The Musty Old Magical Curiosity Shop
Dianne Carol Sudron
ARTHUR H. STOCKWELL LTD
Torrs Park; Ilfracombe; Devon
Established 1898
www.ahstockwell.co.uk
2016 digital version converted and published by
Andrews UK Limited
www.andrewsuk.com
© Dianne Carol Sudron, 2011
First published in Great Britain, 2011
All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the copyright holder.
Milly Paris, the Silly Clock That Couldn’t Tell the Time
Milly Paris was hanging on the kitchen wall sobbing her heart out - big wailing sobs. “I feel so silly and stupid,” she lamented.
“Dry your eyes, silly,” cried Omega Horizon “or someone will surely hear you!”
Milly Paris was a very special kitchen wall clock, handmade in France with an antique, creamy, nicely painted face and large French numbers; but back in ‘tickety-tock’ classes in France she hadn’t properly learnt to tell the time, or anything like it. She had only learnt to sing and socialise, and she talked in fluent English, French, and German. She was elegant and eloquent.
She had manners and sophistication, understood etiquette and was very humorous and silly. She was happy, funny and hilarious to be with, and she could be scandalous! However, she hadn’t attended any of the ‘tickety-tock’ classes and hadn’t learnt any time-telling skills. She either guessed it, or she asked the wristwatch Omega Horizon. Sometimes she even asked Charles Brown, a wristwatch purchased from Swiss Cottage in London - if he was lying on the kitchen top doing nothing! Very occasionally she asked the cat or the owl, but things had to be pretty bad before she would ask the silly fat cat.
Milly lived in a large Victorian house in Bayswater with Dr and Mrs Laugherty and their two children, Daisy and Oliver, their fat cat, Mog Og, and their butler, Miles Butterworth. They had all lived in France, in the city of Paris, but when they returned to London they moved into a large rambling house in a very prestigious area of Bayswater.
They loved France and the hot French weather. They had bought a French chateau, but it had needed a lot of renovation and they decided to keep it for a holiday place when renovations were completed.
Dr Patrick Laugherty’s wife, Penelope (or Penny, as she liked to be called), was a journalist for a paranormal magazine called Paranormal Investigations.
Patrick was a handsome man with dark, wavy-brown, thick hair. He was stockily built and of medium height with green eyes. Penelope said he looked like an Irish potato farmer, and indeed his forefathers had come over from Ireland.
Patrick and Penelope liked to grow their own vegetables, and they had a vine that was growing in their greenhouse. It was very productive, and Miles helped to make about thirty bottles of wine from the grapes.
Penelope was of slim build. She had long fair hair, which she tinted blonde. She had soulful brown eyes. Patrick said she could have been a dancer at the Moulin Rouge, as she was very fit and athletic and loved to dance. She also enjoyed holding themed dinner parties, and she loved her job as a journalist.
Of course, she was always writing articles about the strange and unusual, but she didn’t realise that the strangest and most unusual things went on in her own home.
She was so busy looking for the strange and unusual elsewhere that she never thought to look within her own family.
Penelope also enjoyed 1930s and 1940s wartime-themed events. Some people went to these events dressed in military uniforms and others wore more elegant, glamorous clothes in the styles of the 1930s and 1940s. Penelope and Patrick usually chose to wear elegant and glamorous clothes, but some of their friends chose military uniforms.
They had recently been to such an event on Patrick’s thirty-fifth birthday. It had been held at Portmadog in Wales, and it had been such great fun. Some of the people looked as if they had come straight from the 1930s and 1940s - as if they had been beamed through a portal in time.
Dr Laugherty loved to be very punctual; he hated to be late. He was almost regimental about it. This approach to being on time was because of his job: he didn’t want to keep his patients waiting.
Penelope had a high-pressure job, working to deadlines, and her work could take her away for weekends. Sometimes she had to go to Paris, in which case punctuality had to be the order of the day. If possible, she would catch a flight and be back the same day, as she hated to be away from home.
Both of their children, Daisy and Oliver, had a chauffeur to take them to school. The chauffeur was also the butler, Miles Butterworth, and he too was on time for everything - an impeccable example of punctuality. He had to be the support for the whole family. He owned an excellent wristwatch, Elijah Dual Movement, and he had a digital watch from Japan that was aptly named Zanuzy Zeon. Zanuzy could locate geographical landmarks like a compass. Miles also owned an alarm clock that actually spoke. He was named Preston Snooze and he had been made in South Carolina in the USA. He spoke with a Southern drawl. He was a military clock.
“Hi, buddy. This is the voice of Preston Snooze. I do declare that you, my buddy, must wake up and get your clothes on at once. There’s no time like the morning - so good morning, buddy. I’m here for you if you’re here for me. Right, let’s wash and go-go-go-go-go!”
It was raining hard outside and grey clouds were hanging overhead. Milly thought that it was seven o’clock because the silly fat cat always strolled into the kitchen at that time.
“I guess it’s seven o’clock,” she whispered to Mog Og, the silly fat cat.
He replied as he straightened his crumpled whiskers after a good night’s sleep, “You could say that, Milly. I guess it is.” Then he wrinkled his forehead as he thought, and he asked, “What did you do in Paris, Milly? What did you learn, cos you seem to guess the time so much? Anyway, Milly, I’m gonna have to go through the cat flap into the pouring rain to do a whoopsie. Catch ya later, babe.”
Max Life
Dr Patrick Laugherty had an alarm clock named Max Life. He had been made in Chicago and he woke Patrick up by singing in a booming voice. He sang, “It’s time to rise and shine to a beautiful morning. It’s time to wake up and shake off the night before. It’s time to have a cup of tea, coffee or freshly squeezed orange juice, buttered toast, marmalade, soft-boiled eggs, hard-boiled eggs, cornflakes or sausage, beans and eggs, sunny side up. It’s time to rise and shine and open your sleepy eyes. Remember your dreams - they can be so real even though they’re so silly. You dreamt you put your pyjamas in the fridge and you tried to wear banana skins as a pair of shoes and slipped over. That was a really funny dream!” boomed the voice of Max Life. Max also gave dieting advice and a thermometer reading if Patrick ever got a sore throat, and he also took blood pressure and cholesterol readings.
Max Life always cheered Patrick up - and he was exactly the cheerful medicine he needed before he headed to his doctor’s surgery to see his patients for that day.
As he scribbled out his prescriptions he would hum or sing, “Large boiled eggs, buttered toast and marmalade, gingerbread, cookies and large brown pears,” and it certainly took the patients’ minds off their problems.
He sometimes offered advice from Max Life instead of prescribing tablets; and sometimes the patients went out humming as they looked at th
eir prescriptions and saw the words ‘Raspberry juice, pineapple juice, ginger juice, orange juice and large brown pears, walnuts, coconuts and mangoes’. The patients went out laughing to themselves, definitely feeling 100 per cent better.
Dr Laugherty could write at speed, like all doctors can, and the lists were sometimes very long. He didn’t always give out painkilling tablets, but he believed that happiness, laughter and healthy foods are often the best remedies for illnesses. He was a clever man.
Zimex Jones
All of the Laugherty family had wristwatches, and they were all very different. They all had different personalities, and different talents, just like people. They all got their watches in different ways - some of them were very strange.
One of the strangest watches was Daisy’s watch. She got a watch when she was thirteen years old, and he was named Zimex Jones. He was just like something out of Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. Zimex Jones was in fact from another universe - in fact a parallel world in the fifth dimension. He originally belonged to a thirteen-year-old girl in that parallel world. She was also called Daisy - well, sort of: it was actually spelt DayZ. This DayZ from the parallel world had lost her wristwatch (never to be found again) and it had appeared on the Laugherty’s sofa one night.
Mrs Laugherty thought that Patrick had put it there as a present for Daisy’s thirteenth birthday, which happened to be the next day, so Penelope had gone and immediately wrapped it up in pink fancy paper with a gift tag saying, ‘Surprise birthday pressie from Mum & Dad, Oliver & Mog Og. Lots of love and kisses on your 13th birthday’. Penelope put it in a pink-and-purple fancy bag. To this day, Penelope thinks Patrick bought it and Patrick thinks Penelope bought it.
Miles had a sense of humour. Chatting over tea one day (using a real Ming dynasty china cup and saucer), he asked Mog Og if he’d bought it! It was as if Miles knew that nobody had bought it.
So that’s how Zimex Jones became the wristwatch of Daisy Laugherty. One day in the future, maybe the two Daisys will swap places - maybe only for a day. That would be great fun. Daisy never dreamt something like that could happen, and in the parallel world DayZ was still perplexed and searching for her wristwatch.
Zimex Jones could ‘time slip’, and time-travelling modes were on his clock-face menu. How this worked for Daisy was that when she was late for school she had to keep looking at the watch. Daisy would be thirty minutes early for school if she looked at her watch thirty times, so she soon worked out that the watch slowed down time, and she had a gut instinct - just as many animals have - that the watch was from a parallel world. She also discovered that the watch when viewed through a mirror didn’t look like a mirror image. Nothing was in reverse as it should have been.
She had been reading a book about Einstein and his theory of relativity, and another book on time travel which hadn’t quite answered all of her questions, so she was still searching for answers and clues.
Daisy’s favourite aunt was called Madeleine, and she was French. Madeleine had bought a doll from the Musty Old Magical Curiosity Shop when the musty old shop had materialised in Petticoat Lane during the Second World War. Madeleine had the doll as a young girl, and the doll had been given to Daisy for her sixth birthday. Madeleine had told Daisy about the musty old shop. The doll was named Anabella. She was a very pretty doll. She was dressed in a green velvet jacket with gold buttons and a cream floral-patterned pinafore over the top of a green velvet dress. She also had 1860s-style boots and a French beret with a cream ostrich feather. Anabella was a talking doll, and she sometimes gave secrets away - especially at midnight when the moon was full.
Well, one day Anabella whispered to Daisy that the wristwatch came from DayZ, who existed in a parallel world, and that the watch had actually fallen down a sofa (or a ‘squashy-squishy recliner’ as they were called in that world).
Camping in the Brecon Beacons
Sometimes the family spent a weekend camping, which was a bit of a headache for Miles as he had to organise everything. All the family loved the countryside. They thought being out in nature, sleeping under the stars, was the best medicine. Dr Laugherty had a very stressful job, and the best remedy for him was getting closer to nature, though he still liked to have the butler and the best food whilst they were camping.
Miles sometimes stayed up late into the night when they were camping. He waited until the last embers of the campfire had died down, and then he sometimes took out the telescope to look at the stars. The children also loved learning about the constellations, such as the Great Bear, the Giraffe, the Eagle, the Dolphin, the Hunting Dogs and all the zodiac constellations. They enjoyed going camping, and they enjoyed singing round the campfire and telling stories. Sometimes they were ghost stories, but if the ghost stories were too scary, Miles would be asked to stay up all night to ward off any ghosts.
Even Mog Og went on the camping trips, and even he would get very scared by the ghost stories. When he went to sleep he had nightmares.
Patrick and Penelope didn’t like some of the really scary ghost stories Miles told.
Sometimes they had a glass of sherry before bedtime, served on a silver tray by Miles, who’d wear his butler suit even when camping. He had very little time to relax, but he enjoyed it that way. He got up early and went to bed later than everyone else, but he did enjoy camping under the stars. He felt most refreshed by it.
Sometimes when they went camping, strange and scary things happened. When camping, you can get creepy crickets making noises all night long and other strange noises; you get ants in your tent and large spiders coming in. You have to be prepared - well prepared - but it’s great fun.
Sometimes the wristwatches helped out if anything was creeping about.
Oliver had received his wristwatch for his tenth birthday. The watch was named Julian Quartz and lit up in the dark. It lit up neon blue, argon green, jasper red, vivid violet, ochre yellow and oasis orange. This was an especially good watch, and it came in very handy when the family went camping - which they often did at weekends.
One particular weekend they went to the Brecon Beacons in Wales. Oliver was in his tent at the foot of the Brecon Beacons. He had heard that some of the locals had seen strange lights in the sky and heard an almighty crash. It could have been thunder or an earth tremor - or aliens landing.
As he lay in the tent the thought of this was making his heart pound. It was pitch-black in the tent - panther black - blacker than Welsh coal dust. The slightest noise set his hair on end and his teeth chattering. Suddenly he heard a strange bleating noise and something huge brushed against the tent. All at once Julian Quartz lit up and the whole tent was bathed in an eerie neon-blue light - and the creature outside the tent disappeared. Oliver was glad of the light from the watch, and he was glad that whatever it was had disappeared!
The watch also emitted a laser beam. It could stun strangers and hypnotise them, but it could only be used in an emergency. So far Oliver had never had to use it, but he knew that when the laser beam came into action a voice said, “This is an emergency - an emergency.” He could switch the voice off if he wanted to, so as not to scare everyone.
On this particular night in the Brecon Beacons it was only a stray sheep outside the tent. The watch somehow knew this and reassured Oliver.
“It was a stray sheep. It was three years old. It was a pet sheep from Mr Ewan Evans’ farm. It was called Woolley.”
Woolley was sleepwalking, bumping into tents and scaring everyone inside.
“Thank goodness for that!” declared Oliver. “I thought it was an alien from outer space.”
None of the other family members woke up. Daisy didn’t wake up; nor did Penelope or Patrick; nor did Miles. Mog Og was in a tent of his own, and he didn’t wake up either. He was on a well-earned vacation.
Only Oliver woke up.
They all had a laugh next morning over breakfast. Th
ey all realised something must have gone bump in the night as Oliver’s hair was stuck up on end. He had to comb it ten times before it finally flattened into place. In fact, he had to put a bit of hair gel on it to flatten it. His hair was dark brown like Patrick’s hair, and it was thick and curly.
Unfortunately the hair gel attracted flies, wasps and bees, as he soon found out. All day long Miles had to help to keep the flies, wasps and bees at bay, and sometimes Oliver ended up running like a wild thing to get away from them. Daisy found this funny. She laughed so much! Eventually Oliver had to take a shower and wash his hair. He had so many flies and midges stuck to it.
That was a hilarious camping holiday in Wales - at least, Daisy thought so. Oliver was glad Julian Quartz had come to his rescue, so he was quite happy.
Miles had had a good view of the night sky, and Penelope and Patrick had had a well-earned vacation out in the country air.
George Midnight and Jasmine Feathersprings
One autumn day Milly was feeling lonely, and she was feeling a bit under the weather. It was windy outside and the leaves were falling off the big oak tree. The summer was over. It felt like the fun had suddenly gone. What Milly wanted was some fun company.
“I wouldn’t mind having some more clock friends, Omega,” piped up Milly.
“Well, you have me, Milly, to talk to, don’t forget.”
“Well, you’re not always around. You’re a wristwatch, Omega, and you spend a lot of time on Mrs Laugherty’s wrist gallivanting about while I’m stuck on this wall!”
That was true, but Omega Horizon did spend quite a lot of time sitting on the kitchen table or on the kitchen worktop or on a shelf of the Welsh dresser.
Omega liked to listen into conversations, and she had a photographic memory. Basically she recorded conversations, and Mrs Laugherty often left the wristwatch sitting in the kitchen to record any conversation without anyone knowing they were being recorded. Mrs Laugherty also wore the wristwatch a lot, which was very useful where she worked.
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