It was a quiet morning.
I know you have
a hard time believing that, but it’s true. Maybe the statement will carry more
merit if I confess that Sally and Mort have been gone since breakfast.
Yeah, I thought
so.
Mom has been
notably absent as well. Uncle Pete showed up at the crack of dawn and took her
off on some adventure or other.
I don’t really
worry about them, though. I mean, how much trouble can a mid-forties mother and
her ‘recently-returned from Iraq’ beau get into.
Don’t answer
that.
I’m beginning
to think Peter and I are the only two sane people in this scenario.
Ahem…
Peter was over
and had graciously accompanied me on my errands: stopping at the bank, dropping off my
donations at the Big Brothers, Big Sisters call center, discussing schedule adherence
with the neighbourhood boys who are selectively and collectively in
charge of walking our dog, and just generally having
a ‘normal’ day.
Okay, we had to
sort out a Scary Gary/brother/Mrs. Michaelson dispute
when the former decided to set off firecrackers--something that would have been a
fairly common-place occurrence if not for the fact that said crackers (Every.
Single. One.) headed with unerring accuracy into Mrs. Michaelson’s prize-winning
tulips.
Peter finally
resorted to taking charge of the situation and marched both of the Townsend
boys—and the rest of their firecrackers—to their mother, Mary.
I, meanwhile,
tried to sooth Mrs. Michaelson’s ruffled feathers.
And help her
patch up her tulip bed.
Anyways,
errands run, neighbourhood sorted out, Peter and I had flopped down on the
grass in the front yard. Just soaking up the sunshine.
We both heard
it at the same time.
A siren.
I looked to the
left. Yep. There it was. And getting closer. I sighed and looked at Peter.
He was gazing
off to the right. He looked at me, his mouth opened to make a comment.
Then he frowned
and tipped his head.
I did the same.
Wait. Siren-s?
From both
directions?
Uh-oh.
Mort’s rather
disreputable Volvo raced in from the right and barely made the turn into our
driveway.
From the left,
Uncle Pete’s car did the same, pulling in tight behind Mort.
Peter and I
rose slowly to our feet.
Just FYI, it’s
a good thing to always meet Sally’s shenanigans whilst on one’s feet…
As the
passengers hurriedly disembarked, a police car, lights flashing and siren
blazing blew in from the right and pulled to the curb out front.
Then another
(ditto for lights and siren) from the left.
Mort and Sally
and Mom and Uncle Pete raced toward Peter and I.
“We’re engaged!”
they all said together.
Oh, my…
Today’s post is a writing challenge. Participating bloggers picked 4 – 6 words or short phrases for someone else to craft into a post—all words to be used at least once. All the posts are unique as each writer has received their own set of words. And 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: bank
~ call center ~ schedule adherence ~ dog ~ dispute
Were given to
me, via Karen, from my friend, Sarah at https://crazymamallama.blogspot.com/
Now go and see what words the others got—and how they used them!
The Diary of an
Alzheimer’s Caregiver
Oh my. That's for the engagement, the other engagement, and the sirens cliffhanger.
ReplyDeleteYou always paint such a great Sally story! Now you have to take us to the wedding.
ReplyDeleteLaughing! I needed that. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the smiles. And the many directions my mind is taking me...
ReplyDeleteOh Sally... :) Thanks for the story.
ReplyDeleteWait, are you here to tell me that your own engagement was not accompanied by blue lights and police sirens?
ReplyDeleteWell. While the engagements are not unexpected, the accompaniment is. Did they break into someplace to set up a special Pop-the-Quedtion moment and get into trouble? Please continue this episode!
ReplyDelete