embarrassing accident. I put my shoe down slowly. The roach crawls back inside my jeans.
Thereâs got to be a better way than splattering.
I look around for inspiration.
Thereâs a window above the toilet. Itâs high and very small, but it might do. I could climb up there, hold the jeans outside the window and shake the cockroach off.
No sweat. No splatter. No roach.
I pick up the jeans, taking care to hold the waist and the trouser legs closed so that the roach canât escape. I shut the lid of the toilet and use it to step up onto the cistern. The window is now level with my head.
I lean against the wall for balance and slide the window open as far as it will go. I push the jeans out of the window and shake them as hard as I can.
Suddenly, the roach is on my hand. I get such a fright, I drop the jeans, lose my footing and crash down into the bath.
I feel like lying here, closing my eyes, and pretending itâs all just a bad dream â but I have to find the roach before it disappears again. I get out of the bath and study myself in the mirror.
The roach is sitting on top of my head.
This time I know exactly what to do. Itâs not going to be pleasant, but itâs the only way. This is one tricky cockroach and I canât afford to take any chances.
I go back to the toilet and get down onto my knees. I lift the lid and bend lower and lower until my head is right inside the bowl. Then I take a deep breath, reach up and push the flush button.
Itâs horrible.
Toilet water up my nose.
Toilet water in my ears.
Toilet water in my mouth.
Finally, the flushing stops. I sit back up.
Itâs gone.
But so are my jeans.
I canât go back to the table without them. What would I say? I can just imagine the conversation:
MRS BAINBRIDGE: Where are your pants, Andy?
ME: Oh, I accidentally dropped them out of the bathroom window, Mrs Bainbridge.
MR BAINBRIDGE: Isnât that annoying! It happens to me all the time. Why donât you have a look in my wardrobe and see if thereâs anything there that fits you?
Yeah, right. Dream on. Meanwhile, back in the real world, Iâm naked from the waist down.
Thereâs no choice, really, but to climb out the window and fetch my jeans. I donât fancy a month without pocket-money.
I climb back on top of the cistern and lean across to the tiny window. Itâs going to be a tight squeeze, but since I havenât eaten any dinner yet, I reckon Iâll make it.
I grip the narrow ledge and pull myself up and halfway out.
Itâs a long way to the ground. I didnât realise I was so high up.
But Iâm in no danger of falling.
Iâm stuck.
I canât go forward and I canât go back.
And to make matters worse, thereâs someone banging on the door.
âItâs taken!â I yell.
âIs everything all right?â calls Mum. âYouâve been in there an awfully long time!â
âYes,â I call. âIâll be out in a second.â
âHeâs not answering!â says Mum. âI think thereâs something wrong!â
She canât hear me because my head is outside the house.
Then I hear Mr Bainbridgeâs voice.
âStand back, everyone. Iâm going to break the door down.â
Oh great. My hero.
I hear a huge crash.
Mr Bainbridge is no muscle man, but the flimsy lock snaps like itâs Arnie Schwarzenegger himself out there.
âOh my God!â says Mr Bainbridge.
For probably the first time in his life, Mr Bainbridge has taken the Lordâs name in vain, but I guess the last thing he expected to see was my bare bum staring at him from his bathroom window.
âOh my God!â says Mrs Bainbridge.
âOh my God!â says Mum.
âOh my God!â says Dad.
âI know this seems a little unusual,â I yell, âbut thereâs a perfectly reasonable and logical explanation! See, while I was saying grace, I saw this