Babe in the bushes (Rousse)

Something caught my eye as I peered out of the bathroom window. At first I thought it was a squirrel in the shrubbery, but when I opened the back door and stepped out into the garden I realised that the creature rustling under the bush was a baby girl. I picked her up from the ground and carried her indoors to show to my mother-in-law. The child would soon be identified with a quick phone call to the hospital and a scan of the barcode bangle on her wrist. However, I had a funny feeling that this child would not be returning to the care of the NHS: I was adopting a baby!

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Jools Holland, Danny Baker and strange events in London (Belle)

The car was so old it had a split windscreen and cracked leather seats. I had no idea where it had come from, but even so I attempted to drive it at break-neck speed while seated in the passenger seat. I took a long, sharp bend in the City and parked outside ‘Conran HQ’ in Islington. The lobby was impressive. With its vaulted ceiling and marbled floor it bore a striking resemblance to Grand Central Station.

When the receptionist asked if she could help me, I shrugged my shoulders. I had no reason to be here and left through the revolving doors with Jools Holland. As we went out, Danny Baker was coming in. I greeted him cheerily and that, combined with the fact that I seemed to know his friend, convinced him that he knew me. He asked me for a drink and I eagerly accepted. Over a glass of cider I told him (untruthfully) that I had lived in Deptford for 30 years. He was naturally impressed.

Later, and after having accidentally witnessed my former boyfriend propose to his new girlfriend, I realised all the streets of London were blocked and no-one could leave the centre of town. I stopped to look at a shiny new statue, made of parquet flooring but depicting a Victorian military victory. Something was not adding up.

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Murder in the machair (Rousse)

Although I had no idea what I was doing here, I recognised the familiar Harris landscape: islands, hills and the single track road, the perfect combination for cycling holidays by tandem. The official pushed open the roadside gate and led us across the machair down to the low cliff edge. He pointed at the beach to the south, identifying it as “Seilebost, the most beautiful beach in the Outer Hebrides”. I was just about to argue that I knew another beach even more beautiful than this one just a few miles north when he interrupted to reveal the real purpose of our encounter. The interrogation would end when we confessed to the murder of the 30 individuals whose bodies had recently washed up on the shore.

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Single women looking for men, and a new line in hot tubs (Rousse)

TPR and GJ were sewn into a two-man Black Watch tartan straight-jacket. Forced together so closely, the dancing tutor believed this would speed up the process of teaching them the moves for the forthcoming ball. Neither was particularly charmed by this idea. In complete contrast the entire single female population of Edinburgh could barely contain their excitement, bursting with enthusiasm for the chance to dance with two of the best-looking men in town, with the added bonus of perhaps finding a husband at the social event of the year. I was just grateful that KC featured on the guest list: at least there would be one man at the party familiar with the ways of the dance floor.

TPR and GJ had managed to unravel themselves during the night and looked much more comfortable with one another when they awoke together at the guest house on the Isle of Lewis the next day. I climbed out of bed and wandered off to see if I could find our host. He was nowhere to be seen. Instead I came across a foursome of newly-appointed hot tub salesmen plonked on the sofas in the sitting room. I glanced out the window at the waves rolling in from the Atlantic and commented that I thought it unlikely that anyone who lived so close to the sea would be interested in buying a hot tub. Then I spotted the menacing line tattooed across the cheek of one of the salesmen “guests”. My first thought was that he perhaps sold a new line in “goth hot tubs”. My second was fear.

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Commuting by ‘Fawlty Towers’ ocean liner (Belle)

The ocean liner departure hall was overcrowded and really confusing, yet still I refused to ask for help. I only wanted to travel as far as Hatfield, but I didn’t know if my ship would be departing from the north- or the south-bound platform. I ran up and down wooden stairs to various levels hoping someone would offer advice. Eventually, I recognised the chef from Fawlty Towers who was now working as a steward. He pointed me in the right direction.

Later, I was back on board, this time to sit an exam. I was sitting in a tight corner in the cabin and writing a powerful essay about the re-use of corporate assets. I was going to be an accountant! The examination brochure was illustrated with irrelevant, black and white police crime photographs. In one, the hull of the very ship I was travelling on was photographed in dry dock, with post-it notes attached to it. Were those bullet holes?

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Belle ‘bottles’ Great British Bake Off

Dough by Brendan MacNeill

Dough by Brendan MacNeill

Newly released from prison, I had unexpectedly made it to the semi-finals of The Great British Bake Off. And now here I was, trying to knead dough on a cluttered work surface in C’s kitchen.

It was my first visit to C’s new house and I had taken time to admire the intricate pattern she had created on the kitchen floor using multi-coloured sawdust. Even as I said how lovely it was, she tutted loudly and swept it all away. As I kneaded my dough, it simply disappeared down to dust and to make matters worse I spilled frozen peas all over the newly clean kitchen floor. Then the lamp I had been working under started to smoke. Not only had I created chaos in the kitchen, I was now going to be disqualified from the show.

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Lost Shakespeare play: Rousse plays the leading lady

Two gorgeous knights of the realm were fighting over me – with swords! One was my lover. The other was the Duke of Northumberland, determined to win me as his own. I buried my face in the right shoulder of my beloved as the Duke lanced his unprotected left armpit. Blood spurted everywhere. I prayed that my parents would not witness the debris. It was simply far too gory to contemplate. Knowing them, they would take the whole thing literally, forgetting that I was the female lead in this “new” long-lost three-person Shakespearean drama.

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Judge Judy and some Hollywood greats (Belle)

I was astonished to learn that my best friend’s boyfriend was taking me to Judge Judy’s court for non-payment of a yoga class fee. I burst into his hotel room and told him, in a stream of obscenities, exactly what I thought. Only later did I realise that I would have to repeat my words in court – and on ITV2.

Later, in a badly constructed public convenience, I tried to unravel the complexities of the family trees of Hollywood. It seems Clark Gable was the father of just one of Bette Davis’s twins.

Later I diffused a fight over an Evian water bottle.

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Regrets of Mrs Harry Potter (Rousse)

Although I was now immensely rich, the downside of life as Mrs Harry Potter was the complete loss of privacy following our marriage.

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Cornwall via Northampton International (Belle)

As I looked into the bay, I saw an EasyJet plane parked alongside a few outbuildings. I asked my guide what I was looking at and she said, “oh, that’s Northampton International Airport”.

Things had really changed around here – not least the aquisition of a coast line for a previously land-locked county. The profile of Northamptonshire had never been higher. At the Girl Guides camp the Guides were playing an animated version of ‘Cornwall or Northampton?’. As a game show host showed picture flash cards of scenic views the crowd had to correctly call out whether the picture had been taken in Cornwall – or Northampton.

Later I joined the Guides for a circuit on the spinning water ride. Sitting in a buoyant wooden ring I spun round the circuit but was dismayed to find that my ring took me on a short cut and I finished the ride too quickly. My sister, who had also been disappointed, snuck onto the ride again. Once again, I wished I was less honest.

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