MY JOURNEY

MY JOURNEY
SOMETIMES YOU REALLY DO HAVE TO DO IT WRONG TO FINALLY GET IT RIGHT.

Monday, March 16, 2015


Bats in the Belfry
 

Scenario:  

Coworker departs for Charleston for back surgery; gone a couple of days. Returns and his daughter tells him that she thought his house had been broken into after finding the front door standing wide open. Police were called and with weapons drawn, conducted a room to room search. No criminal activity was discovered.  

And now for the rest of the story:

Evidence of intruders were detected in the attic…bats…they had been homesteading there undetected apparently.  

What do you do when you discover a critter infestation? You call an exterminator, right?  

Exterminator says hold onto your bats, these winged rats are protected in South Carolina. Protected…are you kidding? They’re bats. Normal pest control could not touch this. Okay, here at the beach they have the Snake Chaser so possibly they have the Bat Bouncer.  

Nope...friend was given a number and agency to contact. Confirmed a second time, he could not harm the bats that were living and breeding in his attic. Experts would be sent to apply netting to capture the invading species. All entry ways would be obstructed and a new doorway would be installed to funnel the bats in and out of the attic until all were captured or deterred from returning. 

Having back surgery…scary
Finding bats living in your attic…nasty
Removing bats from premises…priceless…not hardly…came with a price tag of $2100.
Leaving one’s front door open…a game changer…maybe even senior moment...

I grew up in the south and never heard anything about bats being protected. Papa and Granny lived in a four room mill house. Bats would often get inside the eves of the house. My grand folks would hear them squealing and fluttering about. Got bats, Who you gonna call?  

The T. Allen teenage version would be summoned by Papa. Armed with a can of Raid I would climb atop the roof and ease along the house eves to the pitch, both sides, spraying the bug juice underneath the eves. Bats don’t like the smell apparently. They’d exit by the hundreds so it seemed, flailing wildly about. Some would make crash landings on the ground. Papa manned with a bat, the wood kind, would batter her up, playing long ball with those falling short of the plate. Yep, Papa killed them dead. We could have been ruthless law breakers back then…that is if anyone actually cared about the extermination of bats. I was an accomplice…a willing partner in the crime…but you do what your papa asks you to do. Besides, it was sort of fun on top of that roof. Back in the day I walked in the shadow of the man I admired, no questions asked, just glad to be there. Bats, we didn't need no stinking bats..
 

Bat Facts:  

Most bats are protected under SC law and should never be maltreated or killed in any circumstance. Always use a reputable and industry specific animal removal and control company.  

Bats are among South Carolina’s most interesting and unique mammals and probably one of the most misunderstood. There are many myths concerning bats that cause some people to unnecessarily fear these mammals. Bats rarely, if ever attack people or "get tangled in your hair." In fact, most bats in the South Carolina are biologically useful mammals. They feed primarily upon insects, many of which are pests to agriculture. However, bats can be harmful pests if they take up residence within buildings. There are good reasons for not tolerating their presence. The scratching and squeaking noises they create are annoying. Their droppings and urine not only stain walls and ceilings, but also cause objectionable, persistent odors that may attract insects such as roaches and other bat colonies, even after the original colony is eliminated. Long-term accumulation of these droppings in attic spaces has been associated with the respiratory disease Histoplasmosis. This disease is caused by a fungal spore called Histoplasma capsulatum. Bat droppings that have decomposed provide an ideal habitat for spore growth and reproduction. And finally, there is a slight chance of someone contacting a rabid bat, although the great majority of house-infesting bats in South Carolina are NOT rabid.  

If you discover a bat colony living in or around your home, it is suggested that you act fast. The longer you wait to resolve a bat infestation problem, the more damages will incur and the more costly the restorations and removal will be. As soon as you suspect possible bat intrusion, contact a local animal removal company. We recommend you do not call an ordinary pest control company! Many pest control companies will advertise that they can remove and trap bats, but this seldom the case.  Pest Control companies specialize in bugs and most do not carry the proper licenses, equipment, and species knowledge to safely and effectively remove bats from a property. These pest control companies are known to use poisons and illegal bat traps to get rid of bats, and in accordance with South Carolina laws, this is far from the right way to remove bats.

I still say Raid goes a long way but that was then, this is now.

Friday, March 6, 2015


Crime Scene Investigation

One of the men’s urinals at work was cordoned off with red “Do Not Enter’ Tape this morning.  I glanced down immediately to make sure there was no chalked silhouette on the floor of a man holding his junk.  Could someone have been murdered in mid-piss? If so, what had been the motive? Criminals are not known for their intelligence in many situations. You hear that dumb crook news all the time over the airwaves.  A curse, the writer in me began visualizing a scenario…

Detective Moe Monday, Joe Friday’s cousin, notepad in hand, asked, “And you found the body, John?”

John nodded. ”I did, but not in the John, on the floor in front of the pisser.”

“Did you touch anything?”

“Felt for a pulse but I was wearing my rubber gloves.”

“So if there are any prints, they won’t be yours, right? Do you always wear rubber gloves?”

“What are you getting at, Detective? Am I a suspect? Should I contact legal counsel?”

“I don’t know John; do you have something to hide? You were the one wearing he rubber gloves. What’s that you’re holding?”

“A plunger, I was contacted about a blockage here.”

“Looks like it could be dangerous. Did you use it? Did you recognize the caller?”

“No I didn’t”

“You didn’t use it as a weapon or you didn’t recognize the caller?”

“I really should call a lawyer, shouldn’t I? Aren’t you supposed to read me my rights?”

“Right…do you know the victim?”

“I’ve seen him in here a time or two; not that I was glancing over the partition or anything like that. I mean…sometimes you just look without really thinking. It’s like you tend to look at a woman’s boobs before you look at her yes.  What are you scribbling in your notepad, Detective?”

“Just taking your statement as given…do you suffer from any envious infatuations, John?”

“All hype…I mean...NO…I’m comfortable with who I am!”

“Do you know the identity of the deceased?”

John gulped, teetering on a bout of hyperventilation. “Yes…name’s Derrick. We work out at the same gym. I mean…I don’t know him personally.” 

“So you have seen him at this gym?”

“I wasn’t looking, not intentionally…the showers are for gym members…just a mere coincidence we were showering at the same time and it was steamy at the time, real foggy I’m telling you. I really couldn’t see that much. I should call a lawyer.”

“How long have you known the deceased, John?”

“I don’t really know him, I’m telling you. I’ve just seen him a few times. I don’t mean that the way it sounds. I’m happily married.”

”How am I supposed to think it sounds, John?”

“I’m just a custodian. I can’t help seeing what I see while cleaning the bathrooms. Hey, I reported finding him, didn’t I? That should count for something.”

“Are we keeping count now, John? Did you have a score to square? Do you clean the showers at the gym?”

“No, I just shower there.”

“Is there something wrong with your home shower?”

“I didn’t do it. I’m telling you the truth.”

“Just a moment ago you said you did. Which is it?”

“Which is what?”

“Did you or did you not shower at the gym with Derrick?”

“I did. No I didn’t. I mean I did shower but I didn’t actually shower with him. We were just in the shower at the same time.”

“Mere coincidence, John?”

Sweating profusely now, John continued his fumbling downward spiral. “I’m innocent, I tell you. Looking doesn’t make me a murderer. It’s human nature sometimes. It doesn’t mean a thing. Talk to my wife. We’ve been married for almost twenty seven years. We have four kids, one boy and three girls.”

“Did Derrick and your wife know one another, John?”

“What has that got to do with me and Derrick?”

“Did your wife know about you and Derrick and the shower incidences?

“No…I mean…there were no incidences…just us in the shower.”

“Are you sure about that, John?”

“Sure about my wife?”

“Sure about the shower…John…when was the last time you saw Derrick in the shower?”

"It was…wait a minute…I am contacting a lawyer. I don’t like where this is going.”

“And just where is it going, John?”

“Detective Monday, we’re done here,” said Quincy, the coroner, nodding and smiling at John. 

“It’s not what you think,” whined John.

“What are we suppose to think,” asked Detective Moe Monday.

“Best guess, the man had a heart attack, but I’ll know more after the autopsy. Take care, Moe.”

“Thank you Quincy. John, I’ll contact you if I have any more questions,” winked Detective Monday.

Well…it could have gone down like this or maybe it was just a busted urinal…

Tuesday, March 3, 2015


Perfect Pair, Nice’uns in their Day 

Things come in pairs for a reason. You need both to complete the set. One is typically not enough without the other.  Try wearing just one shoe all day. While pants and underwear are often referred to as pairs, they equal just one item a piece, not two. Hats and shirts for instance; you wouldn’t wear a pair of hats or shirts, would you.  Doesn’t exactly roll off your tongue, does it? Gloves come in pairs but so do a pair of glasses. Makes you want to scream if you really think about it.

New House Rule: When doing the laundry and one shy of a pair of socks show up in the dryer, leave the one sock on the dryer until its matching pair shows up. It seems easy enough to digest if you maintain low expectations. Soon there are three pairs of pair-less socks resting on the dryer. None match the other so mixing and matching is not a viable option; that is unless you decide to become a trend setter and raise the fashion bar.

Question: Are you sure both of the socks entered the washer and made a similar trip to the dryer?

Yeah, maybe, sort of…I wasn’t really paying attention. Matching them up and/or pre-counting is not part of the equation. Check and balances happen after due process of the cleaning and during cycles. Can a sock exit the drain line? I have no proof or evidence to support it. Facts, give me the facts.

Plausibly Deniable:

Black holes, worm holes, time warps or parallel dimensions could hold the key to the mystery. These theories don’t hold up in court though. Why don’t these phenomena snatch up other articles of clothing? I for one am not missing any pants, shirts or underwear.  Towels, sheets nor wash clothes ever vanish into thin air. Does this mean that the entity only has an insatiable appétit for socks or is the hole too small for other objects to pass through? Process of elimination, the washer or dryer is guilty until proven innocent.   Either that or we’re back to black holes, worm holes, time warps or parallel dimensions. Days have passed and searches haven’t revealed the location of those missing in action. Sock disappearances are the perfect scenario for episodes of In Search Of, America’s Most Wanted, Myth Busters, and Stranger than Truth or Finding Big Foot and My Other Sock.

Observation: Why is it always those socks that perfectly match a specific pair of pants that go AWOL? Both pants legs are in once piece, even thought the dryer has this uncanny ability to turn one or both inside out. What’s with that? Same thing happens to shirts. Landry devices, possessed or possessing a superior intelligence; possibly they are even extraterrestrial life forms.

Is it possible that Captain Kirk from the Star Trek’s Enterprise is having socks transported on board, but if so, why not beam up the pair, Scotty? Maybe our socks are being traded to Klingons. Miss matched foot apparel deters from an ugly puss of a face, cloaking equally ugly feet. Sometimes you just have to reach for the stars when seeking explanations.    

Explanation: Maybe this is nature’s way of culling the thread worn and hole riddled socks. The weak are supposed to be weeded out to make for a healthier herd. Not buying it, one surviving sock contributes nothing to the quality of other socks residing in the ole sock drawer.

Corporate Intervention: Each pair of socks is designed with a unique genetic code and an embedded expiration date. When the pair reaches their life cycle, one dissolves or disintegrates. This is a sure thing insurance policy for sock manufacturers, guaranteeing the customer will initiate a new purchase.

 I Don’t Know: Someone or something is obviously responsible for the missing socks. I don’t Know Who did it is the pat answer.

Easier Solution to the Evil: Category…socks for $200…take the pair, please, the complete pair each time; not one from each. Oddly, have you ever had that happen before? I can never ever remember both pairs of the sock going missing while washing and drying a load of laundry. You would think that at some point it should happen. Possibly it has. Think about it. Would you really pay any attention if the pair disappeared? One there, one not is usually the tip-off there is something rotten in Denmark. Sure, eventually you might notice the pair missing but you would never blame it on the laundry eaters. You’d shrug and think they’d eventually show up, maybe in another drawer.

Prevention through Innovation: Staple, tie, affix each pair together before allowing them to undergo the vicious, merciless process. Just as I got my entrepreneur inventive juices flowing, a quest to design and develop such an item, patent it and then make a fortune, I inquired through Google first. To my shock, several items existed on the internet to do just that. I might just have to purchase one of these options, a way to preserve my sanity and a save matching socks. My gut tells me that the same ones responsible for stealing them probably came up with the solution.  Remember radar to apprehend speeders and radar detectors to beat the system and detect those hiding in ambush.

Make a Joyful noise: Not to worry, the Calvary is on the way. I’m going to bite the bullet and buy some of those new fangled sock clips. A fine pair mine will make, nice’uns anchoring each foot once again. Real men never discard socks until the holes appear above shoe level or underwear until the elastic is shot and it ends up below our butt cheeks inside our britches making us have that commando feeling. Underwear, another story…don’t even get me started.        

Monday, March 2, 2015


improvise

[im-pruh-vahyz] prəˌvaɪz/





Saturday, February 21, 2015


Bully on Board

THE STORIES

The Big Yellow Kid Transporter

The Bully Frog

Man is My Very Best Friend, Isn’t He?

Comic Relief

Tale of the Why Monkey

Beggars Can’t be Choosey

 

Under the Big Top

 

Preach to the Choir

 

Would You Like Fries with That?

 

CYBER-RAMA-MANIA

What’s Bugging You Now?

The Ostrich Effect

Senior Citizen Discount

Bully on the Beach

Hog-Pig

Nursery Rhymes with No Reason

Friday, February 20, 2015

A story from the collection of 'Bully on Board' book, not yet published:


The Bully Frog

Tom the toad buried himself in the cool mud and under the cover of the giant white mushroom. It was welcome shade from the day’s hot sun.  Tom couldn’t bare the hot sun and had to find somewhere moist and cool to stay during the day. His rough brown skin was spotted, like giant freckles. He looked fat but toads were just shaped like that. A skinny toad was an unhealthy toad. Tom was good at hide and go seek. If he didn’t want to be seen, he wasn’t. 

The last sunrays were giving way to shadows. Nightfall was near. It was Tom’s favorite time. He began to move, to free himself from his hiding place. Tom was hungry. He always woke form his day of rest, ready to eat.  He wasn’t a very picky eater. Most any bug, grub or worm would do. If it jumped, flew or crawled, it was food. That was bad news for any of the critters that lived nearby or were just passing through. Tom hardly ever met one he didn’t like. He slept and then he ate. His life was pretty simple. Tom was lazy. He didn’t like hunting food. He would much rather just sit here and wait for food to come to him. Most of time some stray would wander by and Tom could nail it with his long sticky tongue. Gulp and gone. 

Tom didn’t really have many friends. He had eaten most of them. He couldn’t help it. If it moved it was food. It did have one pal. Terry the turtle lived in the nearby pond. He was Tom’s only friend because he was too big to swallow. And Tom had tried it once. Terry had thought it was funny. Tom had nailed Terry with his tongue but then couldn’t budge him. They became friends that very day. Terry didn’t eat toads either. Both were safe. Terry was a pond cooter and unlike Tom, he liked basking in the sun on a rock or log. He was mostly black with a little yellow blended in and he ate water plants.

Terry rested on a big flat rock near where Tom had been buried in the mud. He tried to stay quite during the day to allow Tom to get his beauty rest.  The rest wasn’t helping, thought Terry. Tom was anything but pretty. He watched as Tom dug himself out. He could hardly wait. Tom was always good for a few laughs. He was so witty. Terry liked spending time with Tom, more so than with all the other pond cooters.  Life with other cooters was just too boring and the same thing every day. Rest in the sun, swim in the water, eats water plants then back in the sun and repeat it again. Terry wanted adventure and Tom talked good stories. He wasn’t sure if they were truthful or not, but he liked listening to his tales. 

“Hey Tom, good night to you, did have a good day sleep?”

“I slept like toad in the road.”

“That wouldn’t be a safe place for a toad to sleep, Tom. I should know. Crossing one of those roads with those things that zoom by can be scary. I’ve seen too many cooters mashed flat. No, stay out of the road, Tom the toad.”

“I suppose I could have said I slept like a bug in a rug but that just makes me hungry.”

“You should be a vegetarian like me.  I say yuck to eating bugs. “

“You don’t know what you’re missing, Terry.”

“I do, Tom. You’ve gobbled down some of my best six and eight legged friends. They say you’re a big ole fat bully and are mean to boot. Remember, you even tried to eat me once.”

“I was just cleaning your shell, Terry. It gets quite nasty in that mucky water you live in.”

“Funny, you only offered to clean it that one time.”

Tom changed the subject. “Have you seen any creepy crawlers about?”

“Now Tom, I told you those little creepy crawlers are my friends.  You did promise to leave them alone while I was here.”

“Indeed and so I shall,” said Tom, looking about for any signs of movement. “So how was life on the sunny side today? Did I miss anything?”

“Jake the water snake passed through. I think he was just fishing. He didn’t stay long. I heard a new frog croaking on the other side of the pond.  He must be a big ole boy by the sounds of him. All the other frogs got real quite.”

“Who invited him to our pond?”

“Maybe he didn’t know he needed an invitation, Tom.”

“Never mind, I will handle him when the time comes.”

“See Tom, that’s why the six and eight legged ones think you are a bully; that, and the fact you eat them.”

“I sorry, Terry, I can’t live on algae and blades of grass like you.  It takes more to support this beautiful body of mine. I need protein.”

“We can’t help who we are, Tom. We are all different. We shouldn’t be judged by what and who we eat. I know that.”

A sound of a fly buzzing caught Tom’s attention.  “What’s that behind you, Terry?”

Terry stretched his neck to look around his shell and Tom’s tongue shot out in lighting speed and snatched the fly. He closed his eyes as he gulped it down. Terry turned and shook his head, shamed by what Tom had just done.

“I heard that, Tom. I know what you just did and you promised me.”

“Did what, what did you think you just heard, Terry?  I didn’t do anything.”

“Tom, you or a bully and you are in denial.”

“I am not. I’m just hungry. It takes a lot of protein to keep this body of mine in tip top shape. Unlike you, grass and weeds doesn’t do it for me, too much fiber.”

 I can’t deal with this again. I’m going so you can be yourself. I’ll warn my little friends to stay clear of the side of the pond.”

“Have a good one, pal. Don’t eat anything I wouldn’t, but wait that would cover everything you eat.” Tom the Toad chuckled, uncaring about Terry and his concerns. A toad had to do what a Toad had to do and that included eating any bug that came his way.  It was a mere fact and nature’s way, thought Tom.

The night drifted by and no more six or eight legged menu items came his way. Maybe just sitting here and waiting was not the best idea. Tom was not a hunter but maybe a mere change was needed. Location, location, location, they say. Tom hopped his way along the edge of the big pond to the other side, a place he had never been.  It was spooky not being on his home turf. No bugs buzzed the air, not even a skitter. Even the crickets were silent. Tom was jumpy, but toads were jumpers so that should not worry him.

A splash in the water caught Tom’s attention.  Tom saw a swirl in the water. Something very big had just made that splash. Tom ran his tongue around his mouth, hungry for what it might have been. If he could snag it with his tongue, he would surely be his next meal. Tom had no table manners when it came to stuffing critters inside his mouth.  He was just hungry enough to eat most anything right now, the bigger, the better.

Two eyes broke the water surface in the water.  Tom could see the top of what looked like a green head, a very large green head if it was indeed a head. Tom’s eyes might be too big for his belly if this was indeed his very next meal. Even he might have a tough time cramming it in his mouth.  Tom had no pride. He would try if he could get close enough to it. Toads were fearless and ferocious.  Tom puffed up so he would look larger and meaner.  Size did matter in his little world.  Tom jumped closer to the water’s edge and kept a close eye on his next meal.

Two huge eyes stared back. A green head was much wider than Tom the toad’s body. If he could have jumped backwards, he would have.  His meal plan didn’t seem like such a good idea viewing it this closely. Pond water rained on Tom. The owner of the two eyes leapt to meet and greet him. Tom the toad didn’t feel much like the big bad eater of six and eight legged critters right now.  Tom gulped and no gazed up at the biggest and greenest frog he had ever seen.  He was four times his size. It was smiling, just like Tom smiled before he ate what came his way.

A deep voice boomed out, “What do I have here at my lake’s edge?”

Tom blinked and then took a deep breath. “I am Tom the toad.”

“I’ve never seen you before, Tom the toad. What brings you to my lake?”

Tom had always thought of this as his pond. It might not be a good idea to tell this frog that, he thought.  “I was shopping for supper.”

“Funny, I was doing the same,” bellowed the big green frog. “I don’t often introduce myself to supper, by my name is Bully.”

“You are a bull frog, aren’t you? We could be cousins,” said Tom, hoping to make friends quickly. “Relatives don’t eat relatives, now do they?”

“Indeed, I am a bullfrog but I don’t think we are kinfolk. What type of meal were you looking for at my lake, Tom? ”

“Just the usual six or eight legged kind,” replied Tom. “What do you like to eat, Bully?’

“Where do I start? The list is so long. Let’s see. I eat insects, most any variety or leg count, fish, turtles, snakes, bats, birds, snails, crawfish, salamanders, and why yes, frogs, toads and tadpoles. As you can see, I have an iron clad stomach and can dine on most anything. One can never be too picky, don’t you agree? I bet you never pass up anything either, right?”

“I try hard not eat friends. Timmy, my friend says only a bully would do that. ”

“You’ve never tried to eat this Timmy friend?”

“He is much too large for that. He’s a turtle.”

“Ah, he is too large or you would have tried, I see.”

“Does this Timmy the Turtle think you to be a bully, Tom the toad?”

“Sometimes, I suppose, when I eat his six legged or eight legged friends. How is a toad to know who is friend and who is food?”

Bully leapt a little closer, towering over Tom the Toad. “It is sad, those who know no better, call others such terrible and hurtful names, Tom. We cannot change who we are, now can we?  If it moves, we eat it, right, Tom?”

Tom had a sudden urge to remain perfectly still. “Maybe we shouldn’t eat friends. Would you honor me by being my friend, Bully?”

“But we just met, Tom. How do we really know if we like each other? I must confess. I don’t have any friends. They seem to just vanish, poof, gone, like a mere morsel of food. You are such a plump little toad aren’t you, Tom. You don’t miss many meals, do you?”

“Toads give you warts. Did you know that? Toads taste yucky too, so I’ve heard.”

“Have you ever tasted toad, Tom?”

Tom dodged that question. No good could come out of a yes or no answer. “I suppose, I should be hopping along, back to my side of the pond, I mean, lake.”

“No, please stay. We have so much yet to share, Tom. Tell me. Do you see me as a bully?”

Another bad yes or no question, thought Tom.  Bully shifted his weight, leaning closer. Tom had seen that move before. He used it.  This was not good. “A bully would try to scare others or call them names. A bully would do harm.  I think you are not like this, now are you?”

“Do I scare you, Tom?”

“Oh no, not me, we are frog and toad, family, like I said.”

“I have not called you any names, now have I, Tom?”

“No, you have not.”

“I have not harmed you in anyway, have I, Tom?”

Tom thought, not yet but instead said, “No, you have not.”

“I go by Bully because I am a bullfrog. Bully doesn’t mean I am a real bully, now does it, Tom?”

“Bully the bullfrog; it has a nice ring to it to me, just like Tom the toad and Timmy the turtle.  I really should go. It is getting late after all.”

“What do we really have but time, Tom? Is your time running short?”

            Yes, thought Tom, but he didn’t say it. “I must find shelter, a cool place, for the hot summer day will be here soon. Toads do not like the day’s sun and heat.”

            “You should do like me, stay in the water where it is cool all day long. Come in, try it. It will make you all wet and slippery, very nice.”

            “I should really get hopping, Bully. It is a long way back to my side.” Movement is bad, thought Tom, or it is for six and eight legged critters. It might be bad for four legged ones too. He should have stayed on his side of the pond.

            “I am so sorry. I have such terrible manners, Tom.”

            “Why would you say you are sorry? You have done nothing to be sorry about, Bully. You have been very nice to me.”

            “Oh but I am sorry, Tom. I have done the most terrible thing.”

            “What could you have done that is so terrible?”

            “It is not polite to play and toy with my food. Those are such terrible table manners, don’t you think?”

            “I have not seen you play with any food, Bully.”

            “Kind for you to say, my food doesn’t usually support me like you do. That will make you more special to me. You will forever be my favorite.”

            “You are going to eat me, aren’t you?”

            “You must be one of those new Smart Meals, Tom.”

            “If you eat me, it will make you a bully. You don’t want to be a bully, do you?”

            “Bullies too need to eat, Tom. It’s nothing personal. Besides, it will be your and my little secret, now want it? Please to even think about hopping away. I am a far stronger and better hopper, I assure you.”

            “Can’t we talk about this?”

            “Do you and those six and eight legged critters talk it over, Tom? Timmy the turtle was right. Toads and frogs are bullies.  We have no friends because we eat them.  I have had no regrets, have you, Tom?”

            Tom said nothing. He was doomed, no way out of this mess, just another meal for this big bullfrog. Reap what you sow, said Timmy.

            “I must admit, Tom, it is nice to talk over dinner first. It makes it more meaningful.  I’m not sure all what have been as cordial as you.”  Bully closed his eyes, which meant he was about to leap and strike.  He croaked loudly instead then swirled and jumped into the lake.

            Behind where Bully had sat was Timmy the turtle. “I took your advice, Tom. I tried something besides plants. I’m not sure I like frog legs though. Does it really taste like chicken? “

            “I’m not sure. I have never tried it. Thank you, Timmy.”

            “That’s what friends are for, Tom.”

            “Timmy, I can’t eat plants like you but I will promise you, I will not eat your friends anymore. I’ll ask if they know you, first.”

            Timmy nodded. “See you on our side of the pond, Tom.”

            “No bully is a good bully,” said Tom the toad, hopping to see another day. Tonight he was no longer hungry.  He had learned a valuable lesson. Meals had feelings too, six or eight legged.  It takes a four legged one to know this.