Sally shrugged. “I don’t know why they got so bent. Mort had paid for the stupid ring.”
“Just another in a long string of misunderstandings, Sal,”
Mort said, flipping a page in the magazine he was reading.
I raised an eyebrow. “Something you seem to excel at, Sis.”
She made a face. “The guard was new and a bit trigger-happy.”
“He pulled a gun?” Using one oven mitt-encased hand, Mom whacked
Mort’s feet to get them off the coffee table, then set down a platter of
bubbly, cheese-filled appetizers.
“Nope. A cell phone. With a speed dial to the police.” Sally grabbed a round of cracker, ham
and melted cheese and popped it into her mouth. “Oooh. Theeth are HOT!”
Mom grinned at her. “You think? I did just take them out of
the oven!”
I looked at her. “So what happened with you and Uncle Pete?”
Mom glanced at her newly-minted fiancĂ© and blushed. Let’s
face it. She’s not cut out of quite the same ‘thumb-my-nose-at-the-world’ stuff
as Sally. “Another misunderstanding.”
I merely looked at her. “We’re listening.”
She sat beside Uncle Pete and they linked hands. “We were just in the wrong place at the wrong
time, to tell the truth. Apparently there had been a mugging nearby and the
perpetrator…”
“What big words you know,” I said.
She tossed me a glare, cleared her throat and went on. “…the
perpetrator looked like a decidedly attractive ex-marine recently returned from
Afghanistan.”
Uncle Peter smiled at her. “I love
you,” he said. She blushed even more.
“See? Easily explained,” Sally said, reaching for another
cracker.
Peter and I exchanged a glance. “So what do we do now?”
Sally bounced to her feet. “Let me grab some money. WE are going shopping!”
I summoned up a smile. “Have fun.”
“No. Not Mort and me! YOU and me!”
I had time to look at Peter hopelessly whilst reciting the
oft-misquoted ‘We who are about to die salute you!’ before I was jerked from my
comfortable perch on the couch.
In less time than I imagined possible, the two of us were
skating up and down aisles at Dollar Tree. Sally was pulling packaged decorations
off shelves with total abandon. “Oooh! This! And this! And these!” She pushed her
laden cart(s), collecting another as one was filled. Before long, she had a
positive train.
I glanced at my watch. We’d been there 7 minutes.
I tried to get her attention. “Sal, don’t you think it would
be much smarter to actually come up with a theme—or at least colours—and then
go to a Bridal Wedding planning company and start there?”
Sally looked at me. “They have such a place?”
“Several.” I edged past the tottering pile in the cart
nearest me. “They’ll help you plan your wedding and everything.”
Sally pursed her lips and looked thoughtful. Then she
started pushing her carts toward the checkout. “Well, we’ll get…”
That was as far as she ‘got’.
As Sally was rounding the corner from aisle 4 something—one of her pockets? —caught one of the shelves.
In a heartbeat, it and all three of its closest neighbours
came crashing down, ejecting their contents. Instantly, the center of the aisle
became a war zone.
Shoppers—and me—scattered.
Sally calmly remained—haven’t I told you she’s made of stern
stuff—and, when the manager and a small army of employees approached, pointed
at the mess. “There’s been an accident,” she said, needlessly.
As the manager et al gaped at her, Sally pushed/pulled her
carts to the checkout. The young man behind the till had been staring at what
he could see of the mess behind her. He turned wide eyes to Sally. “Erm…” was
all he could manage.
Sally merely shrugged. “Please add these things up,” she
said. “And anything that’s broken in there.” She pointed.
You know, I don’t say this often (in point of fact, never), but
sometimes, I’m downright proud of my sister.
Life with her is never boring, and actually is often filled
with laughter and that’s the truth.
The future is now—if we can just survive it…
My words:
Were given to me, via Karen, from my friend, Jenniy at Climaxed
Now go and see what words the others got—and how they used them!