Sunday, 27 November 2011

The Squirrel

"G'mornin" I said, half-interestedly perusing the paper as he slowly shuffled into the kitchen, still half asleep.  "Coffee’s just made.  How was your sleep?"

"I was talking to a squirrel" he said matter-of-factly through a yawn.

"Oh. What did he have to say?" I asked with a barely detectable smirk, knowing this opening line was the indicator of a conversation that I would reference for months to come.

"Not much" he replied, looking for orange juice with heavily-lidded eyes. "He was building a sculpture out of his own feces, so my expectations were pretty low going in."

"What was the sculpture of?" I asked, barely able to contain myself and wildly appreciative of the fact that if he were a little more alert, he wouldn't be telling me any of this.

"Another squirrel" he said, unfazed. "I couldn't tell until I got into the room, because it wasn’t that great or anything ... you know those weird little squirrel hands probably aren’t great for sculpting, but it was of another squirrel."

"The room?" I asked.  In the interest of of keeping my composure, I was trying not to focus on the image of little squirrel hands craftily working away at a squirrel-shaped sculpture, though I imagined they would actually be quite good at it.  I needed to hear more about this dream, and was afraid an outburst of laughter would shatter any opportunity.

"Yeah we were in his tree.  He had armchairs and a fireplace and stuff.  It was pretty awesome ... except for the shit sculpture.  Who does that?"  He paused and shook his head, letting his incredulity towards the squirrel's filthy behaviour have time to breathe.  "Fucking squirrel."  He paused again. "Are we out of orange juice?"

“It’s on the table.”  I began to feign interest in the Sport section in a lame effort to avoid eye contact.  It was incredible that he didn’t catch me.

“What was his name?” I was hoping for Montgomery.

“Zipper” he said.  I almost choked.

“What did you guys talk about?”

“Well we didn’t have much time for niceties, Di.  I saw what he was doing and I left.”  He was mildly annoyed, assuming I should know better than to ask a question that would intimate that he would stick around in a squirrel's living room while he was doing such a thing.

“Well you’re the one who said you guys were talking.  And you know his name.” I paused.  “So what were you and Zipper on about?” 

“It was before I went to his place.  Cooking.  We were talking about cooking.  He told me puts lemon zest in his scrambled eggs.”

A now-cold toasted English muffin was halfway to my mouth as my arm arrested in midair.  I had been preparing myself to be entertained, but I instead found myself completely prepared to take cooking tips from an imaginary squirrel named Zipper, who, in addition to being an obviously creative culinarian, had an affinity for creating fecal sculptures in his spare time. 

“What else does he put in them?” I asked while thinking about where I’d left my zester.

“Fresh oregano”

Man alive, I’d just bought some fresh oregano. 

Before I was aware of it, I was making Zipper’s signature eggs.  They were delicious.  I almost felt bad about judging the damn squirrel and his foul artistic habits.  Almost.  I felt less guilty after reminding myself that he was not in fact a person, or real, for that matter, as most talking squirrels tend not to be.  This was undoubtedly a chapter from no one’s life but mine.


**alternate ending (ooh ahh)**



I placed two plates on the table and we sat down to try the eggs.  They were delicious.  As I enjoyed them, I began to look around the room.  A newspaper clipping on the fridge of two squirrels boxing caught my eye.  I paused.  On the table, my home design magazine was open to a photo of a living room with overstuffed arm chairs and a fireplace.  The opposite page was an advertisement of a child making a sculpture from toilet paper.  My gaze darted to the fruit bowl in the middle of the table.  Oranges and lemons.  Yesterday, he had helped me unpack the groceries.



“Dear God.”  I was astounded.  “You’re Keyser Soze.”

“Thanks for the eggs, babe” he laughed, bending down to kiss my forehead as he cleared the plates and faked a limp to the sink. 


Thursday, 24 November 2011

A Mint Julep Morning

The strap to my sandal had come loose when stepping off the bus, but there were a lot of passengers behind me, and I knew better than to stop and fix it.  Once in the bus bay, I stepped quickly to my right to let the pedestrian traffic by, but had overestimated my own stealth in unstrapped heels and went over on my ankle.  To my surprise, it wasn’t the sharp pain or the embarrassment of almost falling in public that horrified me most, but the gentle thud on the back of my head and the subsequent flurry of feathers in my peripheral vision as I stumbled.  

My ears recognized the soft warble, but my eyes were momentarily frozen, unable to look over and verify the fear.  The moment passed quickly enough, and I turned my gaze to find myself staring at the pigeon that had just flown into the back of my head - or rather the pigeon whose flight path I had just interrupted with my head.


Not even a small fraction of the way to work yet, I wondered if I should turn around, wash my hair, and call it a day.  I chose to persevere, all the while painfully recalling the amount of times I had recently referred to my “messy bun” hairdo as a filthy bird nest.

In an usual turn of events, I was able to get one of the last seats on the subway.  Happily sitting down, I exhaled as my lips worked their way into a grin.  I put my face in my hands to allow myself a moment to laugh at the situation when I felt something warm and soft press up against my ear. Startled, I jumped back and opened my eyes to find myself staring at the head of the cat that was sticking out of the shirt of the young man sitting beside me.

“He likes you” the young man said.

“Ah – " was my brilliant response.

“His name is Neo.”

“Hi Neo” I replied, wondering what the hell was going on with my day.  It couldn’t possibly be past 7:45 a.m.

“He doesn’t normally like people.  That’s why I carry him in my shirt – to let him know he’s safe.  You must be different”

“Oh I don’t think so” I replied confidently.

“What’s your name?”

Resisting the desperate urge to say ‘Trinity’, I volunteered “Annie.”

“Hi Annie, I’m Patrick” he said happily.  “How are you?”

“Oh I’m just great, Patrick, thanks.  How are you?”

“I’m good, thanks.”  He was nervous. “Um ... I grow my own mint.”

“Wha – um.  Okay.  Cool, Patrick.  Good for you.”

There was a long pause as he struggled with his thoughts.

“I make a mean mojito, or mint julep if that’s your poison.” He laughed nervously.

“Could Neo and I interest you in one?”

“A mint julep?”

“Yes. Or- or a mojito.”

“Thank you Patrick, but I don’t think so”

“Oh. Fine.”

The train rattled to a slow halt in the dark underground.  Patrick and I were both frozen and silent.  Neo, on the other hand, was rubbing my shoulder with his head and purring with impressive gusto for a scaredy cat.

“I’m sorry” I said.

Was this honestly happening?  Did a man with a cat sticking out of shirt just ask if I was interested in a mint julep before 8 a.m?  With the wealth of events that had happened to me on the subway in the past year, I had a hard time believing I could convince my friends of this one.

“It’s fine” he replied.

I got off at the next stop, giving Neo and Patrick a small wave and a smile.  Patrick waved back.  Neo just stared. 

“Totally worth the three extra blocks” I said to myself as I watched the train pull away and began to walk.

“Totally waiting for the next train” I said turning back to the platform as the strap to my sandal snapped.

Welcome

It's an interesting thing, writing to a crowd of no one; carefully selecting words while simultaneously hoping and fearing the future brings readers.  Sweet readers.  I think you're all lovely.  Thanks for being here.

I'll say now that, as far as I can guess (how far can you guess?), it's rare that I'll be speaking to you in this voice. I'm going to take more of a storytelling approach.  That's what this blog is about.  Taking my days and turning myself into a haphazard heroine as opposed to what I actually am, which is a common day desk jockey.  That's part of the truth about me right there.  I should tell you all now, because you'll discover soon enough that there are few secrets between us anyway.  I'm plain.  I am not a glossy socialite, beautifully rough and tumble farm girl, or soulful starving artist (though I sometimes wish I was). I don't think I possess any made-for-tv quirky idiosynchrasies, and other than my capacity to find stories (or have stories find me), I tend to think I'm uninspiringly average.  I live in the city.  I work a nine to five job.  I take public transit.  My winter coat is black.  I think that's why you might like me though, but I'll let you judge for yourself.

I suppose you may be wondering about "Pigeons and Apple Cores".  The explanation is somewhat reasonable, though multi-factoral in nature: 

1.  The first 10 names I picked were taken.
2.  These items are both things that have 'flown' into the back of my head within the past year
3.  Reason #2 gives you a good idea of the type of stories that find me, so I think it may set the tone fairly well.

Thanks again for reading, Reader.  I won't keep you, but I hope you hang out for a while.

di