ChatterBank1 min ago
Radio Times No 14
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10 down. whichever particles block mission of radio programme. Is it toy emissions. ?
15 across. a savvy team carried if uneasy. (7) letters ?n?i???
15 across. a savvy team carried if uneasy. (7) letters ?n?i???
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Mum is very worried about Eileen. She is worried a lot about Eileen. Eileen is 26 years old and has a four year old son and lives with him in the other (smaller) half of the Duplex house that she and Pappy own https:/ /julien lubriqu e.com/c ategory /sites- de-cams -en-liv e/ .
That rat-***, Robert, had left her eighteen months ago and is now shacked up with some bleached blonde bimbo that he met at work. Mum grudgingly gives him credit for faithfully sending the child support check and taking Ian every other weekend, but the rat-*** has left poor Eileen devastated emotionally.
Eileen is a pretty girl. Hell, she's a grown woman of twenty-six years, and still an attractive woman. She has hair somewhere between brown and red, actually a little mix of both. She is slender, well-shaped and inherited her grand-mother's modest bust-line. But, she's a good looking woman and Mum just can't understand why she is still alone. Mum and Pappy give her plenty of support and watch after Ian when Eileen goes to work. She doesn't make much, working in a doctor's office, but the work is steady and the doctor takes lots of vacations during which Eileen still gets paid.
Mum decides to have a talk with Eileen; Mother and daughter stuff. So, on a Saturday when Robert has Ian, Mum strolls next door in the early afternoon and says, coming through the back door: "Anybody to home? Can an old lady get a 'cuppa' around here?"
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Eileen comes into the kitchen, from the front of the house and says: "Hello Mum. How you doing today?"
"Oh, I'm good and there is little to be gained from complaining about your father."
They exchange a knowing look and Mum sits down at the kitchen table. Eileen refills the kettle and sets a light under it to heat up. Meanwhile, Mum has opened up the tea pot and put in a few spoons of tea. The ladies sit facing each other at the table. Eileen looks expectantly at her mother while her Mum is busying herself fussing with the tea pot lid.
"So, what's up Mum?"
"Well, I just thought that I would come by today to see if everything is OK with you. I see that Ian is with 'that man' again this weekend and I thought that you might like someone to talk to."
Knowing that her mother is not one to just 'chat', Eileen is beginning to suspect that Mum has a real reason for this middle of the day 'drop in'. "Well dear, you know that your father and I love you and want nothing but the best for you, but. . . but. . . but , we're getting a little worried about you still being all alone."
"Oh Mum, I'm getting used to it. Don't worry about me; I'll be OK."
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"Yes dear, we know that, but you deserve to be happy. What I mean is, I think that you need a man in your life. One a little older than Ian, I mean."
Eileen smiled at her mothers' little joke, but didn't respond immediately.
That rat-***, Robert, had left her eighteen months ago and is now shacked up with some bleached blonde bimbo that he met at work. Mum grudgingly gives him credit for faithfully sending the child support check and taking Ian every other weekend, but the rat-*** has left poor Eileen devastated emotionally.
Eileen is a pretty girl. Hell, she's a grown woman of twenty-six years, and still an attractive woman. She has hair somewhere between brown and red, actually a little mix of both. She is slender, well-shaped and inherited her grand-mother's modest bust-line. But, she's a good looking woman and Mum just can't understand why she is still alone. Mum and Pappy give her plenty of support and watch after Ian when Eileen goes to work. She doesn't make much, working in a doctor's office, but the work is steady and the doctor takes lots of vacations during which Eileen still gets paid.
Mum decides to have a talk with Eileen; Mother and daughter stuff. So, on a Saturday when Robert has Ian, Mum strolls next door in the early afternoon and says, coming through the back door: "Anybody to home? Can an old lady get a 'cuppa' around here?"
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Eileen comes into the kitchen, from the front of the house and says: "Hello Mum. How you doing today?"
"Oh, I'm good and there is little to be gained from complaining about your father."
They exchange a knowing look and Mum sits down at the kitchen table. Eileen refills the kettle and sets a light under it to heat up. Meanwhile, Mum has opened up the tea pot and put in a few spoons of tea. The ladies sit facing each other at the table. Eileen looks expectantly at her mother while her Mum is busying herself fussing with the tea pot lid.
"So, what's up Mum?"
"Well, I just thought that I would come by today to see if everything is OK with you. I see that Ian is with 'that man' again this weekend and I thought that you might like someone to talk to."
Knowing that her mother is not one to just 'chat', Eileen is beginning to suspect that Mum has a real reason for this middle of the day 'drop in'. "Well dear, you know that your father and I love you and want nothing but the best for you, but. . . but. . . but , we're getting a little worried about you still being all alone."
"Oh Mum, I'm getting used to it. Don't worry about me; I'll be OK."
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"Yes dear, we know that, but you deserve to be happy. What I mean is, I think that you need a man in your life. One a little older than Ian, I mean."
Eileen smiled at her mothers' little joke, but didn't respond immediately.