Mt. Scurveyshire Erupts (‘Oy, Rodney’)

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“Kaaaa-BOOM!” writes Violet Crepuscular, introducing chapter DCXLII of her epic romance, Oy, Rodney. “Mount Scurveyshire has erupted! The roads are already choked with refugees fleeing to Czechoslovakia.”

[Excuse me. The regular editor plotzed when he read that last sentence. He had to be locked in a padded cell for his own good. I have been named to replace him because my knowledge of history and geography is no better than it should be.]

The krikitt match goes on, though. “It’s tradition,” explains Lady Margo Cargo, in a candid aside to the reader. “Krikitt has been played here since the time of Piltdown Man. We can’t let a volcano hold us back!”

Despite the tremendous noise, Mt. Scuuveyshire has produced little more than a bump in the ground. A ragged urchin plugged the hole with his poor tattered garment.

“I do not mean a sea urchin!” adds Ms. Crepuscular. “Sea urchins are pachyderms. Or something. I mean a poor little orphan boy named Zaph-enaph-Kraputni. How is that for bringing home the suspense! I’ll bet none of you saw that coming!”

I think I’ll put a thumbtack on her chair. There is a limit to the abuse a substitute editor must take.

Volcano Threatens Scurveyshire! (‘Oy, Rodney’)

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Does your group have more cavities than theirs? Is it a breath mint or a candy mint? How do you get rid of waxy build-up on your kitchen floor?

The Queen of Suspense wants to know.

“As serious as these problem are,” she confides in the reader, introducing Chapter DXLIX of her epic romance, Oy, Rodney, “they do have one thing in common. They are about to become irrelevant!”

(Well, gosh, I could’ve told you that and I’m only the editor. Nobody listens to me.)

She taps Johnno the Merry Minstrel to deliver the news to Scurveyshire. Johnno is the only one who can make it rhyme. Sort of.

“We have a volcano about to erupt,/ and stifle the honest, wipe out the corrupt/, and pump out lots of lava to bury the shire:/ it’s news of the worst kind, for the whole quacking shire!” Eat your heart out, Wordsworth.

Mt. Scurveyshire has never erupted before. It’s never even been a proper mountain. If you’re looking for something like this, forget it.

Vulcanic eruption on postage stamp of Papua New Guinea Stock Photo - Alamy

The American adventurer who thinks he’s Sargon of Akkad, Willis Twombley, solemnly shakes his head and thoughtfully fires a few shots into the air. “Old Hammurabi,” he soliloquizes, “always said those volcanoes in New Guinea were the worst–you never know where they’ll turn up next.”

Still reeling from his duel with Ginsu knives, against himself (it was a draw), Lord Jeremy Coldsore stares piercingly at Twombley. “Don’t New Guinea volcanoes just stay in New Guinea?” he inquires.

“That’s where you’re wrong, old hoss!” Twombley ululates.

Here the Queen of Suspense shuts down the chapter. To create more suspense. I ought to publish her phone number.

At Last! The Duel! (‘Oy, Rodney’)

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Introducing Chapter DXLVIII of her epic romance, Oy, Rodney, author Violet Crepuscular declares “My readers are revolting!” (Ed.–I don’t know how to take this. Do you?) Apparently a cabal of readers in Scotland have formed a conspiracy against “the Queen of Suspense,” according to police in Egypt. Somebody’s gonna get locked up in the dungeon at Glamis Castle unless she comes across with the duel already.

The alert reader who has nothing better to do will remember that Lord Jeremy Coldsore has challenged himself to a duel to the death–ginsu knives at 25 paces. All of Scurveyshire turns out to watch. The sardines-in-toothpaste vendors have never had it so good.

“You sure you wanna go through with this, Germy, ol’ hoss?” asks the American adventurer, Willis Twombley, who thinks he is Sargon of Akkad.

“Fire!” cries the referee, Constable Chumley.

“We don’t have guns!” Lord Jeremy points out.

The crowd is getting ugly. The constable shudders. Jeremy steps off 25 paces, turns, and throws the knife. It sticks in Chumley’s helmet, having missed a vital spot. He runs 50 paces in the opposite direction and throws the other knife. It bursts an inflatable effigy of a Victorian celebrity who has demanded that his name be not mentioned here.

The mayor of Scurveyshire–really, it’s none of his business–declares the duel a draw. “We don’t have any more ginsu knives,” he explains. A large dog drags him out of sight.

Next week: More suspense, every bit as riveting as this week’s!

Ginsu Knives at Dawn (‘Oy, Rodney’)

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We are at the point in Violet Crepuscular’s epic romance, Oy, Rodney, where no one seems to know what chapter this is supposed to be. Let us call it Chapter DXLVI. If the number turns out to be wrong… who’ll notice?

“Today,” writes Ms. Crepuscular, “is the day you’ve all been waiting for!” (Speak for yourself, Vi.) “Yes! Today Lord Jeremy Coldsore will meet himself in a duel to the death with Ginsu knives!” She dismisses those who point out the anachronism. “I never accept criticism from pygmies!” she declares. “Let them flourinate!”

Meanwhile, the duel has hit a snag.

“How the blazes am I supposed to stand back-to-back with myself?” Lord Jeremy protests to the referee, one Merv Griffin (I just work here!). “You can try standing face-to-face,” Merv ululates. By now a crowd has gathered, but it is already breaking up. Someone has heard a rumor of free toothpaste crackers.

There’s also a problem with who gets the choice of weapons. The two Ginsu knives in the cookie tin look exactly alike. Jeremy cannot help suspecting there’s a cheat in it somewhere.

But you will have to tune in next week to find out!

(Editor’s Note: All in favor of bagging this whole “Queen of Suspense” thing, say “Rhinoceros.”

When the Author Forgets the Story (‘Oy, Rodney’)

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Even the Queen of Suspense has her lapses. Violet Crepuscular has just admitted as much.

“I admit I had a little lapse,” she confides in her readers. “I thought I took care of this, oh, two or three hundred chapters ago–but it seems to have slipped past me. I think it had something to do with that medieval witch and necromancer, Black Rodney.” Some 400 pages have gone by since the last mention of Black Rodney.

To some of us it would occur to correct the lapse, but Ms. Crepuscular says “I didn’t get where I am today, correcting lapses. By Jove, have you all forgotten that Lord Jeremy Coldsore has to fight a duel? Against himself! That, my friends, is how you write suspense!”

She goes on to insert a recipe for clam and toothpaste chowder. The editor throws up his hands and leaves the room. A mouse comes out, looking for crumbs.

“I promise to have the whole plot straightened out by next week,” Violet assures the reader. “See what it does to your concentration when everybody’s a critic taking pot shots at you! It’d serve you all right if Black Rodney turned up in your la-dee-dah gated communities!

“And don’t even think that Lord Jeremy is going to allow himself to back out of that duel with himself. Not with a pedigree going all the way back to the Crusades!”

The mouse sits up on its hind legs, richly entertained.

15,500+ Mouse Sitting Up Stock Photos, Pictures & Royalty ...

The Bitter Tea of Willis Twombley (‘Oy, Rodney’)

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Bad news! The publishers keep rejecting Chapter DXL of Violet Crepuscular’s epic romance, Oy, Rodney. But it takes more than that to beat the Queen of Suspense!

“Welcome to Chapter DXLI of my epic romance, Oy, Rodney!” writes Ms. Crepuscular, in an unpublished letter to the London Times. What? “You just published it, dude”? Please stop distracting me!

Whatever happened in the past few chapters has been forgotten as the narrative moves on. Lord Jeremy has yet to fight the duel with himself. Johnno the Merry Minstrel has an infestation of deadly tropical spiders. And we find the American adventurer who thinks he’s Sargon of Akkad, Willis Twombley, drinking Lethe Brown Ale at The Lying Tart.

“I’m worried about Germy,” he announces to the assembled patrons of the pub. As one, they flee screaming to the sidewalk. Mr. Twombley does not notice. “I been short on noticin’ things lately,” he confesses to the vaguely mollusc-like bartender, whose complexion changes from a blue flush to a mottled grey.

“Dear reader,” interjects Ms. Crepuscular, “please lay off the catty comments and the smart-aleck questions about what’s a half-octopus doing, tending bar in an English pub circa 1850. I am one of only a very few authors who actually practice diversity! And now you’ve made me lose my place, where was I…?”

Tune in for more suspense next week.

[Editor’s Note: What was with the bitter tea? Search me! Nobody tells me anything.]

Saving Lord Jeremy (‘Oy, Rodney’)

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It turns out that Violet Crepuscular, The Queen of Suspense, is now laid up with a sprained coccyx. Apparently dosing herself with Dr. Babcock’s Hop-Toad Tonic has had less than optimal results. Nevertheless, she soldiers on. Thus we are come to Chapter DXL of her epic romance, Oy, Rodney.

Lord Jeremy Coldsore having rashly challenged himself to a duel, his friends are meeting at The Lying Tart, ostensibly to find some way to save him from himself, but in reality to get helplessly plastered. In this they succeed.

Meanwhile, Ms. Crepuscular is agitated by a “Get Well” card from a reader in New Hong Kong, Oklahoma. “Get well so you can stop writing this drivel and go back to composing rock operas,” writes Mrs. Uinta Baggy. She has obviously confused Violet Crepuscular, author of epic romances, with Violet Corpuscular, well-known composer of widely-despised rock operas.

“I’ll get her for this!” elongates Ms. Crepuscular. [Don’t blame me for that, I just work here.] “As soon as I’m up and around again, I’ll shove a swarm of hornets through her mail slot!”

Well, she’s distracted: we can’t expect much of the story today. We are sure she will return to form in the very near future.

Oops–Dueling Is Illegal (‘Oy, Rodney’)

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We are dumbfounded by developments in Chapter DXXXIX (look at all the cool x’s!) of Violet Crepuscular’s epic romance, Oy, Rodney. The Queen of Suspense is at it again! See how she ratchets up the tension till you could just plotz! Well, I could…

As if he weren’t already in enough trouble, having challenged himself to a duel and rashly accepted, Lord Jeremy Coldsore has a private consultation with a solicitor named Jox, who normally hangs out in Charles Dickens books. Here in Scurveyshire he used to mind Farmer Feep’s ferocious feral pigs.

“Not only can you not back out of the duel without destroying your reputation for untold centuries to come,” Jox counsels him, “but as the shire’s justice of the peace, you have another problem. Dueling is against the law! First you broke the law by challenging yourself to a duel, then you broke it by accepting, and as justice of the peace, you ought to put yourself on trial, and, if found guilty, sentence yourself to be drawn and quartered!”

“I hadn’t thought of that,” Jeremy admits. “I say–they don’t still do that, do they?”

“I’m afraid they do, my lord… in Scurveyshire.”

[Loud, portentous music signals the end of this present chapter. Readers who can’t tolerate the suspense are urged to seek professional help.]

The Field of Honor (‘Oy, Rodney’)

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“I fell down and sprained my coccyx a few days ago,” Violet Crepuscular confides in her readers, “but did that hold back the creative processes? You should live so long!”

Thus turn we unto Chapter DXXXVIII of Ms. Crepuscular’s epic romance, Oy, Rodney.

Lord Jeremy Coldsore has let his impetuous nature get the better of him, and has challenged himself to a duel–with sabers! He has asked the American adventurer, Willis Twombley, to be his second.

“What’re you gonna do if you go and stab yourself?” Twombley asks. He thinks he’s Sargon of Akkad, but we can’t go into that just now.

“Tell Lady Margo that I died for love!” says Jeremy.

However, a snag has developed. It seems the only field in all of Scurveyshire suitable to be a dueling venue was once, and not so long ago, a cow pasture.

“This is ridiculous!” Jeremy fostulates. “I refuse to fight a duel in a field that used to be covered with cow-poop!”

Then he says, “Hah! Unless I’m very much mistaken, I’ve got him on the run!”

Twombley withdraws to The Lying Tart for a gin and hair tonic. There he finds Johnno the Merry Minstrel composing “Ye Olde Ballad of Lord Jeremy Coldsore’s Affaire of Honour.” News travels preternaturally fast in these rural communities.

A Challenge to a Duel! (Oy, Rodney)

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We have finally received Chapter DXXXVI of Violent Crepuscular’s epic romance, Oy, Rodney. Nothing happens in this chapter. We must move on to Chapter DXXXVII.

You may recall that Lord Jeremy Coldsore, who is engaged to be married to Lady Margo Cargo, has suddenly fallen violently in love with some character whom he has named “Micropora” and who, if she existed today, might easily be mistaken for a plastic lawn ornament. This unsettles Willis Twombley, the American adventurer who thinks he’s Sargon of Akkad: Lady Margo believes he and Lord Jeremy are the same person.

“This sort of thing happened all the time in the 1850s,” writes Ms. Crepuscular, the Queen of Suspense. “You have to know about these things if you’re going to be queen of anything.”

Twombley attempts to revive Jeremy’s honor. “Look here, Germy!” he argues persuasively. “I need that marriage! I’m jist about flat busted, but Lady Margo’s the richest widow in all Scurveyshire. You can’t back out of it jist ’cause you fell for I dunno what! Folks’ll think you’re a snake in the grass.”

This cabilitates Lord Jeremy. “You’re right, old boy!” quoth he. “What kind of a cad would leave dear Lady Margo in the lurch? I challenge him to a duel! I will meet him on the field of honor, sabers at the ready!”

“Yes, yes, I know!” Ms. Crepuscular concludes. “He has challenged himself to a duel–and he dare not back out! And that’s what I call suspense!”

We can hardly wait to hear the rest of it.