallop, giggling like teenagers. I am jolly glad I confiscated
his chopper, that’s all I can say.
Flora Bijou Mybug, who has stunned everyone this year with
her excellent portrayal of Bob Frapples, King of the Flying Monkeys, is now
demonstrating her hitherto unknown skills as a disc jockey and is pumpin’ up da
volume in the ballroom, playing her themed set of songs containing the word
‘cat’. Like, ‘What’s New, Pussycat?’ ‘Love Cats’ ‘Stray Cat Strut’ ‘Cool For
Cats’ and anything by Kerry Katona. Magnus von Tasselltussell has requested the
song by Mud called, ‘The Cat Crept In The Crypt, Crapped and Crept Out Again’
but Flora Bijou Mybug is pretty certain he’s got the title wrong. Mrs Poo, who
has absolutely revelled in her role as Wicked Witch of the West has also stayed
in costume having dried it off next to the roaring fire in the drawing room.
‘I’m disappointed she melted,’ she says. ‘Personally, I
think she should have triumphed, evil over good. That’d make a change, wouldn’t
it?’
‘It would,’ I agree. ‘It would certainly subvert the
tradition of Christmas being the season of love, peace and goodwill to all. But
it wouldn’t be right or natural. Good always has to triumph over evil in order
that humanity can live in hope for the future.’
‘Fair do,’ says Mrs Poo. ‘Now, let me at the Jager bombs.’ A
Jager bomb, for those who don’t know, me included, is a shot cocktail made from
Red Bull and Jagermeister. It is supposed to taste like cough syrup and makes
you run mad with its heady mix of caffeine and alcohol. Sounds disgusting.
And so everyone is changed into their party gear and soon
the ballroom at Much Malarkey Manor is a-rockin’ and a-rollin, and everyone is
having a lovely time at the Christmas Eve Wrap Party.
I leave them to it. Closing the door of the ballroom I make
my way to the quiet, calm space of the library. Someone, probably Mrs Miggins because
she knows me best of all, has been in ahead and lit some candles and the fire.
The big comfy reading chair has been pulled up to the fire hearth and draped in
woolly rugs. A little table has been set to one side, and on top of the table
is a large pot of tea keeping warm under its cosy, and a slice of home-made
fruit cake. There’s a couple of magazines, too, and copies of ‘Cold Comfort
Farm’ and ‘Mapp and Lucia’, both of which I’ve been meaning to re-read for a
while now. A-top the reading pile is a parcel wrapped in brown parcel paper and
tied with a red ribbon. I pick it up and read the gift tag.
‘May you have warmth
in your igloo, oil in your lamp, and peace in your heart.’
I open the parcel. Inside
is a beautiful notebook, bound in fabric. On the front it says, ‘Keep Writing.’
It’s been a tough year, dear reader. If you’ve had a tough
year, too, I send you a hug and hope this story has made a smile or two for you.
And I hope you have lovely Christmas Day tomorrow, however you choose to spend
it. And finally, I send a heartfelt wish for 2020 to be kind. To us all.
Comments
KJ
Bravo Denise, the 2019 Christmas extravaganza will go down in the annals as a cracker. Thank you for keeping us so supremely entertained. Each installment has brightened my day. It's so sad that it's come to an end. Perhaps it hasn't??
I hope you and His Lordship have a relaxing and very Happy Christmas x
I’m currently not in ‘my’ home, but staying with a very dear sister in a home-from-home, and looking forward to seeing family later. A very happy Christmas to you and Andy and to all your readers, may you all find peace and happiness today. Right, better get up and put those sprouts on if they’re going to be ready by 1 pm ...