For days, whenever there has been a lull in the conversation or activity, Gabriel will look at his sister with dancing lights in his eyes and say,
Didi. Remember the booby trap...? And then she shushes him, looks at me nervously, and whispers dramatically,
Not now.
Yesterday, now arrived. We were making
papier mache maracas; there is something about the associative, open flow of conversation that can happen when one's hands are busy. I had been singing El Canario, from
Nueva York, over and over, and for a reason I cannot fathom my children found this annoying. They told me they were going to punish me if I kept singing. I told them I would go sing somewhere else, where children appreciated my beautiful voice.
Gabriel (in a mild panic):
Didi. The booby trap.
Frances: You're right. Mama, you're not going anywhere, because we're going to booby trap you.
Now the secret was out. I asked them how they were planning to trap me. They told me all the details. String, fabric, lots of knots I could never undo, and it would all go down in the kitchen. But don't worry Mama, we're going to make it so comfortable for you! They explained that they would be kind captors, and as long as I didn't sing, they'd bring me my favorite foods for dinner and make sure I had a cozy sleeping bag.
Wait, I asked. What do I need the sleeping bag for?
Apparently they planned to keep me in a string cage for "at least two days." Which isn't that long, especially when I would be treated so well! The fantasy was in full flight, and Frances especially fully believed all she was telling me. At one point she said, "Mama, it's a
nice punishment. In fact, it's just like childhood. People do things for you and you can't go anywhere."
(Just like childhood! In the midst of explaining her plans to Stockholm Syndrome-ize me, she compared my imagined dependent, captive state to
childhood. Fodder for parenting critiques of all sorts, be you anti-helicoptering, pro-free ranging, etc etc. Does she really feel like childhood is one long stay in a relatively pleasant booby trap??)
Well. I agreed to read the
New Yorker on the couch (an awful sacrifice) while they tinkered with the trap. When they called me in to see it, they were so proud!
But conflicts emerged almost immediately. If Mama was in the trap, who would go to the store? We were out of milk! And then Gabriel was suddenly ravenous, and needed crackers in the bread box that only I could reach. The two of them debated how to handle this until I quietly slipped under some string, got the crackers down, and then walked out the other side by swinging my legs over a waist-high layer of strings.
Cruel? Maybe. Frances was devastated. Her trap didn't work. But it was okay, because she had derived boundless pleasure from the planning and construction stages. I have a feeling this isn't the last booby trap I'll be walking into.
In other news, I've been a bit depressed about our summer garden, which is thirsty, hot, and overrun with mosquitoes and weeds. The failure is mine. But then this morning, inspired by the first real bunch of gorgeous blooms on the morning glory vines, I headed out with our new camera.
And suddenly the garden didn't seem like such a bust. When you become intimately acquainted with a flower, it's extraordinary construction and saturated colors seem positively miraculous. A watermelon blossom, a maverick morning glory, the curling cucumbers...this morning, those small successes were more than enough.