Not knowing what to expect is exactly what to expect when you come across writer Peggy McFarland. A shy, timid lass (yeah, right), this rarified lady of class, sass and brass tells it as it is in her mind's world . . . and, the world goes along for the story. That's the glory of reading Ms Peggy . . . she brings the absurd home, and you just want it to stay.
Adventurous Ladies
and Stalwart Men
and Stalwart Men
*** NOW PLAYING ***
*** AT THE BIJOU ***
Mom, Dad, I Met . . . Someone
~ from the far reaching realm of Peggy McFarland
~ from the far reaching realm of Peggy McFarland
The cab driver parked next to the white sign hanging from a wrought iron post. It creaked in the slight breeze. “Schuyler Animal Healers,” he read aloud. “You one?”
“Family biz,” Andy answered. His nostrils flared. The lingering onion and lunch meat, stale-sweat atmosphere intensified since the cab stopped. Andy lunged for the window button.
The cab driver glanced in the rearview mirror. Andy gulped for air. One hand fidgeted with the door lock and the other scratched his shoulder. This skin’s so dry!
“In trouble or meet a girl?”
“I met … someone.”
The driver smirked. “I get it. Not the type of,” he gestured air quotes, “’someone’ your parents expect.”
“Something like that.” Andy tapped his foot. If he only knew. The driver drummed his fingers against the dash. He peeked in the rearview at his immobile fare and deliberately turned the meter back on. He looked out his side window. “Is that an emu?”
“Probably a sore throat case. Dad’s the bird healer.”
“What’s wrong with the moose? Too horny?” The cab driver chuckled.
The radio crackled. “Got another fare. That’s Eighteen seventy-five, Dr. Doolittle.”
Andy paid the driver, grasped the door handle and then, reluctantly, stepped out of the vehicle. The cab peeled out almost before the door clicked shut. Andy choked on the sprayed grit. Soon, no more dirt.
A horse trotted to him and with a loud pop transformed into his human mother. An eagle swooped and batted Andy with the tip of a wing; its raucous screech drowned out a faint pop. Human legs skidded to a stop. After a sharp crack the rest of its avian body transformed into Andy’s human father.
“So how was spring break?” his father asked. “Meet any ‘Girl’s Gone Wild’?”
Before Andy could respond, his mother smothered him in a tight hug. Andy gasped for air. He wheezed, “Let’s go inside.”
His mother wiped her feet on the novelty “Finish Line” doormat before she led the way to the kitchen. As she washed her hands she nodded for Andy to sit and said, “Beauty’s lonely since her colt noticed fillies. He chases every twitching tail.”
She dried her hands and raised her eyebrows at her son. Andy stared at the Blue Seals Feed plaque decorating a door that led out of the kitchen.
“Don’t nag Rosa. You’ll get your grandchildren,” his father said. Rosa shook her head but smiled a toothy grin at her son.
Andy squirmed. And stalled. “Uh, why were you in eagle form, Dad?”
A skein of Canadian geese flew toward a golf course. The ‘endangered list’ years made them arrogant. They don’t believe people hate ‘em. I had to use intimidation to divert them.”
“Mom, Dad, I met … someone,” Andy blurted.
“Oh thank goodness!”
“Rosa!”
“Arnold, we both worry that his time spent as different fish has made him,” she nudged Andy’s arm before she added, “… aloof. So how’d you meet?”
“In the Caribbean. She’s sleek and graceful and, and … we’re soul mates.”
His father cocked his head. “Aanndd?”
“And … she’s a dolphin.”
He gushed out his explanation. “She was depressed swimming with tourists, so I became dolphin and helped her escape and … we connected.”
His mother snorted. “So, how’s this going to work? If you’re human and she’s dolphin?”
“I’ll – I’ll live as a dolphin.”
His father said, “You know you can’t do that. The longer you stay dolphin, the harder it is to change back to original human form.”
“I won’t have my son live as … as a creature. What about grandchildren?” His mother stomped her foot. “How am I supposed to spoil them? ‘Here’s your bucket of herring?’”
“You always say I can be anything I want.” Andy quivered under his father’s fierce glare. “I want to be a dolphin.”
“That’s not what we meant!” his father squawked. “You don’t have to be a healer, but use your talent! Become a deck hand! A magician! A, a … whatever! But not a PERMANENT DOLPHIN!”
“In a couple years,” his mother whined, “you’ll regret it, but you’ll have been dolphin too long to change back completely. Then what’ll you be? A merman?”
“I love her. This is what I want. The open sea, intellectual communication, freedom from city living …”
“ … and caught in a tuna net!” his mother interrupted, “You’ll be lunch!” She sobbed.
Andy shook ‘no’. “Ridiculous! Didn’t you teach me, look for inner beauty? She has it! Outer beauty too. The cutest little bottlenose …”
“Okay Flipper,” his mother spat, “since you brought it up, what about sex?”
Andy squirmed. “Er, that’s pers …”
“Well, it’s called animal needs but it’s human! You’ll look dolphin, but ….”
“Dolphins have sex for pleasure too.” Andy added, “Once you rub fins ….” His face burned.
His father strutted around the kitchen and rubbed his bald head.
“Dad, sure I can be a bass or a goldfish, but they don’t need healers, not like birds and mammals. With ‘Chtkh’ …,” Andy clicked her name, then realized his parents couldn’t speak dolphin. He stood.
“If you want to meet your future daughter-in-law,” he paused to retrieve a brochure from his pocket, “tell an albatross to find me. Meet us here.” Andy dropped the brochure on the table. The resort offered “therapeutic swims with dolphins”.
“Mom, Dad. I love you, but I have to be with her.”
Andy strode across the room and gripped the doorknob. The plaque clattered against the door.
“Son, that’s the bathroom.”
Andy darted inside and flushed. When they realized what he was doing, his parents dashed to the doorway, only to see their son’s orange tail twitch down the drain.
Peggy wished to share a little background on her tall tale - er tail, which splashed out of a Writer's Digest writing prompt contest . . . and what better to appear with an epic of The Bathroom Monologues, than . . . *flush fiction*? (You had to see that coming down the pipes).
PEGGY: “After it didn’t win (out of 1500 entries) I took the time to beef up the word-count slightly in order to make it all a little clearer. I didn’t give up on this story, as it cracked me up every time I thought about the mother complaining that she couldn’t spoil her grandchildren, and the son saying his parents taught him he could be anything he wanted to be. Everyday Weirdness, with editor N.E. Lilly liked it and gave me a 24-hour turnaround between acceptance and printing. And now, Kate asked me if she could reprint it. I’m glad I stuck with this story.”
KATE: Aboard the Harbinger*33, Peggy has raised the bar (as well as drinking at it when Mike Whitney frets his guitar and croons his heart away in the Lizard Lounge - hey, he named it). Her heart’s there though, right on the starboard side midst the most raucous of our sailing wenches and scalawags. She no longer rolls her eyes since Goddess Mother Jeanette has put the kibosh on those kind of rogue movements, but the dash of her outspoken presence hones both wit and wordsmithery of crew. Truly Peg, it would not be the same voyage without You. Honoured we are for your timeless talents aboard Harbinger*33, sailing to its publishing journey of manifesting destinies.
KATE SMILES ~ Peggy McFarland stories will be discovered the more when her Twilight Zone of a terrifying tale is published within the collaborative tome, Harbinger*33, soon to soar.
~ Absolutely*Kate and shored’up readers to be
9 comments:
Nothing fishy about your tail tale Peggy. True*Love always splashes well in the final scenes, and proves it's never done for the halibut. You details and innuendos were splendid -- "chasing tail", the Finish Line door mat, the cabby letting the meter run, the "Flipper" crack from Mama Rosa. You had to have fun writing this one, laughing at yourself all the way to ... the bathroom.
I so loved this piece when I saw it in the summer. Truly am honoured you had it showcased AT THE BIJOU along with the logical tie'in to the genesis of John's. This harbingers well.
~ Absolutely*Kate and the staff of The BIJOU
Well, that made a splash! Great again!
“How am I supposed to spoil them? ‘Here’s your bucket of herring?’”
One of the funniest lines I have read in ages!! A story full to the bream of goodness!!!
Peg, that last line cracked me up. This was a delightful tale/tail.
it's deja vu all over again~the post is well worth the reprint, and the comment needs to be made.
kudos, peggy.
(is it irony the word verification was mesuffer?)
I loved this the first time, and even more the second. Fun and quirky, I like to think you serve your drinks that way.
I love your daily fictional tweets and recommend all to join the fun.
Great write, Peg.
This is the first time I've seen this and I truly loved it. So funny on so many levels and yet to familiar. Excellent. I will be connecting to your twits Peggy.
Thank you so much for the positive comments! and I'm thrilled to learn at least four people now read my tweetales!
Nice. today, not only did this go live here, but my winning story for a horror magazine arrived today! I got to see my name in print, on pages in a nationally distributed magazine! I'm tickled.
Such an imaginative and funny story Peggy! Congratulations on being published on real paper too!
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