“Y’all
have to go to bed early tonight.”
“Why?”
“Because
the time changes, and we have to move the clocks forward an hour."
“No,
we don’t. We turn them back an hour. We get to stay up an hour later.”
Evidently
in the mid-70s, spring forward and fall back had not been coined yet. If
so, my daddy had never heard the phrases.
Kristi
was spending the weekend with me. She moved to Dothan when we were two-year-olds.
Her daddy was the minister of music at our church. Her mama played piano,
taught children’s choir, sang in the soprano section and an occasional solo, and
did about 1000 other things. We lived near each other and attended the same
elementary school. We were sidekicks, soul mates. We were both the babies in our
families, so we had that in common. We were babies with a big age gap between
us and the next older sibling, so we had that in common, too. We probably had
the same personality, because we argued with every breath. Mama said about us, “They
are miserable when they are not together, and they are miserable when they are.”
Folks often called us the other’s name. Old folks at church occasionally
slipped and called me Kristi even as
a young adult, long after Kristi and her family had moved.
They
moved the summer after we completed second grade at Girard Elementary School. Church members were saddened by the news. Kristi and I were heartbroken. Our parents vowed we would stay in touch. Many times, we make promises in life that with every fiber of our beings we intend to
keep, but life pushes in and good intentions get pushed to the side. Our parents were true to their word, though. If Mama
heard of someone going to Birmingham for the weekend, she would call Mrs.
Andrews while she was packing my bag, and vice versa.
So,
Kristi and her doll Humpty were with me this particular weekend. Daddy let us
watch The Mary Tyler Moore Show and The Bob Newhart Show, but he sent us to
bed BEFORE The Carol Burnett Show. We
were outraged. He had NEVER sent me to bed before Carol Burnett. We slung our hair and stomped our feet down the hall to my room. We snuggled in
my double bed and took turns tickling each other’s backs.
Sunday
School began at 9:30. To our neighbors, the Pitmans, that meant leave for church
at 9:00. To the Kings, that meant leave for church before 9:30. Yet, the next
morning, as Kristi and I climbed in the rear-facing backseat of Mama’s blue
station wagon with the brown paneling down the side, we noticed that the Pitmans’
cars were still in their driveway. Somebody was obviously sick. But why would everyone stay home? Why would both cars
be there? Hmmm.
“Sissy,
go call Time,” Daddy said.
I
ran to the kitchen, to the only phone in the house (the one attached to the
wall, the one with the long curly cord), and dialed the numbers on the rotary
phone. I knew them by heart: 794-8441. I heard the familiar voice say, “"Don't bank it in a sock; sock it in the bank. Your
Colonial Bread time is 7:27. Temperature—.” I slammed down the phone. I didn’t
care about the temp.
“DADDY!
IT IS 7:30! I TOLD YOU WE TURNED THE CLOCK THE WRONG WAY!!!”
Angie got out of the car and returned to bed. Starla probably went to study her
Sunday School lesson. Kristi and I went to downstairs to play Barbies. I
imagine Mama started lunch or called Little Granny. I picture Daddy sitting in
his chair, sipping a bonus cup of coffee, reading the Dothan Eagle,
and grinning from ear to ear over the new tale he had to tell on himself.
I
bet you money (to quote Little Granny) that we were
still late to church.
Kristi and me at my cousin's birthday party. |
We were still late to church this Sunday even with the extra hour! It's nice to see we are not alone!
ReplyDeleteWe were, too. (Shhh . . . .)
DeleteI totally over slept and missed church completely. With the extra hour of sleep.
ReplyDelete