Friday, April 23, 2010

The Owl

Right around Christmas time, the season of giving, I was returning from a visit with the element of family that I don't see very often. My children and I were in the middle of nowhere, on a road slicked in places with ice, and I had seen few cars on my way home. The snow was still piled high on the road's edges, right up to the white lines on both lanes. The frigid air was so crisp that I wasn't even driving the speed limit for fear of hitting black ice.

I came to a straight stretch on the road and kicked my speed up a couple of notches. I passed a fence post and a white blur darted into my peripherals. I turned my head a little to see what it was and an owl's tail feathers fanned out right in my direct line of sight. I blinked and I was looking right up an owl's butt.

Immediately, I let off the gas and went to hit the brakes, but my logic kicked in over my emotions and I realized that if I dodged or braked, I might very well lose traction. The owl flew along with my windshield brushing his tail feathers for longer than I would have thought he could, but when he dipped a wing to change direction, the car got him.

I'm the type of person who has to make sure that her roadkill is actually dead, as I can't stand the thought of any creature suffering needlessly. After a bad word or two that prompted my children to tune in and ask me what had happened, I pulled off on the shoulder and went to make sure there was a corpse and not a pain filled bird.

The tiny body lay near the middle of the road, with one wing spread across one yellow line. In the moonlight, enhanced by the reflection off the snow, I thought I saw its chest rise and fall. I took a couple of steps farther and the owl popped up and flopped its way to the white line, scaring a year or so off my life.

I said a few more bad words and got back in the car, putting it in reverse to try and finish the poor thing off. My five-year-old daughter was babbling that "we had to kill it because it couldn't live while in such pain and we couldn't leave it" to try to stop the sobbing of my eight-year-old son. Backing up took all of my concentration since I was trying to keep my tires aligned with the white line and I responded with simple grunts to her exclamations of "Right, Mama? Right?" repeated endlessly and tearfully.

When I was sure I had gone far past the spot where the owl had landed, I still hadn't spotted the body or felt the bump as the tires went over it. Admittedly, the owl would make only a small bump, but I was waiting for it. I turned my attention forward and advanced in increments, examining the roadside in my headlights. Still no owl.

I got back out in the freezing cold and squinted as I searched for the little squish I wished I was certain of. Instead, as I walked the line, I saw movement off in the two-feet deep snow. With a few more bad words, I debated if it was really worth getting snow in my sneakers, until I caught a faint wail coming through the closed windows of my car. Crap. I had no choice. I took two steps into the snow, just enough to wet the ankles of my jeans when it melted and to have a couple of clumps drop into my shoes when the injured bird took flight, gliding in for a rough landing back on the yellow line.

I debated my options. I could get back in the car and try to squish it again, but that could just result in another round of flopsy. I could get in the car and lie to my children, but then I'd have to deal with my conscience, knowing that I had left it to die. My cold feet would feel even worse if I chose that course of action. Finally I concluded I had no real choice.

I took off my coat and tiptoed toward the poor thing. The rise and fall of its chest was clearly visible now as it labored for breath. When I was several feet away, I tossed my coat on top of it then stepped forward and carefully gathered it up.

Getting back in the car, my kids asked me what I had done and I explained as I headed back down the road. I worried about the owl getting enough air and decided to pull off the road as soon as I came to a spot that wasn't a snow drift. While I drove, my mental voices had a serious debate about what I was going to do with the owl, both in the short and long term. While they proffered multiple suggestions, none seemed to fit the bill I was searching for. The lights of a convenience store ahead lit the night and a solution came to me as I flipped my turn signal.

Two days before during my after Christmas shopping, I had purchased a new coffee maker for the teacher workroom at school. Since I had attendance window duty first thing in the morning, I always got the last cup of coffee left in the pot. Unfortunately, this cup was usually half grounds since we could not seem to find a filter that would hold up under the force of the hot water. Plus, another teacher always set the pot up for a quick flip in the morning and I wanted a machine that would do the self-timer bit and turn on even if she wasn't around to flip the switch. It took quite a bit of searching to locate the one I wanted on the shelf, since the store was running a sale and most of the timer ones were already purchased, but I had succeeded, quite proud of myself.

School began in two days and I knew the coffee maker would be well secured in styrofoam. As soon as I pulled into the parking lot, I jumped out, dug through the Christmas clutter in my trunk, and unearthed the new pot. I pulled out the maker, carefully keeping the styrofoam together around it and laid the ensemble back in a safe little nook of wrapping paper. The box was far more important to me at that moment.

I moved around to the passenger door and worked very carefully to gently rest the injured owl in the box. As soon as I saw it was safe and still alive, I closed the lid, hoping to lessen its fear. The short term solution met, the voices began working on the long term; who was going to kill this owl for me?

In my chosen home, I have more friends than I've ever had before. I ran through the list of all of them in my head and came up with several who either hunt or have husbands who hunt, but I couldn't think of a one who would still be up at this hour of the night. While they're wonderful friends, there's only one who I'm close enough to that I would wake her to shoot an owl and she was on the opposite end of the county, another good two hours' worth of driving. As the smell of bird filled my car, I decided to do what most distraught girls with my background would do. I ran home to Daddy.

I couldn't call my parents because they were out at a dinner party. I also didn't want to actually ask my father to kill the owl because he would swear and/or mock me quite a bit. Mostly, I knew where he kept his guns, so we headed down the mountain to kill an owl.

My daughter fell asleep, both due to the excitement and the late hour, but my boy was in it with me for the long haul. He would go for long stretches in complete silence and then offer options for ways we could avoid killing the owl. I would consider his thoughts and then explain why they wouldn't work. Eventually, he accepted that I would have to do it. That's when the crying began again, but softly this time as he mourned.

When we finally arrived at my parents' house, I half hoped the owl would already be dead, but it wasn't. I carried my daughter up to her bed and tucked her in then went for the .22. Getting gun was no problem, but then I discovered Daddy didn't keep his ammo with the guns. I had no idea where to find a single bullet.

My son trailed after me up and down stairs as I searched in all the places I thought my father might logically keep his hunting supplies. Eventually, I found a couple of .22 bullets in a basket on top of the refrigerator in the basement. My boy was bawling and begging me to find him headphones. He had accepted that I was going to shoot the owl, but he couldn't bear the thought of hearing the shot and knowing it had happened. His plan was to get on the computer and blast away the sound. I helped him set up something upstairs, though we couldn't find any headphones, and went back down to the kitchen to load the gun.

I slipped a shell in and locked the bolt into place. Again, as I opened the box, I prayed that the owl was already dead. Again, it wasn't. I stared at its terrified eyes for a couple of minutes, trying to nerve myself to pick it up and take it outside for extermination. Finally, my son yelled down the stairs, wondering why he hadn't heard the fateful shot.

I simply couldn't do it. I had driven an extra 45 minutes to put the poor thing out of its misery and had ended up merely prolonging its agony. I hated myself in that moment. I quietly opened the bolt and removed the bullet, telling my son that I just couldn't do it. He threw himself at me, hugging me around the knees as we headed into the living room to cry together.

After a bit, I went to check on the owl to tell it my dad would be home soon. When I opened the box, I couldn't see any movement of its chest. I grabbed a coat hanger and gently lifted its wing for a closer look. Its eyes had finally glazed over. It was gone.

Ten minutes later, my parents walked through the door.

My mom was getting ready to look in the box when I walked into the laundry room. "Don't say anything," I commanded. After one look at my face, they complied. I made sure that they were okay with my daughter spending the night since my son was still stuck to me like glue then I loaded the boxed dead owl and my boy into the car. We dumped the corpse near a church parking lot, not for the religious connotations, though that did comfort me just a little, but because it was a convenient place to pull off the road close to woods.

On Wednesday I returned to school, armed with the new coffee pot still coddled in packing and a sad story to share. When I removed the styrofoam, I began swearing so much that another teacher came in to see what had happened.

It was the wrong pot. Some jerk had switched out the pot with the timer on it for the cheaper flip switch version. If I hadn't spent 15 minutes searching the shelves, I would think it was my mistake, but I knew beyond the shadow of a doubt that this error was not my doing.

Normally, I wouldn't swear enough to call someone else's attention to the situation, but this time I couldn't help myself. Normally, I would put the pot back in the box and exchange it at the store. Normally, this would be an annoying inconvenience, but not significant enough to chance having a student hear me swear.

I stood looking at the little green switch on the regular coffee pot for what seemed to be a long while. Then I walked over to the counter and plugged it in. This coffee pot was now mine. I couldn't return it to the store. The box had had a dead owl in it.

My best friend at school was so sympathetic about the owl. So sympathetic that she choked on her lunch laughing at our new coffee pot. Each morning for a month when I walked in and got a cup of perfectly brewed coffee, the teacher who flipped the switch would look at me and the corners of her lips would twitch just a little before she hurried out the room. The next time they go on sale, I'm buying a single serving pot.

Monday, March 1, 2010

The Parking Lot

My high school has a tradition of holding a drug free party after graduation at a local bowling alley. Although I wasn’t exactly the joiner type, Ben and I decided to go to the free bowling, more because we loved bowling than for the people, but we did have fun with my friends. Most of his friends went to another school. I remember Ben won a free hat for hitting a strike when they called for a volunteer. No one was even attempting it despite the cajoling of the guy on the intercom, and Ben felt pity for the man and was in a mood where he didn’t mind making a spectacle of himself. It was the only strike he bowled that night.

That party was the third time in my life I had ever stayed up all night. The first two were our junior and senior proms when we went to the after party so Ben could jump in the bungee trampoline and get a killer wedgie on the velcro wall. I remember driving home after the junior prom and falling asleep in his pickup. I was cold, so he turned the heat up. Since he hadn’t had any sleep either, I still think it was a miracle we made it home without him falling asleep at the wheel.

The day after our bowling graduation party, I started my summer job that I would work until heading off to college in the fall. I had accepted a position as third shift short-order cook at a local convenience store. The pay was decent, but I worked 11 pm to 8 am. The work was easy since not that many people want deep fried food during those hours. Most of the people I dealt with were drunk or stoned, with the notable exception of the hospital staff who always had a large midnight order. In the morning, I cooked biscuits for some regulars and made gravy for the morning shift. Having made that gravy, I would never eat gravy at a convenience store again.

The graveyard shift is what led to my first summer of adulthood’s shenanigans. Because I haven’t been a night owl since the day I was born, I absolutely hated the shift I worked. I didn’t have the energy to do anything other than drive home and sleep until my shift started up again. If I was lucky, I’d get in two or three hours of wakefulness before I went in to work since my internal clock was so off that I slept through the entire day.

On weekends, I’d drive over to Ben’s house and pass out in his bed or on his couch until he’d show in the afternoon. He knew I’d be sleeping and since he rarely slept in his house, this worked pretty well for both of us.

At that time of our lives, he spent almost every single Saturday wrestling with the AIWF, a small federation started by one of his friends who wanted to wrestle but didn’t have the form or capability of making it in the big time. They were nice men, the wrestlers, but none of them could have really gone on to something on television. They put together a pretty good league, all in all, and still have local cable channel talk shows and wrestling venues around a couple of states. Ben wrestled as Chris Windham from Sweetwater, Texas, which amused me to no end, him being about as far from a Texan as possible. In the ring, a side of him came out that manifested nowhere else; he loved the adulation and attention from the crowds as he tied on the bandanas and wrapped himself in his good-guy persona.

The wrestling events were staged all over the state of North Carolina and we would often have to drive three to four hours to get to that night’s venue. I hated sleeping in his truck, especially since we frequently took a friend along for the trip. Ben drove a little blue Mitsubishi stick shift. It was just wide enough for three people, but when I was trying to sleep, I couldn’t contort my body sufficiently to keep my feet in the passenger’s side and put my head on a shoulder that wasn‘t shifting gears. There was never a question of me sitting on the door side because that would put the two guys squooshed together and that was not happening.

I don’t remember how we discovered my salvation, but somehow we realized that the mattress of the chair that folded out into a bed in his house was easily removable and fit just perfectly into the bed of his pickup truck. There wasn’t more than an inch of space from the top of the mattress to the cab of the truck when it was pushed up against the tailgate and no room on the sides. With a blanket and a pillow, I could go anywhere and still get as good a rest as if I were in bed at home thanks to the balmy summer weather.

So we traveled. I would sleep in the house until he arrived, he’d kiss me awake, load up the mattress, tuck me in back, and head off to wherever. Half the time, I didn’t even know what town or city I was in when I woke up on the back side of a National Guard Armory or a high school, places where the group held most of their shows. I’d get up, brush out my hair and have a sip of the water Ben would leave for me chilling in the cab, and then meander inside to find him and help set stuff up whenever I woke. All the guys kept an eye on me, I think, while I slept in the back, but I didn’t really know very many of them all that well.

The only flaw in our brilliant adventure was when it rained. On those occasions, Ben would pull off the road and I’d pile in the cab for the ride and sleep stretched out across the seat when we got there. I always had a crick in my neck on those days. Plus, I couldn’t sleep on the mattress again for a couple of days until it dried out.

One day, I was sound asleep in the back with my covers pulled up snug when I felt a few raindrops patter across my forehead. I tried to ignore it and go back to sleep, hoping the light shower would pass without making me move, but as I began to feel the drops impacting on my blanket, I realized I was going to have to go inside.

I opened my eyes to a gray sky and laid there blinking for a few seconds, trying to work my tear glands into wetting my dry contacts before I actually sat up. I will admit to being grumpy when I emerged because I didn’t relish trying to fit my 5’9” frame into the interior of the truck or the inevitable crick that would come. To stall a little longer since the rain wasn’t pouring yet, I checked my watch to see that I really only needed another half hour of sleep before I’d have reached my normal time anyway. With that, I shrugged off the now damp cover and sat up.

It took me a minute to process what I was seeing. I usually sat up to chainlink fences and narrow lanes next to a large building of some sort. There were usually people who knew me within earshot. This time, I saw lots and lots of cars. I looked slowly to the left and saw more cars. This parking lot was full and whatever store I was at was doing a brisk business. Before I could determine my exact location, the skies opened up and the rain went from a cooling mist with an occasional actual drop to a soaking rain with drops large enough that you felt each one hit the top of your head.

Whatever fuzziness from my sleep lingered was pretty much washed away, and though my confusion remained, self-preservation kicked in and I vaulted over the side of the truck. Once my feet hit the pavement, my head came up and I saw the Food Lion sign way up the parking lot from the space I had been left in.

I was in the middle of a Food Lion parking lot. Ben had driven me to a Food Lion parking lot and left me sleeping without a word. My infamous red-headed temper started to rise. By now I had moved up the water chart from damp to wet and I grabbed the door handle as I started to fume in earnest. Boy, was he getting a piece of my mind when he came back. The diatribe with which I planned to blast him was writing itself so loudly in my head that my brain failed to register that the handle was pulled out but the door wasn’t opening. I paused my mental tirade and looked inside the cab.

The doors were locked.

To recap, Ben had driven me to a very busy Food Lion parking lot in a city I didn’t know the name of, left me sleeping alone in the back of his pickup open to the elements, and had locked me out of the vehicle.

A slow boil is the first term that comes to mind when I recall that moment. I stood there with the above three thoughts chasing each other through my brain. I was so surprised that Ben would be so inconsiderate and uncaring of my safety and comfort that I couldn’t form a coherent thought. I glanced at the store, just beginning to decide I was going to have to have him paged when my next shock hit me.

Heads down to avoid the rain and moving as fast as their legs could carry them, Neal and Jimmy, two wrestlers I barely knew, sprinted out the door heading for the vehicle. Slowly my brain processed this new tidbit of info.

Ben had not left me sleeping in the back of a Food Lion parking lot all by myself, locked out in the rain. He had sent me, sound asleep, off in the back of his pickup with two men I barely knew, in a city I didn’t know the name of, to a Food Lion parking lot where I woke up in the rain locked out of the cab.

Neal looked up as I realized this and the expression on my face caused him to visibly miss a step. I was raised with Southern manners, but even those failed me when the two guys got to the cab, sputtering apologies. I don’t remember actually saying a word, namely because I was too angry to speak. Not at Neal and Jimmy. They had just borrowed the truck. But the numbskull who handed over the keys with his girlfriend in the back end? He was going to get it.

Said numbskull was waiting anxiously when we pulled into the little lane up to the chainlink fence behind the big building. I didn’t speak a word. He started to, but thought better of it.

I dripped into the building and sat down on the padding that went under the tarp on the ring. I pulled off my shoes, wrung out my socks, and laid down to go back to sleep. He sat down quietly beside me and moved my hair off my forehead. When they needed the padding, he woke me up and hugged me.

I never delivered that tirade. I never released all that anger in one screaming hissy-fit. For once, I just let it go. Well, I let it go for then. I pretty much brought it back up in every argument we had for the next ten years. I won all those, of course.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

The Mouse

Growing up, I lived in a trailer, known in the north as a mobile home, I believe. For those who haven't lived in a trailer, the walls are maybe 1/8" thick and sound from one end travels fairly well to the other end. Quiet noises don't pass along, but anything louder than a normal speaking voice is quite audible.

Because my dad is amazingly handy with virtually any tool and because a trailer is really not big enough for a family of four with genes that lean towards portly, we had an addition that ran three-fourths the length of the trailer down the back side. Instead of walking in the back door and facing down our washing machine, you would enter what would probably be considered a parlor. My dad's desk with our word processor and my mom's piano that no one could really play sat with a rocking chair and the cabinet that held all of our photographic memories along with some seriously kickin' vinyls from my parents' early years.

The second room off that was the "mud room," a misnomer if ever I heard one because it contained my dad's tools, all his fishing equipment, an upright freezer, the dryer, and a chest freezer that functioned as a folding table. Mud was not allowed in the room and if you actually walked in with any on your shoes, you'd track it across the parlor, which we affectionately called "the back room" since we were so creative overall.

If you stepped to the right when facing the washer that was formerly right at the back door's entrance, you'd enter the bathroom. If you turned left instead, you'd quickly come to my bedroom, the first door on the right on the hall that used to give me nightmares about endless tunnels. My room was just wide enough that I could fully stretch my arms and not touch the walls. I had just enough room to open my dresser drawers without touching the side of my twin bed and there was just enough space at the foot of my bed to remove a book from the bookshelf that went almost to the ceiling.

The next door on the right, after you passed the furnace cover, was (and still is some 18 years later) cheerfully decorated with Winne-the-Pooh wallpaper and bright red curtains. When my brother turned six, my mom tried to redecorate, but he pitched a fit. Since he grew into a deep voice at the age of 10 and became an official redneck at about 13, this room has always amused me at a fundamental level. He's a manly man, though good-hearted, and even at 10, he was very aware of his masculine image.

My parents had the master bedroom on the other side of the bathroom that actually had two doors--one to the bathroom and one to the hallway--and offered the most privacy of anywhere in our home.

In later years I realized just how sneaky my parents really are, but as a child, even at 14, I didn't realize that they were feeding me information early in the mornings through that bathroom wall. I always thought I was eavesdropping and that they still thought I was asleep. These conversations were how I discovered that we had a mouse problem happening. Of course, everyone in the house discovered this simultaneously since those thin walls did nothing to slow the scream my mom let out when she opened a draw to put on her makeup and a mouse smiled at her.

After we all recovered from the jump start to our hearts so early in the morning, my dad set a trap in the drawer and we all headed to school for the day. When we got home, Mama checked the drawer and, sure enough, there was a mouse in the trap. Daddy did his masculine duty and chucked the corpse out the back door for the dogs to eat. Mouse problem solved.

We had a normal dinner like any normal family and continued on with our normal routines. I talked to my boyfriend on the phone and then read a book until bedtime, and my brother watched a little TV, then holed up in his room with his country music on the radio. My parents did whatever it was they did in the evenings after I hid in my room, teenagers being what they are and me fairly typical of the breed.

All was calm and peaceful until my mom, after bidding me goodnight as I read myself to sleep, went to take off her makeup. She opened the drawer and let out another blood-curdling scream. This one was followed by another more frantic shout that almost covered the sound of the drawer slamming shut.

"Nelson!" (That's my dad.) "There's a mouse in the drawer!"

My dad came into the bathroom and opened the drawer. "I don't see anything," he said.

"I saw it! I think it was the same mouse! It had a mark across its forehead where the trap closed on it!"

I heard a pacifying grunt that was obviously meant to convey belief but fell far short of the mark. My mom's tone turned more shrill.

"Something was wrong with it, too!" she proclaimed. "It ran at me when I screamed!"

"Well, it's gone now," he said, and gratefully returned to the television in his bedroom. I finished my chapter and turned off the lamp, leaving on only my nightlight. (I'm still phobic of the dark.)

Later, I woke from a sound sleep wondering why I had woken up at all. I lay still for a second and then I heard this strange scratching sound right beside my ear. As my fuzzed brain tried to place what it could be, the poppy noise moved down my mattress, keeping on the side of the mattress that was pushed up against the wall. I was definitely awake now, since nothing I could think of made any sense in conjunction with that strange noise and the inch of space between my mattress and the wall.

Then the noise hit the end of the mattress and stopped. I heard a slight thump only slightly louder than my heart pounding in my ears, and next I saw a mouse happily buzzing across the tops of my alphabetized-by-author paperbacks on the third shelf.

I did what any 14-year-old girl who realizes a mouse was less than three inches away from her head when she woke up does: I leaped out of the bed and screamed.

"DADDY! DADDYYYYY!"

I backed up in the tight space between my bed and the dresser because I couldn't run past the bookcase to get in the hall.

"There's a MOUSE in my room! Daddy! Daddy!"

Now any self-respecting mouse would run like a fiend when presented with the level of noise I was making. Not this one. It did a couple of laps over the tops of the paperbacks and then jumped back on the mattress, skittering between the mattress and the wall back to wherever it had come from.

When my dad arrived in his tighty-whities and trailing the cord from his sleep apnea machine still attached to the mask fastened over his face, he wasn't happy.

"Ain't no damn mouse!" he swore, and he reached down and jerked my mattress off its boxsprings to illustrate his point, slamming it back down hard enough to rattle all the knick-knacks on my dresser top.

Then my brother screamed. I've told you he had a deep voice, even at 10. His scream, however, would have worked for any girl in a horror movie or a six-year-old on the playground. Girlie doesn't even touch the high register that blared from his vocal chords as he sprinted out of his room in his white Fruit-of-the-Looms.

"It ran across my chest!" he trilled as he went past.

Daddy stepped out of my door in time to be knocked into the wall by my brother's flight to the top of the washing machine where he remained perched for the rest of the debacle that followed.

The positive outcome of my little bro's loud flight was that my father finally believed me about the mouse. He really had no choice; it ran across his foot as it chased my brother down the hall.

Daddy and I watched in disbelief as the mouse slid around the corner and into the bathroom. Before we could do more than exchange an amazed glance, my mother screamed and we ran into their bedroom.

My mom was staring at the floor and I made a long jump onto their bed that would have made any track competitor proud.

"It ran under the bed," she told us with high excitement.

My dad took a second to remove his mask and then dropped to his hands and knees to see if he could scare it out into the open. To assist him in getting far enough under the queen-sized bed, he grabbed a light blue foam noodle, about four feet long, that we used for swimming during the summer. My mom leaned over her side of the bed and watched for the mouse as Daddy poked the noodle under the bed. When it ran out, she screeched and it promptly turned around and ran back under the bed.

Daddy hopped up and noodled under her side of the bed while I watched the floor on my side. When the mouse ran out, I squealed, and--you guessed it--the mouse turned towards my voice and ran back under the bed. This exchange of poking, exiting, screaming, and hiding continued for at least four more passes apiece. By this time, we had realized that the mouse was running towards our screams, but my mom and I were laughing so hard at my dad's cussing and noodling that it was impossible to not shriek when we saw it. Finally, I made no noise when it came out my side and it took off back through the bathroom and into the hallway with my dad in hot pursuit.

My brother shrieked from the top of the washing machine that it had gone into the back room, and my dad sped into the mud room and grabbed his seining net from his fishing gear. My mom spread the big green net so that its white foam floats were weighing down the bottom and she held it in place against the door frame.

Daddy picked up one of his dress loafers from beside the door, still in his underwear, and started surveying the room for the mouse's hiding spot. He spotted its tail disappearing behind the piano.

He barked an order at my brother: "Go get your bb gun."

"I ain't getting off this washer!" my brother growled emphatically.

"I'll get it," I volunteered and ran for Winnie-the-Pooh's domain.

I emerged with the stylized bb gun which was designed to look like an M16 machine gun, which I only know because of the giant gold sticker on the side with "M16" written in bold, black letters. I handed it to Daddy across our green barricade and the picture that he made was forever stamped on my mental eye.

My dad stood in his white Hanes, the bridge of his nose still reddened from his sleeping mask, holding a black machine gun in his right hand Rambo-style, and a brown dress loafer in his left hand. All his attention was focused on the piano. Beside me, my mother held her breath as she waited and my lily-livered brother whimpered a little from the washer behind me.

Daddy shouted and the mouse ran straight for him. He drew a careful bead on it, squinting one eye, and pulled the trigger slowly.

"EEEEEEE!" The mouse squealed as it did a backwards somersault in the air, actually forming a circle with its body while air born. It was one of the cooler things I've ever seen.

Apparently, Daddy shot it in the butt because it began running in a circle, chasing its own tail. I've always thought that the perfect "O" it formed while sprinting was uncanny. Daddy sat the machine bb gun on the rocking chair and leaned over with the shoe. BAM! The terror of the mouse was ended.

Daddy picked it up by the tail and peered closely at it to be sure that it really was dead this time. Sure enough, we could see that the poor thing had a bar right across its head, forming a sort of unibrow. He opened the back door and tossed it out, then went straight back to bed as though nothing had happened.

Mama and I met each other's eyes and burst out laughing. We turned around, saw my brother sliding off the washer, and doubled over. We laughed so hard that I sat down in the floor and couldn't move and my mother quite literally wet her pants. Daddy started cursing at us to shut up and go back to bed since it was around 2 in the morning and we headed in that direction as soon as we could get enough air to move.

We lay in bed laughing until Daddy cursed again, and then I tried really hard to stop. As soon as I'd stop, though, my mom would start again. Daddy would yell and Mama would stop and I would start again. After an hour or so of exchanging the giggles, Daddy threatened bodily harm and we finally got ourselves under control.

Live traps are my method of choice with mice now that I have my own home. They may occasionally chew their way out, but I've not been chased by one since I switched.