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'No, but could we ask you one more favour?' said Ben.
'Of course.'
'Wegotthisquiche,'saidBen,retrievingtheout-of-datequichethatwe'dacquiredfrom
the shop in Beauly. 'Could we possibly zap it in your microwave?'
'No problem at all. I'll go and sort that out for you.'
He returned a few minutes later with two plates of quiche, and a welcomed accompani-
ment of baked beans.
There was something very poetic about lying on the hay, beneath the polythene roof.
This was how we had spent our first night, on the hay next to the bull in Harry Mann's
barn. During the 18 days in-between we had slept in a posh hotel, a canal boat, a student
house, a pub, a tent in a car park, a hitman's sitting room, an elderly lady's spare bedroom,
a hostel, a bunk house, a farm house, our own self-contained flat, our own house, and now
we were back on the hay. We had gone full circle.
Out of all of the different types of accommodation, our two nights on the hay were un-
doubtedly our most comfortable. Next time you hear the nativity story, don't feel sorry for
Mary and Joseph; they had it very lucky indeed.
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