The Princess Who Had Everything


“What do you get the girl who has everything?’ pondered Baron von Washboard, flexing in the mirror.


“Am I putting on weight?” he added, pinching his midriff.


“What girl?” replied Peep, holding up a robe for inspection. “And no, you aren’t getting fat. Just vain.”


The Baron wrinkled his nose and pulled a face. “The girl? Why Princess Rousseau, the only girl for me in the kingdom of Bleakadonia.”


“But what about Lady Stacy?” interjected his manservant.


“She was just a side quest,” snapped von Washboard. “Different kingdom. Oh, and I can’t possibly wear that robe. It masks my obliques.”


His manservant sighed and began folding the garment. “As you will Baron,” he replied, deftly holding a corner of the robe between chin and chest. “So does Princess Rousseau really have everything?”


“Everything? Gosh no, she’s hardly got anything!” exclaimed the Baron. “That was just a turn of phrase. She might live a life of luxury in her absent father’s castle, but she hasn’t got two shekels to rub together. Poor thing hasn’t even got a bedpan!”


“So how does she poo?” asked Peep.


“Out the window.”


Now it was Peep’s turn to pull a face. “So why don’t you get her a chamberpot for Christmas?”


Von Washboard chuckled. “A practical gift? For Christmas? Peasant please!”


“What about one of those diamond encrusted ones…”


“I am not buying Princess Rousseau a diamond chamberpot for her to shit in!” insisted the Baron. “I knew I should have hired Milo as my manservant. He could have picked a suitable gift for a princess.”


“What about a pedicure?” asked Peep, trying his utmost to regain the Baron’s favour. “You know, a toenail polish.”


The Baron shook his head wistfully. “You can’t polish a turd.”


He leaned against the bookshelf and absent-mindedly rubbed a finger against a dusty tome. “Actually, I think I might know what to get the princess who has nothing yet demands everything…”


...I’ll give her a story!”


“A story?”


“A story.”


“What sort of story?”


“A nice story. A meta story, but a nice one. One in which Rousseau’s handsome suitor extols her beauty and basedness of heart.”


“Do you really mean that?”


“Course I mean it.”


“You’re not just saying that because it’s Christmas and you want to give Rousseau warm feels so she’ll blow you?


“What sort of a man would do such a thing!” exclaimed von Washboard, resting a curved forefinger against his chin. “Not I.”


“Peep, grab a quill and dip it quick. I can sense a Christmas cracker coming on…”


The manservant did as he was told and began scratching on a sheet of parchment.


“Yo hol up,” chided the Baron. “I haven’t told you what to write yet.”


He glanced down disapprovingly at the parchment.


“Once upon a time there lived a princess named Rousseau…”


“That was my line! How did you know I was going to start with that?” exclaimed the Baron.


“Just a lucky guess,” smirked Peep.


The manservant regained his composure. “Er...do go on.”


“Once upon a time there lived a princess named Rousseau…” he began. “She was the fairest maiden in the entire kingdom. Her laugh was contagious, her smile irresistible and her breasts could light up a room…”


“You’re totally getting blown,” remarked Peep.


Von Washboard closed his eyes. “Totally.”