Well, I was right. Mom and Dad are pregnant!
Mom is pretty excited. I mean, she had Sally and me 10 months apart over 18 years ago. I guess she’s been secretly thinking her family was incomplete.
Who knew?
But Dad? Dad is completely OVER THE MOON!
You’d have to see it to believe it—this former crusty old Major all googly-eyed over baby stuff.
But I suspected he had a soft spot somewhere in his makeup. I mean, he did deliberately join our family. Even after he’d met Sally.
Speaking of Sally, I should probably tell you that Sally and Mort are still in Munich. I think they are due home any time.
It’s been…quite peaceful. Even a bit...shall I say it? Boring.
Until today.
Dad has been totally obsessed with helping Mom with everything. Baby shopping. Exercising. He and Mom came back from their new favourite walking trail with him carrying her like a prized poodle because he was afraid she'd gotten too tired (but that is another story!) He even insists on going to Mom’s doctor appointments. I think it’s totally sweet.
They just got back from one.
A doctor's visit, that is.
Peter and I were making supper when they walked in. Well, Peter was. I was abuse-ing some craft materials in an effort to make a little scarecrow decoration for Halloween. I looked at them, standing there just inside the front door. “Supper’s almost ready.”
They merely nodded. Mom--smiling. Dad--not.
Dad helped Mom take her coat off and hung it up for her. Then the two of them walked over to the couch and sat down.
Now, normally, this wouldn’t raise any eyebrows. I mean, it was fairly normal behaviour, am I right?
But neither of them was saying anything.
Anything.
And Dad seemed to be holding Mom’s hand with greater…intensity…than usual.
I set down the glue gun I’d been holding.”Okay. Out with it.”
They looked at me.
“Your Dad’s a hero,” Mom said quietly.
I smiled at Dad (who was now shaking his head) and thought about his bravery in joining our family and making Mom so happy. “He’s already a hero to me,” I told them.
“No,” Mom insisted. “He really is a hero.”
I abandoned my crafts and moved closer, sitting in the chair opposite the couch.
Peter shut off the heat under the soup he had been stirring and joined us.
Mom, her fingers tightly entwined in Dad’s, leaned forward. “There was a fire at the Doctor’s office!”
Dad groaned and put his head back against the cushions.
I stared at Mom. “Whaaat?”
She nodded. "It’s totally true. A fire.” She looked at Dad. "And your dad put it out!”
I turned to him. “Seriously?”
I’ve seen him blush before, so I know what it looks like.
“Yes,” he said finally.
“Well, that’s great!” Peter said.
“Was anyone hurt?”
“Um…no.”
Mom sat there, smiling at him. He was staring at the floor.
Neither of them were saying anything.
Mom put her head on his shoulder. “And he saved everyone!” She squeezed his hand, then got up and headed toward the hallway. “I need the bathroom,” she said, unnecessarily.
Dad looked at us after she had closed the door. “I’ve never been so embarrassed in my life,” he said.
“So…what happened?” I asked.
Dad’s blush got darker.
Okay, this was really strange.
“Umm…Dad?”
He sighed. “Well…actually, I started the fire.”
Okay, I hadn’t been expecting this. “Seriously?” I asked again.
He nodded. “Your Mom couldn’t…well…it was dark in the corner where she was sitting and she was having a hard time reading her magazine and I thought…maybe I should move the light over for her. So I did. But I pulled too hard and the cord ripped out of the plug. And it spit sparks all up the wall and it…actually It was pretty spectacular. Suddenly the whole wall was aflame! And there was stupid me, with my jacket, beating out the flames.”
“But you put the fire out, Uncle Pete,” Peter protested.
He rolled his eyes. “After I started it.”
I smiled at him. “A true ‘Sally’ moment,” I said. I got up and crossed the floor, then gave him a big hug. “Dad? You wanna know something? You fit right in!”
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: scarecrow ~ abuse ~ walking trail ~ poodle were sent to me, via Karen, from my good friend, Rena! Thank you, my friend!