Mary has called to tell me that she can't talk.
“I’m going to have to call you back,” she says.
I lean back in my chair.
“You sound bummed. What’s up?”
“Oh, nothing.” Mary sighs heavily. “I’m just vacuuming the street. I’ll call you back in ten.”
Normally, this is the sort of statement that gives me
wrinkles, but if it’s Mary saying it?
My forehead remains as placid as a baby’s.
Thirty minutes later, the phone rings.
“Good morning, Acme Grommets and Gravel.”
“Bleeeeeeechhhhhh.”
“Thank you, sir. I’ll
transfer you now.”
“Pearl, dagnabit!
My life is a shambles!” Mary
starts laughing. There is only the
slightest tinge of hysteria attached to the sound.
“What’s going on?”
“You know my car, right?”
I start to frown, catch myself. “Yes,” I say cautiously.
“And you know the kind of valuable stuff I keep in it,
right?”
“Are we talking about the mop AND the radio?”
“Yep.”
I nod, sure that she will know that I am nodding.
“You are also aware, are you not, that I don’t lock my
car door?”
“Yes, ma’am,” I say.
“I know all these things and more.”
“So, knowing these things, where would you place the odds of
my car window being smashed out?”
“No!”
“Yes!”
“Sonofabitch.”
There is a moment’s silence as we consider the state of
affairs wherein an unlocked car holding both a mop and a radio is broken into
and neither is taken.
“So they left the mop,” I say. “That’s a clue, right there.”
I envision Mary nodding.
“We know they don’t care about their kitchen floors.”
“And they have no need for a Flintstone-style wig,” I
say.
“Nor are they wise to the advantages of a mid-price car
stereo.”
“Bestids.”
There is silence again.
“So,” I say. “You’ve
been vacuuming the street.”
“No need for everyone to suffer,” she says. “They left quite a mess.”
“And took nothing,” I say.
“And took nothing,” she agrees. “On the other hand,” she says, ”I have to say
that the street in front of our house has never been cleaner.”
“We have you to thank, Mare.”
“Hey,” she says, grinning into the phone, “Who has more
fun than me?”
and it leaves the unanswered question...why?
ReplyDeletenow my forehead is wrinkled...
R., I'm going to say "sheer stupidity" and call it a day...
ReplyDeleteIf she needs to borrow "ours", the city of Borger recently bought a cute lil truck with a street sweeper, um, cute as in my favorite lil Freightliner M2 Business Class model. What a waste, it would make a veRy nice pickup truck. WeLL, if it was the four door model. Alas, it isn't a nice maroon color either, just Utility Department White.
ReplyDeleteesb, I'll let her know. :-)
ReplyDeletea big UGH for mary!
ReplyDeleteTexWisGirl, like she doesn't have enough on her plate!
ReplyDeleteUg. Thieves make me ill. I'm all for going medieval on their asses. You touch my stuff--the stuff I have slaved and saved and EARNED....and I'll wack off a hand. *sigh*
ReplyDeleteAt least it's not winter?
i'm glad you are friends with real people, chock full of personality.
ReplyDeleteand i'm glad you soak in, stir up, savor, distill and share batches of those personalities with us.
OMG PEARL your blog is a still. i can see the copper tubing now.
you are running bootleg shine and we line up each day to take a pull from the jug.
I wonder why they broke the windows if the car was unlocked? Just vandals, I guess, young ones.
ReplyDeleteThey did steal something...happiness and peace of mind...the devils.
ReplyDeleteAs the old joke goes (or a variation thereof):
ReplyDelete"When they were handing out brains, those people thought they were saying 'drains', and said, "no, we don't need any"."
Sheer stupidity, indeed.
Oh rubbishness.
ReplyDeleteNot your post. Mary's situation. Your posts aren't rubbish. They are the opposite of rubbish.
The other day I realised that the most valuable thing in my car is the Krook-Lock.
Arse.
I hope a glass nugget got stuck in their thieving underwear
ReplyDeleteDid you take the floorwax over? If a job's worth doing...
ReplyDeleteSenseless vandalism, yet Mary remains Mary! Gotta' love that girl!
ReplyDeleteBless her heart!
ReplyDeleteI am shocked. Shocked! They didn't take the mop, you say?! I can see it sitting there. Frightened. Alone. Unwanted. Why that's just - there's no other word for it - senseless. BTW, We used to leave our car unlocked. With the keys in it. They only broke our window, too.
ReplyDeleteI need a 'Mary' in my life too!
ReplyDeleteShe could phone me at work any time!
Lets not forget vandals/would be thieves = idiots.
ReplyDeleteWe have a few of those running around here too. How hard is it to check to see if the door is unlocked?
My friend Lucy always swept the street before she set up for a street show. She always swept my place, too. It's like I know Mary.
ReplyDeleteFlintstone-style wig!! Why didn't I think of that?!?!
ReplyDeleteVacuuming the street? Well, that sucks.
ReplyDeleteFun article, Pearl :)
Take care and happy blogging, eh.
Gary
Oh, the humanity. It sounds like it was just for the pure fun of it--which is even more maddening. They broke the window because they could....and that's it.
ReplyDeleteAt least if they had taken the mop...
sheesh.
Oh Pearl. It's good to read your voice.
ReplyDeleteAnn
Pearl,some pathetic thieves are so dumb and silly they need their knee-caps whacked and cracked. Mary could spend her street-vacuuming time more productively smacking their foolish knee-caps using a brand new solid oak mop handle and listening to the radio,would help her get the right BEAT. Dummies too stupid to try the door first deserve what they get, even a grommet up the nose. ":)
ReplyDeleteYour stories always make me smile.
ReplyDeletemaybe the vandal was looking for a broom and a tv.
ReplyDeleteMary's welcome to come and vacuum my street any time she likes. It's just leaves and stuff, no broken glass.
ReplyDeleteIf that car gets any worse the night stalkers will be coming around in the depth of the night and making repairs to it... pitiful heap..
ReplyDeleteProbably her husband did it---had to prove to himself that the vacuum was still in running order. He had to cross that off his list of things to get her for her next birthday.
ReplyDeleteCall him on the sly and suggest a bucket to go with the mop.
Well, she's decent. Lesser people would just drive around the shards and ignore the mess.
ReplyDeleteWell, at least she's got a good attitude. Note to thieves: check the car door next, dummies.
ReplyDeleteAnd I thought it was strange that my mother liked to vacuum her kitchen floor. There is a setting for that, she'd say.
ReplyDeleteMaybe, just like my mother, Mary couldn't work a broom.
A sticker saying:
ReplyDelete'car unlocked - we trust you'?