
The tavern didn't exactly appear to be your average Weatherspoons but alas I had little time to explore it further as I was ushered quickly upstairs by my two gnome escorts and bundled into a room where, without further explanation, the door was slammed shut and I was left alone. Rather pointlessly I tried the door to see if it had been left unlocked, but unsurprisingly, it hadn't.
I went over to the bed and sat down on what I presumed would be a straw filled mattress, as that seems to be the norm for such places as this, according to all the fiction I have read over the years. Sadly, whoever ran this particular tavern had failed to read the same titles as I had, and I found myself sitting on boards instead. Hard boards, covered by a thin, worn blanket which itself had a small colony of lice that had moved in and seemed as settled as they could be. I even saw a tiny, well manicured lawn that the respectable lice had tended carefully, complete with flower borders and a minuscule swing seat.
Careful not to upset the lice further, who seemed to be shaking small, licey fists at me for interrupting what would appear to have been their annual fete, I got up and instead sat on a chair that had been provided for that very purpose. I was busy looking around for a plug socket for my laptop but only managing to find dust, splinters and a mean looking spider sharpening scissors on the back of a millipede, when the door was unlocked and in stepped someone that made me sit very still.
With my mouth open.
Wide.
'Hello' Sidney said, striding into the room, wearing what appeared to be a chainmail bikini.
'You're....here' was all I could manage, followed by a pause and then 'Talking?'
'Yeth' Sidney said, smiling broadly. 'It appearth that here I am able to talk, but I theem to have a lithp.The barmaid downthtairth found it motht appealing. Thee gave me her number.'
I continued to stare at my cat.
'Do you like my armour?' he said, twirling round and rattling the links of his impractical swimwear.
'It's very........nice' I was finding the link between my brain and mouth had been severed by shock.
'Yeth I thought tho' Sidney continued to beam at me.
'Tho' he said, walking over to the bed where he sat down. I heard the screams of lice and the crunching of what I presumed was the ferris wheel they had erected for their fete. 'What ith going on then? They didn't tell me much.'
'Me neither' I said just as the door opened and in stepped someone who, I had a funny feeling, might be about to let us know just what was going on.




