“How long is this gonna take?”
Tinkletoes asks after the first thirty minutes.
“I don't know.” Carp says.
“I think he said something about having a guitar stand in every
room of the house.”
Mr. Donut shuffles past them
without a word on his way to the bathroom. Going inside he shuts
the door behind him.
“Here's our chance. Let's
split.” Tinkletoes says.
“Eureka!” Mr. Donut calls.
“See.” Tinkletoes says, “Now
we're gonna have to listen to stories about his bowels and shit.”
“Is it necessary to repeat
yourself?” Carp says.
“Huh?”
Mr. Donut opens the bathroom door.
“Eureka! I found my guitar. This was the last place I was playing
it.”
“You mean you play guitar while
you're...” Tinkletoes asks.
“I'm 94. Some things take a
while.” Mr. Donut says shuffling into the bedroom. He is carrying
a shiny ebony guitar with a customized black leather strap that says
'Sweets' on it. Reaching into the hollow of the guitar he pulls out
a small stack of papers. “This is it. A culmination of 70 years
work. This has been brewing since I was fourteen years old and I got
my first secondhand guitar. I remember the first time I heard “Too
Late To Worry Too Blue To Cry”. I knew country music was a part
of me. I was meant for it like it was meant for me.” He slowly
hands his treasures to Carp, who carefully accepts them. As Carp
and Tinkletoes read over the paperwork Mr. Donut keeps talking about
his work. “I have never had the lyrics come together like this
before. I have six songs so far. How long are records these days?”
He asks. “I've never heard anything like my songs on the radio
either. I think I might have something here.”
Carp and Tinkletoes read the list.
Their faces go from shock, to surprise, to stifled laughter and back
again.
“Are you having trouble reading
it? I have trouble writing things down clearly sometimes.” Mr.
Donut asks.
“No we, we can read it.” Carp
says.
“You have to read it out loud
sometimes in order to get the full affect.” Mr. Donut says.
“That's a good idea.”
Tinkletoes says. “Why don't you read it out loud Carp?”
“I don't think...”
“Read it. Out Loud.”
Tinkletoes repeats.
“Okay.” Carp says, paling a
little. “Let's see what we have here. “1. Sweet Rainbow
Sprinkles. 2. She Couldn't Be Crueller. 3. Donut Man. 4. I Miss
The Rustle Of Your Depends 5. I Wear Your Cold Cream To Bed.”
and “6. I'm Missin' Your Support Hose.”
“Support Hose is the one I'm the
proudest of. Let me play that for you first.” Mr. Donut says
bowing his head and adjusting the strings on his guitar.
Tinkletoes' face turns red with
stifled laughter.
Carp glares at Tinkletoes.
“It's his best song Carp. Let
Sweets play it for you.” Tinkletoes says leaning in to Carp.
Tinkletoes turns his head away to stifle his laughter. Unable to
contain himself he gets to the bathroom just as the intro starts.
“I'm missin' your support
hose...and it's givin' me the blues.” Mr. Donuts sings. He plays
the guitar skillfully, closing his eyes when he sings, letting the
notes pour out. “Since you told me you was leavin', I've been
feelin' so confused. You left me oh so lonely. I don't even have
any ice cubes.”
Carp runs his hand down his face and
covers his mouth.
“I'm missin' your support hose and
it's givin' me the blues.”
“Okay now. Big finish.” Mr.
Donut says. He brings the song to it's conclusion loudly and with
great flourish waiting for applause.
Carp applauds and smiles painfully.
“So what do you think?
Wait...before you say anything I want you to know I come from a
tougher generation. Be honest. I can take it.” Mr. Donut says.
“Your sound is completely unique.
I have never heard anything like it.”
Tinkletoes comes out of the bathroom.
“You hope to never hear anything like it. Ever again.” He
whispers as he passes Carp.
“What did you think?” Mr. Donut
asks Tinkletoes.
“Well...um...” Tinkletoes says
looking at the ceiling.
“Yes?”
“What's up with the ice
cubes?” Tinkletoes asks.
Mr. Donut laughs for a moment, “Is
he serious?” he says looking at Carp.
Carp laughs in agreement.
“The ice cubes are a metaphor for
Mrs. Donut's passionate loving care. It was one of the things that
made her the best wife of our generation. Ice cubes. Her ice cubes
were never stale. For 64 years, I had scotch on the rocks
every night when I got home from work. For 45 years, if we were
dining at home, the ice in that drink was always fresh. Trust me a
man can tell when he gets stale ice. She loved me that much. To
make the extra effort every day to make sure I had fresh ice. That
is the mark of a quality wife.”
“Really? I thought you knew a
good woman because she would actually...”
Carp stands up and smacks
Tinkletoes on the back of the head before he can finish his sentence.
“Have some respect.” Carp
whispers.
“We're all guys.”
Tinkletoes points out.
“She was some woman. She loved
me with everything she had.” Mr Donut says, as his eyes tear up.
“I miss her.”
“It's okay. Let it out. Let it
out.” Carp says, enclosing Mr. Donut in a manly embrace.
“Put it back. Put that back
now.” Tinkletoes says. He squats down and looks Mr. Donut
in the eye. “It's been two years. You've probably been crying
this whole time. Did it bring her back?”
Mr. Donut shakes his head.
“Of course not. Because you're a
guy. Well, also because she's dead. I mean she can't come back. Guys don't do it this way. You got to take
all your pain and bury it. Bury it deep. As far as
you can. Then you do man things. When you're doing the man things
you let the crap you buried come out and explode. It explodes right
out of you like a batch of grenades. If you do it right, you've
killed something.” Tinkletoes says.
“You mean like a rabbit or a
deer?” Mr. Donut asks.
“Or a ninja zombie. If you're
really lucky a space alien.”
“Mrs. Donut didn't approve of me
hunting.” He says drying his tears.
“Mrs. Donut isn't here now is
she?” Tinkletoes says grinning.
A light slowly begins to dawn at the
end of both Mr. Donut and Tinkletoes' tunnels.
“No. She isn't.”
“She's dead. You can do whatever
you want. You can do man things again.” Tinkletoes
says.
“I can do man things again?”
“Because you're a guy.”
Tinkletoes says.
“Because I'm a guy.” Mr. Donut
repeats.
“No. Say it with grit this time.
'I'm a guy.'” Tinkletoes says.
“I'm a guy.”
“A little deeper man. 'I'm a
guy.'”
“I'm a little deeper man. I'm a
guy.” Mr. Donut says.
“It'll have to do.” Tinkletoes
says. “Let Carp and me show you what you've been missing. I have
guns, knives and live ammo. Let's go have some fun.”
“Um...Tink...” Carp says.
“Yeah. Just as soon as I get out
of this dress.”
4 comments:
Haha..ice cubes. Very funny!
Thanks. I'm glad you laughed. :)
I love your imagination. Your stories are great I wish I had got that skill. Keep up the good work, a laugh a day is a true gift that you are giving us. Thanks cant wait till next week.
Thank you so much. :D
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