“What is it?” Mom’s concerned voice trickled down the hall to
my room.
Without conscious thought, I scrambled from my bed and hit
the hall already at a full run.
We live in Sally’s house.
Dealing with Sally’s escapades on a nearly daily basis.
I’m totally justified in my overreaction.
I skidded around the corner, catching the handle of the
fridge to stop my forward momentum.
Mom, looking rather intent, was standing by the sink, her
cell phone pressed to one ear. She glanced at me and held up one finger.
I fidgeted while she continued her conversation.
Across the room, Dad was lying on the couch. Well, I’m
assuming. Now he was slowly rising, his eyes on Mom.
“Oh. Well, that’s good,” Mom said.
I swiveled to look at her again. The pinched ‘Sally’ look had been replaced by
the relieved ‘Sally’ look. There are no other looks.
It was obvious that, whatever Sally (and by association,
Mort) were up to, it wasn’t something Mom had to deal with.
I relaxed and Dad sank back to the couch and, once again,
picked up the book he had been reading.
Mom pressed ‘end’ and smiled at the two of us. “Well, that
was a whole lot of nothing,” she said brightly.
You have to understand the ‘speak’ in our house. “Whole lot
of nothing’; is code for: ‘Sally hasn’t done anything that’s gotten her arrested
today hallelujah’.
“What’s Sally been doing?” I asked.
“Oh, well, she has a day off from shooting, so she and Mort
are wandering a fairground in Munich, seeing who can find the biggest pretzel and dancing to the latest Schlager hits—whatever that means.”
“Schlager is music, Mom. Bright. Lively. I rather like it.”
“Ah. She says if her shoot goes over, she and Mort are going
to try to take in Octoberfest.”
I shivered as Dad and I exchanged a glance. Sally at Octoberfest?
Someone would be shipping her home in a barrel.
“So what would the two of you like for breakfast? When will
Peter be here?”
Dad and I looked at each other. Okay, we are the weirdos of
the family. Both of us like a hearty bacon and eggs and pancakes and waffles
and maybe steak breakfast.
Mom and Sally and Mort prefer something lighter.
And way more sugary.
Peter is still on the fence. Easily swinging both ways.
“He’s probably on his way. He doesn’t have to work until
later today.”
“Well, I’ll just do the usual then?”
Dad grinned at her. Steak and eggs and waffles, it was.
I opened the fridge and dragged out a grocer’s tray of
ribeye steaks, which I threw on the indoor grill and painted with my favourite
sauce.
Say what you will about people with money, living with one
definitely has its perks.
A knock on the front door preceded Peter’s entrance. He came
over and greeted me with a quick kiss and a slow hug.
I love that man!
Then he and his uncle, my father, started to set the table
as they launched into one of their long, drawn-out discussions about modern
government and the state of all branches of the modern military.
You have to know that Dad (the former Uncle Pete Gunn)
served many, many years in the military. Marines. Reaching the rank of Major
before retiring. He definitely has some opinions.
I flipped the steaks and squirted on more BBQ sauce.
Mom and I have breakfast timed almost perfectly.
But the time I was setting the platter of steaming steaks on the table,
Mom was carrying in the bowl of fluffy scrambled eggs and the plate of crispy
waffles.
Okay, yes. A big breakfast makes me…poetic.
As everyone was sitting down, I thought I heard a car pull
up. I hurried to the big front window and peered out.
“Who’s here?” Mom asked.
“No one. Just someone next door at the Baggins’.”
I started back toward the table, walking past the couch where Dad had been
lying. His book had fallen to the floor and instinctively, I leaned over to
pick it up and put it in a safe place—and glanced at the cover.
‘The Best Baby Name Book in the World’: Two thousand of the most popular Baby Names Anywhere!
I looked at Dad, who was leaning forward, talking to Mom, their
hands linked romantically.
Peter was looking at me. “Gwen? Coming?”
I simply stared at him as my train of thought crashed and
died on some lonely shoal.
He started to get up.
Mom and Dad turned to look at me and Dad saw the book in my
hands. His face went red. No small feat for someone as deeply and permanently
tanned as he was.
“Ummm…something you’d care to share with the class?” I
asked.
My words: Oktoberfest ~ Pretzel ~ Schlager ~ Munich ~ Fairground ~ Barrel were sent to me, via Karen, from my good friend, Tamara! Thank you, my friend!
Oooh, this is gonna be good. Not sure I can wait a month to find out what's going on.
ReplyDeleteBaby Names? If this baby was conceived in after partying at the Oktoberfest, may I suggest Maximilian, Gerhard, Günther, Waltraud, Hildegard or Käthe ;-)))))
ReplyDeleteNice use of topics! Now I want to learn more about Mom and Dad...Laurie
ReplyDeleteOoooh.
ReplyDeleteFun! I like the surprise at the end.
ReplyDeleteOhh, surprise! I love your stories! And agree with KarenBakingInATornado, it'll be a long month ahead.
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like this would be one of those, "I thought I was past that!" surprise babies. They're always a bonus.
ReplyDeleteIt's gonna be hard to wait to hear this!
ReplyDelete