Sorry but the plastic
dinosaur – sorry, Thai water dragon – belonging to Diogenes the Hungarian dwarf really
does remind me of the time when I used to play Dungeons and Dragons. Back then proto
‘shoot ’em up’ computer game designers were cutting their creative teeth on an
amazing social concept: friends sat around a table (sometimes with Citadel metal
miniatures) and role played Tolkien-inspired adventures in dungeon
settings. A world of 20-sided dice, wandering monster tables, Kobolds and frighteningly
tight chainmail underwear. In these crazed subterranean adventures one of the
magical items your Fighter-High Elf-Lawful Good-Whatever You So Desired-character
could acquire was a Bag of Holding. This seemingly innocuous leather bag was
actually some sort of trans-dimensional device like Doctor Who’s Tardis, which
meant it could actually hold much more than its outward physical dimensions
suggested. Diogenes’ dinosaur is a bit like that like that – on the outside
merely a medium-sized plastic drgon but after unzipping its belly he pulls out
one blessed thing after another. In fact, he keeps going until the table is almost
groaning under the Himalayan weight of it all.
“Blimey,” I say. “Is this the special
delivery from Thailand then – the stuff that was saved from that terrible
flood?”
Diogenes takes a tatty old sepia exercise
book from the pile, suspiciously holding the spine between his thumb and forefinger.
“Yes,” he says. “They’re all old and
falling apart. Might as well chuck ’em, to be honest.”
“You better bloody not!” I quickly take
the book from him. “And be careful. All that you see before you – the exercise
books, badges, squeezed tubes, caskets, VHS tapes, scraps of papers, postcards,
box lids, paper bags, torn envelopes and that weird statuette with the bulging
penis – all represent the detritus of a lifetime of pratting about in the sometimes
dangerously improbable areas of the worlds’ dark and wrinkled soft bits. So treat
with care, my hairy vertically challenged friend.”
“You’re lucky I didn’t come across this
lot cleaning the Budapest streets otherwise it would have gone straight into my
dustcart where it belongs.”
I gently take a train ticket issued in
Asuncion and hold it up. “You know what this is?”
“A train ticket issued in Paraguay?”
Honestly, I sometimes despair.
“No,” I say, patiently. “It is not just a Paraguayan
train ticket. It is…it is…like a Ring of Teleportation…but disguised as…as a, err,
ticket.”
“Jack, how much have you had to drink?”
“Not enough.”
We both laugh.
Diogenes sits back in his chair and orders
two glasses of full-bodied local wine. Alright,” he says. “I give up. You tell
me the story behind a crappy old train ticket that is actually not a disguised
magical item.”
“Only if you insist.”
“Deal is the same as always: I get the drinks
in and you supply the dubious stories.”
“Oh, go on then…”
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