Aftermath

Or use the handy-dandy 'chalkboard spinner' in the basement.A normal person.Cathy and I were ten.I should point out here that there is nothing normal about a 10-year-old.Back to my story . . .Cathy and I would collect the brushes.Cart them outside.And bang them together.Imagine, if you will, a cloud of fine, white dust.With two little girls somewhere near the center of it.Giggling.You get it, right?!What on earth could be more fun?The fact that the dust merely got relocated and that the two little girls then had to, themselves, be cleaned, never even entered our minds.For a brief, wonderful while, we were the center of our very own little dust storm.I can still remember how it smelled.And, as it collected on our tongues, just how it tasted.Magic.
There is an unexpected codicil: Fifteen years later, I was expecting my third child. Another boy.I craved something. In fact, I could almost taste it. It took forever to figure out what that taste was.Then it hit me.Chalk.I was craving chalk.And not the light, cheap stuff that had become common.No.I was craving the good stuff.The stuff that Cathy and I used to clean out of those brushes and catch in our mouths all those years ago.The doctor told me I was lacking in minerals and gave me some pills to swallow.Sigh.I wish he would have simply given me some brushes to clean . . .
Published on June 27, 2018 07:30
No comments have been added yet.
On the Border
Stories from the Stringam Family ranches from the 1800's through to today.
Stories from the Stringam Family ranches from the 1800's through to today.
...more
- Diane Stringam Tolley's profile
- 43 followers
