Thursday, 21 February 2019

Send In The Clones: A Fairy Story




Once Upon a Time, in a city in the English Midlands, there lived a man named Philip Blue who was very rich and who owned a factory. Some years before he had invented a new kind of widget, and he built his factory so that he could make lots of his widgets and sell them at a very good profit.

As a result he made himself a fortune, but he suffered from a fault that is common to many rich people, which is that his only aim in life became to make yet more money, even though he had long ago reached the point where he had more than enough to last him for the rest of his life. Every day he would visit the vault in the cellar of his enormous house and watch as barrow-loads of money were wheeled in to add to his millions. The only time he spent any of his money was when he wanted to buy another luxury yacht, of which he had several.

He was what is known as a capitalist, but he was one of those who spent so much time adding to his riches that he had no time in which to do anything else, such as washing. That was why his neighbours called him a filthy capitalist. This qualified him to be knighted by the Queen, so that he could call himself Sir Philip Blue.

Of course, he did not make all the widgets by himself. His factory was staffed by a hundred workers who spent all day earning the minimum wage as they turned the wheels on the hundred widget-making machines that produced thousands of widgets every hour.

Sir Philip liked nothing better than to walk through his factory watching his hundred workers turn their wheels and make his widgets. He noted which ones worked faster and which worked slower. He would hurl insults at the really slow ones and call them rude names. Given that he thought that nearly all of them were lazy shirkers, he shouted lots of rude names as he walked through his factory.

There was only one worker who really impressed Sir Philip. This was Number 42, who turned his wheel so fast that he produced twice as many widgets as anybody else. Number 42 was never shouted at or called a rude name. Sir Philip would have loved it if all his workers had been as efficient as Number 42.

One day, as Sir Philip was crossing the road outside his factory, he spotted one of his factory lorries coming down the road. To his horror, he saw that there was nobody driving it. Somebody must have left the handbrake off and let it roll out of the factory gate and onto the public road. The lorry was approaching a pedestrian crossing just as a young woman pushing a pram was using it.

One thought flashed through Sir Philip’s mind. If the lorry was to run down and kill a young mother and her baby, the reputation of his company could he tarnished for ever. He simply could not let that happen. That was why he seized hold of the handle on the driver’s door, pulled it open and leaped aboard, grabbing the handbrake just in time to prevent the lorry, emblazoned with his company’s name and logo, crushing the young woman and the pram beneath its wheels.

The young woman was extremely grateful to Sir Philip for saving her life and that of her baby. Completely misinterpreting his motives, she hugged him tight and asked what she could possibly do to repay him for his brave and thoughtless action.

“You see”, she said, “I’m a fairy and I can grant any wish you might have – anything at all.”

“Anything?” asked Sir Philip.

“Anything”, said the fairy, whose name was Amelia.

“Well,” said Sir Philip, “My deepest wish is that all my hundred workers could be just like Number 42. Could you manage that?”

“No problem”, said Amelia. “Just get me a sample of Number 42’s DNA and I’ll produce 99 clones of him who will work just as hard as he does.”

“That’s brilliant”, said Sir Philip. “But how do I get a sample of his DNA?”

“All you have to do”, said Amelia, “is get a smear of saliva from something he has been drinking out of, such as a cup or a mug. Just collect one the next time he has a tea break.”

“Tea break?” asked Sir Philip. “What’s a tea break?”

Nevertheless, Sir Philip was able to get a DNA sample from Number 42 and the fairy duly produced 99 clones of him. Sir Philip promptly sacked all the other workers and installed the clones in their places.

Production went through the roof. Widgets poured out of the factory, all to the same extremely high standard that Number 42 had always produced. Likewise, more money poured into Sir Philip’s basement and he ordered another two luxury yachts.

But then, a month or so later, Sir Philip noticed that production was starting to slow down. On his next factory visit he went straight to the machine worked by Number 42 and was shocked to see that his star worker was turning his wheel far more slowly than usual, and he looked distinctly unwell.

“I’m very sorry, Sir Philip”, he said. “But I’m going to have to stop working for you. You see, all my family suffer from a very rare genetic disease that means that we have perfectly healthy lives to the age of 50 then drop dead shortly afterwards. It was my 50th birthday last week and my time is nearly up”.

And so it was. Unfortunately for Sir Philip, that was also the case with every other worker in his factory, each of whom was an exact clone of Number 42 and therefore had the same genetic malfunction. Two weeks later, every worker in his factory died and the wheels stopped turning.

Things only got worse. With such a terrible reputation for worker fatalities, nobody would risk taking a job at Sir Philip’s factory. Not only that, but all the original workers, Numbers 1 to 41 and 43 to 100, hired a very clever lawyer who urged them to sue Sir Philip for unfair dismissal and claim massive compensation for all the insults they had suffered at his hands during the time they had worked for him.

Before long, the barrows were wheeling money out of Sir Philip’s cellar, all the yachts were sold, as well as the house, and Sir Philip lost his knighthood.

On the other hand, the 99 former workers, as well as fairy Amelia and her baby, all lived happily ever after.
© John Welford

Thursday, 14 February 2019

Valentine's Day at the Macbeths




Breakfast at Glamis Castle, home of Lord and Lady (soon to be King and Queen) Macbeth was never a particularly jolly affair. Apart from the appalling draughts that blew down the length of the dining room through all the ill-fitting windows, there was the recurring problem of the awkward questions that flew across the breakfast table between the castle’s chief occupants.

These quite often referred to missing guests. It was a common occurrence for a distinguished visitor to enjoy a hearty supper the evening before but not put in an appearance at breakfast. His lordship would ask her ladyship what had happened to Lord McX or Duke McY and be fobbed off with the news that he was a particularly heavy sleeper. Macbeth always doubted this, knowing just how uncomfortable all the beds were at Glamis Castle. His suspicion was that the only way to lose consciousness for any length of time in a castle bed was if one’s throat was attended to courtesy of a sharp knife, and his wife had never said anything to allay that suspicion.

However, on the morning of 14th February the questions were about a very different matter. Four envelopes were propped against his lordship’s box of cornflakes but there was none within reach of Lady Macbeth at the other end of the table.

“Where’s my Valentine’s card, then?” she snapped.

“Oh – is it Valentine’s Day today, my sweet?” Macbeth replied.

“You know full well it is”, said her ladyship. “And you’ve forgotten to buy me a card!”

“Oh dear”, said Macbeth. “Sorry.”

“What’s the matter with you?” asked his wife. “Don’t you love me any more?”

This was a question to which a straight yes or no answer was not easy to give. It was the “any more” that was the problem. Had Macbeth ever loved his wife in the first place? This was the question he was forced to ask himself, and he racked his brain trying to remember if this had ever been the case.

The fact was that theirs would have been a shotgun wedding had shotguns been around at the time. Determined to get herself an aristocratic husband she had put the word around that Macbeth was the father of her unborn child and gathered an impressive force of violent thugs to frog-march Macbeth down the aisle of the local kirk to put a ring on her finger. 

For his part, Macbeth could not recall ever having been to bed with his bride, and this situation did not change after they were married. The supposed pregnancy had all been a trick, thanks to some well-placed cushions that disappeared immediately after the wedding.

“So how come you’ve got four Valentine’s cards today?” she asked. “I know who one of them’s from, but what about the other three? How many floozies have you been seeing behind my back?”

Macbeth knew that any answer he gave would only lead to further trouble, so he stayed silent.

“Open them”, she said. “I want to know who sent them”.

“Valentine’s cards are always anonymous”, Macbeth said. “You wouldn’t be able to tell.”

“Give them here”, she said. “I can always tell”.

So Macbeth flung the offending cards down the length of the table. Lady Macbeth started to open the first of them, using a knife that looked as though it might have used for other purposes in the past, judging by the suspicious red stains on it.

“I know the perfume used by every woman within 20 miles of this castle”, she said. “If you’ve been playing around with any of them I’ll know after a single sniff”.

So saying, she gave put her nose to the open envelope and nearly collapsed on the floor, grabbing her throat as she did so.

“My God!” she gasped. “That’s appalling! What female could possibly smell like that?”

“Like what?” Macbeth asked.

“Like a ton of dog poo mixed with the pong from that corpse I forgot to bury until it had been dead for a fortnight”.

“What corpse was that, my precious?” 

“Never you mind. At all events, this pong smells worse.”

“And what does the card say?” he asked.

Lady Macbeth gingerly extracted the card and read the verse on the front.

“Roses are red, Violets are blue, You will be mine, I’ve put a spell on you”.

“I wonder who could possibly have sent that?” Macbeth wondered, having a pretty good idea what the answer was.

“You can read the other two”, said Lady Macbeth, throwing them back in his direction. “I don’t want them anywhere near me”.

“OK”, said her husband, holding his nose as he extracted the cards from their envelopes.

“This one says: “Some roses are yellow, Others are white, You’re a lucky fellow, Come to dinner tonight.”

“And the third one?”

Macbeth picked up the final mystery card with trepidation, knowing full well where it had come from. Why those hags from Blasted Heath Cottage thought of him on Valentine’s Day was anyone’s guess, but it was hard to imagine that their intentions towards him could have been even remotely friendly ones.

The third card read:

“Roses are red, Violets are blue, You never could guess, What we’ve put in the stew.” On this point they were entirely wrong. He could.

Lady Macbeth was staring at him down the length of the table. Although Macbeth did not have the slightest intention of accepting the invitation to dinner, his wife did not appear to be so sure. 

“I think you’d better look at my card”, she said. She was holding her knife in a somewhat threatening manner, testing its sharpness with her thumb.

Macbeth promptly did so. Its message was clear enough:

“Roses aren’t blue, Violets aren’t red, Start messing around, You'd be better off dead”.


© John Welford