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White Rhino Stew
by Zach Smith

I stumbled on this strange bistro at 105 Sherwood St. Warsop, Mansfield. The restaurant is called “The Prince of Neverland All-You-Can-Eat Cafe.” Though the name is deceiving and should read: “Anything-You-Can-Eat.” A sign in the window reads: “If you order something we don’t have, we will give you a million quid.”

Of course, I had to see.

The restaurant had no menu, and the waiter affirmed the sign.

Smugly, I gave him my first order.

“I would like a bowl of White Rhino Stew.”

“Very Good Sir,” he said.

Soon, he returned with a steaming hot bowl of vegetables, potatoes, and some kind of meat cooked in a fine stout. It was warm and hearty, though a bit gamey.

I don’t have proof that it was White Rhinoceros, but the bill indicated it was a rare meat indeed.

The next day, I was back with another order to stump them.

“What will it be today, Sir?” asked the same waiter.

“I would like a Dodo Bird Egg French Omelet with Mammoth Milk Cheese and a side of Auroch Bacon.”

The waiter looked at me.

“You do serve breakfast all day?”

“Would you like Seasoned Potatoes or Fruit Cocktail with that?”

“Both,” I said, a little discouraged but more surprised.

The Omelet came out. To be honest, it didn’t taste very good. But it was very big, and so was the bill. I ended up eating it for several days. The bacon was good, though.

“What will it be today, sir?” Asked the waiter when I returned a week later.

“I want a fortune cookie, and on the fortune, I want either the proof or disproof of the Riemann Hypothesis.”

“It would be very inappropriate to give you a fortune without a meal,” said the waiter. “So, would you care for an egg roll first?”

“Sounds lovely,” I said.

The egg roll was lovely.

The fortune cookie was the size of a crown roast. Sure enough, it contained a scroll with a whole lot of mathematical symbols on it that I didn’t understand, though I did have a friend at Cambridge who would. We could published a paper together, and if other mathematicians validated it, we could split the prize of one million dollars American. It wasn’t quite the million quid that was advertised in the window of the Prince of Neverland, but it was something, and that was good because the restaurant had been cleaning me out.

At least, that was my plan.

I handed over my credit card to pay the tab.

Soon, the waiter returned, somewhat embarrassed.

“Sir,” he said. “It would appear your credit card has been declined.”

So now I’m stuck here washing dishes at the Prince of Neverland, and at the rate of three quid per hour, it will be months before my tab is paid. But they did say if I can get ten people to visit the Cafe, they will let me go.

So please visit the Prince of Neverland, and tell them I sent you. I don’t particularly like working here. You wouldn’t believe the stuff people order.