St. George, Part 4
The
family gathered around the kitchen table. Mom utilized every bit of the
hamburger graciously given to the family by Nicki’s boyfriend and included it
in the evening’s meal. After the blessing on the food, dad addressed the
family.
“Looks
like we’ve got a concert day after tomorrow in St. George. I hope everyone’s
ready to go.” The children’s reactions expressed both excitement and despair.
“Now,
now, everyone,” dad said. “I checked the calendar and there were no conflicts.
I’ve got the bus tuned up and ready to go. I want all of you packed and ready
to go by 6 a.m…” The moans from the children stopped the family patriarch in
mid-speech.
“Hey,
you know we’ve got to leave early. The Larsen’s are expecting us around noon
tomorrow. We're going to need time to check out the venue and go through the program a time or tow. Speaking of which,” dad turned to Adam. “We need a song.”
Nathan
spoke up as Adam’s brain began thinking about a new song for the family.
“What’s the gig, dad” Mom answered his question.
“It’s
for a charity, Don’t Blame the Children…It’s Not Their Fault. MarLinda told me all about it.
“Is
that the Panguitch Larsens?” a knowing Natalie asked.
“The
very ones!” the proud mother responded.
“What’s
that charity about?” Nicki asked.
“A portion of the
city park was damaged in a flash flood last month in St. George and the city is
blaming the children who play around a creek upstream from the park for causing the damage.”
“How
is it the kid’s fault?” This time the question came from April.
“Well,”
mom began. “MarLinda says every summer the kids dam up the creek to make a swimming
hole—you know how hot it can get in St. George in the Summer, so who can blame
them? Anyway, during the big storms they had last month a flash flood destroyed
part of the park and some yahoo on the city council said if the kids hadn’t
built the dam, the damage wouldn’t have happened.”
“Maybe
it was the kid’s fault,” Nathan said.
“MarLinda
doesn’t think so, and she’s never lied to me, so I believe her,” mom said.
The
family continued eating when Nicki interrupted. “Mom, since we’re going to be
out-of-town this weekend, can Brad borrow the car?” Everyone at the table
yelled in unison, “NO!”
Dad
brought the conversation back to the weekend trip. “Like I was saying, Adam—do you
think you can whip us up something special for the event?”
“You
can count on me!” Adam said enthusiastically.
“Can
you pass me the salad Aaron?” April asked. “Since I don’t eat meat, I need
something to eat.”
“It’s
too bad, April. This burger is really lean…”
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