Flashback Friday: The Baffling Case of the Missing Socks
Flashback Friday is a monthly meme that takes place on the last Friday of the month.
The idea is to give a little more love to a post youāve published on your blog before. Maybe you just love it, maybe itās appropriate for now, or maybe it just didnāt get the attention it deserved when you first published it.
Thanks to Michael dāAgostino, who started it all, there is a solution ā join Flashback Friday!
Just join in whenever you like, repost one of your own blog posts, including any copyright notices on text or media, on the last Friday of the month.
Use the Flashback Friday logo above, as designed by Michael dāAgostino. Link it back to host Jemima Pett (there's a linky list!) and add a link to your post in the comments on Jemima's post (or mine, or any other participant's).
Since Friday is my flash fiction day, I've been sharing stories from the archives. This one dates back to 2013, and since it is a mystery featuring my heroine, JJ MacGregor of Pismawallops Island, and since JJ has a new book coming out next month, you can enjoy seeing the sleuth in action.
The Baffling Case of the Missing Socks
A Minor Domestic Mystery
āMom! I canāt find my socks!ā
There are few words more chilling to the heart of a mother on a schedule. No use ignoring him, though. Iāve known Brian almost 16 years, and he doesnāt give up.
With a sigh, I hit āsaveā and turned from the computer to call up the stairs, āThere were a dozen pairs in your sock drawer yesterday.ā
āI mean my new running socks. The ones Coach brought me from Seattle.ā
I began the standard litany. āAre they in your gym bag?ā
āNo!ā
āDid you leave them in your locker?ā
āNo! Mom, this is important. We have a meet today in Sedro-Woolly!ā
Brian runs the 1500 meter race for the Orcaville High track team. His socks bear a life-and-death importance to him on meet days. This was serious.
I stood up, preparing myself for a desperate search for the truth even as I made one last effort to avoid the crisis. āDonāt you have any others?ā
āNot like these. I need the new ones for the meet!ā
I hauled myself up the stairs, muttering to myself about useless males. Brian stood in the middle of his room, gym bag in one hand and book bag in the other, looking frantically about him.
I looked at my watch. We had about three minutes before we had to leave for school. Iād meant to spend those minutes finishing an article I was writing for the new āRural Urbanitesā magazine, but this took precedence.
āFinish getting ready. Iāll look.ā
Brian dropped both bags and looked frantically around. āWhat? Iāve got my uniform.ā
āHair.ā I pointed. āAnd teeth. And shoes would probably be good.ā
He clutched at his head and disappeared into the bathroom.
A few years ago Iād have wasted my time quizzing him about where heād last seen the socks. Iām wiser now. Itās one of the mercifully few ways Brian resembles his father: Allen canāt find things either. Happily, Allen's not my problem anymore. Brian is.
I began with the sock drawer, rummaging hastily through the jumble of socks and underwear to see if Brian had really looked, or just glanced at the mess and given up. The new socks were neon green, which made it unlikely that even a guy could miss them. Still, it was the most reasonable place to find a pair of socks. Ninety percent of the time, when a male canāt find something, it is right where it should be, only under something else.
I made that statistic up, but itās true.
From the sock drawer I turned to the other drawers. Nothing. Then the desk. I was starting to feel the pressure of time slipping away, and I left an even worse mess than Iād found, and still no socks.
Moving to the bed as the clocked ticked down to doom, I vowed Brian would clean his room that very day. Well, maybe the next day. Heād be late coming home from the track meet. Any time the team ran anywhere but at home, it was a major expedition for the same reason I couldnāt just run out and buy Brian new socks: tiny Pismawallops Island is a 40-minute ferry ride from everything.
No, the honor of Orcaville hung on the keen detective abilities of JJ MacGregor, and I wasnāt going to let the team down.
I grabbed the bedcovers, yanked them back to expose the interior, and shook. Brian needed clean sheets, but he wasnāt sleeping with the new socks. A few garments fell to the floor as I shook out the covers, but not the socks.
I swept the bedding back into place as I heard the bathroom door open. It was crunch time, and I had to come through.
As Brianās footsteps sounded in the hall, I dropped to my stomach on the hardwood floor and stuck my head under the bed.
āMom! Have you found them? Weāve got to go!ā
I jerked when he yelled, banging my head on the underside of the bed so hard the bed moved.
āUnspeakable excrescence of a cursed hunk of furniture,ā I began, then stopped.
I reached out an arm, grabbed the glowing bundle that dropped from behind the bed, and back out from under before accepting Brianās hand up.
Of course, when he saw the socks, he dropped my hand and grabbed them like a drowning man clutching a life ring. Or a lover clutching his true love.
For a moment I saw red, which went well with the stars I was still seeing from cracking my head. Self-centered little beast, just like his father!
While Brian stowed the socks and gathered his belongings, I climbed more slowly to my feet.
Then he turned again. āYouāre the greatest, Mom! A real Sherlock Holmes.ā There was not a hint of irony in his tone.
I could almost feel my deerstalker hat and Inverness Cape as I followed him down the stairs. Not so much like his dad, after all. Brian had an actual sense of gratitude, as well as a sense of humor.
āCome on, Mom!ā Brian called again. He already had the car keys and was leading the way out the door.
The last misty hints of the deerstalker faded away as I climbed into the passenger seat, and the greatest sleuth on Pismawallops Island became once again a driver training instructor. I tightened my seat belt and crossed myself, muttered three āom manisā and followed it up with āNow I lay me down to sleep,ā just to cover all my bases. A real sleuth can face any danger, but not always without blanching.
©Rebecca M. Douglass, 2018
As always, please ask permission to use any photos or text. Link-backs appreciated!
As always, please ask permission to use any photos or text. Link-backs appreciated!
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