Read The Middle of Somewhere Online
Authors: J.B. Cheaney
To Doug:
who hates sudden moves,
loud noises,
and surprises.
Surprise!
Don't let life's little surprises get you down
.
Expect the unexpected! Remember, there's always
.
a Plan B
.
—Kent Clark
,
Seize the Way
:
Ten Weeks to SuperSize Your Life!
None of this that I'm about to tell you would have happened if my mother hadn't found that squirrel in the toilet.
Kent Clark says that life is full of surprises. This particular surprise started with my brother leaving the front door open again, which he's not supposed to do because there's a big tear in the storm-door screen that my mother never got around to having fixed.
When the squirrel got in, my brother was the first to go nuts. My mother went nuts right after, because when she's having one of her Bad Days it doesn't take much. Then the squirrel went nuts because—but let me back up.
It was the first Saturday morning in June. My brother— whose name is Gerald but we've always called him “Gee”— was sprawled on the floor in the living room watching cartoons. All of a sudden, a fuzzy tail flickered across the screen. Next minute, the furry little animal attached to the tail had whipped around on top of the TV and was staring my brother right in the face. Both were equally shocked, I'm sure, but Gee was the one who screamed. Then he
threw what was closest to hand, which happened to be a bowl of Cheerios, and we were off to the races.
With Gee leaping and lunging after him, the squirrel zoomed all the way around the living room twice before discovering the kitchen door. His squirrelly brain probably leapt with joy—Ah, escape hatch!—as he shot through the opening.
Only to be confronted with another screaming person: my mother. She hadn't been much alarmed when Gee let loose, because Gee screaming is no big deal. But a small, four-legged mammal on the counter, knocking spoons to the floor and making tracks right through the pancakes on the griddle—that's a big deal. “Ronniiie!” she yelled.
Ronnie is me, Veronica Sparks. At that exact moment, I was on the bed in my room reading a copy of Architectural Digest from the library. Or maybe “reading” isn't the best word for poring over diagrams of how to organize a closet, which was my current project. That jangly tone in my mother's “Ronniiie!” made the magazine jump out of my hands and dive to the floor. Something big was going down.
And when I reached the kitchen door, it hurled itself at me: a reddish-gray ball of fur with a twirly tail and beady eyes and toothy mouth stretched wide like a little bear trap, landing right on my chest!
Then I screamed, which those who know me will agree is a very rare occurrence.
The squirrel leapt off my chest as quick as he'd leapt on. Next, a wild chase with dialogue to match.
ME: Open the back door and shoo him out!
MAMA: I tried that, but whenever I make a move he goes berserk!
ME: So?! He's not going any berserker! I'll chase him your way!
GEE: Aiieee!
MAMA: Don't let him get near the fan!
ME: I'll head him off!
GEE: Ow! Ow! Ow! (Which he yells sometimes, not because he's hurt but because it's an easy yell to do over and over.)
MAMA: Okay, now—oh
no
!
The “oh
no
” was because even though our peppy little visitor got safely through the door, it was the wrong door—back into the living room, with a little squad of Sparkses (that's us) in hot pursuit.
If I'd thought, while still on my bed looking over
Architectural Digest, Hmmm, that particular tone in my mothers voice probably means that some wild animal is loose in the house. Therefore, on my way to the kitchen I'll open the storm door in the living room, just in case the critter heads that way
—if such thoughts had run through my head at that point, tragedy could have been avoided. But I'm not so good at handling life's little surprises yet.
The squirrel saw daylight through the storm door and slammed his panicky body against it, but he missed the hole in the screen that got him into this mess in the first place. Bouncing off the screen, he spun around, getting even more confused, then headed for the hallway.
The straightest route from the hall led into my room, which at the moment was nothing but walls and corners. I
was reorganizing, so all my stuff was piled in the middle of the floor: no posters, shelves, or anything to break up the monotony. That squirrel got up such a speed he was running sideways on the wall, like some hotshot skateboarder. But after twice around, he careened back into the hall and headed for my mother's bedroom.
Mama never reorganizes. And she never throws anything away. Her room always looked like an explosion in Granny's Drawers Antique Mall (where some of the stuff came from): two dressers, two sewing machines, stacks of plastic storage boxes, a wardrobe with its door hanging open, an empty birdcage, and (somewhere) a bed. And that's only the big stuff. To a squirrel, it must have looked like hideaway heaven, after bare-wall hell. He dived in and disappeared.
We heard some crackles and rustles, but soon not even that. In the sudden quiet, the three of us stared at each other. “All right,” Mama said grimly. “He's in here
somewhere
. Gee, don't move. Ronnie and I'll flush him out.”
So the two of us went on patrol while Gee stayed by the door. He couldn't just
stay
, though—he kept squatting down to peer under furniture, chanting, “Squirrel-ly Squirr-rel-ly” We had to keep telling him to quit so we could listen for movement. For five minutes at least, we crept around like jungle commandos searching for the enemy spy—tiptoe to the hat rack; stop and listen. Peek under the bed; stop and listen. And try not to think of a screaming kamikaze rodent leaping from behind the rolls of gift wrap to latch on to your nose.
Finally, Mom straightened up and wiped the sweat off
her forehead with a mighty sigh. “This is the last thing I need today. Rent's due, A/C's broken, and I've
got
to clean up this room. But if I don't get to the bathroom right now, I'm gonna pop.” She eased around the sewing-machine table. “Keep a watch, Ronnie. If that nasty rodent makes a move, chase him
out
”
Gee leapt at her, knocking over a pile of plastic storage bins. “Don't go, Mama!”
She got ahold of her temper and held him off. “It's just to the bathroom, sugar. Help your sister, okay?” As her steps creaked into the hall, my brother slipped over and grabbed my hand. We tiptoed toward the closet.
Then from the bathroom came a hair-raising screech, followed by a squeak, and finally a WHAM!
When we got to the bathroom door, still holding hands, the sight struck us both at the same time: Mama flat on the floor with one leg twisted to the side. Hanging over the edge of the toilet seat was something that looked exactly like a squirrel tail.
Of course Gee started screaming again. Meanwhile, my mother was moaning in pain, so it took a while to sort out what happened.
There's a hole in the wall between my mother's room and the bathroom. How it got there is anybody's guess, but my guess is that somebody who used to live here had a temper and wore steel-toed boots. The hole made a crooked tepee shape in the bedroom wall and a little boottoe shape in the bathroom, which you wouldn't think a grown-up squirrel could get through. But as I learned that day, there's not much to them but fur.
Our squirrel must've thought his luck had changed when he found an escape hatch. And while he sat on the tile floor catching his breath, his little heart pattering like a snare drum, he must have picked up the scent of water. A life-or-death chase over hill and dale and hot skillet can make a critter thirsty.
So he nosed down into the toilet—which was easy, since Gee left the seat up again—only to find that there was no nosing out. The harder he scurried, the farther he sank, until his little head was wedged into the inlet hole and he was all the way drowned. My mother came in right after.
The screech we heard was her shock at Rocky the Flying Squirrel's tragic end. The squeak was her slipping on the wet tile floor, and the thump was her fall. It was a loud thump, because my mother—though cute as a bug with her curly dark hair and bright blue eyes—is a bit on the heavy side.
So our squirrel problem was solved, but now we had a Mama problem. Which turned out to be a whole lot worse. I didn't know how much worse until I tried to help her up and she screamed in pain: “Call 911!” Gee yelled the same, as though I hadn't heard it the first time. (A lot of yelling goes on in our house.)
The operator dispatched an ambulance and transferred me to the hospital, where the nurse on duty told me to put a pillow under Mama's head but not to move her or apply any pressure to the leg or knee. “What's that noise in the background?” she asked.
“That's my brother. He's ADHD. Once he gets wound up he's hard to unwind.”
“Well, see what you can do,” she said. “That can't be helpful.”