Mort’s eyes were wide as he and Sally charged through the front door. “Hide us!” he screamed.
“What?” I
jumped up from the couch where Peter and I had been happily—and normally—looking
through a photo album. Why?”
The two of
them stopped for breath.
“I don’t
know!” Mort said. “The police were after us as we were walking back through
the forest!”
“How do you
know they were after you?”
“Because they
hollered at us to stop.”
Yeah, that
would be a fairly broad hint.
Peter had
joined me. “Why? What did you do?”
“I DON’T
KNOW!”
I looked at Sally, who shrugged.
“We were just
taking the tree to dump it in the forest,” Mort said. “Like everyone around
here does.”
Sally nodded.
“Maybe we shouldn’t have used a wheelbarrow?” Sally looked at him, then back at
us. “Mort isn’t very good with a wheelbarrow and he lost the tree halfway
across the levee. It fell all the way down into the aqueduct.”
“Or
maybe it was because we walked across the levee?” Mort said. He looked at me. “Aren’t we
allowed to cross the levee?”
It was my
turn to shrug.
Peter looked
out the window. “They’re here.”
“Oh, man! You
have to hide us!” Mort said again.
“Mort, where?! They know you live here. Unless we find a capsule to stuff you
and Sally in, or discover a way to transport you instantly to the Old Town and
somehow erase our entire external surroundings, they’re going to find you!”
Peter shook
his head. “Sally, I don’t know how it is you manage to incite shady
activities from the most
normal of actions, but, sister dear, this time you’ll have to accept the subsequent consequences!”
Sally
shrugged again.
“But we didn’t
DO anything,” Mort moaned.
“Then you
have nothing to fear.” Peter crossed the entryway to answer a smart knock at
the door. “Some in, officers,” he said.
The two men
took off their hats as they entered. “We’re looking for Sally Hart . . .” the
first one began . . .” Then, seeing Sally and Mort standing there, he put his hat
back on. “Sally Hart, Mort Humphries, you need to come down to the station with
us for questioning.”
Sally looked
at him. “Why?”
“You were
seen—by several witnesses—disposing of a body over the edge of the Ferness
Aqueduct. Our men are looking for it now. Please come with me.”
“Ooooh!” Sally
suddenly grinned and her eyes sparkled. “Can I be handcuffed?”
The man
frowned. “Erm . . . yes?”
“Me, too!”
Mort said, holding out his wrists.
The men
shrugged and handcuffed the pair, then led them out the front door.
“Woohoo!” Sally
screeched as they crossed the front yard. She held her hands up. “Mort and me
are being arrested!”
Any
neighbours who hadn’t been pulled from their houses by the flashing lights of
the two police cruisers were certainly attracted, now, by Sally.
As usual.
Sigh.
I probably
don’t have to tell you that Sally and Mort were soon home, dropped off by a
rather red-faced patrolman who simply nodded. And left.
And that the
crime they had been arrested for had not been a crime at all.
Merely, at
the very worst, littering.
But, to be
absolutely truthful, it was all Sally’s
fault.
And she
should have been arrested.
For crimes to wrapping . . .
Our tree. |
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 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 for today? subsequent consequences ~ pull
together ~ capsule ~ Old Town ~ external surroundings ~ incite shady activities
They were submitted by my friend Tamara at https://thethreegerbers.blogspot.ch/
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