Wrong House
By Jane Goodhew
As she approached her home, she knew intuitively that there was
something amiss. She went to put the key
in the door but there was no point as the door was already open but that would
never happen because she suffered from OCD and had not just checked and double-checked so many times that the door was locked.
What should she do next, go in or first call the police and tell them
there had been a break-in? She decided
against the latter as if she did not go in, she could not be certain that there
had been anything stolen and perhaps she had checked it so many times she had
in fact unlocked it? That was a
possibility.
She took out her personal alarm and went inside. What she saw was not what she had been
expecting; it had not been a burglary in fact far from it as nothing was the
same as when she had gone away. Absolutely nothing! She went
from room to room and not one was even to her taste or even from the 21st
Century but more from an age long gone.
Thick or floral floor-length curtains hung from each window, lamps
were strategically placed on highly polished half-moon wooden tables, and wall
holders held candles some by the doors so they could easily be reached in case the
gas was cut off? What was she thinking,
gas light, she had electricity! The carpets which were in the centre of a
parquet floor were also heavily patterned the type she would never be seen dead
with in her ultra-modern home. There were
also ceiling-to-wall bookcases, numerous hard-backed and very dull looking not
quite the Mills & Boon or Agatha Christie that she was used to
reading. She kept pinching herself
thinking it must be a dream and eventually she would wake up in the shower like
Bobby in Dallas. No, she was already awake, and nothing was
making the slightest sense to her what could she do, phone the police, and say
what.
“Well officer my house has either been taken over by the
disgusting taste brigade or has become a stage set for the latest film.” She
would solve this mystery herself, she had yet to fathom it, but she would. It was then that she remembered she had given
permission for her house to be used for the remake of yet another Dickens novel
as she had been away for some time.
Copyright Jane Goodhew