The Grownups Wanted Us Dead

Cosmetically Yours

Rumble loved his car. I don’t know why. It was a banged up beater. A Dodge Dart well past the age of darting anywhere. Still, he washed it, petted it, polished it and praised it. Most days — since my car was really Gram’s car — Rumble drove me to college. He sometimes took my friends Carla and Susan as well. He provided me with a key to the trunk of his car so I could switch out books between classes, but he refused to supply me with a key to the door. He said he didn’t trust me — bad mistake. By not trusting me, he gave me permission to be untrustworthy. I mean, it wasn’t like I was going to disappoint him, right? Gaining access to Rumble’s car wasn’t all that hard. He was taking a mechanics course and I just went into the auto shop and lifted his keys from his workbench while he was under someone’s chassis.

Maybelline used to make — may still make for all I know — eyeshadow in a tube that went on like liquid, but dried to a powder. My friends and I always carried a half-dozen tubes of the stuff at any given time. I didn’t care for them much on my eyes, but they were wonderful for writing on mirrors — or car windows.

Carla, Susan and I often used the eyeshadow to write notes on Rumble’s car window, like: pick me up at the library, or don’t wait I have another ride home. Rumble was used to seeing them, and knew they wiped right off. On this particular day I used them all and decorated every window. However, this time I decorated them on the inside, and I drew hearts and flowers, advertised his nickname, and wrote notes in baby-talk. The work was slow and meticulous because I had to write everything backward, so it would show correctly through the window. When my masterpiece was complete, I moved his car and parked it square in front of the auto shop so all his friends could see it. Then I walked up the embankment and sat down behind some bushes to wait.

At lunch time the auto shop emptied. A few of Rumble’s classmates found the car first. They walked around it reading and laughing, then using his nickname, they called him out in baby talk. “Oh Rumblie, ud woo come here, pwease?” They were laughing hysterically, but fell quiet and backed away as he approached the car, his face darker than a thunder cloud.

Rumble jerked out his pocket handkerchief and took a swipe at the window. His baby name mocked him. Painted in lavendar and surrounded by little pink hearts, it remained. He took another swipe. No change. Not even a smudge. A few of his friends snickered. Someone taunted, “Whudssa matta, Rumblie?” He let out a snarl and scrubbed frantically. The writing stayed.

He thumped his fist against the top of the car and stomped back into the auto bay. Someone called, “Hey, Rumblie, doan go ‘way mad! Come back!”

Rumble stomped back out to his car, ignoring the continuing taunts. He cupped his hands around his eyes and peered in the car windows. I knew he wasn’t going to find his keys, they were in my pocket. I had forgotten to return them.

Rumble walked slowly around his car, then he stopped and turned his gaze to the people around him. “Did anyone see who did this?” He rumbled. He didn’t raise his voice, but there was definite menace in the words. With hasty, “no’s” his audience dispersed. Rumble stood in the parkinglot, his eyes scanning the vicinity and suddenly I realized he was looking for a suspect. I scooted hastily behind a tree. When I finally had the nerve to peek out again Rumble was gone, and if I didn’t hurry, I’d be late for English class.

At the end of the day I approached Rumble’s car just as casually and nonchalantly as I assumed an innocent person would. Rumble was leaning against it waiting for me. He held out his hand and rumbled, “My keys?”

I told him I didn’t have them. It was true. I didn’t. While Rumble was leaning on his car waiting for me I’d slipped into the auto shop and put them back on his work bench. Rumble said, “Somebody took them. It had to be you. ” He pointed at his windows, “I recognize the paint job.”

“Hey!” I said all innocent, “I’m not the only one who uses that stuff!”

His hand was still outstretched. “My keys?”

Pretending impatience, I raised my hands and said, “Search me. I haven’t got them.”

“Where are they?” He asked. Rumble’s voice is deep and low and, when he wants it to be, menacing. Luckily, I knew I was safe from any actual physical violence, so the threat was wasted on me.

“How should I know? They’re not my keys!” I acted all put out, then added graciously. “Do you want me to help you look for them?”

“I already looked.”

“Yeah,” I said, putting my books down on the trunk of the car. “Like you looked for your textbook I found on the foot of your bed right where you left it.”

He turned his gaze back toward the auto bay. “Okay,” he said, and we walked inside.

I returned his keys just a few inches away from where I’d found them. Behind a can of WD-40 instead of in front of it. I hung back and let Rumble find them. When he said, “But I looked here earlier.” I just said, “Right.”

We walked back to the car. I gathered my books from the top of the trunk and stashed them inside. Rumble jerked open the driver’s door and wiped his nickname from the window. He crawled all through the car, cleaning every window. I waited outside. Rumble is a gentleman. He always opened the car door for me, cousin or not, and I knew better then to open it myself, besides, it was still locked. Finally Rumble emerged from the driver’s door and looked across the top of the car at me. “Since you didn’t have the keys, I know who did this.”

“Oh?” I said, my voice may have been a little sharper than I intended.

“Hmm,” Rumble nodded. “Had to be Susan. I gave her my keys this morning because she said she’d lost something in the back seat. I hope she enjoys walking home tonight.”

Oh crap. I’d just gotten one of my friends in trouble. “Maybe she didn’t do it,” I said. “I mean, why would she?”

“You. Susan. Carla. ” Rumble held up a finger as he listed each name, then he went through them again, “Carla is in Cataldo. You say you didn’t do it. Susan had the keys.”

Technically, I never said I didn’t do it. I couldn’t admit that, though. I also couldn’t let Susan take the blame. “But I’m sure Susan didn’t do it!” I snapped.

Rumble smirked at me across the top of the car. “So am I. Now.” Then he dropped into the driver’s seat, shut the door and — just before he drove away — waved at me.

April 5, 2007 - Posted by Quilly | Coeur d'Alene, Rumble, humor | | 16 Comments

16 Comments »

  1. [...] Friday, April 6th, 2007 in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, detour, cousins, memoir, humor Perhaps it was because, The Grownups Wanted Us Dead, that my cousin Rumble and I behaved the way we did. We were emulating our elders and rehearsing for the day we would be grownups ourselves. Rumble and I practiced the art of torture through the innovative use of many common, ordinary weapons things — like eyeshadow. Rumble loved his car. I don’t know why. It was a banged up beater. A Dodge Dart well past the … [...]

    Pingback by Cosmetically Yours « Quilly’s Quips | April 6, 2007 | Reply

  2. The best part yet, see I was “Patient” ;)

    Comment by The Old Fart | April 6, 2007 | Reply

  3. hilarious stuff as always!
    and thumbs up for you being honest when you could have got away with it :D

    Comment by polona | April 6, 2007 | Reply

  4. LOL… ok, knowing a few of the principal players of this story (being related to 3 of them, you know) made it even more fun to read. I was literally laughing out loud by the end of it.

    Comment by Brooke | April 6, 2007 | Reply

  5. Bill — I am glad you found the story worth waiting for. Now you have more waiting until next weekend.

    Polona — it wasn’t so much honesty as fear. Rumble would never hurt me. Susan would have killed me.

    Brooke — I always claim Carla as family, but I’d actually forgotten that for you she is family, and it’s not just one of those assimilation things.

    Comment by QuillDancer | April 6, 2007 | Reply

  6. [takes another note. notebook getting heavy.]

    Comment by oceallaigh | April 6, 2007 | Reply

  7. LOL! Well… the exercise did ya good! I still think you got the BEST of that deal!

    Comment by melli | April 6, 2007 | Reply

  8. OC — Since you implied — to my face — after reading this that I deserved Rumble’s revenge, I somehow think you’re not going to need that notebook to jog your memory. I hope you sleep very soundly tonight. :*

    Melli — Gram made Rumble come back and get me, but I walked about a mile before he arrived, and that gave me plenty of time to think …. muhahahahaha!

    Comment by QuillDancer | April 6, 2007 | Reply

  9. I did sleep soundly, Quilly. And you showed restraint. Congratulations. I won’t hold it against you. Or let my guard down.

    Comment by oceallaigh | April 7, 2007 | Reply

  10. OC — My restraint comes from the knowledge that you are much smarter than I am, so I fear what I may have to face in revenge.

    Comment by QuillDancer | April 7, 2007 | Reply

  11. Quillie, that was brilliant. Do OC’s toenails have lavendar flowers on them this morning?

    Comment by Doug | April 7, 2007 | Reply

  12. OC — hmmm, right — I’m sure that was your plan.

    Doug flowers? No.

    Comment by QuillDancer | April 8, 2007 | Reply

  13. I think you got off lightly. Great story as usual.
    Mike

    Comment by Mike Cook | April 8, 2007 | Reply

  14. Hillarious. Aren“t you a little mischief?!

    well done on both your parts!

    Comment by Penguin | April 9, 2007 | Reply

  15. What a great story! I’m glad, even though I like you immensely, that Rumble got even that day.

    Comment by katcampbell | April 9, 2007 | Reply

  16. Mike — all that time he gave me to walk was put to good use plotting my revenge. Muhahahahaha

    Minka — Rumble wasn’t as devious as I, but he pretty much held his own.

    Kat — did you read the Tea story? Rumble was quite adept at getting even.

    Comment by QuillDancer | April 9, 2007 | Reply


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