Welcome to the Spot Writers. This month’s prompt was created
using a random generator. Use these five words in a writing: suntan, paint,
waterfall, inflation, exposure. This week’s prompt comes to us from Val Muller,
author of the Corgi Capers kidlit
mystery series.
Like so many, Val is at home in social isolation with her
family during these strange times, which serves as inspiration to this prompt.
She wishes the best for readers of this post, and for everyone around the
globe.
Childhood
by Val Muller
She was on the way to work when she got the call. It was a
strange conversation, sounding at first almost like a telemarketer, but the
voice on the other end sounded determined, somber. Not the careless, detached
way telemarketers often sound.
After she hung up, the words echoed in her mind. Possible
COVID-19 exposure. Self-quarantinde for 14 days. The symptoms, shortness of
breath, trouble breathing… those were happening now, already. She took a deep
breath and forced herself to calm down. Those were symptoms of stress, too, and
what was more stressful than that phone call?
She was instructed to pick up her children from school, and
the man on the phone—she’d already forgotten his name. It had letters in it,
she remembered that. Maybe an R? Or a B, perhaps?—was going to call her husband
as well to make him aware of the situation.
Her phone buzzed again, and she pulled to the side of the
road to get a handle on things. It was a text from the boss. The whole office
had been exposed. They had known, hadn’t they? When Mary came in wheezing and
coughing… she said it was just allergies. And they believed her, though their
nerves had been set on edge.
And what were they supposed to do? Start a witch hunt
against anyone who sniffled?
As instructed, she called the school. She was to have a
teacher escort her children out of the building and to her car. She was not to
enter the school building, or any building, until she had spent 14 days
symptom-free.
The kids were thrilled. She shook her head. Boys. They
asked if they could order fast food using their app. She considered this. The
app allowed payment online. The food would be brought to their car. She nodded
in a daze and let them order.
After lunch, they asked if they could spend the day in the
basement playing video games. In her shock, she allowed it. On the phone, the
school secretary disclosed rumors that schools were likely shutting down soon,
anyway, so the boys wouldn’t be missing much in-class instruction. She didn’t
tell the boys that, of course. Let them have this day to be carefree. They were
old enough now—grades 4 and 5. This event would likely mark the end of their
childhood.
And how would she spend today, the last day her boys were
children? At first she panicked at the computer, ordering a delivery of
groceries while fielding texts from her husband about his preparations for
coming home to telework for the next two weeks. Then she cleaned out the
refrigerator and freezer. They would be in this for the long haul, it seemed.
Then she headed for the entryway closet. Cleaning always
calmed her. It gave her something to do, a goal. She started with the winter
clothes. They were likely done for the season. Spring had come early, it seemed.
She packed all the hats and gloves and scarves into the plastic sleeve and
tucked the sleeve on the top shelf. Something was wedged back there, preventing
the sleeve from fitting.
It was the box of paints. She’d bought it for the boys when
they were younger, hoping they’d pick up her love for art. But they took
instead to video games and sports. She took the paints and closed the closet
door.
Outside, springtime acted like the world was not in a global
panic. The birds chirped as if they had never heard of a virus. The sun warmed
her skin, and she felt the suntan already bronzing her bleached winter skin as
she set up the small wooden easel on the picnic table.
The neighbor’s line of pear trees were in bloom, fuzzy white
against a clouded blue sky. In their rock garden, they had turned on the little
waterfall that pumped a stream of water so that it trickled over a pile of
rocks.
This was zen. So she picked up her paintbrush to capture the
moment. Tomorrow would bring what it would, but for now her boys were living a
peaceful childhood moment.
And as she dabbed at the paper with bits of white on blue,
so was she.
The Spot Writers—Our Members:
Val Muller: http://www.valmuller.com/blog/
Catherine A. MacKenzie:
https://writingwicket.wordpress.com/wicker-chitter/
Phil Yeats: https://alankemisterauthor.wordpress.com
Chiara De Giorgi: https://chiaradegiorgi.blogspot.com/
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