You have been invited along to a piss-up with 26 other associates, many of whom you barely know.
As the evening progresses you realise that only a small handful of your group are actually going up to the bar whenever a round of drinks is needed.
Towards the end of the evening you decide that you will head off to a different pub as you are fed up subsidising so many of these strangers.
The other tiny group that have been putting their hands in their pockets desperately urge you to stay, particularly their drunken uncle Jean-Claude who has been coaxing some of the poorer attendees to order house-doubles.
You decide to leave anyway and live happily ever after. Soon after you leave the party breaks up and you receive a text from the others in the paying clique to meet up with them in a nicer pub.
The poorer ones get thrown out of the first pub for not paying for their drinks and angrily beat up Uncle J-C for ruining their evening.
The End
As the evening progresses you realise that only a small handful of your group are actually going up to the bar whenever a round of drinks is needed.
Towards the end of the evening you decide that you will head off to a different pub as you are fed up subsidising so many of these strangers.
The other tiny group that have been putting their hands in their pockets desperately urge you to stay, particularly their drunken uncle Jean-Claude who has been coaxing some of the poorer attendees to order house-doubles.
You decide to leave anyway and live happily ever after. Soon after you leave the party breaks up and you receive a text from the others in the paying clique to meet up with them in a nicer pub.
The poorer ones get thrown out of the first pub for not paying for their drinks and angrily beat up Uncle J-C for ruining their evening.
The End
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