Hemmed In
Rumble never should have left me to walk home. Walking stimulates blood flow, and blood flow stimulates brain activity. Even though Gram sent Rumble back to get me, by the time he showed up, I’d walked over half the way home, and my revenge was pretty well plotted.
The next morning I told Rumble to go ahead and go to school without me, because my friends Sue and Anna were coming by. If Rumble left with the impression they would be taking me to school, that wasn’t my fault. We raided Gram’s sewing kit, grabbed a packet of needles and a couple of rolls of white thread, then we descended the basement stairs and invaded Rumble’s lair.
Rumble was — probably still is – ridiculously fastidious about his things. Most everything he owned had it’s very own hanger, even his bath towels. I took the towels out of his closet and very carefully sewed the inside layer tightly to the hanger. I also sewed the shoulders of his bathrobe to the hanger. Anna sewed all of Rumble’s socks together in pairs. Sue sewed the fly closed on every pair of underwear he owned. I sewed his top sheet to his bottom sheet on his bed.
All three of us sewed closed every single button hole on every single article of clothing he owned. On his shirts, we sewed them closed unbuttoned. On the flies of his mechanic’s coveralls and his denim overalls, we sewed them closed buttoned.
That little chore took most of the day. About an hour after we started Gram came down to see what we were doing. She shook her head. “He really isn’t going to like this you know,” she warned, then left the room. As she was ascending the stairs she said, “Don’t forget to sew his pockets closed.” It seemed like good advice, so we took it.
Every evening when the TV went off after the news, Rumble and I said good-night. I went to my bedroom and Rumble retreated downstairs. The north wall of the staircase was the south wall of my bedroom. On the third step down Rumble always knocked on the wall three times, and I knocked back. That night I waited in glee after the three knocks for the eruption downstairs. It never came.
The next morning at breakfast Rumble was a little grumbly. “The bed thing was really cute,” he said. “I pretty much ripped it to pieces trying to get into it.” Then his voice lowered. “The towel thing was not at all amusing.”
My grandfather had built the downstairs bathroom. The shower was 4′x4′ and the water sprinkler was a 3 inch disk that sprayed straight down from the celling. The bathroom window took up most of the west wall, and it didn’t have a curtain on it. Those of us who used that bathroom dried off inside the shower and emerged wrapped in the bathrobe or towel we’d left hanging on the door for just that purpose — unless of course both the bathrobe and the towel were sewed tightly to their hangers.
Rumble said he used his pocket knife to get the button holes open on his shirt. I had the joy of watching him try to use his pockets. He ran his pipe lighter down his chest about three times before he actually stopped to look at his pocket to see why it wouldn’t open. He did the same thing trying to put his car keys in his right front pocket and his wallet in his back pocket. Each time he made rumbly noises and used his pocket knife to cut the threads.
Next he sat down on the couch and tried to seperate his socks. More rumbling. I laughed myself silly. Gram – -the traitor — told Rumble that Anna and Sue had helped me. Rumble promised to save a few choice growls for them. Finally he was dressed in his chambray shirt, denimn overalls, mechanics coveralls, socks and shoes — and likely undergarments as well, though I never saw them — and he never mentioned them. I didn’t know if he’d discovered all his flies were sewn closed. He went out the door to school.
Sue and Anna came to pick me up. We went out the door to school, too. We went straight to the school cafeteria and bought a gigantic cola, which we then delivered to Rumble as a peace offering. Being the suspicious sort — go figure — he made me taste it before he would accept the dang thing.
We hung around the shop visiting while he drank his soda. It wasn’t an unusual occurance. None of us had class at that time and the shop was full of boys — most of whom we weren’t related to. Rumble didn’t think it odd that we hung out there flirting.
When his soda was about three-quarters gone, Rumble excused himself to use the restroom. Just before he could walk away, Anna asked if she could use his pocket knife to cut her shoe lace, which suddenly was hopelessly tangled. Rumble surrendered his pocket knife without a qualm.
He erupted from the bathroom like a thundercloud. His brows were drawn together and his beard was fairly bristling. We’d made a tactical mistake and were in the tool alcove. there was no way out that wasn’t past Rumble. He advanced on us, rumbling. “The coveralls …. okay. I thought that was funny. The overalls were a bit more irritating! But the underwear ….” his voice cracked like thunder. “The underwear is unforgivable!” He madly jabbed his finger in the direction of the restroom. “I don’t suppose you’ve ever been in that men’s room,” he shouted. “It has no doors! And I had to disrobe –disrobe! Completely undress — to take a pee! I haven’t done that since I was four!”
I think in pictures, and the visual that conjured up was just too much. I dissolved in a fit of giggles. So did everybody else within ear-shot. Rumble rumbled that it damn well wasn’t funny. Then he jammed his hand in the grease barrel and marked my cheek with a gooey, black “B”, for brat. Even that didn’t make me stop laughing.
Several days later Rumble arrived at the breakfast table still bristling. He growled, “This is getting old! How the hell much of my stuff did you sew up?”
I grinned at him and shrugged one shoulder. “All of it.”
He was lifting a piece of toast to his open mouth and he froze, staring at me in horror. Finally he sighed, then rumbled in resignation, “I’ll be cutting thread for the next month!” I smiled again and blew him a kiss on my way out of the room.
I stopped by your blog quite by accident.
There’s a sense of real warmth and sweetness to your writing. It’s very relatable, too.
In one of your earlier posts especially..the one about Dead Man’s Hill I think was the name…this was all obvious. I might have ridden my bike in a different neighborhood, in a different state at a completely different time, but with the way you conveyed your story, I was riding right along with you.
I’ll be back.
lauriekendrick.wordpress.com
[...] Saturday, April 14th, 2007 in Gram, Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, detour, cousins, memoir, humor Somehow it seemed that, The Grownups Wanted Us Dead, less and less often. I suppose they considered their work done since it was obvious we were trying to kill each other. The next morning I told Rumble to go ahead and go to school without me, because my friends Sue and A… [...]
Laurie — wow! That’s quite a compliment. Thank you, and welcome. I am glad you found your way here.
This was good, I enjoyed it like all the others. Your stories add to the Saturday Morning.
Thank you for sharing
lol,you rock!
Bill — glad you enjoyed it.
Polona — thank you.
So, how long did this little war last between the two of you?
Poor, poor, poor, poor, poor Rumble. If reincarnation exists and God offers me a choice next time I’ll be shopping for the dullest kinfolk I can find.
Silver — about 7 months.
Doug — are you implying that Rumble is less than blessed to have me for a cousin? I think you’ve hurt one of my feelings. No. I am certain you have hurt one of my feelings. My, “I’m perfect and everybody loves me,” feeling is definately injured.
Rumble had the patience of a saint in dealing with you.
Mike
Mike — I would like you to remember, please, that had Rumble eaten that P.B. & J. sandwich, none of this ever would have happened.
I grew up with two sisters, so I’m taking Rumbles side.
Mike
Mike — Please see my above comment to Doug. I think I’ll go in the bathroom and cry now.
[plans inspection of premises on next visit, to note location and content of sewing kits and evaluation of risk of mayhem to personal possessions. also plans NEVER to argue with Q on the matter of PB&J.]
Love, the sewing box is a fancy wooden job. You’ll find it under the end table at the end of the love seat. And you’ll be happy to know I rarely eat PB&J any more. :*
The plot thickens. What is funny to me is that I just realized what the website is called. I have a friend whom, for years, I have called: Kathaleniebeanieweenie. I am suggesting you add the weenie.
You were sew cruel!
Gawpo — people have been reading this blog for 11 months now without discovering my childhood nickname. I would like to thank you for pointing it out to them. Not. Jackie is the only one who still calls me by that name. She does not have permission to do so, but Jackie seldom cares about such things as permissions.
As to being sew creul — do you have any laundry you’d like done?