Mama
Takes The Bus
Mama always took the
Greyhound Bus to visit her sister, my Auntie Edna and to visit my
Uncles and all the rest of her family. Pop thought this was funny.
"That's what the car
is for, getting around and going on trips," he would say to Mama
as soon as she started talking about taking the bus here or bus
there.
Her whole family was the
same way. They took the bus to visit relatives. No matter what. And
Pop always said, "Take the car, it's easier to get where you are
going."
Uncles Louis, Homer, Leon,
Lester and Auntie Edna disagreed. They all said, and I heard this my
self point-blank from each of them "We don't take cars to visit
family because they all have their own cars." Even I knew that
didn't make any sense at all.
So the deal was that Mama
went to visit on the bus and Pop stayed home with the car, the
animals, Candy the dog, and the garden. The rest of us went visiting
on the bus.
Every summer we went to
San Jose to visit my Auntie Edna, her husband, Uncle Joe and their
four kids. My cousins were awful. It was boring there because we had
nothing to do. Getting there on the bus was the worst part. It was a
long ride.
I met some interesting
adults on the bus rides, but Mama was the most interesting of all.
People riding on buses never seem too dressed up to me. But Mama got
all done up nice for the long ride. She always wore high heels, nylon
stockings that buttoned to her girdle, one of her beautiful slips,
and a new seersucker dress that she made for the visit. Seersucker is
kind of a bumpy striped cotton cloth that doesn't get messy in hot
weather. It feels cool because it doesn't stick to you too much.
Every spring just before Easter Mama would go to Penny's and buy six
yards of seersucker in navy and white. She bought pink flowered
cotton for me. I hate pink. She also bought yards of other cloth for
spring dresses.
One spring as we planned
to visit Auntie Edna's house there was a birthday party for Uncle
Homer just after school was out. It was supposed to be a secret
party, but he must have known about it since it was his birthday.
That year I went with Mama on her annual shopping trip to buy
seersucker. It was awful. Or worse than awful.
When we got to JC Penny's
I started to whine, beg, and plead for a "no pink" dress. I
said I was too old for pink. I told Mama it made my eyes look pink
like one of the rabbits, because of my white hair and all. She was
thinking only about her dress and never heard a word.
It was March and the wind
was blowing from off Humboldt Bay like a son-of-a-gun. Pop always
says that, so I learned to say that, too, because that is just how
the wind blows. It blew me nearly over. Mama grabbed me by the hand
and we both blew right into Penny's.
The cloth was in big round
bolts laying on tables. All the different colors were neat to look
at, but after an hour while Mama looked at the big books about
patterns of dresses, I was pretty bored. She went through McCall's
and Singer Books. The pictures were of women with their dresses
already sewn together. Not one picture showed anyone that looked like
Mama. They were all bony and had sad faces.
There were stairs to the
men's department. Sometimes Mama let me go up and down the stairs to
keep me busy. One time I got in one of the cupboards where the cloth
was saved. That was fun until she started calling me, thinking I was
lost.
She finally found a
pattern to make her dress and yards of navy stripe seersucker. And
she didn't buy pink with flowers. She bought yellow with white
flowers. I really wanted blue, but felt fairly lucky that I wouldn't
have another stupid pink dress.
Back at home, Mama began
to stick the pieces of tissue paper all over her cloth. This way and
that way. Of course, this was on the kitchen table.
When I came in from
chores, I had to help her lift the cloth over on the couch and after
dinner, lift back it back on the table. After the pieces were all cut
out, sides and sleeves and backs and stuff, Mama laid all the pieces
in order on her sewing machine top. She kept all the scraps because
who knows when they might come in handy?
The next day after Pop
went to work, and we kids went to school she would sew all morning.
She had an electric sewing machine that went like he double
toothpicks. She'd step on the pedal, give it the juice and, whee,
sewed straight or curvy or, however, it was supposed to be.
I know how hard it is to
even sew straight. I was supposed to make place mats for Auntie Edna
for her birthday, one for her, one for Uncle Joe and four for my
red-haired cousins. NOT one of the six places mats had a straight
seam. I did try. Honest. I got so mad at the sewing machine and mad
at me, that I had a nosebleed. Mama said she couldn't figure out why
I couldn't sew straight and neither could I.
Anyway, when I got home
from school the next day, there was my dress, hanging from the door
top in the kitchen. It was a soft yellow with white flowers, tiny
little apple blossoms maybe, and a white collar and wide ties. Some
times she sewed a button in the tips of the ties to make them hang
right. She always found pretty buttons. So up the middle of my back
marched yellow pearl buttons that I couldn't see when I wore it and
stuck into my back when I leaned against a hard chair back. I
couldn't wear it until Easter and then on the bus trip, but I had to
put it on so my mother could make it the right length. Mama always
made wide hems in the bottoms of my dress skirts so she could let
them down when I grew.
"Oh, Baby Rose, you
look like a candy angel, yes, you do," Mama said, twitching at
my hem. I could sort of see myself in the window. I didn't look
anything like candy angels.
"Now, you can't wear
this until Easter and then the bus trip, so don't you grow too much,
okay?" She teased me. "I better not give you any cake on
Sunday."
"Cake will me grow
out, not up." I said trying to forget cake and Sunday was three
days away.
I did forget all about the
yellow dress until Easter. And after Easter, I was busy with the new
baby animals and spring and all the things that country children do
when the grass gets so green. I have a rule. When the grass gets that
green, I have to roll in it, over and over. It's called "the
rolling in the clover rule" because that's the kind of grass I
like best.
School was suddenly out.
The bus tickets were bought. My noodle brother went to stay with Gran
and Granddad because he was "helping" them paint their
house. I had to go on the bus with Mama. Away from the wonderful
green grass, the baby rabbits and the baby chicks, and the new baby
calf that our milk cow, Lulubelle, just had given us.
I cried until my eyes
swelled shut but it didn't help. I had to go with Mama on the bus. As
we pulled out of the bus station I waved at Pop, but he didn't wave
back. He just sort of nodded like he did to strangers. I couldn't cry
anymore. I just sat there.
Mama getting herself
settled was something I don't ever like to miss, even when I'm
unhappy. She had to set herself on the seat just right, with her
skirt tucked around her crossed legs. She had to have all her bags
and her purse and her movie magazine all fixed just so. She always
sat on the aisle side to keep me in line, she said.
She took up most of the
seat. I always said so but just to myself.
See, there was no armrest
between the bus seats like in the movies? So she just didn't know her
side from my side. I sat watching her silently while she fussed with
her stuff and spread around. Finally, I looked out of the window and
watched my hometown of Eureka, California passing by. I knew I'd
never be back. When would I ever get home again? I missed Candy, my
black Lab dog and my best friend already and we weren't even out of
the parking lot yet.
In the end we started and
I stared at the houses and then the fields until I fell asleep. But I
didn't cry again. I almost never cry.
I woke up when I heard
Mama groaning. Outside the bus window, the world's tallest trees
whizzed by. I looked at Mama. She was kind of an icky color. She was
carsick. She always gets carsick. Even on short trips to Fortuna, a
town not far from Eureka. I watched in horror as she stood up in her
seersucker dress and red high heels. She staggered down the center of
the bus. Holding the seat backs and nearly falling on people, she
stumbled up to the bus driver.
"You must stop the
bus," Mama cried.
"Ma'am, what's
wrong?" the driver asked, glancing back through the bus in his
big mirror. Everyone on the bus was looking at us. I closed MY eyes.
"Stop this bus now!"
screeched Mama. "PLEASE."
"Okay, the next stop
is the Drive-Thru Tree. We'll stop there. Please sit down," he
told Mama. So she did, right on the floor next to the bus driver.
Now, I did hide.
"Don't worry, little
girl, your mother will be better soon." The lady across the
aisle in the other seat said to me. That was when I started gagging
in sympathy with Mama. The lady leaned way back. Afraid, I guess.
"It's okay, I never
throw UP unless I WANT to." I told her as soon as I could talk.
I could tell by the look on her face that she thought I was not
telling the truth.
Mama, meanwhile, was
starting to pray.
"Oh, Jesus, take me
with You, Lord," Mama cried out.
Some of the people around
looked sort embarrassed 'cause they weren't use to out loud prayers.
When Mama was sick or anyone else was sick, Mama always prayed. Out
loud. Very loud.
"Oh, yes, Lord Jesus,
come and take this dying woman to her glory," Mama went on. We
couldn't get to the Drive-Thru Tree soon enough, I thought.
Just as she was starting
to get ready to pray harder, the bus made a switcheroo swerve into
the parking lot. My mother was up and at those weird sucking doors
before the driver had a chance to pull the handle to open them. Wham!
I saw her through the
window running straight into the bushes. Thimbleberry bushes and
dogwood trees parted as her high heels went hoofing off. Somebody on
the bus laughed.
I stood up and glared all
around. No one looked guilty. I frowned, about to hit somebody if
they laughed at my mother again. Then all the people started getting
off the bus, one after the other.
Dang. I picked up Mama's
two-ton purse; I knew better than to leave THAT thing lying around. I
waddled as I carried it into the little restaurant and gift store. A
black sign on one door said "Pointers" and a sign on the
other said "Setters". For a minute I couldn't remember
which was which. Then I saw the woman who was so nosey pointing at me
to go in the "Setters" room and I followed her.
I put Mama's purse between
my feet while I waited my turn. I felt very grown-up.
"Well, why do you
suppose they don't have more toilets for women?" I said this
politely to a lady next in line. She looked nice, not nosy.
"I don't know, kiddo,
just the way things are," She told me, scratching her backside
over her dress. When she stopped scratching, her dress stuck up on
her fanny kind of like a flag. I snickered.
"Well, I'm going to
write the President. Then, there'll be heck to pay." I am very
knowledgeable about politics, my Pop always says.
"You go ahead, kiddo,
I can wait 'til after you," the lady said as a stall door opened
and a lady came out.
"Thank you kindly,
Ma'am," I said to her, tipping my imaginary cowboy hat and
hauling Mama's purse into the little room after me.
When I was finished, I
quick washed my hands and went out to the store. I was thinking that
Mama's purse was stretching my arms out even longer.
I saw that there was a
glass case over the candy so I went to check on the Mounds bars. Yep,
they had them, both kinds, with almonds and plain, my favorite. I
looked around. No Mama yet. I stayed where I was and started reading
all the signs.
"Own a Redwood Burl!"
was the sign over a bowl carved from the knots cut off a redwood
tree. I guessed people would buy them and then find out it took at
least two hundred years for it grow up to be even a baby redwood
tree.
Another sign said
"Horoscopes" and one that said "Fresh Roast Coffee"
and a stand-up sign on the counter. I leaned closer.
Travel
Sickness?
Nausea?
Peeples' Dramamine
cures the nightmare of
TRAVEL UPSET
only 89 cents for 10 doses
Peeples' Dramamine
cures the nightmare of
TRAVEL UPSET
only 89 cents for 10 doses
What an idea! This is it.
I'd fix up Mama and be a hero. I sat right down on the floor and took
off my shoe. I felt in the bottom of it. Nothing. Took off my other
shoe. Nothing again. Then, I remembered that I had put my emergency
dollar in my sock. I pulled off my sock. Yep, there it was.
"I'll take one of
these," I said, handing the little travel sickness packet to the
man behind the counter. "My mama is feeling sick and this is
sure to help her."
"Snake oil, huh?"
He said to me. I quick looked around. No sign of Mama. If it had
anything to do with snakes, she wouldn't get near it. He gave me the
change and the packet. It was smaller than a pack of gum. I put it in
my pocket with the change.
"Thank you," I
told him. I sat back on the floor to put on my sock and my shoes. I
saw Mama's legs through all the grown-ups standing around. Her red
high heels clicked out of the "Setters" door without a
waver. Something that someone said made her laugh. I could hear her
talking.
"Just fine now, thank
you for asking," Mama said, and her laugh went its way all
around the room. I tied my shoes and stood up.
"There you are, Baby
Rose. Mama is all better now." She waved at me. OF COURSE, all
the people turned to look at the big baby. My ears got hot.
She came over to me and
said, "How about a candy bar? Just don't eat it where I have to
smell it."
"Why not?"
"Because, I'm not
quite well," Mama told me in whisper. She took her purse under
her arm and I was greatly relieved of its weight and responsibility.
I sighed as my ears cooled off.
"A plain Hershey bar,
please. And could I get some ice water in a paper cup and a nice cup
of coffee?" she asked the man behind the counter. I hoped he
wouldn't tell her about the snake oil. He handed her the ice water.
And then he set down the paper cup of black coffee. She took one look
at the coffee and couldn't take a drink.
"Mama, listen, I got
this wonderful stuff that keeps you from being sick. I bought it with
my emergency dollar, but it says it works." I took the packet
out of my pocket and started to read it to her.
"Ladies and Gents,
now boarding for San Francisco, San Rafael and points south,"
the bus driver called. Mama looked up, her paper cup of water
sloshing a little over the edge.
"You want more,
Mama?" She handed it to me and swayed toward the bus. As she
waved her hand at me, I knew exactly what she meant. Get the water
and get on the bus.
I took the water over to
the man. "Could I have a refill of my mother's water?"
"She is sure one sick
lady. How come you don't get sick, too?" He laughed. He filled
the glass and handed it back.
"I don't have time,
and thanks again," I nodded to him, just exactly as Pop had
nodded at me in the bus depot four hours earlier.
I ran outside with the
paper cup. The people were lining up to get in and find their seats.
I took a drink of water. Then I held the cup in my teeth while I tore
open the packet. The pills fell out into my hand. I turned the paper
packet over, "two every four hours" I read to myself.
I held the paper cup in
one hand. I glanced around to see if I was being watched, and seeing
the grown-ups were all busy with their getting on the bus, I dropped
two of the pills in the ice water. I shook it a little, hoping it
would be like Alka-Seltzer. But I could see trails of milky pills
stuff still in there. I stuck my finger into the cup and stirred it a
little.
"Uck," I said
out loud, after licking my finger. It tasted awful. Would she drink
it?
It was finally my turn.
Boy, were people slow. I like to hurry. That's just me. I finally
went down the aisle, hoping I wouldn't spill the medicine water on
somebody.
When I got to our seat,
Mama was lying back, her eyes closed, her lips perfectly red and her
face sort of green. I looked to see if she had gills to get green.
Nope, not yet green to the gills Laughing at my own joke, I padded my
mother on the shoulder.
"Mama, Mama?"
"Oh, dear, I feel
sick still. And so dry. Parched as a desert toad." Mama sat up,
grabbed the cup and drank down the water. I blinked.
She moved her legs aside
to let me in. Very careful not to step on her toes, I slid past. I
struggled with my conscience about to tell her or not to tell her
about the pills in the water. Then the bus started. Before I could
completely figure out what to do, the big old Greyhound Bus was
humming down Highway 101 again.
"Leave the driving to
us," I sang under my breath; it was the TV commercial about the
bus. "Take the bus, leave the driving to us."
Too late now. I looked at
Mama. Her hair was nicely combed, her seersucker dress tucked around
her, her purse clasped by her round arms on her lap.
As I watched her, her
eyelids flickered and she started to snore. And drool sort of got
started in the corner of her mouth. I did laugh then.
The rest of the trip was
long; finally, I had to crawl over Mama to use the bathroom at one of
the stops. The lady across the aisle went with me, just to be sure,
she said.
"Sure of what?"
I asked, trying to smile nicely. After all, she was a grown-up.
"Well, to be sure
nothing happens to you and that you don't get lost or miss the bus.
We're getting close to the city now.,” she said, showing me her
teeth.
I ran for the bathroom. OF
COURSE, there was a line of ladies. The lady from across the aisle
asked me if Mama always got sick on bus trips.
"Umm, hmmm, don't
know, for sure, maybe you should ask her," I said, knowing Mama
wouldn't like strangers asking about her throwing up. I finished my
business and didn't wait for that lady.
I ran straight to the big
silver bus. I was glad we were getting close to Auntie Edna's. I was
hungry and could have eaten a whole chocolate cake. Usually, Mama had
sandwiches, like peanut butter, but they were in the cupboard over
the seat and I couldn't reach them unless I stood on Mama.
When I got back to my
seat, there was a big man sitting in it. He was asleep, too. Snoring,
too. I stood there. Gawking. What could I do? The lady came back.
Then to me, she said, "Oh, dear, I'll move over by the window
and you can still sit by your mother, only across the aisle. Here,
honey." She patted the seat.
"Thank you. It's very
kind you, but Pop told me to look out for Mama." I told her. I
scratched under my braid. I chewed on the end of my braid. The bus
driver started the motor.
"Well, honey, they're
just napping. I am sure it will be fine."
I know for a fact that
anytime anyone calls me "honey" I'm going to regret it.
I sat on the very edge of
the seat, turned toward Mama. What else could I do? Just keep my eyes
on her. My eyes started watering from staring at Mama and that man so
hard.
All of a sudden, we were
starting over the Golden Gate Bridge. I jumped up to see down into
San Francisco Bay and see the ships. It was the best part of the bus
trip.
The bus swayed and I
bumped against Mama. Then, I fell, yelping, backward into my seat by
the lady. Mama's eyes popped wide open. Her mouth went big and then
shut tight, turning down. She sucked up her drool. Then she looked at
the man.
"Sir," said Mama
to the sleeping man, "I'll have to ask you to lean on your own
breakfast, Mister. Up, sir, up!" She poked his chest with her
long red fingernail. Poke, poke.
I couldn't stop laughing
at the look on the man's face when he woke up. He looked like he'd
stepped in a cow pile. He said sorry a whole bunch of times to my
mother. Then, he and I changed seats so that the nosy lady could just
take care of him instead of me. I slipped past Mama as she smiled at
me.
"Baby Rose, I had the
sweetest dream, all about being a butterfly, Baby, do you want to
hear it?"
"Yes! Mama, yes!"
I was so happy that I just
didn't tell her about spiking her water with Dramamine pills. Well,
okay, I didn't tell her until we started home from Auntie Edna's. I
had to tell her then and give up the remaining eight pills. I wish I
had given them to Uncle Homer for his birthday since he gets sick on
all his bus rides, too.
Pop says it runs in their
side of the family.
No comments:
Post a Comment
If you spam with these comments to sell or promote anything I will delete them.