Bryan said “By the way Roger is coming for the weekend.”
“When does he arrive?” I asked in a blasé fashion, being used to having visitors pop in out of the blue and all.
“Oh, I guess in the
early morning on Friday.” was the reply I got.
Early on Friday (to me anyway) means
any time between six am and say oo'er nine fifty nine am on Friday. Remember Friday is the weekend for us. Any other time is either the
middle of the night or day time.
On Thursday after an arty farty overload of beauty on The Art Bus with Philip (the beloved first born) and an unmemorable evening. Well I can’t remember what we did, if anything. By the by, do you know at the moment the days
merge into nights into weeks because, darlings, there is just too much on. I really do need to get a
life where I am independently wealthy. If for no other reason than to be able to fit all this busy-ness in
without the bother of a job. Anyway, after a lovely day
of art and “whatever” evening we went to bed, as you do. I think between 11.30 p.m. and midnight, although for us that seems a bit early. Some time between then and the morning Bryan
and I were both up fussing about because of ruddy kamikaze Dubai mosquitoes. What is it with mosquitoes in this town? They are evil little
vampires with poison, I swear, in their gnashers. If you get bitten by a mosquito in
Dubai the likelihood of acquiring a festering wound within a few days is pretty
damn high. Vicious little critters. Anyway, it was not a peaceful sleep (brand
plugging aside) that we had. Then as if that was not enough, miserably, at what felt like an
ungodly hour (seven a.m. as it happens) I was woken up by Bryan’s phone ringing. The call was to let Bryan know that Roger has been on our door step since 1.30a.m. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Apparently early on Friday is
1.30am. Which of course is technically correct. If I had known that this was the time Roger was arriving I would have left the door unlocked for the poor
man. So our guest arrived at our home and rang the doorbell, and rang it some more,
and knocked at the door, and knocked some more (in our defence he did say that
he did not knock very loudly) and none of the three people in the house heard a
bloody thing. We did not hear a ring or a knock or even plaintive sobbing, if
there was any. So Roger curled up outside the front door and tried to get some
sleep. Poor bloody bugger.
Over a peace offering coffee (the no longer Jolly) Roger
recounted his ordeal. He said it had been cold, so cold in fact that he had to pull his beanie out of his suitcase. Or did he pull out his beanie to stop the mosquitoes from eating him alive… I forget… it was early in the morning. Did I mention he was harassed by mosquitoes (no
surprises there) and midges? The marble was not comfortable. He is no longer a young man and stone floors are not made for middle aged bodies. It was a sad, sorry, tale and I felt dreadful for our small , well okay, entire part in his discomfort.
Two things spring to my mind. One is about my / our sleeping patterns and the other about Roger’s tactics.
Firstly, you need to know that I get woken up every day by a neighbour who goes to the Gym opposite our house at 4am. EVERY MORNING. By the way the neighbour shall remain nameless for the time being as not only is he a neighbour but we work in the same company, so one day when I need some cannon fodder I will have it. I mean all this waking me up at four a.m. must have some emotional blackmail value don't you think? But back to the point. I get woken up by his turning on of the lights in
the Gym. Such is the nature of my light sleeperness. This being the case how on God's green Earth is it possible that I do not get woken up by someone
ringing the doorbell? If you are
in the business of breaking and entering you know what time to call at our
place.
Secondly I think that Roger is
far too well brought up by half. I would have made much more noise, thrown a
few stones at our bedroom window, or at least tried to break in. Mind you,
having been quiet as a mouse about getting into our home, once in it we could
not shut him up about the hardship he suffered at our hands. He milked it let
me tell you. He milked it expertly, just enough to make us feel as low as shark
shit, but not enough to stop us feeling guilty. Well Played Roger.
Whilst writing this post I started to have a sense of deja vu. So I went looking at older posts. I sadly discovered, much to my shame, that this is not the first time this has happened to our guests....
The other visitor who was left out in the cold.
We are bad, bad hosts. If you are coming for a visit. Word of advice. If we are not picking you up from the airport. Make bloody sure we promise to leave the door open for you. Oh and bring a pillow and sleeping bag if we don't...... Just saying. Better safe than sorry.
Whilst writing this post I started to have a sense of deja vu. So I went looking at older posts. I sadly discovered, much to my shame, that this is not the first time this has happened to our guests....
The other visitor who was left out in the cold.
We are bad, bad hosts. If you are coming for a visit. Word of advice. If we are not picking you up from the airport. Make bloody sure we promise to leave the door open for you. Oh and bring a pillow and sleeping bag if we don't...... Just saying. Better safe than sorry.
2 comments:
Due to your now poor track record in this matter I feel vindicated that "it is not me" !!
But seriously, thank you for the 'always on' hospitality.
Roger
Roger,I am investigating the possibility of an online booking system that could be linked to an electronic computerized door locking mechanism to avoid such occurrences in the future. This would allow visitors some peace of mind. I have had some threatening comments from family members that will be visiting in a few months’ time about what will happen to me if they are denied access to the house in a timely manner. I am afraid.
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