Wednesday 27 February 2008

Throwing in the towels

Not content with one freak accident, Francis busily accumulates more. He arranges to visit a factory. Hours before he sets off, it bursts into flames. He drives to Grimsby so he can share the rare beauty and magic of the dawn fish market on the docks and, that evening, feels the tremor of the UK's most vigorous earthquake for 250 years.

He baulks, though, at my suggestion that he might like to move on his own into reinforced, low level accommodation, carefully selected to avoid fault lines, tectonic plates, motorways and all materials implicated in cases of spontaneous combustion. "You could fill the place with sardines," I say. "They're definitely not on any list of hazardous materials, though I suppose you could slip on them."

Meanwhile, I have problems of my own. At school, the big xylophone is making a funny buzzing sound on the low notes. Either Francis' freak accident syndrome is catching, and it, too, is about to explode into flames, or there's something trapped inside - quite possibly the remains of an old music teacher, traumatised by one too many bracing motivational assembly chats.

"Now," says Sasha, to the school. "I want to talk to you about waste. When you dry your hands after you've been to the toilet, what do you do if you take too many paper towels?"

The children are baffled.

"I'll tell you exactly what you do," she says, voice rising scarily. "You just throw them on the floor. Creating mess. And one day, when you come in, there won't be any more, because thanks to your wasteful habits, we'll simply have run out. For ever."

There's dead silence.

"Now, here's what I want you to do. If you take too many, I want you to take all the spare ones to your teacher. They will be pleased, because there are so many things they can do with them. Like - mopping up after painting or...........

"Anyway," she continues, in a slightly hurried way. "They'll work out things to do with them. I expect they'll even put them back into the dispenser for you, if you ask nicely."

Given the general hygiene standards of the children, encouraging them to spread a merry trail of slightly used paper towels round the rest of the building seems to make about as much sense as keeping a colony of threadworm as the class pets.

The other teachers appear strangely unenthused by the notion that they might spend some of their free time carefully reinserting paper towels into a metal container so grimy that it looks as if, with just a little modification, it could provide a terrorist with a perfect starter bio-weapon.

"We need to cut down on mess," says Sasha. "Remember, a lion can choke on a plastic bag." It's the first useful piece of advice I've had all day.

8 comments:

Irene said...

Quite a few bloggers seem to have felt this earthquake, you seem to all be concentrated in one area of England.

Having lived in California, made me used to the feel of terror when one hit and I remember looking around me in alarm as pieces of furniture started to hop across the room.

Sasha is becoming quite neurotic and absolutely unsuited for her job. It's obvious that she is losing all sense of perspective on the realities of life. How can she best be declared incompetent? Do you care?

Maybe Francis is a harbinger of disaster, you know, with the car accident and the height of the table and everything. Well, that was not quite a disaster, unless you keep sawing. You should take out all sorts of insurance policies.

I love you, Omega Mum!

Cath said...

Teachers have free time at your school?

Just who is Sasha? And what planet is she on? And can I come?

Omega Mum said...

Sweet I: And I love you too. Isn't it beautiful? I think Francis is secretly an Old Testament figure - possibly Jonah, or Job. Will tell you as soon as God appears to him in a vision. Any day now, I'd have thought.

Crazy Cath: They have free time (well, that's 'free' in a relative sense, obviously they have marking, lesson preparation) when I teach music.

Expat mum said...

Ew! Knowing my little one's hands, even after he has supposedly washed them, I would probably only use those towels to wipe up messes off the floor!

Mya said...

Can't you arrange for Francis and Sasha to meet up? With any luck she might spontaneously combust.

Mya x

Unknown said...

One of my publishers lives where the epicenter of the earthquake hit. She said no one was hurt as far as she knew. I hope you're all okay. I've never felt an earthquake. I didn't Britain was in an earthquake zone so I was surprised to hear it hit there.

Anonymous said...

If it's true that even the strongest people must step back, take a deep breath, and summon up their fortitude now and then, I would have nostrils the size of golf balls trying to deal with that Sasha woman.from p.t.

Omega Mum said...

Expatmum: I think you're extremely brave even to contemplate touching them.

Mya: Although mightn't Francis be swept into the Demonic pyre and be consumed, too? Always pros and cons to these sorts of things, I find.

Ashley Ladd: Nice to hear from you. We're all fine, thanks, with a wonderful new lease of life now we've got something other than terrorism and the weather to moan about.

Anon: Thank God - a solution to what was causing my nostril problem. Now I know and can learn to live my life again......