"My back," I wheezed.
"Can't hear you."
"Can't see you..."
PAULA BENNETT
Well, land's sakes! Lordy. Bless my soul, ain't it a crying shame to be taken down a peg or two?
I do declare it's something I never thought a body would ever experience. No, sir. There I was, sitting pretty in the big old mansion on the hill for nine long, happy years, punishing the poor and now look at me!
I'm just like those poor folks. I done gone from hero to zero. I called up Big Daddy. He always cheers me up.
"Aw, shucks, Big Momma," he said, "you can come join me around the boardroom table at this here ANZ Bank any time you like. It's money for jam. Just the way you like it."
"I sure do appreciate that, John," I said.
"No problem," he said. "Say. How's ole Bill?"
"The same," I said.
"Yeah," he said. "Yeah."
JIAN YANG
I was opening my mail this morning and found an invitation to a reunion of my old class at the People's Liberation Army Air Force Engineering Academy.
It brought back so many wonderful memories of when I studied there before going to lecture at the Foreign Languages Institute elite spy school.
"You look happy," said Bill English.
"Oh," I said. "I didn't see you there."
"I was just walking past your office when I saw you holding up your letter, and smiling from ear to ear," he said. "Good news, is it?"
"Yes," I said. "It's an invitation to a reunion of my old class at Luoyang University."
BILL ENGLISH
It's not our job to make this place run.
We have no obligation to smooth Labour's path.
None whatsoever.
Zero.
Nada.
Nothing! I'm not going to lift a finger! I don't have to if I don't want to, and no one can make me, so -
"Now, dear," Mary called out, "what did I tell you about working yourself up into a rage?"
"My back," I wheezed, and lay down again.