Easy As Falling Off A Bike pt 2826

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The Daily Dormouse.
(aka Bike, est. 2007)
Part 2826
by Angharad

Copyright© 2015 Angharad

  
-Dormouse-001.jpg

This is a work of fiction any mention of real people, places or institutions is purely coincidental and does not imply that they are as suggested in the story.
*****

“So where are you going?” I asked as we sipped our coffees. These days it’s all in paper or plastic cups, most of which are made in Gosport, so I try not to take too much notice especially as the coffee is actually quite good now.

“Oh anywhere you are,” he said smiling.

“I’m not sure my husband would agree.”

“Do we need to tell him?”

“I tell him everything,” I want him to know.

“Everything? You are an unusual lady.”

“Quite.”

“I love your English understatement.”

“I’m not English actually.”

“So, you’re still beautiful.”

“I’m actually Scottish and married to a Scottish nobleman.”

“So?”

What do I say in response to that?

“Tell me about yourself,” I threw back at him.

“Nothing much to tell, I’m American and like my ancestors, over here.”

That silly song went through my mind, ’Over here, over here, the Yanks are coming...’

“I’d worked that much out myself, where in the States are you from?”

“Have you been there?”

“No, have you been to Scotland?”

“Yes, didn’t see anything except Edinburgh Castle because of the rain and scotch mist.”

“Pity, Edinburgh’s a fine city given the right weather.”

“You’ll have to give me the guided tour.”

Damn I’m blushing again.

“I will if you tell me the real reason why you’re chatting me up.”

“Ooh direct eh? Okay, you’re a beautiful woman who was being harassed by some piece of trash and I can’t bear to see that happen, so here I am.”

“Just pure coincidence?”

“Absolutely.”

“And you expect me to believe it?”

“Absolutely.” His smile was doing things to my tummy but he was still lying to me.

“You must think I’m stupid.”

“You don’t look stupid to me and the lecture you gave that guy about cattle means you’re either, a veterinarian, a farmer or some sort of scientist.”

“And you expect me to believe you?”

“Absolutely,” his grin broadened.

“You know who I am, don’t you?”

“Yeah, you just told me a beautiful woman who’s married to a Scottish nobleman.”

“And you’re what CIA or FBI?”

“I love your imagination.”

“Who’s Jason Brown?” I asked and for a moment his facade slipped.

“I have no idea.”

“You sure about that?”

“Absolutely.”

“My sources say he’s a CIA field officer.”

“He might well be, my name’s Jack, not Jason.”

“Pity, I’ve never met a spy before, do the Home Office know you’re here?”

“Why should they, I’m just a tourist come to see where my ancestors originated.”

“Where was that?”

“One was Edinburgh and the other Yorkshire.”

“I think you got on the wrong train.”

“Why?”

“Yorkshire’s north of here we’re heading south and west.”

“I’m coming to see the Mary Rose and Nelson’s ship.”

“HMS Victory.”

“That’s the one.”

“Don’t tell me one of your grandmothers sailed in her.”

“Not that I’m aware of—do I sense a certain hostility?”

I smiled back as vacuously as he had at me, “No, but I find it easier to talk with people who tell me the truth.”

“Why shouldn’t I be?”

“That’s for you to answer not I.”

“I guess you’re right—okay, I’m a US spy called what was it, Jason Bourne, and I’m following you because I fancy you and I’ve never made love to a Scottish noblewoman before—that any better?”

“Oh your acting is very good, but you’re still lying to me.”

“Okay, I’ve got a wife called Charlene and a baby boy called Rich, now you know all about me.”

“Do I?”

“So does Charlene know about Ellen?”

His smile slipped for a split second before he came back with, “Why should she?”

“Because she’s your wife.”

“I just told you my wife’s name is Charlene.”

I touched my left ear as if listening to a microphone. “Not according to my sources. Anyway, what’s it like working for the company, isn’t that how you lot refer to it, the CIA?”

“I don’t, I’m with Exxon or whatever you call it over here.”

“Esso.”

“I shoulda known that.”

“Yes, even the CIA would have known that.”

“See—some spy I’d have been.”

I rolled my eyes—let’s face it it’s so easy to pretend not to be something, you just fluff one or two things while issuing denials, which is what he did, but I’d picked up his thoughts and he was a company man, all right. Now, the Americans are supposed to be on the same side as us, except we both spy on each other—they have Jason Bourne, we have James Bond—sure we do, and all our MI6 officers drive round in Aston Martins and wear Armani suits, course they do, makes it easier for the bumbling Russians to spot them—duh.

“So what d’you do for Exxon?”

“I sell their high grade lubricating oils half of which are synthetic and never seen an oil well.”

“So are you an engineer or chemist?”

“Engineer. You a veterinarian or a scientist?”

“Farmer’s wife.”

“A Scottish nobleman farmer—right?”

“Absolutely,” I lied back.

“So what’s he doing down here in Hamp-shire, shouldn’t he up farming haggis in the highlands?”

“Don’t get haggis in the highlands, too cold, they can’t breed if it gets too cold.”

“You don’t say?”

“We have huge sheds of baby haggis waiting to be fattened up for Burn’s night.”

“Really?”

“Really.”

“What about the sheep’s stomach and oatmeal stuff then?”

“Oh that’s just what we tell the Sassenachs and Americans so they don’t get the genuine thing. Real haggis, especially the young ones, we call them kittens, are so succulent, there’d be none for we Scots.”

“You should be an actress.”

“I am, but then you know that don’t you?”

“Oh yeah, course we CIA know everything about you down to the haggis farming, are they as big as dormice or bigger.”

“Why compare them to some obscure hedgerow creature, why not a rabbit?”

“I had a hunch you’d know about dormice, because there’s some woman like you on a picture in my bank holding one.”

“There’s a picture of some woman selling mortgages in mine but I wouldn’t recognise her if she stood next to it. So the CIA think I’m into dormice. Okay, I modelled for the poster, got a few quid for it but farming is our mainstay, especially...”

“...fattening haggis.”

“See, you knew it all along.”

He shook his head, “Pity you’re not in industry, I coulda got you a competitive price for all your lubricants.”

“We’ll just have to make do with three in one, won’t we? The haggis won’t mind, though I sometimes get upset when they go off to market, it’s such a long way for them to go up to Scotland.”

“You don’t make them walk all the way, do ya?”

“No, we fly them up there. Only the best for my haggis.”

“Naturally—you know you’ve almost convinced me I should try one.”

“Go ahead but not one of mine, they’re all sold already.”

“Really?”

“Really, House of Fraser, Sauchiehall Street. Ask them if you don’t believe me.”

“I’ll take your word for it.”

“Oops, this is my station.” I stood up and left the train knowing he was following me.

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