It’s quiet.
That, in itself, should be cause for alarm.
Sally is, after all, home.
And where Sally is, there goes Mort also.
Twice the trouble for half the price.
So to speak.
Sally and Mort are playing with her new VR game.
The one Mom could never afford but which proved to be
easily attained when one is . . . erm . . . attaining.
As is Sally.
It’s kinda weird, sitting here watching Mort and Sally
through the banister between the kitchen/dining/ohmywordwehavealotofspace room
and the family room half a floor down.
They are happily engaged in the imaginary world only they
can see.
Okay, yes, something that is entirely normal for Sally.
Moving on . . .
I don’t know why, but I’m suddenly reminded of the first
time Mom and I knew Sally may be trouble.
“No, Sweetie, you can’t have a pet. Not right now. Mama
just has too much to look after with Daddy away.”
Sally had just turned five and for a month, the two of us
were the same age. And Sally wanted a
mouse.
“But Mama! He’s jus’ a little mouse. Little tiny.”
“But he will still have to be cared for and kept warm and
safe. And he and his cage cleaned. We don’t want him to bring us fleas!”
“I can do it!” Sally said stoutly.
Mom looked at her speculatively. Then she smiled. “If any
five-year-old could do it, you could, Sweetie.” She frowned slightly. “All
right. Let’s try.”
Sally squealed with delight and was soon seated in the
back of the car with a little cage on her knees. Nestled snugly in some cedar
shavings was one red-eyed white mouse.
“You’ll have to think of a name for him,” Mom said,
eyeing the happy pair in her rear-view mirror.
“Hmmm . . .” Sally scrunched her face into its most
creative configuration. “Morris.”
“Morris?”
Sally nodded happily.
“Morris, it is.”
Mom pulled up to the house and we all piled out, Sally
clutching her precious new pet. And cage. As we approached the front door, Mom
spotted a large parcel leaning against the newel post at the top of the steps. “Oooh!
It’s come!” She grabbed the parcel and unlocked the door.
Sally headed upstairs and, I was pretty sure, proceeded
to push everything off the dresser we shared so Morris could reside in a place
of honour.
I followed Mom into the kitchen.
She dumped her purchases on the counter, then tore into
the ‘front steps’ parcel.
It proved to be a large, pumpkin-coloured duvet.
“Oooh! It’s perfect!” Mom said. She held it up. “Isn’t
it, Gwen?”
I nodded and petted it with one hand. “I like the colour.”
“So do I!” Mom smiled. “I had a coupon and thought . . . why not?” She laughed. “This will keep me so
nice and warm I won’t even count the days till your Dad gets home!”
Sally appeared behind her. “Oooh! Pretty!”
“And warm!” Mom brushed Sally’s cheek with the soft
fabric. “I’m going to have the warmest bed in the whole house!”
Sally smiled, then set the cage she was carrying on the
kitchen table. “Morris doesn’t want to be upstairs alone. He wants to be here.
With us.”
I looked into the cage at the soundly sleeping little
rodent.
Mom leaned over to look. “He looks pretty contented to
me.”
“Well, he’s not!” Sally picked up a pencil and tried to force it between the bars. It wouldn’t fit.
Mom shrugged and started gathering up her new duvet. “Don’t
tease him, Honey. Gwen, do you want to help me put this on the bed?”
I nodded and hurried after her.
Later, Mom looked up from the TV program she was watching
and stopped Sally on her way to her room with a full cup of water. “What are you doing with the water, Sweetheart?”
“You said we have to clean Morris and his cage.”
“Oh. Yes, I did. But that should probably be done here in
the kitchen. And I want to supervise your first attempt.”
“K.”
Now you have to know that this was early days for Sally
hi-jinks. Mom was fairly new to it, being as she had only ever dealt with me.
Ahem . . .
Mom turned back to her program, forgetting all about
Morris.
Still later, we were all getting ready for bed. Sally,
all bathed and clean jumped into her bed and pulled the covers to her chin. “Night,
Mom! Thanks for Morris!”
Mom nodded and smiled and leaned over to give her a kiss
and a hug. “You’re welcome, Baby.” She glanced at Morris’ cage. “I hope he’ll
be all right tonight.”
Sally smiled. “He’s fine. He had a nice bath and he’s all
warm and toasty now!”
“Honey, I told you to wait for me!”
“It was just a teensy bath.”
“Well, next time I want to help.”
“K.”
Mom went out, shutting off the light before she closed
the door.
Within moments, I could hear Sally’s breathing change as
she headed toward sleep.
Suddenly, there was a scream from Mom’s room.
Sally’s eyes popped open and she turned to look at me. “She
did say hers was the warmest bed, right?”
Today’s post is a writing challenge. This is how it
works: participating bloggers picked 4 – 6 words or short phrases for someone
else to craft into a post. All words must be used at least once and all the
posts will be unique as each writer has received their own set of words. That’s
the challenge, here’s a fun twist; no one who’s participating knows who got
their words and in what direction the writer will take them. Until now.
My words were: mouse ~ pencil ~ cup ~ pumpkin ~ fleas ~
coupon
They were submitted by my good friend, Dawn at https://spatulasonparade.blogspot.com
Below you’ll find links to the other blogs featuring this
challenge. Check them all out, see what words they got and how they used
them.
Links to the other “Use Your Words” posts:
So this wasn't a coming of age behavior, looks like Sally was Sally right from the start. Poor mom!
ReplyDeleteSally was born to keep her family busy! I can't imagine snuggling in bed and finding a mouse sharing the new blankets!
ReplyDeleteStart as you mean to go on.
ReplyDeleteLOL of course Morris HAD to have the warmest bed. Oh Sally...my youngest son could have been a Sally in boy form. Oh man. Love the Sally shenanigans.
ReplyDeleteSpatulas On Parade
Sally is just meant to keep people on their toes!
ReplyDeleteHindsight ...
ReplyDeleteOh dear! Well at least he would be easily seen against the pumpkin duvet.
ReplyDeleteI remember the time my oldest daughter wanted a white mouse in a cage. We found her one at the toy store. Toy mouse in a plastic toy cage about six inches square. She was happy. Then the next daughter wanted a carpet python, a real one...No No No.
What a cute flashback! And this is how it all began... Morris, the mouse :-)
ReplyDeleteThat's one good thing about all of the mice and gerbils and hamsters we had as pets -- none of them ever got loose, or were set loose.
ReplyDeleteSally is fun to read about, but i am glad i do not live with her.