Tuesday, July 5, 2016

Kerri Shying R# 7 Joe Day's Day

Lately, it seemed, his mind had become a big wooden hotel, full of people from the past, washing and laughing at all hours, day and night.  No forgetting, like his Janice had done in the wearying season before she passed.

The little girls looked like twins in the cotton school tunics with shorts on underneath. Belt and braces, is what he thought, but it was for pushing them on the swings at the park, so the knickers can’t be seen, his daughter said.

“I used to put the sprinkler under the trampoline so my sister could be Esther Williams in a musical”, smiling at Mum as she podded peas for tea on the back step.
“That’s nice Dad.”

I’m a skeevy old man who goes to the track according to my grandson while my grand-daughters’ step, one at a time, into a kind of butterfly aviary and have a jump. Where’s the fun. Now and then I put them in together going ‘shh’ in case Killjoy and Mr Serious catch me. They hold hands like little dancing fairies.
I sit on the edge to stop the net tearing, imagining them doing forward somersaults on their mother’s soft lawn. 
“Poppy, teach us how to whistle.”

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