Charlotte’s
Diary
Monday
Oh Dear Diary, My poor old
Scotty looked such a mess when he came to breakfast this morning, still in his
dressing gown, unshaven and confused. The first thing he did was to knock the sugar
bowl onto the floor. ‘Who put the damn sugar bowl there?’ he shouted.
‘You’ve
forgotten your glasses,’ I said gently.
‘Enema!’
he shouted for one of the servants. ‘Enema!’
‘Darling,’
I said, ‘her name’s not Enema, it’s Enela. I’ll go and get your glasses. We
must learn to become self-reliant. We won’t always be living in this house with
twenty-seven servants.’
‘We’re
the servants of the people,’ he cackled, ‘so we have to be looked after
properly.’
When
I came back he was trying to read The Pest.
‘I don’t seem to look very well in this picture,’ he whined. ‘Are they trying
to make me look silly?’
‘You’ve
got the newspaper upside down,’ I said. ‘Try it again after putting on your
reading glasses. And here are your false teeth, they will help you tackle the
cornflakes.’
Oh Dear Diary, He used to be so
handsome and energetic. Never marry a man twenty years older than yourself.
Tuesday
Oh Dear Diary, Another struggle with My Old Man
at breakfast. At least he arrived with his teeth and spectacles, but his eyes
were bloodshot, his breath was poisonous, and the wobble had returned to his
right arm.
‘Have you taken the pills for your
wobbly right arm, dear?’ I asked him gently.
‘Useless fart of a doctor, his bloody
pills don’t work,’ he snorted. So saying, he took a hip flask out of this
dressing gown, and poured whisky all over his cornflakes. ‘This should do the
trick’ he chuckled. ‘What’s on my programme today?’
‘You’ve got all day to try to make
yourself look presentable,’ I said. ‘This evening you have go to another gala
dinner, Christine is being given another award.’
‘What for this time?’ he growled.
‘She’s being given the award for being
the Woman with the Most Awards.’
‘Is Michael going?’
‘No,’ I laughed, ‘He’s resting. He’s
not a young man like you to be gallivanting around to all these award ceremonies.’
That evening I dressed him up in his
dark grey suit. It didn’t fit properly on his hunched back, but the sleeves were
long enough to hide his wobbly hand.
Oh Dear Diary, Sometimes I remember those
young men that courted me at college.
Wednesday
Dear
Diary, Last night my Old Man never reached his bed. He was brought home
unconscious from the gala dinner, and left to sleep it off on the sofa. Strangely
enough, this made his appearance at breakfast more presentable. When he finally
woke up and staggered towards the breakfast table he was still wearing his
suit, spectacles and teeth from the night before. Although he did have some
trouble eating his cornflakes because he spent a long time finding his wobbly
hand in his long sleeve.
‘There is a report here in The Pest,’ I said grimly, ‘of your
behaviour at the gala dinner. It says that you defended the government by
saying We men know what we’re doing.
We’re not like women quarreling about which one has been sleeping with
somebody’s husband.’
‘I don’t remember saying that.’
‘That’s the remarkable thing about
you. You can never remember saying anything. Especially after insulting all the
women in the country, including your wife who works hard to make you look
normal. According to The Pest report,
your statement came straight after several members of the cabinet had a fight
about who was sleeping with somebody’s wife. And then, after your heroic
statement that We men know what we are
doing, you collapsed and were carried out.’
‘Really Lotty,’ he replied, sounding
genuinely hurt, ‘you know what the doctor said about my brain not being properly
connected to my legs. You should be more sympathetic.’
Dear
Diary, The real problem is that his brain is not properly connected to his
tongue.
Thursday
When my poor Old Dotty came to the
breakfast table this morning, he seemed confused, but got my name right on the
third attempt.
‘Look
at this headline in The Pest, I said.
‘You told parliament that some of your cabinet colleagues are corrupt. Have you
gone completely mad?’
‘Not
at all,’ he said. ‘I was defending my friend Kapimbe, who had previously said
the same thing.’
‘But
why defend him? Is he not going to be fired?’
‘I
have to defend him, because he is supposed to take over from me, so I can
retire. That was the original arrangement. But if he is fired, I shall be stuck
with this job until I die.’ Tears ran down his wrinkled old face and dripped
into his breakfast whisky.
Don’t
tell anybody, Dear Diary, but next
time I shall marry a younger man, energetic and witty. I already have my eye on
Spectator Kalaki.
I already have my eye on Spectator Kalaki.LOL! i can't wait to see Sara's diary.
ReplyDeletewe need to commend every sane person who has to put up with this lot, otherwise chainama would have been filled to brim, maybe with time it will soon...
Another 1st frm kalaki.
ReplyDeleteThe real problem is that his brain is not properly connected to his tongue.
ReplyDelete