Let the record show
that The Pony started taking some new medicine in September. He takes it in the
morning, before school. I am always asking if he took it, and if he made sure
to eat something with it. The instructions say that it can be taken with or
without food. But better safe than sorry, says Val. This morning, The Pony said
he ate something.
“What? What did you have with your pill?” hollered Val down the
basement stairs.
“Just…something.
Something chocolate that I had down here.”
“That’s not a proper breakfast! You need a Little Debbie brownie or
something.”
“I’m fine.”
On the way out the
door, The Pony reached into the pantry for a Little Debbie Cosmic Brownie. Yet he was as disappointed as Old
Mother Hubbard’s dog when he pulled out an empty box. Let the record show that
The Pony is the only one who eats Little Debbies. So he must inform the
list-maker when he runs out, or none will be boughten on the weekly shopping
trip.
Once in T-Hoe, I
offered him the Nature Valley Granola Bar I had carried out of my classroom the
day before, and not eaten on the way home. The Pony took it. I heard it open. I
could even hear him crunching. Those Nature Valley bars ain’t foolin’. They’re
hard-core hard. Like cedar shingles.
Almost to school,
driving by the park, The Pony, who doesn’t ask for much, said
“Mom? Do you think we
can hurry up and get to school? I feel kind of sick.”
Let the record show
that Val does not lollygag on the way to work. She drives the speed limit.
Especially in school town, a well-known speed trap, where Mrs. Thevictorian has
been stopped twice over the years, both after school, by two different
patrolmen, on two different streets, and given a warning about the speed limit,
which she was exceeding by five miles per hour. Uh huh. It’s not like Val was
drag racing or driving fast and furiously.
“I don’t know, Pony. I’m already going 30. The speed limit is 30, you
know. I’ll try. Hold your head out the window if you need to. Or I can pull
over.”
“If you don’t mind, I’m
going to quit talking now. To hold it in.”
So there I was, racing
at 30 mph to get my Pony to school. I went past the park, around past the old
burned-up restaurant by the creek, past the convenience store and carwash and
Dollar Store, up the hill, past the turn off to the middle school, down the
hill by the old daycare, where I crept up to 35 mph while coasting, and started
up the hill that would take us to the school parking lot.
YIKES!
There sat a patrolman
beside the road.
“Great! That guy has not sat there for two months, and the day I’m
rushing my sick Pony to school, there he is! Good thing I jammed on the brakes
as soon as I saw him!”
We neared the summit.
Stopped at the stop sign. Went past to make our left turn onto the parking lot.
The Pony had his window down, head out. The temperature was 23 degrees.
“Do you want me to let you out right here? Before I back in?”
“I think that would be
best.”
I unlocked The Pony’s
door. He hopped out and headed for the grassy area at our end of the building.
I pulled down and back up, into my spot. I turned to see The Pony on his hands
and knees like a dog, vomit churning from his mouth.
He walked back to the
car.
“Here. Do you want this bottle of water I had in here from yesterday?”
“Uh huh. I think I
will just keep it with me. I don’t think you want it back.”
“You’re right.”
The Pony took a small
bag of Lay’s Potato Chips with him as well, and went on to class. He picked up
his lunch at 11:00, but told me after school that he didn’t eat anything but
his Cheetos. The chicken strip was still in his lunch bag. I told him Juno
would love it when we got home.
Out the end door we
went to get in T-Hoe and drive home.
“I wonder if your vomit is still there. I saw a white truck out here
most of the morning. I don’t know what they were doing. Something out front
with a big saw, like digging a trench for a gas line.”
“I KNOW! I saw that
truck on my way down here to class, and I felt bad for whoever had to see my
vomit. Look. It’s still there.”
“I don’t need to look. I thought sure a dog would wonder by and eat it
while we were in school.”
“You know what I hate?
I hate how, on cold mornings like today, the vomit steams as it exits your
mouth.”
“STOP! I’m about to get down on my hands and knees like a dog.”
“Sorry. Can you tell I’m
feeling better?”
Yeah. I think I could.
Great dialog!
ReplyDeleteThis would have been more of a thriller if you were in the new fancy car and not T-Hoe.
NOOOO! The very thought curdles my ice-cold blood!
DeleteWe took the fancy new car to my sister the ex-mayor's wife's house on Christmas Day. And The Pony and I took it to town on sunny Sunday afternoon. But right now it's safe in the garage (or so I thought--look for a related story in the next several days) until our new roof is on, and the weather looks good.
OMG! Now it's vomit humor. I may just . . . .
ReplyDeleteI try to provide a long buffet of entertainment options here at the cathouse...
DeleteNothing escapes his notice, not even vomit steam!!
ReplyDeleteAttention to detail is one of The Pony's strong points. Unlike caring about people.
DeleteWhen the barf hits the ground,
ReplyDeleteAnd it makes not a sound,
That's-a-gross-a!
Maybe you could cut a record. And on the flip side, you can sing "I've Got Tears in My Ears From Lying on My Back in My Bed While I Cry Over You."
Deletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qU7HTgAAgQc
Even I have NEVER run a vomit themed post!!
ReplyDeleteNow when you DO, I can call you a copycat! Better wait at least a week.
DeleteOK!!
DeleteEck eck, now you've gone and done it.
ReplyDeleteI had no idea that all of you dainty tenderfeet were such highfalutin, upper-crust pillars of society that you can't enjoy a good vomit tale.
DeleteAnd to think, my educational post about feces transplants was so well-received...
http://unbaggingthecats.blogspot.com/2013/01/what-we-have-here-is-success-to.html