ReAd ChicKens' Butts aND cOcONUtS bEFOrE IT'S TOO LATE!!!!!
I’m just breezin’ along with the breeze, breezin’ along
with the breeze. Hey, Hi, everyone. It’s me again! Hasn’t the
book been egg-citing so far? Did you think I’d be too chicken
to write a second chapter? I guess I’m coming out of my
shell. That’s no yoke! Some people say I’m cracked and
others think I’m just a dumb cluck. But someday, I’ll be at
the beak of my career. So, please, don’t cry fowl and start
and international hen-cident.
Have you noticed a chicken theme in Chapter 2? Have
you also noticed the author of this book being an eensy bit
paranoid? (Just a side note: Is it the teeny weenie, itsy
bitsy, inky dinky or eensy weensie spider that went up the
water spout?) My red-haired sinister is not the main reason
I’m paranoid. Actually, the root cause is------(dum dum dum
dum – dramatic music) chickens’ butts and coconuts.
Let me take you back to my childhood. (harp music and
fog from a machine) back, baaack, baaaack, (echo)
baaaaaaaaaack, baaaaaaaaaack. (We spare no expense on the
special effects.)
There I was in my Buster Browns and my corduroy. Cute
as a bug. Innocent. Unsuspecting. Minding my own business.
(Let’s face it, I was precious.) My world was peaceful, secure
and satisfying. Until the “day!” I remember it ever so clearly.
It was a Sunday morning and the golden sunbeams were
streaming through the lace curtains like gentle laser beams
from an alien warship. Everything seemed so normal. Dad was
reading the Post Dispatch, Mom was in the kitchen, my
brothers and sisters were watching Kukla, Fran and Ollie.
How was I to know that this would be the most—no wait,
let’s try again. How was I to know that this would be the
darkest, most terrifying day of my life! (Psycho music)
(Yeah, that’s good.)
I’ll never forget my Mom’s words. They seemed so sweet
and loving. Daaaany, come to the kitchen. I have a surprise
for you.
A surprise? Oh, joy! Cake? Candy? A pony? Not exactly.
She had something a bit more unusual, shall we say, in mind.
(More psycho music).
Mama was standing in front of the kitchen sink with her
favorite, razor-sharp butcher’s knife in her hand. The
mirror-like blade of the knife reflected her face as a
distorted, scrunched up image of a surreal, uh, let’s see,
Lucille Ball. Yeah! That’s it! Kind of like a psychotic,
demented, Lucille Ball.
At the time, I thought nothing of it. Why would I be
suspicious of Mom? Wasn’t she the one who woke up at all
hours to feed me and change my dirty diapers? Didn’t she
clean up my baby puke and bathe me when I rolled in tar?
Sure, sure she did, uh huh, yep, she did all right. So why,
then, did it happen? Why, why didn’t I recognize the signs.
The hoot owl hooting outside my window and the dead
albatross in my sandbox.
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