Little pub

I inherited this pub recently.

It’s really tiny.

It’s about four foot by four foot.

The bar’s just a small shelf along the back wall with a couple of beer taps built into it, and there’s enough space at the end for a cash register, and next to that there’s a little cubby hole which has just about enough space for a chair to fit in for whoever is working the bar that night to sit in.

Which is always me because I didn’t inherit a pub just to let someone else work there.

There’s no space to store anything else in the pub, there’s not even a sink, and everyone has to bring their own glasses with them.

I say everyone but you can only fit six people in there really, in two rows of three. Maybe eight, if everyone’s tiny and you can fit four in a row.

And you can’t be too tall, either, because the ceiling’s only six foot up.

So it’s just as well when I go in there I get to sit in the chair.

There’s a cellar under the bar for the beer barrels to go in, but you can only get down to it through an opening in the floor and the hatch is the entirety of the floor so you can only go down there when the pub is empty so if one of the barrels runs out you can’t change it until the next day.

When the pub’s open and it’s full – and it’s always full because so few people can get inside and also it’s the only pub in the town – there’s no space to move past the people by the bar to get to the bar, or the people by the door to get to the door, so what happens is all six people (or eight if they’re small) have to move around together in a loop, slowly, constantly, in unison, clockwise, like one of those puzzles where a piece is missing and you have to slide the pieces around to get them into the right place, except there’s no pieces missing, and no space, but you never stop moving. And this line moves just fast enough so that one complete rotation takes exactly the time it takes to drink one pint

It’s a bit disorientating when you’ve had a few and you’re sat on the chair serving and you’re the only one not moving and everyone else is, and because they’ve all had a few as well they think they’re not moving and you are instead, and so to them it must look like you’re some huge moon orbiting around them in the dark.

To me they look like a caterpillar that’s swallowed its own tail.

To cover the rent and the rates I have to sell about 600 pints a week, which means each person in the pub has to drink a hundred pints every week, if for accounting purposes I assume it’s always the same 6 people in the pub. Which is 14 and a quarter pints a day, which is about two pints an hour, when you take into account our opening hours, which you should, because I can’t sell pints when I’m not open (we don’t have a website).

Which doesn’t sound much, but maintaining a constant rotational speed of two pints an hour is pretty draining, and I’d say that if left to their own devices, the line would settle down to an approximate rate of about one pint per hour, give or take ten minutes or so.

To this end, I have been experimenting with different methods to raise the rotational speed to high enough levels to allow us to stay in business, but it’s quite a difficult problem.

I had hoped to effect a method of subbing people in and out of the pub with waiting customers queueing up outside, but due to the terms of our licence, and the location of our front door, and various other byelaws, there is to be no drinking on the high street, and it was discovered that without a drink in their hand people would wander off around the town and not find their way back. So this method would lead to a slow dissipation of all our clientele over the course of the night, resulting ultimately in an actual decrease in the internal rotational speed within our establishment.

So the substitution method was abandoned.

Next I tried embedding a pacemaker within the line. However, to ensure the pacemaker would maintain a high pace, it proved necessary to subsidise the cost of their drinking, meaning that the five remaining genuine customers would each then have to consume an increased number of pints, over and above the aforementioned hoped-for consumption rate. The necessary rotational speed could not be maintain.

I briefly considered putting a step between the front row of customers and the back row of customers, so as to induce a number of trips across the course of the night, leading to an equal increase in spillages, meaning pint glasses needed to be refilled at a greater rate. But this was not practical for a number of reasons, and the idea was abandoned.

One weekend I banned talking, so as to decrease the amount of time wasted on non-consumptional uses of the mouth, but christ was all that silent bloody shuffling weird.

So I let them talk.

An actual rotating floor with adjustable controls would probably be the best solution, but given the space needed for the workings of it you’d only be able to get inside if you were about four foot 6. Which would mean letting children in. And children drink pints even slower than bloody adults.

I suppose if we were letting children in we could just play musical chairs – well musical pints – and make them run around as if it was a game. A strangely expensive game.

Also, thinking about it, we’d probably be able to fit at least ten children inside, maybe even 12. So on some levels it seems like a good idea.

But then the pub would be full of children and I didn’t inherit a pub just to fill it with children.

So in the end I just increased our prices and now we charge seven pounds a pint.

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Notes:

1. Written on July 15th, 2016
2. In honour of the pub that opened up on the high street a few months earlier
3. It was an extremely little pub
4. And still is

Spiders Are Wonderful

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Notes:

1. This was written on October 9th, 2010
2. And then illustrated over the next six months or so
3. And first published on the 4th of April, 2011
4. It is available to buy, in ebook form, on itunes, for £2.99
5. But is sadly unavailable in print these days
6. We tried to get it funded on kickstarter a couple of years ago
7. But we failed
8. Despite such astonishing advertorial pleading material such as this incredible video:

9. Or this baffling appearance on national radio:


10. Toby Vok will return
11. In the meantime, however, before his re-emergence, you can keep abreast of his more recent adventures at his personal website (tobyvok.co.uk)

Tale #3: The Cat Wife

A nobleman had three sons, but had yet to choose an heir. When a cat began to attack the people of the town, he said to his children, “Whosoever saves our town from this beast of the woods shall inherit my castle and all of my lands”, and each in turn set out to defeat the creature.

The eldest son, a soldier, picked up his sword and marched out into the forest where the cat was presumed to live. He quickly became lost and as the day headed towards night he sat down and, although only intending to rest for a short while, fell asleep against the trunk of an old oak tree.

When he awoke it was completely dark, and he could feel the weight of something heavy on his chest. He tried to move but the cat – for that was what it was – pushed its claws into his skin, opened its eyes (which were just in front of his own) and said, “What is that you hold in your hand? Is it for me?”

The eldest son said, “Yes, it is for you. If you let me up I will give you a good close look of it.”

The cat leapt from his chest and sat down in front of him, and the soldier stood up, raised his sword, and swung it as hard and as fast as he could at where the cat now sat. But the cat’s eyes saw so well in the dark that she dodged easily out of the way of the blade and then leapt forward and sliced the man’s head clean off his shoulders with a single swipe of her claws.

The next day the nobleman woke to find the head of his eldest son left on their front doorstep. So now the middle son, a farmer, strode out into the woods to try his luck against the cat, and he carried with him a bag of the finest meat from his farm.

He quickly became lost as he searched through the unfamiliar woods, and as the day headed towards night he sat down to quickly rest his weary legs. Yet he ended up falling into a deep sleep, and when he awoke the moon was high in the night sky above him and bathed in its light he could see the cat asleep on his own chest.

When he tried to move, the cat awoke and said, “What is that you have in your bag? Is it for me?”

And the farmer said, “Yes, it is for you. If you let me up I’ll open up my bag and give you a good look at what’s inside.”

The cat leapt from his chest and sat down in front of him, and the farmer stood up and opened his sack, and took from within the meat he had brought with him and threw it onto the ground. The cat sniffed at it, and satisfied that it was not poisoned, began greedily to eat, and while she was distracted the farmer held out the sack and approached the cat as quietly as he could. But before he could lower the sack over her head, she heard the heavy beat of his heart as he approached and leapt out of his way. And then, with a single swipe of her claws, sliced his head clean from his shoulders just as she had his brother’s.

The next morning, the nobleman awoke to find the head of his second son left on their back doorstep. The youngest son, who was considered useless by his father for he had no job nor a wife, was still in bed when his father burst into his room. His father dragged him from his room and insisted that now he must make his way to the forest and avenge the deaths of his brothers.

To this the young son said, “I do not want to, father. This cat has never harmed me. And anyway, surely now you’ve sent my brothers to their deaths, I’m your only son and your only heir.”

In response to this insolence the nobleman beat his son so fiercely that the boy agreed tearfully to go to the forest, even if only to escape his father’s wrath, and he set out before lunch. In the woods, the young man did not become lost, for he cared not where he was, and gave no thought to returning home.

He came soon to a stream, where he stripped naked and bathed his battered body in the babbling brook. When he returned to the riverbank, he found the cat sat on top of his blood-soaked clothes, busily tearing the cloth of his shirt to ribbons with her long and deadly claws.

She looked up at him while her claws continued their game and said, “Your first brother brought me a sword, and with it tried to kill me. Your second brother brought me a sack of food, and with it tried to capture me. What have you brought me, and what will you try to do to me with it?”

The youngest son said, “I have brought you nothing, for I came here only to escape my father. I cannot give you my clothes, for you have already destroyed them. I cannot give you money, for I have no job and therefore nothing to spend. I cannot give you food, for I forgot to bring any even for myself. All I have left are my hands and my heart, which for all my trying I have never been able to give away, for no-one has ever wanted to employ me, and nor have any ever wanted to love me.”

“Then give me your hands,” said the cat. “To stroke me whenever I desire. And give me your heart, to love me forever and without regret, and in return I shall become your wife, and cease my attacks upon on the town.”

So they returned to his home and were married that very afternoon. For saving the town, the young man and his cat wife inherited the nobleman’s castle and all of his lands, and lived there benevolently until the end of their days. As for where the noblemen went, none would say.

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Notes:

1. The earliest version of this I can find is from August 2013.
2. Illustrated again by Holly English
3. I like cats