Sentence
The Fourhundredandeightythird
En route to The
Wrestlers Annual Reunion at The Bridges Public
House in South Darenth, Kent, Father Mungo Macaneny announced that
Lulu, in whose roadster he was a paying passenger, was more than his
sais, using the Malay word for Chauffeur, “I should hope
so,” she retorted, rather more tartly than she intended, “you are
my 'soul-mate' dear Lulu,” he continued, with the effect of causing
her to do an emergency stop in the overtaking lane, to considerable
honking of horns, squealing of tyres and cursing from other drivers
as they shimmied past, some of them even having swung round and now
overtaking them in reverse along the clock-wise M25; “it's jist a
whigmaleerie,” said Lulu, in some agitation now, “yer a Cafflick
Priest, fer Chrissake, an am a Lezzie, it cannae go naewhaur,” but
she agreed to his suggestion of a stop at the next roadhouse for a
bowl of jambalaya and triple Scotches to settle their nerves, which
was when he told her how nervous he was at the prospect of
meeting his old grappling pals and learning the names of the 'absent
friends' who had departed in the past twelve months for The Great
Changing-Room in The Sky which
even brought a tear to Lulu's heavily mascaraed eyes as he gripped
her hand and vented his fear that he might be an 'absent friend'
himself, by
next year's reunion! “never having known the pure joy of
'no-strings-attached' sex with a wummin,”
he whispered, so that the lorry-drivers at the next table should not
overhear; “are ye a
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