120309.fb2 1634: The Ram Rebellion - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 20

1634: The Ram Rebellion - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 20

* * *

“I don’t think that you’re really stopping to think about it, Mom,” Amy said impatiently. “You were right the first time, when you said that the ‘Buggy’ one isn’t like the others. Even if you figure that one out, the person who wrote it won’t be the person who wrote the rest of them.”

“Get to the point,” Kerry said.

“She will,” commented Missy as she buttered another piece of rye bread. “It’s just that by the time she gets there, the rest of us will have written the Great American Novel, built our own greenhouses to grow citrus fruit in our back yards, opened up home businesses, and sent off expeditions to start colonies back in America. Just thinking about all the stuff people think we ought to do since we came back in time makes me tired before I’ve even gotten breakfast.”

Flo wondered when her daughters, who were rapidly approaching thirty, were going to start talking to one another like they weren’t still squabbling about who got the bathroom first. I love them, I really do, she assured herself. I love them all. I love the grandkids that I have. I love, she paused and looked at Kerry, the grandkid that it looks like I’m going to have any minute now. I’ll love the grandkids I’m almost certain to have next year or the year after, if somebody doesn’t re-invent the pill.

Kerry’s David was in school, which reduced the noise level somewhat. Amy’s David and Missy’s Mike were still small enough to corral in a playpen, but since it was the same playpen and Mike had recently bopped David on the head with a toy Brillo, both were squalling in the background. Amy’s Kayla and Missy’s Caitlin had both been in moods all morning that would have driven the author of “sugar and spice” to take it all back. Little girls appeared to be made of sour pickles and tabasco sauce.

But Amy was not distracted. “Look, except for the Buggy story, they’re all Peter Rabbit stories.”

“Amy,” said Missy. “Get to the point.”

Amy, sad to say, stuck her tongue out at her sisters.

Flo mentally gave herself one more black mark for Abysmal Failures in Maternal Training.

“The Peter Rabbit stories aren’t about the guy who had the garden, Whatzisname. Mr. Whatzisname is just there in the background, for scenery. That’s where Mom is in all the others. They’re about the animal. So he’s a stupid ram, so what? She’s only there in the background trying to keep him in his pen, or away from the ewes, or not appreciating how brave and clever he is, or something. The stories are about him. Some of them don’t even mention Mom at all. Except the ‘Buggy’ one. That’s about Mom.”

Kerry thought a minute. “You’re right. I hate to say it, but you’re right. And some of them do have to be guys. It must have been a guy who wrote ‘Bad, Baaad, Brillo!’ But ‘Buggy’ was written by a female. It’s just nasty.”

Amy wasn’t finished. She just ignored Kerry and kept going. “So live with the rest of them. You think that Beatrix Potter didn’t laugh all the way to the bank. He isn’t what you wanted out of this sheep project, but he’s what you got. So make the most of it, Mom.”

Flo sighed. “All right. But I still want to find out who wrote that one.”

“Who are your candidates?” Kerry asked.

“I thought there had to be two things. First, she didn’t like me. I had a bunch in that column. Second, she has to be here-not off in the oil field with her husband like Lelah Johnson-Kidwell that was. And willing to do it-that lets out Charmaine Dwyer-Elkins that was-because she’s actually turned into a nice person, much as I sort of hate to say so.”

“Some day,” Missy said, glancing at the envelope Flo had brought along to the Richards girls’ brunch and kaffeeklatsch, “I think that I really want to hear the stories about what went on in Grantville when you were in grade school and high school, that you ended up with so many people in your ‘enemies’ column.”

Flo glared at her.

“The candidates left are Stella Pilcher-Burroughs that was. But she doesn’t have the gumption. She just whines.”

Flo realized that her daughters were looking shocked. “Well, she does. Always did. I didn’t like her. Still don’t. And it showed, back then. Now I just avoid her.”

Flo looked down into her cup of coffee before she went on. “And Idalee Jackson-Mitchell that was. And I think that it’s Idalee. She’s the scheduler for the Grange meetings. Most people would have had to show up at the paper and leave that thing and someone would have remembered it. She drops stuff off all the time, meeting notices and the like. If it was just on the bottom of things she left in their ‘incoming’ box, on a different kind of paper, nobody would ever know.”

“Mom,” Kerry asked rather cautiously, “What did you do to her?”

“Before the final game at the state basketball tournament, I carefully glued lots of little pieces of straw inside her flippy cheerleader skirt. Just with little bitty dots of library paste. First, they pricked her bottom and itched her. Then, when the cheerleaders really got going, they started to fall out, right in front of the crowd.”

“Mom!” The horror was unanimous.

“That was junior year. I had caught her trying to put the moves on your father. I had him staked out, already. And, face it, as a husband, he’s been a lot better deal than Butler Jackson. But she didn’t have to marry him.”

“Mom!”

“Well, she didn’t. Everybody assumed that she did when they got married, because they couldn’t imagine why else she took him, but it was twenty-two months before Wade was born. I guess she was just starting to be afraid of being an old maid.” Flo paused. “I’m not saying for sure that she did it, and I’m not going out and accuse her. But just sort of pinning it down makes me feel better inside. Idalee does hold grudges-and she’s smart enough.”

Flo came to a decision. “As for the rest of them-Amy’s right. I think I’ll just laugh along with everybody else.”

* * *

“We can do it,” Trissie insisted. “We only need to snitch one copy of the booklet. So Michelle can play.”

Ashley Walsh and Liz Russo looked at her doubtfully.

“The only other person who’ll need to know at all will be Michelle. Grownups think that kids can’t do anything without someone to tell them how. We can do this ourselves. Honestly we can.”

* * *

“And with Michelle Matowski at the piano.” Mrs. Nelson finished the introduction and moved to the director’s post.

The girls’ chorus finished their presentation to polite applause from the League of Women Voters. (Iona had been quite right in saying that the tune was almost impossible to sing, even if it was very popular.) The girls filed out of the front of the room.

Except . . . three of them didn’t. Liz Russo slipped off in the other direction and hid behind the piano. Trissie Harris and Ashley Walsh stayed on the little stage, reached into their pockets, and each brought out a pair of fuzzy white earmuffs.

Flo’s heart sank.

At the piano, Michelle segued into, “Tea for Two.” Brillo and the ewe started to sing, “A ram for me, an ewe for you.” Between every verse, Michelle switched tunes and from behind the piano came Liz Russo’s high soprano admonishing, “No, No, Brillo!”

Flo laughed.

Brillo And The Blue Problem

Rick Boatright

Brillo looked up and noticed that the child had left the gate unlatched. YES! he thought. This time I’ll get my wimmen, and I’ll head North, where a sheep can be a sheep.

This time for sure.

Brillo began butting the gate, and quickly realized that it was more useful to butt it at the latch end. Heading for the ewes’ field, he looked over to the house where no one was yet up.

You know, he thought, every time I get myself some of my wimmen, I fall asleep before I can get out of here.

This sudden rush of realization set Brillo on a new mental path. How to stay awake? What was the majic of waking? Then, suddenly, he realized. It was the Blue Cup. Each morning, Flo came out and drank from the Blue Cup and said that she was waking up.

That was the majic. It was the BLUENESS of it. He looked around. Blue . . . Blue . . . Blue. It was certain that no one was going to bring HIM a blue cup. No, that was reserved only for the yoomans.

Blue. Suddenly, his eyes lit on the flowerbed. Pansies were blue. Weren’t they?

Anyway, Brillo had figured it out. The secret to staying awake, and getting away to the north was finding the magic blue substance. Brillo was determined to eat every blue thing he could find. No matter how many trys it took, he WOULD go north with his wimmen.

Cindabrillo