Jack’s wife popped the usual two into his cup and stirred them with the usual spoon. And then she returned to her slicing and worrying.

Jack buttered up a slice of toast. “You’re a lovely bit of toast,” he told it. “Would you like to come to the pictures on Friday night?”

In Jack’s front garden a postman clung to the roof of Jack’s porch. “Treed by a bleeding lurcher,” he complained. “Or was it a Dane?”

And Grows Hotter Still

“I must be off to work now,” said Jack.

“Don’t forget your sandwiches, dear.”

Jack thrust the brown paper packet into his briefcase. “The price of butter is scandalous,” he told his wife. “But not to worry, eh?” And he kissed her lightly on the cheek, hoisted his trilby hat onto his head, shrugged on his camelhair coat, tucked his case beneath his arm, picked up his umbrella and departed.

“Morning, postie,” said Jack to the figure cowering on the roof of his porch. “I didn’t know it was raining.”

“Raining?”

“Well, as they say, any porch in a storm.”

“Most amusing,” said the postman, who considered it anything but. “I thought you told me your dog didn’t bite.”

“It doesn’t,” said Jack.

“But it nearly had my leg off.”

“This isn’t my dog,” said Jack. “It belongs to the wife.”

Tension Mounts on the Bus

The 8.15 bus was crowded with 8.15 passengers.

“Morning, conductor,” said Jack.

“Morning, Jack,” said the conductor. “Your mate Bill’s up the front.”

Jack craned his neck and bulldozered his eye-brows. “Morning, my mate Bill,” he cried.

“Morning, Jack,” Bill shouted back. “And how are you today?”

“Fair to middling,” called Jack. “Fair to middle-diddle-diddling.”

“I’m very pleased to hear it.” Bill returned to his study of the Daily Sketch. GIANT SPIDER CARRIES OFF WIDOW, ran the banner headline. She was probably asking for it anyway, thought Bill as his gaze left the tabloid and moved slowly up the legs of a particularly well-designed teenage schoolgirl. Shouldn’t be allowed, his thought continued.

And meanwhile at Jack’s house the postman was giving it to Jack’s wife doggy style upon the kitchen floor. This lino needs a dose of Flash, worried the wife of Jack.

Two stops on Jack got a seat. “We’re running thirty-five seconds late this morning,” he informed a fellow traveller.

“Thirty-five seconds late for what?” asked the traveller, whose name was John Omally.

“For work.”

“But I’m not going to work.”

“Where then?”

“I’m going home.”

“But this is the 8.15 bus.”

“It was the 7.30 bus when I got onto it.”

“Ah, I see.” The conversation was interrupted by the sound of a thirteen-year-old fist striking Bill in the face.

“I never touched her,” cried Bill as the bus conductor fought his way through the standing passengers to grasp him by the collar. “A man is innocent until proved guilty,” he complained as the conductor flung him off at the next set of traffic lights.

“It’s the same thing every day,” said Jack to his fellow traveller.

“Not for me it isn’t,” said John. “For I live the kind of life that most men only dream about. A riotous succession of society get-togethers, country weekends, operatic first nights and charity functions.”

“Get away,” said Jack.

“True as true,” said Omally. “Then there’s the skateboarding, the sky diving and the riding of the big surf. Not to mention the North Sea oil drilling.”

“North Sea oil drilling?”

“I told you not to mention that.”

“Sorry.” Jack scratched at his hat. “Do you do any crop spraying at all?”

“Heaps, and Formula One motor racing too.” Omally pulled off his cycle clips and adjusted his socks. “And I’m judging the Miss World competition this afternoon.”

“That must be interesting.”

“Extremely,” said Omally. “As long as you don’t have to sit next to Tony Blackburn or Michael Aspel.”

The bus shuddered to a halt, regrouping its standing cargo at the front end in an untidy scrum. As the struggling passengers regained their feet and began to dust themselves down, the driver put his foot down and they all bundled towards the rear.

A lady in a straw hat fell upon Omally.

“Is this a regular occurrence?” he asked.

“Sometimes we lose one or two at the roundabout,” said Jack. “Although I don’t recall there ever being any fatalities.”

“What about that dwarf the fat butcher fell on last month?” said the lady in the straw hat.

“Oh yes, there was him.”

“And that Zulu who went up in a puff of smoke.”

“That was spontaneous human combustion. That could have happened anywhere.”

“This is my stop,” said Omally.

“It’s very nice,” said the lady in the straw hat. “How much did you have to pay for it?”

“Give my regards to Tony and Michael,” called Jack as Omally slipped off without paying.

The 65 bus swung over the Great West Road and headed south towards Brentford. In its path there might well have been a giant spider of outlandish proportions, its mutated mind set upon world domination. But upon this day, as upon others past, there wasn’t.

But this was to be the most eventful day in Jack’s long and uneventful life, although he still didn’t know it as yet.

The Tension Almost Reaches Breaking Point

“Good morning, Jack,” said Jack’s boss, Leslie. “And how is your lovely wife?”

Jack looked at his watch. “She’ll be making the postman’s breakfast about now,” he said. “And how is your handsome husband?”

“Still delivering the Queen’s mail.”

A thought entered Jack’s head, but finding itself all alone in there it left by the emergency exit.

“Now, Jack,” said Leslie, boss of Jack. “We have a very important despatch to make today and it must be handled with great care. We wouldn’t want there to be any more unfortunate mistakes, now would we?”

“No we wouldn’t,” said Jack. “No-skiddly-oh-po-po.”

Leslie, Jack’s boss, smiled upon her subordinate. She was a tall woman, slim, sleek, svelte. Brown-eyed and black-haired and carrying about with her that aura of a woman who knows exactly where she’s going.

“I’m going to the toilet now,” said Leslie, boss of Jack. “And when I get back I want to see you with your shoulder to the wheel and your nose to the grindstone. Do I make myself clear?”

“Well,” said Jack.

Nail-Biting Stuff

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