Have I mentioned that Sally never—ever—has any good ideas.
Maybe I should re-word: Sally has awesome ideas, but they
never come to anything ‘good’.
Better.
Oh, she often has good intentions.
But the outcome seldom is what any normal person could predict.
I mean, it was only last week that she, ably encouraged and abetted
by her boyfriend Mort and our Cousin Ruth, managed to turn an innocent
celebration of all things ‘pirate’ into a ‘sink-the-enemy’s-ship’ debacle. Sending
The Adventure Slide Park’s life-sized model of the Jolly Roger to Whatshisname’s
locker.
I can still see the look on Mom’s face when I fished her out
from under her bed and told her.
Then there was today, for another example . . .
It started out as an innocent shopping expedition.
We needed milk.
And eggs.
Such normal activities, right?
But Sally insisted on coming along.
For a while, all was well. We entered the store like normal
people. Wandered the aisles. Perused shelves and produce.
Collected. Purchased. Bagged.
And left.
I remember pausing in the doorway on the way out. So this is
what ‘normal’ is like.
As I stood there, I noticed store employees popping out all
over like tree buds. Employees who had been noticeably absent while Sally had
been in the store.
Hmmmm . . .
I turned and followed Sally across the parking lot.
We walked along the sidewalk toward home, each laden with a
couple of grocery bags.
It was a warm day. The sun was shining. I could hear birds
in the trees, singing madly at each other.
It felt, for want of a better word . . . normal.
We were walking along the high, page-wire fence that
enclosed the long-abandoned Paxton’s Shoe Factory and warehouse.
Sally suddenly stopped and turned toward the great,
grey-weathered, windowless structure.
I stopped behind her. “What is it?”
“I heard something.”
I put on my best ‘listening’ face and tipped my head toward
Sally.
Huh. Someone was crying. Loudly.
“Do you hear that?”
“The crying?” I asked.
She gave a short nod, her eyes focused on the building.
Suddenly, she hooked both of her bags over her shoulders,
grabbed the fence with long fingers and scaled it.
Like a monkey.
Or a spider.
I blinked, then hurried back the way we had come and went
through the wide-open gate, shaking my head as I did so.
Trust Sally to make the showy entrance.
I joined her just as she darted through an entryway.
It proved to be a short walkway lined with rickety shelves
that opened into a large central court, overgrown with weeds and the repository
of many, many years’ worth of trash.
On the far side, we could plainly see a man standing over a
girl. He was . . . well . . . not shouting, but talking loudly and poking her
with a stick or something with every phrase.
She was cowering away from him, trying to push at the stick
and sobbing heavily.
Sally didn’t pause for even a moment. She pulled the bags
from her shoulders and, swinging them wildly, charged across the open space.
I took a deep breath and followed, not quite sure what the two of us
were getting into.
I saw the bag in Sally’s right hand connect soundly with the
man’s head, knocking him off balance.
Then before he could react, her left came around and laid
him out.
Flat.
I stopped and stared down at him.
His unconscious face wore a look of complete and utter
surprise.
And fear.
As Sally stood triumphantly over him, grocery bags at the ready, the girl he had been abusing rose to her feet.
Tears seemingly forgotten, she asked, rather breathlessly, “What
are you doing?”
Sally turned to her. “Helping.”
“But . . .”
“CUT!” someone roared.
Uh-oh.
Sally and I turned toward the voice and noticed, for the
first time, the cameras and crew lined up in the shadows along the far wall.
Oops.
One rather red-faced man was advancing toward us followed by
someone with a clipboard and someone else carrying a little case of something.
I’m not really sure, but I think the first man may have had
steam coming from his rather prominent ears.
He stopped beside the guy on the ground. “Is he dead, Brady?”
The person with the little case knelt down. “No, just
stunned, I think. He’s coming around now.”
The man then turned to Sally. The words that exited his
mouth contained more than a few expletives, so I will edit. “What the **********************
are you doing?!”
Sally looked at him calmly. “Helping.”
“Helping?! ********************** who are you **************************** helping?!”
She pointed toward the girl, who was frantically shaking her
head.
The man took a deep breath. “I could have you ************************
arrested and charged! I could . . .”
“Mr. Armin, sir? I think you should see this . . .”
The man turned. One of his cameramen was gesturing.
He gave one last glare to Sally, then with a brief “We ain’t ************************** finished with this, yet, Honey,” he started toward his cameraman.
The two men stood by the camera, looking at the screen.
A short conversation followed in which the words, ‘natural’,
‘born-for-this’ and ‘magic’ featured prominently.
Mr. Armin slowly retraced his steps, stopping beside Sally
once more. “Ummm . . . sooo . . . would you like a job?” he asked.
It was the first time in my life I can remember Sally speechless.
I took the opportunity. “Hey, Sally. Were you carrying the eggs?”
Today is a word challenge.
Karen’s Girls, as we affectionately call ourselves supply words to our intrepid leader. Who then shuffles and re-distributes.
We can then craft our given
words into whatever we see fit.
Fact. Fiction.
The choice is ours.
This month, my words were:
warehouse ~ crying ~ short ~
shelves ~ fence
Thanks so much, Dawn! Your words were awesome!
Now go and see what the others have done with their
challenge...