The
other night I walked to the Traveller’s Rest pub and a biting night it was too.
Frost glistened upon rooftops and the roofs of cars sparkled, it was quite
magical.

So
I made myself comfortable and the mutt sniffed around for old crisps on the
floral carpet and I glanced across to the window seat and espied a couple of
blokes chatting.
They were in fact conversing upon the subject of how to better themselves as they both worked down the local 24 hour supermarket, one in the warehouse unloading lorries and the other on tills. They debated a move to Spain to work in better climes abroad in the bars of the Costas. I thus engaged them upon the subject and this story unfolded as told by the one with stubble and a mobile which regularly shivered and lit up beside his half drunk pint.
They said a mate of theirs worked for a while on a
farm in Glamorganshire for a couple called Rowli Pugh and Catti Jones who were
known to have bad luck. Their wheat was always patchy, their lambs sickly, their
Landrover kept breaking down and their tractor had permanently unresolved
hydraulic problems. On top of this Catti was depressed and thus rendered
incapable of doing a moment’s work.

“Don’t worry mate, hold yer tongue for I know more about you than you know and you’re going nowhere, I’ll make sure that your life becomes one of contentment right here. Tell the missus to leave a candle burning tonight when she goes to bed and every night henceforth.”
Rowli
turned the conversation over in his mind and concluded that yes, he would tell
his wife Catti Jones that an old man had said she must light a candle each
night before bedtime and their luck’d change.
And Catti would probably laugh her head off at such an idea. But what had they to lose? So that’s the angle he took and that’s the angle that got Catti to dig out the candles and light one having put the cat out and brushed her teeth.
And Catti would probably laugh her head off at such an idea. But what had they to lose? So that’s the angle he took and that’s the angle that got Catti to dig out the candles and light one having put the cat out and brushed her teeth.


For Catti it was the make-over
she’d always needed and she set up a business from home selling scented candles.
Their farm prospered, the grain grew thick and strong, the pigs were the
fattest at the market and the lambs too. They had a conservatory built and a
gravel drive snaked up to the farmhouse where an eight grand Aga sat in the
kitchen and double glazing kept the Welsh weather out.
Thus their life continued thus for a full three
years until Catti could contain her curiosity no more. When Rowli
was snoring one night she sneaked down the stairs and opened the kitchen door a
crack.
Rowli and Catti’s luck stayed with them however which is often not the case when the Fairy Folk are spied upon.
The blokes in The Traveller’s Rest confided to me they were hoping for a similar chain of events by sitting on the car park wall by their block of flats that night looking miserable as hell in the hope an Ellyll would appear. Slurring his words the stubbled one said they were off down the supermarket right now for some candles to light each night they were so desperate to escape their dead end jobs, overdrafts and singledom.
Though the thought did cross my mind that hanging
around a car park late at night was asking for trouble, not from Otherworldly
Folk but from the police. But I kept my mouth shut.
Anyway, all said, good luck to ye lads, I hope the magic works.
Anyway, all said, good luck to ye lads, I hope the magic works.
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