The Case of the Missing Books

So it’s a Friday morning in the recent past. My oldest, The Solicitor (TS), is zipping along, getting ready to ride his bike to school with some friends. On Fridays, his uniform requires a tie. It’s also the Pink Goth’s birthday. (PG is my middle child, a girl. If you want to know why we call her that, read this post.)

Somehow we have set a standard of three cake events for birthdays. One at school (usually cupcakes), one at home that night (decorated by siblings) and one at the party (requiring licensed characters and/or creatures). I don’t know how this standard came to be, I only know that it is now sacred and deviating would be like the changes of Vatican II, only more contentious.

Once I get TS out the door, I’m planning on piling PG and Turbo (my little guy) into the car, stopping by the store (I’m buying instead of baking this time. Sue me.) for cupcakes, dropping them off, then zipping over to TS’s school where I’m scheduled to serve pizza for lunch. Good thing I’ve gotten all my movie reviews done early.

Full morning. But I’m supermom. I can do it.

Of course, it’s never that easy. Disaster strikes. TS can’t find his tie. Anywhere. Together we tear the house upside down. No luck. I am looking in the most unlikely of places. Under my bed. Kitchen cabinets. Even the drawer where it should be put away but of which it has never, ever seen the inside. Nothing.

At T-minus three minutes till school starts, I tell TS to go without and take the fates the gods send him (or his teachers).

He rides off and I rush the other kids to the car. But not before noticing that TS HAS LEFT HIS BOOKS AND HOMEWORK ON THE TABLE!!

I pick up his stack of books and work and shove them into his backpack. I have to get a forklift to do this. They weigh a lot.

I drive the younger two to school. Turbo mentions something about his backpack. I don’t have time to check it. I shoo them out and off to a day full of wonder, exploration, and learning.

I drive to TS’s school, where I jump out. But the backpack with his heavy books isn’t in the car. Nowhere. I swore I put it in. Two other moms watch me as I circle the car repeatedly, peering in windows. I’m new here. My reputation can’t afford unexplained car peering. I give a jaunty wave. A little laugh like I know what I’m doing.

I’ll just swing back by the house after dropping off cupcakes and circle back to the school. Again.

I rush to the store. TS calls me. “My teacher is MAKING me call even though I TOLD her MOM KNOWS that I’m not wearing a TIE.” I tell him see if he can borrow one and I’m bring his books just as soon as I zip back home and get them. “What books?” he says, “I have my books.”

I’m so confused.

I drop off cupcakes, kiss my girl, serve pizza, banter with TS’s class while trying not to embarrass him (a nearly impossible task, but I pull it off. I think.) and return home to crash.

After school, TS tells me the books he’d left on the table weren’t needed at school that day. That’s why he left them. Duh. So much for mom to the rescue.

But it’s not until Turbo gets in the car that all is revealed. I had shoved TS’s books into Turbo’s backpack and sent him to school with 35 pounds of Jr. High work. He found this quite amusing.

Mystery solved. The kids were all fine. It was mom who was creating problems.

Again.

Epilogue: We found TS’s tie in a pocket in his backpack. He’d had it with him at school the whole time. Isn’t irony delightful?

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About RebeccaQZ

Rebecca is a movie critic and TV critic. She watches TV and movies so you don't have to. A member of the Washington DC Area Film Critics Association and the Television Critics Association, she writes for Patheos.com, Comcast.net, SixSeeds.tv, and a variety of other outlets. Her other job is caring for three school-aged children.