Clive was in over his
head. In over his head in standard-sized marshmallows.
This one really took
the biscuit. Edith had filled the bathtub with marshmallows, made him
get in and submerge himself in the gooey mess. There were
marshmallows everywhere - in his hair, in his armpits, between his
toes - he was sure there was even one between his bottom cheeks.
Icing sugar got up his nose, making him want to sneeze.
He'd had just about
enough of this. He began to fight his way to the surface of the pink
and white fluffy mass.
"Don't you dare
move yet," Edith demanded. "I haven't finished counting.
Four thousand, four hundred and thirty-two, four thousand, four
hundred and thirty-three..."
"But Edith, I
can't breathe!"
"Don't be silly.
Of course you can breathe, you're talking! Now... rats. I've lost
count. One, two..."
"You got to four
thousand, four hundred and thirty-three," Clive said.
"Oh, yes. Four
thousand, four hundred and thirty-four, Four thousand, four hundred
and thirty-five..."
Clive could hold it no
longer - he sneezed.
"For heaven's
sake, Clive, keep still! Seriously. If you move, you'll dislodge more
of them and skew the answer. You must wait until I finish counting.
Four thousand, four hundred and thirty-six..."
Clive knew from bitter
experience that if he dislodged more marshmallows, she'd go bat guano
crazy and they'd have to do it over again. His only option, if he
wanted a quiet life and to do the sudoku puzzle in the paper with a
nice cup of tea, was to remain perfectly still until she said he
could move. She was still counting. "Four thousand, four hundred
and fifty-eight, Four thousand, four hundred and fifty-nine..."
Clive ate a
marshmallow. Better not eat any more or he might get a sugar rush and
mess up her calculations.
What would the lads at
work think if they could see him now? They'd wet themselves laughing,
that's what. They already thought he was hen-pecked. "Four
thousand, four hundred and sixty..."
Clive tried to quell
the tide of his rising anger by imagining himself on that world
cruise he'd been saving up for forever, but never seemed to get any
closer to affording. He imagined himself sunning himself on a
deckchair by the pool, reading about the exotic destinations they
were sailing towards. "Four thousand, four hundred and
seventy-five, Four thousand, four hundred and seventy-six..."
Even dreaming of the
world cruise couldn't stop his ire building up. The things that woman
made him put up with!
Why, he was still
finding Lego bricks in his car from the time she'd needed to know how
many of them would fill a Ford Fiesta. Most of the bricks had gone to
the charity shop afterwards, but enough had escaped to lurk in the
hallway for him to tread on when he crept downstairs for a midnight
snack in his bare feet.
Then there was the time
she'd forced him to use up all his annual leave allowance and spend
it roller skating from John O'Groats to Land's End in order to find
out how long it would take.
Only last month he'd
gone to the doctor, concerned about his skin turning yellow, fearing
jaundice and liver disease, only to be humiliated when the doctor had
told him it was down to eating Fritz's carrot stew for twenty
consecutive days in a row. Well, they'd been close to their use by
date, and he didn't like to waste food. Starving kids in Africa, and
all that.
"Five thousand,
one hundred and fifteen!" Edith announced, triumphantly. "That's
it! That's how many marshmallows it would take to make a life-sized
model of Clint Hudson!"
Clive sat up, noticing
that Edith had been right; still more marshmallows spilled onto the
bathroom floor when he moved. He stood up and brushed several
marshmallows from his bare skin. He was sticky all over and covered
in icing sugar. He could do with a bath. Oh. The bathroom was full of
marshmallows. No bath until this mess was cleared up, and that would
take ages. Even with Edith helping, but she'd already gone downstairs
to fill in the final number on the entry form. As soon as she'd done
that, she'd be off to the post box to make sure she caught the last
post.
"Why the rush?"
Clive had asked on previous occasions.
"It closes
tomorrow," Edith would say.
"Why must you
always leave these things to the last minute?" Clive would ask,
exasperated.
"Because as soon
as I send it, I'll get a better idea for a tie-breaker slogan."
"So enter again."
"I can't. It's one
entry per household."
Mrs. Barker next door
hadn't spoken to Edith since she'd entered a one-entry-per-household
competition in her name and the prize, a year's supply of best
quality horse manure, had been dumped in her driveway. Mrs. Barker
would give Clive sympathetic looks now, whenever Edith dragged him
out on some ridiculous competition-related mission.
And the shopping! The
lads at work would boast of how they'd get around the supermarket in
ten minutes flat because they'd worked out an optimum route for
picking up their regular purchases. With Edith, the weekly shop could
take all weekend. She'd have to check there were no competitions on
alternative brands. They'd have to buy milk in Morrisons, soap in
Sainsbury's, butter in Budgen's and coffee at the Co-op because they
had competitions on them, and on bad weeks, they'd have to go to the
supermarkets in the next town as well, because one had sold out of
the qualifying packets, or the new Lidl was running one as part of
its opening offers.
Clive pulled a
marshmallow out of his hair. He was going to bloody well make her
help him clear up so he could have a bath. He stomped out onto the
landing, feeling sticky marshmallows under his feet, and yelped in
pain as his foot found yet another stray Lego brick.
"Edith!" he
yelled, but the only answer was the slam of the front door as she
left the house. He could see her through the landing window, walking
briskly up the path, a wad of envelopes and postcards in her hand.
Oh, well. He could
still have a cup of tea and do the sudoku. It was surprising how much
that always calmed him down.
He opened the kitchen
cupboard. A mountain of teabags fell out of it onto his head. Damn
it. He'd forgotten she'd sent all the boxes off as a qualifier for
some competition or other. He stuffed one teabag into a cup.
Once
he'd made his tea, he went over to the kitchen table. You couldn't
see the tablecloth. Every inch of the table groaned under piles of
entry forms, stamps, postcards, pens, and scraps of paper, on which
Edith had been trying to distil into twelve words or less why she
loved Tesco toilet roll in that spidery scrawl of hers.
Demanding she put it
all away had little effect. Even if she did, it would be as messy
again within a couple of days.
Thank goodness today's
paper was on the top of the pile. He put his mug down, his temper too
frayed to care if he left a tea stain on a precious entry form.
He picked up the paper
and turned to the sudoku page, only to find half the puzzle was
missing because Edith had clipped out an entry form from the next
page.
Clive roared with rage
and threw his tea across the room.
"I'm home!"
Edith called. "I just caught the postman. He was emptying the
box as I got there. Now, let's go clean up all those marshmallows."
Clive stomped up to the
bathroom behind his wife. She began stuffing marshmallows into a bin
liner.
Something deep inside
Clive snapped. He grabbed his wife in one hand and a handful of
marshmallows in the other. He stuffed marshmallows into her mouth and
up her nose. She struggled, but he didn't stop until her face had
turned blue and she went limp in his arms.
When the police came to
take him away in handcuffs, all the neighbours came out to gawp. Only
Mrs. Barker patted him on the back. Only she knew what Edith had put
him through. "I'll come visit you in prison," she said.
Mrs. Barker was as good
as her word. On the third day of Clive's life sentence, she came to
see him. While she was there, she handed in some of his clothes for
him, along with a letter in a long white envelope she'd picked up
from the mat on her way out. It was addressed to Mr. Clive Winner. He
hadn't been expecting any mail, so he opened it, intrigued.
"Dear Mr. Winner,"
it read. "We at Sweetdew Marshmallows Ltd are delighted to
inform you that you have won first prize in our recent "How many
marshmallows does it take to make a life sized model of Clint Hudson"
Competition. The prize is a world cruise..."
If you liked this story:
Sweet Karma Short Story Collection
This story and eleven more.
Available from
Createspace
Amazon
Amazon Kindle
If you liked this story:
Sweet Karma Short Story Collection
This story and eleven more.
Available from
Createspace
Amazon
Amazon Kindle
No comments:
Post a Comment