Old
Stuff
It’s been a busy week, so, once
again this week will be a slight cheat. But even a slight cheat is new – sort of.
I can’t help but make some changes. The following ‘story’ first appeared in “Feel
Good Alberta’ in December or November 1995. I probably still have a copy of that
magazine around here somewhere.
But first, the first tune on tonight’s
playlist is “You Don’t Know Me” by Ray Charles and Diana Krall. Silk and velvet,
I don’t know which is which.
Sun Witch
Ah, snuggled in bed under Aunt Anna’s
Christmas quilt, with a cup of warm cocoa within arm’s reach and a flask snooker
of rum strategically tucked between the pillows. The winter rage outside may
have ice-olated me in my home, but that’s OK. I wasn’t expecting to see the neighbors
again before the spring anyway. Winter rations are safely assembled under the
quilts; ten to fifteen novels, 35 pounds of chocolates, a roasted duck or two,
other assorted snacks, TV remote control, and of course peanuts – preferably
shelled, lest my wife complain.
So what had I forgotten? The telephone.
It was still in the room where I could hear it ring. And then it happened. It
rang. I could have ignored it, theoretically at least. But, no. I can’t ignore
a ring tone.
I reluctantly emerged from my
winter cocoon and darted across the room (remember this was 1995), to answer
the blasted device. Heaven forbid that I should allow the answering machine to
perform its duty.
“Hello,” I said.
“Hello? Is that you?”
“Of course it’s me.” I said. “Are
you, you?”
“Can’t you tell?”
“No, I can’t tell. My telepathy
has been on the fritz lately. But my bare legs are absolutely all goose-bumpy
with anticipation.”
“Listen,” she said.
Damn it, I could hear it. It was
the sound of palm trees swaying in the gentle breeze. It was followed by the
crash of hot sun on white sand. I could almost hear the sound of bikinis
dancing.
“It’s me,” she said. “Your
sister.”
I could picture her hands on her
hips as she said this.
“Calling all the way from Florida? You found a
quarter?”
“How’s the weather up there? I’m
wearing shorts.”
So what, I thought. What do you
suppose I’m wearing? What did it matter what I was wearing? There was ice developing between my toes.
Sun-witches. They come in all
shapes, sizes, and denominations. They can be sisters, brothers, cousins or friends
from the cold country. Always the Sun-Witch’s first question reveals the real
reason for their call. It’s always the weather. They know we’re freezing and
that the first reasonable temperature is months away. So why do they call? Because sun-beast live
to remind us of our winter misery. They all do it. It doesn’t matter where
they’ve moved; Arizona, Florida or Mexico. Their motives can only be assumed to
be sadomasochistic. Not even a raisin could enjoy as much sun as they claim to.
“It’s not so bad,” I said. What else
could I say? Did she think I’d admit that my toes are blue and I hadn’t had any
feeling below my knees for weeks?
“Really? I’d thought it’d be
getting cold up there by now.”
Oh, I could feel the venom
dripping from her tongue. I knew her next utterance. She’ll tell me she’s
outside and even though she’s wearing shorts and in a tank top, she’s sweating. Oh, I could say, do you really feel safe in your insect-proof
wire mesh enclosure. Have fire-ants consumed any small children
lately? But I fight back the vitriol.
“No colder than normal,” I
respond diplomatically.
Perhaps I should remind her of
poor Aunt Bertha in Arizona. She turned to dust in Arizona; poor women. “It’s a
dry heat,” she’d say, “you don’t even notice it.”
Aunt Bertha sure didn’t notice
it. The body is 98% water. The “dry heat” sucked her dry. One dry, hot morning
Uncle Frank bent over to kiss her. She collapsed into a mere handful of dust.
The paramedics told Uncle Frank that this sort of thing happens all the time him. It’s the dry heat.”
Poor Uncle Frank hasn’t stopped drinking – water – since. It’s doubtful his
kidneys will survive much longer.
“It’s around 70 degrees down
here. It’s been that way for a week.”
70 degrees! That’d be Fahrenheit
I guessed. 20 C. doesn’t sound warm
enough for people who like to gloat.
“That’s nice, maybe we’ll have to
come down there one day; get ourselves out of this cold for a while.”
Wrong, wrong, wrong. I’d stepped right
into her web.
“You think you can handle all
this nice weather?”
How smarmy! She’d handed me the
“can you handle too much of a good thing” line. I was sunk. Remarks about my
pasty-white skin and the spores growing on my back were just around the corner. I
had to fight back. I needed to score – big!
“Alligators eaten any of your
cats lately?” I said jokingly. Ha, that’d get her.
“Why would you say that! We’d had
Fluff for almost 12 years. He just couldn’t run as fast as he used to. The kids
are still upset.”
“What? I was joking. Nobody told
me.”
“Look, if you prefer tundra to
paradise that’s fine. I didn't call asking for insults. I just called to wish you a Merry
Christmas.”
“I’m sorry,” I said. “Merry
Christmas, and Happy New Year.”
So How Did That
Piece of Drivel Ever Get Published?
If
you really think it is crap, you should see the original. Or maybe I should
find the original. The copy I was working off of had so many typos and errors
that I find it hard to believe that it is the actual finished work that was
published, up in chilly Alberta, Canada way back in 1995.
How it got
published is easy enough. “Feel Good, Alberta” was a new start-up venture for
Alberta. Although the title may have suggested swingers or any number of sexual
escapades it was actually all about living healthy. My column was the healthy
dose of humor. I was just like Dave Barry or Erma Bombeck if either of them
ever happened to be unfunny.
The column was dropped after a
couple of months as the magazine found a new source of revenue. Doctors, mostly
chiropractors actually, paid to have their articles published. Fortunately
these articles always included helpful information such as phone numbers and business
hours. In any event whether I sucked or was secretly brilliant the days of
paying people to write for the magazine had passed. As an actually brilliant
writer once said, “So, it goes.”
The Final Tune for
the Evening.
The
evening ends with “Money Talks” by Danny Hull & Chris Cain. It’s not
exactly a peace & love song; well it’s not a peace & love type song at
all. It’s a money talks and BS walks song, and there you have it!
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