Tormented And Demented

Things took a turn for the worse this morning, as far as the whole stalker/cat thing goes.

We’re really getting a little fed up with the constant eerie howling outside, although the plus side to this is that Kat also seems to have had enough of it. She scared the wits out of me last night. I was innocently sitting on the sofa writing an email, and the cat suddenly sprang up from my knee, leapt dramatically over my head, slammed into the window and started hissing violently at Tom, who continued to wail on the other side of the glass.

“Howwwwwwwl!” said Tom Cat, staring obsessively through the window.

“Hissssssssssss!” said Kat, glaring back with the fury of a woman scorned.

“Arrrghhhhhhh!” said I, dropping the laptop and shielding my head in fright.

What,” said The Sister angrily, coming into the room holding her First Aid revision notes, “is going on now?”

The three of us sat in a defensive line at the window, staring out at Tom Cat. Tom Cat stared back, evilly.

He is not taking the hint, for I think he sat there all night. “Please, please go away!” I pleaded reasonably with him as I left for work this morning. He hissed viciously at me, and I edged nervously around him, backing out of the garden gate and running to the car.

I’d only been in work for 20 minutes when the text message arrived from The Sister. The inevitable had happened, and all hell had broken loose.

OMG!!!  Scared. Evil cat got in2 house, is goin mad. Him & kat in ur bed, peed everywhere, told u he is MAD. Help… am so late 4 wrk but can’t gt him out!!

I could do nothing but sit with my head in my hands, moaning softly. Evil Tom Cat has destroyed my home and ravaged my cat. In my bed. I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry, and was doing a strange combination of both when Zed arrived. Wordlessly, I reached her my phone, and she read the message. Also without a word, she slid the diary across the desk to me, circling today’s date before giving me an affectionate pat on the shoulder and walking away.

I wish people would stop taking a hand out of me. It’s too easy - surely it should have stopped being fun by now? 

Crime Wave

My sheep has no head.

It’s one thing to break into someone’s house and steal from it; it’s quite another thing to break in and decapitate their sheep. I mean, really. How do I go about reporting such a crime to the police? Yes, Officer, here’s how it happened:

Sister and I left for work as usual yesterday morning. We locked the door, leaving the house safe and all fridge magnets intact. We had no reason to fear for their safety – it was just like any other morning. Imagine my horror when I returned at around 5.20pm to find my Mark Owen picture lying magnetless on the worktop, next to a very sad and helpless little figure (I nearly said sheepish, there, quite unintentionally). Sister arrived home as I was holding the headless sheep (and his head) in my hand, a stricken expression on my face. She, too, expressed her grief at such an unnecessary, unprovoked attack. Together, we documented the crime scene in case the police should require photographic evidence.

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I don’t want to point any fingers, but I gave Dirk a key to my house the other day so he can use my computer while I’m at work, as their internet’s not up and running yet. However. It would be wrong for me to accuse him of decapitating my sheep. Just because he’s the only other person with a key.

Fighting fire with neds

If only I’d been blogging when I lived in Scotland. Honestly, my life was so much weirder and more bloggable back then. Since my last post, I’ve been thinking back over my time there and wondering why on earth I moved back here – it’s like going to the theatre to see a series of classic Shakespearean plays performed by the greatest actors in the world, but leaving halfway through for the cinema to see Transformers.

Wull Yum has been on my mind. Just wondering what he’s up to. He used to meet me every day as I lugged my shopping bags/swimming kitbag/uni folders up 3 flights of stairs. I’d be struggling to hang on to everything whilst trying to locate my keys, red in the face and breathing heavily, and he’d be lounging against the wall, watching me with mild interest. 

“Ah’m Wull Yum,” he’d introduce himself, more often than not. “I’m Hayley,” I’d inform him politely. Unless I was having a bad day, in which case I tended to reply “Yes, William. I live right here. Beside you.” If he heard me, it never showed. “Ah’m a bit depressed,” he’d continue, taking a swig of brown paper bag. “Oh dear, why’s that?” I’d ask dutifully. It was easiest to stick to the script. “Ah’ve just bin tae the doc’s the day, lik, hen. Ah’m fur dyin’, ‘e sizz.” “Oh aye?” I’d mumble, trying to sound surprised. “Aye,” he’d say gloomily. “Ah’m jist hayin a wee drink tae furget aboot it fur a while, like, ye ken, hen?” By this point I’d usually have succeeded in getting the door open and backing into my hall. “Aye,” I’d reply, mirroring his expression of gloom. “I know what you mean, William. See you later!”

I may sound cold-hearted, but you don’t know! It took me months of standing there laden with bags, my fingers numb and my arms threatening to fall off,  trying to counsel him, before I caught on to the fact that he hadn’t a clue what he was talking about. He was on his own planet. I did feel sorry for him, though – he had no life, the poor guy. Lived from one drink to the next, and shut himself away in a crappy studio flat that was the epitome of squalor. He nearly did die a few times, but it was nothing to do with his imaginary doctor’s diagnosis. On one such occasion, Red and I were watching Corrie and heard a small gathering of ned teens sitting on the stairs outside our door. They gathered there to drink sometimes, and there wasn’t much we could do about it, as we weren’t particularly anxious to have bricks hurled through our windaes. We just sighed and turned up the volume on the TV.

BANG-BANG-BANG!

We weren’t sure what to think about the noise at the door, as it wasn’t followed by the obligatory WULLLLLL YUMMMMM! (It was, in fact, customary for us to automatically chorus “WULLLLL YUMMMMM!” when we heard thumping noises). It happened again, and I dubiously put the chain on the door and opened it, sticking my nose through the gap. I was greeted by a group of over-excited ned teens.

“Missus! Missus! Thon wee mannie’s flat’s on fire, lik! It’s pure smokin’ an’ everythin, lik, man!”

And indeed, to my alarm, I saw smoke seeping from under Wull Yum’s door. It turned out that the ned teens had only been toking an illicit spliff, and had not planned on having to enter into any heroism antics. They were “feared tae break the dour doon” in case they were promptly arrested for breaking and entering, and most of them were on their last warning as it was. I shouted back to Red “Call the fire brigade!”, and realised I was the only sane person in the immediate area when he picked up the phone, looked at me in panic, and asked “What’s the number?”. Not that spliffs were being sneakily toked on our side of the door, too, of course.

I ended up enlisting the help of one of the more daring and less stoned ned teens, and breaking down Wull Yum’s door. It wasn’t difficult, owing to the fact that it appeared to be made from thick cardboard. We tied tea towels round our heads in the manner of all heroic rescuers, and entered the smoke-filled flat, eyes streaming. “WULLLLLL YUMMMMM!” I yelled hoarsely, with absolutely no sense of irony.

“Thur’s ‘is futt!” shrieked the young ned, excitedly. Wull Yum’s foot was sticking out from a cupboard. Upon closer inspection, it was discovered that the rest of Wull Yum was also there. In the cupboard. He appeared to have fallen asleep there, as you do, and the smoke had now knocked him out. The young ned and I trailed him outside, pausing to turn off the cooker and extinguish a small saucepan-related fire on the way past.

The fire brigade arrived, and I went back into my flat, where I listened from behind the door, in great amusement, to the neds’ exaggerated explanation of events (“big flames”, “nearly dead”, “fought the blaze fur pure ages, lik, man”). Then the police arrived and they scarpered.

Wull Yum was fine. He went to the doctor’s the next morning, and they told him he was going to die. He seemed relieved.

The noise downstairs

Creeeeeeeak.

I wake up and clutch the duvet in panic. Someone is in the house. The clock, glowing eerily in the dark, reads 3:07am. I suspect that’s what time it is. My heart thumping, I wait for the approaching footsteps of my killer.

Creeeeeeeak.

Oh, God, help, I plead silently. Silence. I tremble pathetically under the covers for a few moments, and finally summon up the courage to get out of bed. Gingerly setting my feet on the floor, I ease my body off the bed, inch by inch, in an effort not to make any creaking noises that might alert the psycho killer to my presence in the same way I have been alerted to his.

Creeeeeeeak.

He’s in the utility room. It seems like a strange place for a murderer with an axe and a revolver to go, but I can hear him there, all the same. Prowling amongst the boxes of Daz and the odd socks. Waiting.

I am practically hyperventilating. An interesting variety of thoughts are shooting through my head, all jumbled together and confused, forming a constant stream of useless information that goes something like this: I could spray him in the eyes with some deodorant – what if he kills Kat? – he’ll hear me if I phone the police – Dirk and Jay aren’t in next door tonight – I can text for help – if he kills me how long will it be before anyone finds me? -maybe he could sue me for spraying him in the eyes with deodorant –  would He Who Brings The Coffee be mad if I texted him at this time? – I definitely locked the doors, didn’t I? Did I? I did – I can’t call dad, he’s in no shape to rescue me from a murderer – I did lock them – is there anything embarrassing that they’ll find when they’re clearing out my house after my death? – maybe I could call the police in a whisper – It goes on like this, as I inexplicably grab a hairbrush and creep downstairs in the dark.

Creeeeeeeak.

With a wild howl, totally out of my mind with sheer dread and terror, I switch on the kitchen light and yell “What do you want?!” in a wobbly voice that doesn’t sound nearly as confident and intimidating as I was hoping it might. The cat blinks rapidly in the sudden light, arching her back against the door as she retreats into the utility room once more.

Creeeeeeeak.

STUPID SODDING CREATURE!!!! I yell furiously. She emerges inquiringly, fleeing with an indignant mew as I storm towards her in a mad rage. I slam the creaky door shut, mutter a few unpleasantries, and stomp back up the stairs, flinging the hairbrush in the vague direction of the cat for good measure. I return to bed. Nothing’s easy.

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