Some problems in the house. |
Yes, we arrived home to see copious streams of hot water-heater water meandering like ess-obsessed snakes oblivious to the coldness of concrete, and if that wasn’t enough to grandfather distress, up on the main floor, away from the millimoles of assuagement afforded by the stark realm designated as basement, we were introduced to a strike by the usually reliable Frigidaire, a walkout of sorts, an abdication of cold keep and freezer fastidiousness for the ordinary ballyhoo of mundane room temperature. “I am brunt with fever!”* I said to Maryann, flopping on the kitchen rocker out of breath having heaved up the final steps after checking the cellar fuse box. “Let me guess,” Maryann offered sarcastically, “The fuses are okay! “O yes, they are fine,” I fired off, voicing vehemence directly at the off-duty appliance only inches from my wrath which was now, suddenly, a Borg-like monolith of staid unconcern mocking in muted conspicuousness, its veins of once flowing freon stilled, its current induction eerily severed to await, seemingly, major appliance embalming. “But you know...” Maryann’s unassuming voice served as appropriate deflection, and she needed to say no more, and indeed she said no more, for my pensive nodding acknowledged what her deflection was meant to do, and which indeed did do. I calmly looked up and said, “It’s them again,” and with that, she tipped her palm. The gremlins first manifested themselves, some years back, in the performance of mischievous pranks reserved primarily for Halloween, April Fools, or on-campus initiation of unsuspecting freshmen. They would, these invisible, intangible and incorporeal imps, unravel rolls of Bounty towels, mess up drawers of neatly arranged tee shirts and underwear, and get into the ceramic canisters and open all the teabags; yet curiously enough, they made sure all the lids were back on properly! Mostly these were wee-hour shenanigans, yet there were occasions when they would, while I was making toast in the morning, unplug the toaster, causing me to glance at Maryann and point toward the cupboard--she would then reach for the Graham Crackers. Turns out, our gremlins liked Graham Crackers, but not in any supernatural sort of ingestion, but as an item of amusement, for they loved to crush them into a powder. Maybe it was the sound, I don’t know. And we knew very well, all right, the next day, wherever we left one, by not only seeing the pulverized Graham, but also detecting that Vicks-Vanilla scent unmistakable to our nocturnal friends with penchant for the peculiar. O and by the way, the first thing I checked on the fridge was the plug, and it was in, but I was fooled, for they had stuck a Q-Tip in the slot, preventing electrical contact. As to the water heater, we just needed a new one. 40 Lines Writer’s Cramp December 7, 2013 *”I am brunt with fever,” (I used “brunt” because I like the way this sounds!) |