Just to reassure everyone, Miss Skittles is home safe and sound with no apparent side effects from her ordeal. Well, I say ordeal because we’re assuming that’s what it was although she hasn’t been able to tell us exactly what happened. I saw her Wednesday evening. She ate her dinner as usual, then I left her downstairs when I went to bed. The next morning there was no sign of her, but although this was unusual, during warm weather it’s not unheard of. Anyway, I was late for work, so I dashed off without seeing her. That evening when I went to feed her I noticed her breakfast bowl of biscuits looked untouched. I asked if anyone had seen her, no, came the answer, not since yesterday.
We went to bed concerned but not yet really worried. After all, cats are fickle creatures that do as they please. On Friday morning, the biscuits were still untouched and there was no sign of her. Now I WAS worried. The last time she disappeared she ended up in Ely after going for a ride in the engine of someone’s car! I put out the word on the street’s WhatsApp and neighbours went to check gardens and sheds and anywhere else she might have got in and got trapped. During the day they all reported back no success in finding her. By that evening, when we all gathered for the usual Friday Happy Hour, everyone was concerned.
I searched our garden again, looking everywhere I thought she might have crawled into or behind. I’ll be honest, by now it was a body I was expecting to find. Either way, I just wanted to find her.
Nothing. We went to bed very worried. I had just dropped off when Franki awoke me by tapping at my door.
Skittles is back! She announced.
Bleary-eyed, I jumped out of bed and went downstairs. From their bedroom over the kitchen, they had heard the cat flap go and went down to find the cat face first in the bowl of biscuits. Skittles was thin, very hungry, and very very pleased to see us. Her coat felt rough and out of condition. The consensus is that she managed to get herself shut in somewhere and was only just released. Possibly in one of the empty flats in the apartment block behind us or maybe in someone’s shed. Who knows? The only person who does is staying quiet on the subject.
Accepting as much fuss, cuddles, and love as we were prepared to give her, we made sure she was okay before going back to bed. The next morning, I went downstairs a little bit apprehensive that she might have vanished in the night, but no, there she was, curled up in a patch of sunlight fast asleep.
Anyway, a special cat tracker is now on its way to us. Not only will we be able to track her movements, but it will monitor her health, sleeping patterns, and calorie intake and burn. She is an elderly cat with a heart murmur so that will give us peace of mind. It will be interesting to see where the little madam does roam and how big her territory is. The collar comes with a vibrating mode. The idea is we vibrate her collar every time we feed her so she will come to associate the vibration with food so when we want her to come home we simply vibrate her collar. There is also a flashlight option so we can light her collar up like a beacon. I can’t help but think that will scare the shit out of her and anyone else in her vicinity.
But at least she’s home and she’s safe. Cats can be such a worry. When they disappear you have no clue what’s happened to them. Are they trapped somewhere? Has someone stolen them? Have they died of natural causes? Are they a pile of squished fur on the road? At least with the tracker, we’ll be able to see where she’s gone and what she’s up to, which will be fascinating.
What else has happened since we last chatted? Well, I completed my first two weeks of training in my new job and I’m happy to report that so far I’m loving it. My new boss is lovely and very kind. The work is not too taxing and is interesting, and the patients are wonderful. The practice dog is unpredictable in her moods but luckily seems to like me, so that’s all right. Although the commute is a killer – a five-minute walk at most (ha, ha) – I can manage it, and it’s fabulous not sitting in traffic jams and being able to come home for lunch.
It has been a long two weeks though. As I was training I worked four days each of the weeks instead of two and it was tiring trying to get my old brain to remember new things – and there were lots of things to try and remember. But I picked it up reasonably quickly, and although I have made mistakes (of course, I have) I only make the mistake once and then I never make it again.
It is great having a big window to look out of and being on such a busy street so when I have a moment I can watch the world and his wife walk by. It’s nice not to come home covered with bruises or grout and to be able to wear pretty clothes. I had my feet done as a new employee perk so I could see exactly what happens and understand the terminology. That was interesting. I found out I have a mild genetic foot deformity which explains why my toes curl and sometimes feel bruised, and I had treatment to help remedy it.
Next week I will only work Monday and Tuesday, then will have six days off in a row because the following Monday is a Bank Holiday. I can’t believe how fast this year is passing by. Franki and Rys go back to university on the 15th of September. I have booked an Airbnb close to the university for that night. After the drive up there and the long day of hauling all their belongings back out of storage and into their rooms, I will be exhausted. I will also be meeting Rys’s mother for the first time. She is coming to help move them back in and we are all having dinner together that evening. And then I’ll drive home alone the next morning.
There will only be a month before they’re home again for ten days over the half-term holiday and then I’ll be driving them back to university – this time with my parents. It is Franki’s graduation day on the 3rd of November so we’ve booked a two-bedroom Airbnb house twenty minutes away from the university for four nights and my parents and I will stay there to attend the graduation and look about the area.
I can just about fit five people in my car, but we will all have to pack light because I don’t have a very large boot (trunk to my American friends).
After that, it will only be six weeks until they are home for Christmas and this time I will have two weeks off over the Christmas period!! I am so looking forward to that. The chance to relax and see friends and family at a leisurely pace instead of having to cram it into four days, or evenings when I’ve been at work all day and will be back to work the next. And I am beyond happy I won’t be working Boxing Day anymore.
Both of my previous jobs are still looking for replacements for me, which is a slightly odd fact.
It is wonderful having Franki and Rys home, despite the fact I’ve been working so much so haven’t seen them during the days. It is nice coming home to someone and having someone to eat dinner with and watch TV with. They both seem exhausted after the university year so have been resting and lolling about the house in their PJs not doing much – other than making dinner on the days I’m working.
Last time we spoke I was about to do the Stonham Barns Comic-Con. It was the first time it had been held so no one knew how it would go. I drove myself and two other local authors up there on Friday morning. This was primarily a set-up day for traders and a pitch tent day and settle-in for those people camping for the whole weekend. As the organisers didn’t think we’d sell anything that day they hadn’t charged us and I’m glad they didn’t. We sat there all day and didn’t sell a single book between us. Instead, we spent money on food and drink. Lesson learned. If it is held again next year we will know we don’t have to bother with the Friday. Instead, we can turn up early on Saturday to set up.
The weather on Saturday was appalling. I mean heavy, torrential, coming down sideways, rain of epic biblical proportions. And it didn’t stop. It rained all day.
I felt so sorry for those people camping and for the traders in marquees outside. Luckily, I had taken the precaution of booking our tables in the great hall. With the ground outside rapidly turning into a quagmire, people took refuge in the hall and spent a long time browsing the stalls – which included us.
I took a total of 43 books with me for the weekend. That was a mix of Black Ice, The Forest, Lifesong, Erinsmore, and a few of Mage Quest. I honestly didn’t expect to sell any of the last one as it’s book two in a series but thought it would be nice to have it displayed next to Erinsmore so took four copies with me.
I sold twenty books on Saturday, almost half my stock, which was wonderful. I even sold two copies of Mage Quest. One to a guy there with his family who had bought Franki’s old wardrobe from me when I sold it last year through the local Facebook sales page. He looked at my profile and saw I was an author so bought a copy of Erinsmore for his wife, which I signed. Recognising me, he waited to speak to me and then bought Mage Quest for his wife, which was lovely. The other copy I sold to a lady who loved the look of Erinsmore so bought the two together.
The rain continued. A stormtrooper dashed into the hall and took off his helmet. He grimaced at me and wiped the water from his face.
Bet you’re pleased to be in a plastic costume, I said.
No, he replied glumly. The rainwater has trickled down the back of my neck and gathered in the plastic buttock cups of the uniform so I’m sloshing as I walk, and my arse is freezing.
A seven-foot-tall Chewbacca wandered by, soaking wet and smelling like a wet dog.
Anya from the film Frozen stopped to chat with us. She was struggling to keep her fabulous costume out of the mud. Elsa should have been there as well but had been out on the lash so now had a hangover. Very un-queenlike behaviour.
Through the open door of the hall, I saw a man standing at the entrance to the small traders’ tent opposite. He had his back to us and was holding a full-size, female, store mannequin hugged to his side. His finger was between her bum cheeks, and we realised there was a hole there that his fingers were up. Okaaay. Bit disturbing, standing there, fingering a dummy in broad daylight when there were families and kids around. He turned around, turning the dummy with him and we all recoiled in shock. Where her breasts should be were two gaping holes with ragged edges where he’d sawn them off!! He walked away, carrying his mutilated lady dummy with him, and leaving us wondering just what we’d seen and whether we should report him for abusing a dummy.
By the time I got home that evening, I was exhausted and starving, so put something quick and filling in the oven, ate in front of the TV, and then fell into bed.
The next day was more promising weatherwise as the sun was out, the sky was blue, and it had stopped raining. We had high hopes of doing even better but strangely I only sold 15 books on Sunday. Perhaps because it was a better day people were doing all the outdoor things they hadn’t had a chance to do on Saturday. Anyway, fifteen books sold still isn’t bad, and added to the twenty sold the previous day added up to a successful weekend of 35 books sold out of 43 taken. I also sold one eBook copy of Black Ice which a lady scanned from the Q codes on my table, I spoke to lots of people several of whom scanned my website into their phones, and I handed out lots of cards.
All in all, a profitable and worthwhile event and one I shall do next year.
It was also useful because I found a couple of Franki’s birthday presents there. She’s a massive Star Trek: Deep Space Nine fan, so I bought her a stunning technical drawing of the space station plus a cool nightlight that cycles through seven different colours.
The event finished at 4pm on Sunday and by the time we’d packed up and driven home all I wanted to do was eat dinner and chill, before heading off to bed ready for an early start and my first day at my new job.
It was Franki’s birthday last week. She turned 20. I can’t believe that I have a twenty-year-old child. It seems only yesterday she was born, and I don’t know where the time has gone. We had a quiet family lunch on Sunday where we gave Franki her presents – she loved mine – and she and Rys celebrated together on the actual day because I was at work – although I did cook big, fat steaks for us that evening.
And now it’s Saturday again. We had planned to go to Cambridge today, but we were all so tired this morning that we decided to put it off until during the week. I will have a long run of days off, so we don’t have to go at the weekend and hopefully, it won’t be quite so busy.
I am loving having the weekends off, yet another perk of my new job, and looking forward to days off next week. The year is slipping by, and I have so much to do. I naively thought at the beginning of the year that I would get two if not three, books published in 2023, but now it’s looking like Mage Quest will be the only one. There is a slim chance I can get book six in the Blackwood Family Saga out before Christmas as they are such short books they don’t take long to write or produce, but I’m not putting any pressure on myself.
And I think that’s it for my news. I managed to get a same-day collection slot so will be off to pick up my groceries at four including a nice bottle of wine to celebrate finishing my training and the fact it’s Saturday and I don’t have to work tomorrow. Both are excellent reasons, I think.
Take care everyone and I will be with you again in two weeks.
Julia Blake


























































