Book I: The Argument
The Ottoman – eh? Let me count the arms.
“None, sah!” reports Midshipman
Ripples;
“They’s made that way, and with no back
neither,
“So as to offer comfort to cripples.”
Used in the empire of the same name
For adulterous romps and more, I suspect,
It arrived in America in 1789
As an “Ottomane of velours d’Utrecht”,
Bought by a Mr Thomas Jefferson,
Who happened to see it by chance
And used it to muse and relax on
After taking Louisiana from France
And writing the Kentucky and Virginia
Resolutions – secretly, mind –
So people would come for miles to see
The chair that had no behind.
Book
II: The Events Preceding The Night In Question
“Jesus Christ, you need a steam room
“To dry these things out – they’re
soaking!”
“How many are there – in total, that
is?”
“Eighteen.” “Eighteen? You’re joking!
“Count them again, oh please,” pleaded
Kate,
“Eighteen’s too many to rescue.”
How well she remembered the sodden
ottomans,
Growing up under Ceaușescu,
As a young Romanian girl that year
When the floods came out of the sky
And everyone north of the Danube
Would kill for a pouffe that was dry.
Lou counted them from wall to wall
And, as she said, there were eighteen
in all:
Two had disintegrated, three were just
wettish
(Ideal for couples with that fancy fetish!)
While four were quite sodden and, as
for the rest,
They ranged from drenched to damp at
best.
“Do you think, if we turn the radiators
on,”
Said Kate, skipping gaily upstairs,
“That we could dry them before Tim gets
home
“And sees what we’ve done to his
chairs?”
“This wouldn’t have happened in
Jefferson’s day,”
Avowed Lou, grinding her incisor,
“But if we torch the whole fucking
house,
“Then Tim’ll be none the wiser.”
Book
III: The Ottomans On The Night In Question
Superindent Faraday puffed on his pipe
And surveyed the desolate scene:
A mangled mess of steel and glass
Where once Tim’s house had been
And he turned to Sergeant Keddie:
“What the blazes is this all about?”
“Blazes, sir? A good one!
“Well, according to my snout,
“A man was seen emerging
“From the flames at about half-past
five.
“If he’d left it any later, sir,
“He wouldn’t be alive.
“He claims it was his sister, Lou,
“Who set the house alight
(“His sisters live in Basingstoke
“But were staying overnight).”
“Let’s interview this sister, Lou,”
Said Faraday, looking tense,
But Lou swore blind she’d been asleep
And the mystery made no sense.
Faraday stared at the ceiling
And, perplexed, he scratched his head,
And pursed his lips and picked his nose
And eventually he said:
“This is no ordinary burning of
ottomans,
“We’ll have to call in the Met.” –
For the strangest thing of all, you
see,
Was that the ottomans were still wet!
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