Cruel Pink Tanith Lee (free children's ebooks pdf txt) đ
- Author: Tanith Lee
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âI heard so,â I said. But I thought, God knows. Who else was in there with her? MickieâNicky? Some other old friends? Auntie Vanessa? The dog?
OK OK
After the local ones, and because I hadnât yet been able to meet up with Dimble3, (Dimble being the charity worker who helped clear the house, and who was willing to talk to me providing everything to do with him is kept private, and also on the agreement that I make a charitable donation of three hundred GBP), I decided to pick up on the London sites.
There are far less clues to these, of course. Only The Red Stagâor The Stag and Star, its real nameâseems to exist in fully concrete form.
But when I got there, quite a lot of the regulars recollected Mr Shakespeare-Pepys, as the reader among them called him.
Reg, (who doesnât mind my referring to him as Reg, âOnly no second name, please. The wifelet wouldnât stand for itâ), was or had been, âquite fascinatedâ by the contemporary old woman, who had clearly been possessed by a virile, youngish chap from the Seventeenth or Eighteenth Century.
âAn actor, one gathered. Once or twice at Drury Lane and Covent Garden. Currently strutting the boards at The Obelisk inâwhere was it, Sandy? Yes, thatâs it. Stampwell Street, off Cartwheel Lane. I donât think youâll find that, young sir,â Reg added to me. âSome of us have gone and looked, you see. Neither the various Geographias nor word of mouth seem to offer up proof of its existence.â
âInvented, then?â
âProduct of an insane but eloquent mind,â pronounced Reg. âI said, didnât I, he called this pub The Red Stag?â
Reg told me that Thessrisâhe thought this was what the actorâs name was supposed to beâseemed to see all of them in The Stag, though Reg doubted Mr T saw them as they were. âHeâd have a joke with us, and with me often, as I rather liked it. I mean, I valued the way heâyes, of course, she spoke. Liked the twists he-she put on the English language. No doubt not at all authentic for the scholars, but balls to them. It had a ring to it. Some of the words and phrasesâGod knows if anyone ever spoke like that back thenâbut, yes, a ring. What was that one we liked, Sandy? Oh, yes. Merry-dig. Fuck, you see? And I must say, young sir, he seemed to be having a merry-dig with plenty, and of both genders. Young men, lovely women. He was in love with an actress. Priscilla, I think it was. No, thatâs not it. Near enough. Priscilla Peck. Oh, yes, he had it bad for her. But lots of others, he didnât go short. No, no idea if your Mrs Jones was a les. After all, Mr T had men too. Three of them at least I heard him talking to in here. No, obviously not, no one else could see them. I wouldnât have minded seeing a couple of the girls. His Priscilla. And that other oneâMistress Temple? Something like that.â
âSandyâânot his name, nor to be quotedâdidnât give me any information, Only nodded, or occasionally confirmed something, and smiled over the drinks I bought them both.
Reg though said he could only say he thought heâd seen the other incarnation, the bloke in the suit. Kept himself to himself, if it was the right one, had a quick single drink, or brooded over a sandwich, then left.
âShe was limber for an old bird, wasnât she?â Reg added, with approval. âWhat was she? Sixties? But neither of the alter-egos was her age. Certainly not Mr T. She moved like a young man. Yes, and like a male too. Shame her voice let her down. And the clothes, of course. Looked, shall I say, merry-digging bloody silly in them. But. You say she died? Thatâs a shame. Weâll miss her. She ought to get a proper mention somewhere. Entertaining the masses, eh, Sandy?â
I told them that was the idea, when I wrote the article. We all shook hands as I left.
After The Stag, though, as they had forewarned me, I mostly drew a blank.
What anyway
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