MAYHEM IN MAY… life goes on (Part 159b)
When I woke up Sunday
morning Elle and the kids were gone. I hadn’t looked to see what time it
was when I finally got home but it was after 11am right then and there.
My head was telling me that it had been quite a celebration. I,
gingerly, made my way down the stairs and ended up in the reclining
chair in the den. Thankfully, it was cloudy so the daylight wasn’t too
bright. I remember leaning back in the chair and trying to think back on
the previous night. It didn’t take long for a serious thought to pop
into my head… there had been a very important person missing while we
all celebrated… it was Cliffy’s father. He’d built all the cars that
Cliffy had raced since moving up to the top division (Modified) and paid
all the bills and never saw a winner. Here we were, a bunch of young
“hot shots” (as he called us) that had bought his car, painted it
different colors with a new number, bought four new tires and won in
our first try at it. I’d known the man since I was around 10 or 11 years
old and I really admired him for being able to make things out of junk.
It just didn’t seem right that he didn’t get to see his son win his
first race.
Also in my thoughts was “Big B” because if he hadn’t
thrown in some money towards buying the new tires we probably wouldn’t
have won. AND… thinking about the tires and the big chance we’d taken in
buying something that hadn’t yet been tried I suddenly realized that
not all the people who’d gathered around the car after the races were
there to congratulate Cliffy. They were also there to inspect the tires
to see how badly they’d worn. I know I hadn’t checked them out and I
wondered if any of the other guys had. AND… that thought generated
another… had anyone thought to go to the office to collect our winnings.
I knew first paid $1,000 and it was certainly going to help our
fledgling operation.
It was about then that Elle and the kids
arrived home from church. As she approached the kitchen door I tried to
remember if I’d even tried to tell her that we’d won. As soon as she
appeared in the doorway to the den I told her and got a casual “I know”
back followed by a snide remark along the lines of “I could see that!”. I
was expecting some sort of comment to follow but all she said was that
we’d been invited next door to celebrate the German twins birthday a bit
later on. My head was still pounding and going to a birthday party for
teens that I didn’t really know wasn’t high on my priority list.
To
say it wasn’t a productive day is an understatement. Elle could’ve been
mean and insisted that we do something as a family but allowed me to
sleep some more in the recliner. I definitely felt better by the time we
headed next door. We were the only non-family members at the party
which was a bit uncomfortable. The relatives from Pennsylvania were
there and there was a lot of German spoken but, on the plus side, there
was a lot of good German food. It was pretty boring for me but, with the
way I felt, that was OK. Because Helga and Herta were headed for
college in the Fall, their presents were mostly clothes that would carry
them through the Fall and into the winter. I just stayed out of the
way. When Elle decided it was time for us to go I stood in line to thank
the girls for including us. As I waited for our three girls to do the
same I looked down at the table where they’d placed their presents. The
box right on the top caught my attention. I could see a group of pastel
colors sort of stacked one against the other. Then I saw the last one
and saw the word “Sunday” embroidered onto the yellow material. That’s
when I realized it was a box of day of the week panties. I smiled to
myself as I wondered if each one got their own box. In spite of my
intentions of periodically checking their wash line I’d failed to do so.
I really had no idea of what their preference of panties, cotton or
nylon, was but these were definitely nylon.
The most productive
part of attending the party, such as it played out, was to get an update
on the progress of Bill and Phyllis’s new house. It was definitely not
going to be ready for them by July 1 when they had to be out of the
house they were renting. Their plan was for the twins to return to
Pennsylvania and the relatives right after the current school year
ended. They’d been accepted at Temple University in Philadelphia and
were planning on attending Summer school to get them used to an American
college curriculum. They’d continue to live with the relatives to save
money. Mo, Bill and Phyllis’s oldest daughter, was graduating from the
local high school a year early and had been accepted at the University
of Pennsylvania and was going with the twins when they left. She was
also going to Summer school and, like the twins, would be living with
the relatives.
Bill said he was putting pressure on the
contractor to come up with a place for him and the family to live until
the house was completed since the delay was primarily his fault. Because
our area was a Summer destination there were few rentals available and,
according to Bill, none that were affordable. He did say the president
of the school board had offered to rent rooms to the family at his lodge
but when Bill was telling us about the offer it was obvious it wasn’t
going to happen. He added that a worst case scenario was his three
youngest kids could end up with the relatives as well leaving just he,
Phyllis and Barbara to find a place. I remember looking at the female
relative who sort of winced when he mentioned it. In Barbara’s case,
she’d been hired on a full time basis for the Summer at the store where
she’d worked part time throughout the school year so, hopefully, was
staying. Bill ended on an optimistic note saying there were still six
weeks to resolve the problem. All I could think of was 'Good luck!'
To be continued...
2 comments:
Seems like a rarity that a contractor finishes a job on time! ;^P
Bad
BS... when Bill told me who he'd contracted with I warned him what would happen...
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