Christmas Eve. A time of peace and calm before the
excitement of the Christmas Day celebrations. For making time to sit down and
take stock, for checking that everything is ready. A time of anticipation and
making wishes, of looking forward and starting a celebration.
Or, if you are the residents of the newly resurrected Much
Malarkey Manor, a time for all hands to the decking of the halls with boughs of
holly, fa la la la la la la la laaaaaaa!
The local villagers, hearing the news that Much Malarkey
Manor is once again open for business, trudge up the snow-covered hill to help with the moving of furniture, the unpacking of boxes and to take down the enormous Big Top Yurt which,
quite frankly, has been a bit of an eyesore for the past year. They also want a
bit of a nosey around the new house, and they also know that come lunchtime,
Mrs Slocombe will be serving up a lovely leek and potato soup with cheese on
toast, and mince pies and cream for pudding.
Mrs Slocombe is in her element in her new kitchen! It is
twice the size of the old one, with the addition of a rather nice breakfast
room. ‘That’ll stop my kippers getting chilly in the corridor to the dining
room,’ she says, approvingly. She has cast aside the instruction manual to the
new eight-burner range cooker, too. ‘I can work this using my intuition and
with my eyes shut!’ she says. ‘And this middle oven is the perfect size for one
hefty roast badger!’
Mrs Pumphrey is busy preparing all the guest bedrooms for
those who will be staying over to join them for Christmas Day. Fresh linen,
little tea and coffee trays with homemade biscuits, the best in toiletries,
fluffy bath towels and scented candles. She did have some bowls of pot pourri
but can’t find them anywhere. Tango Pete walks past at some point, carrying a
pile of board games for after dinner fun, and makes a comment that the fancy
vegetable crisps he found tasted a bit odd and that he wasn’t sure they should
smell of flowers either.
Mrs Poo has been out to the Estate woodlands with Kenneth
the Phantomime, to cut evergreens for the decorations. Of all the Manor Estate,
the hens have taken great comfort during the year that the woodlands have
remained a constant place of comfort and familiarity for them.
‘Should we have a Yule log this year?’ says the Phantomime,
spotting a likely candidate on the ground where a beech tree has come down
during the latest storm.
‘Hmmmmm,’ says Mrs Poo. ‘Perhaps not, eh? But we can pop
into the village for some seasoned logs to put in the newly installed log
burners.’
‘Much safer than open fires,’ agrees the Phantomime.
‘Is William Shakespeare hanging around for Christmas?’ says
Mrs Poo, realising she hasn’t seen him since the previous evening.
The Phantomime shakes his head. ‘No, he’s gone,’ he says.
‘He said that as much as he enjoyed meeting everyone, he doesn’t really belong
here. Said something about going to London, to catch up with an old friend in
Deptford, and then heading back to Stratford-Upon-Avon to see if things have
changed much in the last four hundred years.’
‘Ah,’ says Mrs Poo. ‘Probably for the best, eh?’
As the bright, frosty-blue skies of daytime close in and
night-time takes over with her velveteen, star-dotted cloak, a calmness finally
settles over the new Much Malarkey Manor. Mrs Miggins has spent some time
chatting to the ghosts who are very happy to be settled in their new home and
not stuck in the ether. She has invited them to join in the evening
celebrations but our new ghosty friends have politely declined having
discovered the exciting games room, gym and spa facilities in the west wing.
And so, as the Moon emerges and begins her watch over the
turning of Christmas Eve into Christmas Day itself, the Manor curtains are
closed, the woodburners are lit and the four lady hens, Bambino, Nell, Ptolemy,
Tango Pete and the Phantomime settle around the table in the dining room and
enjoy together a lovely supper of many cheeses, many biscuits, many pickles and
three varieties of panettone (traditional, chocolate chip, and kipper and
mustard) whilst Christmas music plays over the new integral sound system and a
Christmas tree twinkles merrily in the window.
Mrs Miggins stands and raises her glass of homemade damson
champagne. Everyone around the table falls silent.
‘I should like to raise a toast,’ she says. ‘To both the old
and the new. May we remember the past and use it to make the future a better
place!’
‘Hear, hear!’ says everyone.
‘It’s been a funny old year,’ says Mrs Slocombe. ‘But we did
it, didn’t we? We lived it and we survived, and here we are now, in our new
home with goodness knows what waiting for us in the future.’
‘Hear, hear,’ says Mrs Pumphrey. ‘And I have to say that I,
for one, won’t miss living in the Big Top Yurt. It was fun whilst it lasted and my tightrope walking skills have come on a treat, but I’m glad to be living in a house that doesn’t require its flaps reinforcing
in a high wind.’
Mrs Poo. ‘I shall miss the Big Top a bit,’ she says. ‘I
rather enjoyed living the circus life.’
Mrs Miggins coughs. ‘And I’m sorry that we didn’t get to
perform your circus-related ideas for our Christmas Story this year,’ she says,
smiling sincerely at Mrs Poo. ‘But perhaps this will make up for the
disappointment?’
And she hands Mrs Poo a small, flat parcel neatly wrapped in
Christmas paper and tied with a gold ribbon.
‘From me to you,’ says Mrs Miggins as Mrs Poo takes the
parcel and gives it a shake.
‘Thank you,’ says Mrs Poo. ‘I shall put it under the tree to
open tomorrow morning.’
‘Open it now,’ says Mrs Miggins. ‘Go on…’
And Mrs Poo, who never needs encouragement to open a
present, tears open the parcel. A huge smile spreads across her beak.
‘It’s the complete DVD box set of the Cirque du Soleil
performances!’ she says, excitedly.
‘I think we should go and watch it now, don’t you?’ says Mrs
Miggins.
‘Perfect way to end the day, I reckon,’ says Mrs Poo, as the
others clap and cheer in agreement.
And that is exactly what they did!
Dear Reader(s) – thank you, once again, for reading along to
the Much Malarkey Manor Christmas Story. I hope you enjoyed it. Lord Malarkey,
Bambino, Nell and I wish you all the magic of a very merry and a very peaceful
Christmas Day. With our love.
Comments
With best wishes to you and Lord M for a very Happy Christmas. We are flaked out here from getting another two big projects done and dusted (just!) in time.. it will be enough to sit down and relax for a few days and I’ve already started..
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Aileen - best wishes to you, too. All is well π
Mrs Duck - all best wishes to you. Enjoy your restful days!