“My turn to do laundry!”
I sat up in bed. You have to know
that, immediately upon waking, I am seldom coherent.
And yes, that condition flees pretty
fast (out of necessity).
Because, you know…Sally.
This time, as my mind began to
clear, I frowned.
Had I really seen her face at the
door? Heard the barked-out words? The closing of said door?
Because, if I had, we were in
trouble.
Ahem…
Sally really doesn’t do many of the
chores around the house.
It is her house. And the rest of us
who live there rent-free are generally happy to do them.
Mom has just carried on with her ‘mom’
stuff—albeit with a little less stress because the bills are all paid and she
has Dad, the former Uncle Pete.
I happily do things that require
the use of any sort of machinery because it has always satisfied something in
me to…you know…do them.
Sally has simply spun in the
middle.
Oh, she has tried to help. She’s
willing and eager.
She is also accident-prone and
known for her snap—let’s call them interesting—decisions.
After which, someone, usually a
professional, tidies up.
So…today and back to that voice at
my door.
It could have been part of the
dream I was having.
Or it could have been real.
Either way, it would still be a
nightmare.
I sighed and threw back the covers.
I climbed out of bed and dressed
hurriedly. Then opened my door and poked my nose out into the hall.
At first, it was happily deserted. Then
Sally appeared at the entrance to the kitchen, laundry basket in her hands. “Gwen!
Come on! Mort and I are waiting to start!”
I think I know why she had suddenly become interested in doing everyone’s laundry.
Sally has an inventor friend who is working on a new incarnation of a washer and drier combination. You know—the one machine to rule them all.
And he has given a prototype to Sally to try out...
I sighed and went back into my room
to get my hamper and we hauled everything downstairs.
Now you have to know it’s not that
she plans any of this. Or deliberately sets out to destroy.
It just…happens.
The first few loads went
surprisingly well.
Baby stuff into the machine first.
Then into the basket for Mort and I
to start folding as the first load of whites was shoved inside.
Then a load of colourful clothes was inserted.
I stayed on the periphery. With
Mort.
Folding and keeping my head down.
Because who knows when ‘something’
is going to happen?
This went on for much of the day.
The first, second, third and even fourth
loads had been washed, dried, and folded. And, I have to admit it, the machine
was doing a great job!
A load of towels was cheerfully
tumbling, nearly at the end of the drier cycle.
And that’s when it happened.
Can’t you just hear the tight ‘Eee!
Eee! Eee!’ of the orchestral strings?
There was a muffled thump, followed
by a thick ‘click’ and what sounded like metal
screeching against metal.
And then the door of the drier blew
off.
I am not making this up.
It blew off.
Landed across the room, like, 20
feet away.
I was supremely glad that no one
(ie. me) was standing in the way of it. I think it could have done some real
damage.
A tongue of flame licked out of the
tub.
I think I screamed.
I know someone did.
And then Sally flew in, fire
extinguisher in hand and, with a flick or two, put out the few flames before
they did much more than singe a couple of towels.
Say what you will about Sally, she
usually gets herself out of difficulties even faster than she got in. And usually, while the rest of us are just starting to react.
Then she pulled the electrical plug
out of the wall and looked at me. “I’ll have to tell Daniel there are a few kinks
to work out,” she said, grinning.
I should say.
Mort, ever the posterior backup, was busy talking to someone at ‘911’.
A mere moment later we were hearing the sounds of sirens.
When Mom and Dad and Ivy Jean
pulled up that evening, it was to see Sally, Mort, Peter and I seated on the
front lawn, hemmed on one side by leafy bushes.
And on the other by firefighters. We were watching them roll-up hoses and chat happily about ‘doing safety
checks’ and ‘another successful mission’.
Mom, clutching the baby, just
stared at the house, her colour fading. “What hap-pend?” She managed at last.
I glanced over at the firefighters
and shrugged. “Ummm…Sally did the laundry?” I
said.
Mom gasped and leaned back against
the arm that appeared around her shoulders. Dad patted her shoulder with his
other hand and she smiled up at him and took a deep, sustaining breath.
“The good news is: the laundry’s
done!” Sally said brightly.
I looked at her. Then at Mom. “So’s
the drier,” I added.
Today’s post is a writing challenge. Participating bloggers picked 4 – 6 words or short phrases for someone else to craft into a post with the understanding that all words be used at least once. 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.
Today, I’m using: everything ~ laundry ~ safety ~ click ~ posterior ~ leafy
Submitted by, Jenniy at