Like wet dog and old towels…
I come down this morning – all ready to bite into the meat of the day. Wait. That sounds revolting. All revved up and ready to go?? Bright eyed and bushy tailed? Better? Worse? Or just more like a lemur?
While heading into the kitchen to make myself some breakfast, I notice that we did not put the cover on our patio furniture last night. There were violent thunder storms and torrential downpours last night. The sofa cushions now look like toddlers who went into the pool in their diapers.
“Crap.”
We’d been good all summer. Every night, we’d covered the sofa with extra outdoor fabric that I had fashioned into water-resistant origami, something more upscale than a blue tarp.
“Why can’t we just use the blue tarp?” David had asked.
My eyes had gone very wide – the result of a near stroke. My mouth had opened and closed – I was a big-mouthed bass, ripped from the depths of a fresh water lake.
He’d held up a calming hand. “It’s okay. It’s okay. We won’t use a blue tarp. It’s okay my love… Just out of curiosity though, did a blue tarp ever hurt you in anyway?” He had then ducked when I swung at him.
And now, all my well-laid plans have been completely rogered. And not in that “Hey-it’s-Wednesday-night-and-the-kid-is-back-at-university” way.
Standing at the back door, gazing upon the now-amphibious cushions, I drag my hand over my face. I could just ignore them. I could ignore them and my day can go on as originally scheduled. I’d exercise, write a couple of chapters, do some web design, read a play for the character discussion I’m having tonight… sigh.
They’ll get all mildewy and smell like wet dog and old towels. I look at the sky. Not actively raining at present, but still very cloudy. However, this could all be moot if I check The Weather Network and it forecasts… Light Rain. Four inch foam cushions cannot dry in light fucking rain. And you can’t put foam in the dryer, because Google says that it will either melt or start a dryer fire – not that our massive cushions would even fit in our dryer. For the love of…
3 HOURS LATER…
The cushions, now denuded of their covers and extra ass-squooshing batting, stand on end, draining upon the outdoor wicker sofa. I squeeze the cushions every 10 minutes, forcefully lobbying the liquid to leave its water-logged haven. The batting has been placed in the dryer on delicate, twice for each piece of batting.
And now? Now, the sun is out. And, according to the Weather Network, will be for the rest of day. And although I may never be able to open my hands again from the repetitive strain of deep foam squeezing, and I had to dictate this post, I’m sure that my newfound hand strength will come in handy. My super power will be grabbing villains by their lycra suits and shaking them until they surrender. The authorities will have to help with releasing said villains from my claw-like grasp – but I think I have a solid starting point for a new, and certainly lucrative, career.