I was sadly examining a favorite grey, white, red and green
sweater I had knitted, and was finding that a wretched moth had eaten up most
of the grey parts, leaving me with a useless and ugly wad of yarn. Just then, I heard a tap, tap on the
door, woke up and was relieved to realize that I was having a bad dream. Knowing that it was Rebecca ready to go for our morning run, and thinking that perhaps she had not
brought her key, I staggered down to let her in. In a haze, I made us tea and got my ugly running outfit on. I
always gasp, moan, and complain about my suffering for our whole run. It is, I suppose, a good kind of suffering. But suffering nonetheless. Afterward,
I had errands to do, and noble Rebecca agreed to go with me to keep me company,
despite having many tasks of her own. Margaret wanted to come too, and I had misgivings about that, but she
was pathetic, and we let her come along. Our errands took us through a
construction area in Chinatown on and shortly
after we passed through the construction, we heard a “chunkita, chunkita,” sound
coming from the rear of the car. I
pulled over to check the tires, but they looked okay. We went on our way, and
as we went, the chunkita waxed and waned.
Rebecca was nervously visualizing the axel breaking, and I was sadly visualizing
spending lots of money on car repairs. We decided to go to Hilltop gas station and see if they could
diagnose the problem. They
immediately diagnosed a flat tire.
Margaret, who loves Hilltop because it means a dog cookie, was thrilled,
but Rebecca and I were not. It
would take about a half hour for them to get to it. Aaargh! My milk
would get sour. They said I could
leave it in their refrigerator, so we deposited it among their lunches, gathered up Margaret and Rebecca’s
groceries and staggered off, laden like little pack mules, to Rebecca’s house
to have a cup of tea and wait out the half hour.
We still had an errand or two,
so we returned, got the car with its fixed tire, and proceeded on with our
shopping. As we went down the
road, we both felt that we were still hearing a subtle “chunkita, chunkita.” We went to the bank and the pharmacy
and then made our way back to Hilltop. Margaret was ecstatic. Two visits to dog cookie heaven in one
day! The fellow who had helped
with front tire heard the “chunkita, chunkita” as we drove in, this time from a
rear tire. It had a huge big unbelievable
thing stuck in it. Double
aargh! But, once again, they fixed it. I delivered Becca to her
house, returned home myself, and feeling that I needed comfort, sought out a
secret cache of Cadbury’s Eggs that I had bought on sale after Easter. I had one, and it made me feel a little
better, so I had another and it made me feel sick. Really sick. I
took to my bed and inwardly cursing myself for being a piggy, and whining about
my upset tummy. A nap did not
really help. Margaret, on the other hand, was having as marvelous a day as I
was having a horrible one. Two
visits to Hilltop and than an afternoon in bed with Mom. What could be better?
7 comments:
What an epic tragedy!
Yes, an epic tragedy! However, how fortunate you were to get to the gas station twice....much better than on the side of the road fixing a flat.
Oh dear! Hope you're feeling better!
And we weren't properly dressed for the pouring-down rain we had to walk through while we waited for the tire to get fixed!
Oh my - poor dears (except for the lucky Margaret)!
Oh dear, driving through or near construction can be devastating to tires. As for Cadbury's Creme Eggs, isn't it odd that one isn't quite enough but two are way too much? I wonder if it's possible to cut one in half and then slam it directly into the freezer to prevent ooze? It's a thought, do you suppose that frozen CCE tastes as good as at room temperature?
we love Hilltop. we don't get cooies though, but they make sure our keeper's car is safe.
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