Oh sure. He's looks innocent here . . . |
Christmas morning, the exciting,
present-opening part, was inevitably on hold until the kids could get
their father out of his bed.
It wasn't as easy as it sounds.
What began as a mainly physical feat
when they were younger, soon progressed into a different sort of
challenge as they grew older.
Their Dad got sneaky.
Case in point . . .
I was heading out to do the milking.
I turned to my Husby, who was still in
bed and said, “Don't start till I get back.”
He grinned.
Something I have learned to treat with
respect over the years.
“Oh, I imagine I'll still be here
when you get back!” Then he reached under the bed and pulled out
the end of a long, heavy chain. “Could you please hand me the other
end?”
Puzzled, I reached under my side of the
bed.
Sure enough, there was the rest.
This man plans ahead . . .
I handed it to him and he lapped the
two ends and snapped a large combination lock shut through them.
He was right.
He would probably still be there when I
got back.
Shaking my head, I left.
Milking was quickly accomplished and I
was soon back at the house,
Pails brimming.
Just as I opened the door, I heard a
cheer go up.
'Wow, everyone's sure happy that I'm
home!' I thought.
It wasn't me.
They had just finished finding the
final number for their father's combination lock.
And had succeeded in freeing him from
his chains.
Quite literally.
I set the milk in the milk room and
came upstairs.
Just as everyone poured, happily, from
our bedroom.
“Mom! We got Dad out of his chains
and we're ready to open presents!”
Now there's something you don't hear
every day.
“Wow! You kids are good!” Thoughts
of future bank robbers and safe-crackers suddenly came to mind.
“Naw! He gave us the first two
numbers. Then all we had to do was figure out the last one.”
“Oh.”
“Yeah. We did it by the process of
elimination.”
“Oh. Well . . . good.”
“It was fun!”
You have to know that these kids have
been exposed to many different challenges over the years.
Duct tape.
Zippers.
Bandages.
Mustard. (Don't ask.)
Air horns.
And Speedos. (Told here.)
If you want to read it, we'll wait . . .
I guess a small matter of freeing their
father from some pesky heavy chains is child's play.
Well, at least for our children.
An interesting Christmas tradition. I wonder how many of the boys will carry it on into their own families.
ReplyDeleteThey all do. It's a sad, sad world!
DeleteToo funny and a speedo is a most effective deterrent.
ReplyDeleteYep. The speedo topped them all . . .
DeleteYour children have a great future ahead, after all their dad's training.
ReplyDeleteYes. They have been prepared to do anything . . . safe cracking, storming fortresses . . .
DeleteActually, Dad only gave us the first number, and Duffy figured out the other two! Who knew LISTENING to your lock would get it open?!?
ReplyDeleteI see a future for that kid . . .
DeleteYour husband has a devious mind.
ReplyDeleteI like that.
Pearl
We deviants have to stick together. Wait . . . that didn't sound right . . .
DeleteIt sounds very entertaining to be in your family, thanks for sharing, I had a great laugh :)
ReplyDelete