The creature from the white lagoon
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My son and
his fiancé are both sick with the dread coronavirus. I had not heard from him so
I hounded him, knowing something was wrong. Ben managed to send me a two line
email letting me know they were home in bed with a nurse coming regularly.
Aside from
that, I know nothing except they are too ill to be in communication with me or
with anybody else. I understand all they do is sleep. Sleep is good. Washington
State has good health care and I hang onto that as a life line.
It’s been at
least three weeks now. And I really don’t know when Ben and Kristen began to be
ill. But Ben was sick on his birthday, unable to call. To say I am worried sick
is the understatement of my year. By the way, “worried sick” is not a cliché.
It is a reality.
Worry is a
mother’s prerogative. In the last two weeks I’ve aged another ten years. By
definition I am nothing but worry contained in a wrinkled bag of skin.
To stay
healthy, I’ve barricaded myself within my garden walls. Now I’ve added a
wellness check to my morning routine. I understand that symptoms of the
coronavirus include inability to smell and taste. So when I wake in the
morning, I open my mouth and huff. So far, each morning—ewwww—I’m assured that
I am still relatively healthy.
While I keep
occupied with a variety of daily activities, I suppose one could say that my
mind is preoccupied without let up.
Still, life
dishes out a measure of excitement. I live in Mexico, a country rife with
creatures. Each morning I shake out my shoes, hoping if a scorpion has crawled
inside, he will fall out of my shoe before I insert my foot. When I lay out my
bathmat in front of the shower, I do so carefully, aware of the wide variety of
spiders. I scan the shower before turning on the water, looking for cockroaches
I hope not to see.
This
afternoon while reading on the patio I felt the call of nature. I sashayed into
the bathroom unzipping as I went, when I let out a blood-curdling scream.
(“Blood-curdling” is not a cliché; it is a reality.)
I am not
given to hysterics. Paralysis in the face of danger, yes, but not hysterics.
Head to
tail, there was a two-foot long beast in my biffy. Sleek and black, half body,
half tail, with big grasping iguana-style feet, my own personal loch mess
monster.
I ran for
the phone and called Leo, whom I thought was working at a neighbor’s. “Leo, where
are you?”
“I’m in
town. What’s wrong?”
“There’s a
dragon in my toilet.”
“I’ll be
right there.”
I went back
to the bathroom to make sure I was not hallucinating. Two feet long and lounging
like a tourist with an umbrella drink in a resort pool.
Back to the
living room, I propped open my screen door for Leo so he would not have to
touch it to enter. Even in emergency I am careful about my coronavirus safety. Back
to the bathroom to stand guard. What would I do if the creeper crawled out?
Leo came.
Leo saw. Leo went next door for help.
Josue was in
his shop welding. Soon both men returned. Josue, masked in welding gear and
wearing huge welding gloves, with a long-handled grabber in one hand, assayed
the situation.
Though I
wasn’t willing to put my own life at risk, I couldn’t understand why one of the
guys didn’t just reach in and grab it, until they informed me that the critter had
big teeth and could bite hard.
With armored
gloves, Josue plucked the dragon creature out of the pond and carried it away.
The juvenile
iguana had climbed down the open (now screened) top of the vent pipe for my
sinks and toilet, crawled all the way into the septic tank where, given how
skinny he was, he’d been trapped a while. Eventually the monster doubled back
and found the outlet into the toilet. I don’t even want to know how the guys
figured out that progression.
Dragons
being an endangered species, perhaps Josue let it go. Perhaps the creature came
in attracted by my morning dragon breath. Perhaps I’ll not soon enter the
bathroom in the dark of night without flicking the light switch.
Remember
when we carried a lantern to the outhouse to check for rattlesnakes before
entering? Remember chamber pots?
Ben, my son,
please get well soon. Have I got a story to tell you!
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
November 12,
2020
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