“What
you see and what you hear depends a great deal on where you are standing. It
also depends on what sort of person you are.” – C.S. Lewis
1. Sticky Side
Down
She didn’t mean any harm. She was just digging.
And isn’t digging what little girls do at the beach? But her little brother didn’t like it,
not one single bit.
“Look what you’ve done!” he shouted. “Stooooooop!!”
To be fair, the long gash leading from the surf to the
castle’s moat did look a bit infected.
It bubbled and foamed each time a wave attacked and retreated. But each time the water emptied, the
wound also seemed to slowly heal as the sides collapsed into each other
and the bottom rose. In fact,
after a few more waves the cut would barely be noticeable as a faint scar on
the wet sand.
The boy, visibly upset by his sister’s digging, asked their
mother if he could get a band-aid out of the small “emergency box” he knew she
kept in their bag.
“Why, sweetheart?” she asked. “What did you do?”
But before he could answer, the boy had already pulled the
paper back off the flesh-colored bandage and laid it carefully on the beach,
sticky side down.
“There,” he said, gently pressing the band-aid onto the sand
to make sure it was secure. “Now,
isn’t that better?”
Later that day, a teenage girl was drawing a heart in
the wet sand with her toe when a soggy band-aid washed onto her foot.
She screamed.
2. Soup
Jesse and Sarah had been all over the city looking for
something to eat. Sure, they’d
found a castoff crust here and there, but nothing substantial. For them, as for many of their brothers
and sisters on the street, hunger sometimes drove them to terrible places. No trashcan was too smelly. No crust too stale. No offering too small.
And then they saw it -- a bowl of fresh, undisturbed
gazpacho. The chilled soup was
sitting on the corner table of a sidewalk café on E 57th St. The restaurant was one of those quaint
spots where the city’s fashionable housewives pause during their afternoons of
shopping to eat off of white clothed bistro tables in the open air.
Of course, there were also breadsticks on the table, but it
was the pale red soup that caught Jesse’s attention -- a beautiful soup left unguarded while its fashionably
dressed owner, who had spent the morning sipping over-priced vinti coffees,
discretely used the restaurant’s ladies’ room.
Jesse and Sarah sat on a park bench across the street from
the soup, trying to look inconspicuous.
“I don’t know,” Sarah protested. “We really probably shouldn’t.”
“We probably shouldn’t?!” Jesse snapped. “We also probably shouldn’t be eating
out of trashcans… but we are. We
also probably shouldn’t be drinking leftover beer out of other people’s cups…
but we are. We also probably shouldn’t
be following bratty kids around the park hoping their nannies will forget where
Jr. set down his organic peanut butter and free range jelly sandwich… but we
are. So, you can stay here on this bench if you
want, but I’m about to have some fresh $12.95 soup, all thanks to Mrs. Well Fed
Rich Lady and her tiny bladder.”
Jesse lifted himself off the bench and crossed 57th
St. He casually hovered around the
cluster of tables, drawing not a few uneasy glances from the café’s diners,
until we was confident the coast was clear. Then, ever so carefully, he descended on the soup and took a
long, slow sip.
The sweetness of the tomatoes… the rich olive oil… glorious.
Consumed as he was by the delicious broth, Jesse didn’t see
the woman with the large sunglasses returning to her table. He was lowering his head for
a second drink when he heard her yell.
“Waiter,” she barked.
“What kind of place is this?!
I leave my table for two minutes, and you bring me a bowl of soup with a
fly in it?! Disgraceful.”
3. Never Been
Married
The reason she’d never been married was that she’d never
been in love with a living man.
She’d been too busy loving Jesus, that long-haired boyfriend who never
seems to call back, to find a boy that might one day want to lie with her.
And then Ken showed up. He was clean and cut and they almost instantly knew which
hymns would be sung at their wedding.
Six months later, those hymns were indeed sung at their wedding. She wore a white dress, and even her
best friends (who knew everything about
her), knew the color was appropriate.
Not surprisingly, her brother thought it would be funny to
decorate the getaway car with condoms.
For an hour, while the bridesmaids fussed over his sister, Dave and his
friends tore dozens of square foil packages and got slippery lipped as they
blew up the condoms they then tied to her car. What better way to send his Disney princess of a sister into
wedded bliss, he thought, than in a condom-covered car with a note under the windshield wiper reading “May Your Love Know No Barriers”?
Kate and her groom were halfway down Spring St. on that blessed Saturday afternoon before she paid any
attention to the torpedo shaped “balloons” on the car. When one broke free from the side
mirror, she was mortified and said, “oh, I hate to leave that nasty thing on
the street! What if a child finds it?”
Her Prince Charming smiled, but didn’t stop the car. He wasn’t going to stop now –
especially not for a condom.
***
Mrs Murphy lived in a house separated from Spring St. by
little more than a narrow sidewalk and a slender rose garden. The widow stayed on a constant vigil to
keep her rose beds free from the beer cans and potato chip bags that blew into yard on a regular basis.
But on Saturday evening when she went to sprinkle crushed
egg shells under the flowering bushes and found a limp condom hanging from one
of the thorny stems, Mrs. Murphy’s disdain for “litter” reached a new high.
Shaking her head, she sighed. “…practically Sodom and Gomorrah.”
Shaking her head, she sighed. “…practically Sodom and Gomorrah.”
4. An Issue of Blood
In those days there was a man named Jesus, the son of a
carpenter. Because of his great
love for the people, he walked from village to village feeding the hungry and
caring for the poor. And he taught
them many things.
And it came to pass that as he passed through a certain
village, Jesus encountered a young woman suffering from an issue of blood. She had suffered a great deal under the
care of many doctors and had spent all she had, yet instead of getting better
she grew worse.
Trembling with fear, the woman fell at Jesus’ feet and asked
“why are the sins of my fathers being visited upon me in this way? If you only wished it, I know you could
make me well.”
“Arise, my child,” he said. “I have an uncle, a skilled surgeon, who lives just across
the border in El Paso. In his
house there are many rooms. I will
go and prepare a place for you.”
And behold, it came to pass that Jesus did, in fact, prepare a place for
her and provided for her every need. The
woman (who was called Angelina) healed nicely and lived in the US for the rest
of her days, doing honorable work among her citizen neighbors.
But Jesus, having angered the local authorities by speeding
in a school zone, was deported back to Chihuahua. And there he fell among thieves, and his uncle heard from
him no more.
1 comment:
These were really good. Almost like thought excercises, they mess with your sense of expectation so much. And I was that close to retching over another poor orphan story done wrong.
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