Contraband! |
Mervin stared at the tell-tale pile of orange peels.
Then, at the large, strictly-forbidden, freshly-peeled,
plump and juicy orange in his hand.
He and his friends could all hear the sound of the approaching
librarian.
Their nemesis was only two book stacks away.
Death was certain.
What to do?
What to do . . .?
In Fort Macleod in the early seventies, the new library of
the equally-new local high school was under the watchful gaze of Mrs. (Eagle
Eyes) Mason.
A crack-a-jack librarian who could, quite literally, spot
evil-doing across the room and through twenty stacks of books.
Watching her in action was a thing of beauty . . . erm . . .
if one wasn’t the culprit.
Something would trigger her radar.
The glasses would be whipped from her face.
And she would peer, narrow-eyed, around the room – inevitably
zeroing in on the virtually invisible culprit.
Call it a gift.
Her cardinal rule?
Never, ever bring
food into the library.
Food attracts silver fish. (Google it – I had
to . . .)
And silver fish eat books.
And soon, every book would be destroyed.
And children would then grow-up in complete and utter ignorance.
Yes, her rules were simple.
Her logic? Unerring.
Her reach? Vast.
And still, the students tried to, in her words, ‘get away
with it’.
Case in point . . . Mervin.
And the telltale orange.
Though he and his friends were literally at the very
furthest point from the librarian that the library afforded, the instant he had
cracked the outside of his handful of citrus deliciousness, the fragrance had
wafted straight to those sensitive nostrils.
The glasses had come off. “Who’s eating an orange in the
library?!”
And the footsteps of doom had started.
And drawn ever closer.
Mervin’s friends stared at him.
Mervin stared at the evidence.
Finally, desperately, he shoved the peels in his pocket.
Then, opening his mouth, shoved in the large, juicy orange.
Whole.
I am not making this up.
Not only did he get that entire fruit inside.
He then . . . closed his mouth.
Just as Mrs. Mason rounded the corner.
“Who here is eating an orange?” she demanded.
His friends had been staring at Mervin in amazement. They turned
to the librarian.
There was a chorus of ‘Not me’s!’ From everyone except, of course, Mervin.
Mrs. Mason peered at them suspiciously, then turning,
continued her hunt.
The boys looked back at their friend.
Who had spit his orange into his hand and was calmly starting
to eat it.
Looking for somewhere to hide things?
A place you know will be safe and secure?
Undetectable?
If you really don’t care of its inevitably moist condition.
Call your big-mouthed friend.
He must have looked like he had a bad case of the mumps.
ReplyDeleteOh, those healthy, round-cheeked kids!
DeletePerfectly evokes the scene! I loved it.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Carol! :)
DeleteThat Mervin is a genius. And I hope my kids never hear his story!
ReplyDeleteMine, neither. Oh . . . wait . . .
DeleteWell, at least he couldn't choke on it, it was too large to slip down the wrong pipe!
ReplyDeleteIsn't it amazing how scent travels? Mervin really didn't have a hope of peeling an orange undetected!
That was my first thought. What if he couldn't breathe! Kids never consider the sniff factor.
DeleteI wonder what else Mervin did in his life? Orange oil is so fragrant; he didn't have a chance, except by his quick thinking.
ReplyDeleteYeah. What other things did he get away with . . .
DeleteThe whole orange?? wow.
ReplyDeleteI've heard of silverfish, but didn't know they ate books. I'm going to have to empty my bookshelf and check I don't have any of those little crawlers.
I had to go look, too. I guess they like the glue in the books. There's always some pest . . .
DeleteWow! Quick thinking kid!
ReplyDeleteI see a future for him in politics.
DeleteLOL on this one. I can't imagine getting a whole orange in anyone's mouth; but I guess there are people with big mouths.
ReplyDeleteLove it and blessings!
I tried it with a mandarin. That was even tough. This kid must have had a HUGE mouth!
Delete