It's Cubby's Birthday!
It’s Cubby’s birthday today.
He’s 22. Born April 12, 1990
I still remember the first time I saw that date. It was on a white plastic nametag, attached
to his cage at The Kid Store in the Holyoke Mall. Even now, I remember what a close-run thing
it was. I almost didn’t buy him.
“You can’t get a kid in those places,” my friends had
cautioned me. “All those mall stores
sell are kiddie mill babies. They’re
awful, the way you take them home and they just go bad. I've seen them turn crazy, and gnaw their own legs off. It's horrible. You want one from good natural
stock. Go to a small breeder, out in
the country.“ I had that advice in mind
but he looked so cute wiggling his little paws in the window. I’d heard my buddies’ warnings loud and clear
though, and I grilled the salesman.
He was very enthusiastic, to say the least. “Sir,” he said, “this is the best baby we’ve
gotten here in a long time. Look how perfectly
formed he is. Watch him wiggle those
ears. Isn’t he irresistible? He even smiles when you poke him in the
belly!” I had to agree, but I was still
cautious.
I picked him up, hefted him and tossed him in the air. “Careful, Sir!” The salesman was
indignant. “These babies are
expensive! If you drop him you’ll have
to buy him, even if he’s damaged.” Money
was tight in those days, and I set him down gingerly. We took a few other babies out and compared
them. He was the obvious winner, but I could not let on that I was smitten. I
had to seem dispassionate and logical.
“What about kiddie mills?
Is that where he came from?” I challenged the salesman. “Sir!”
The fellow seemed indignant though I was sure he’d heard that question a
hundred times before. “The other store
at the far end of the mall sells kiddie mill children. We sell good country raised kids here. Go down there and look. I’m sure you’ll see the difference. Even now, all their kiddie mill babies are
howling and biting in their cages. Look
how sweet and placid this one is, in comparison.”
“He’s perfectly formed too.
Two arms, two legs, eleven fingers and ten toes. Just a stub of a tail. Half those kids at the other store are
missing a leg and one has two heads.
Who’d buy a baby like that?” I
thought of my friends in the circus but I kept my mouth shut.
Meanwhile, The Kid crawled around on the carpet. All he needed was a name and a home. “Isn’t he precious?” Two couples had appeared. As they talked, I began to worry that one
might pluck him from the floor and carry him to the cash register while I stood
there undecided. There’s nothing worse
than a bidding war. I’d see them myself
at the car auctions.
Thinking fast, I made up my mind. This baby was clearly one of their better specimens and much better
behaved than any of the other units. Only
the issue of cost remained. “That’s no
problem,” the salesman said. “We have twenty percent off on baby packages today. All you need to do is buy a baby and two items of clothing, or a case of food and something else for him. Best of all, we can
charge your credit card in twelve installments, interest free!” What else could I say? I put a case of peach flavor Feed-A-Tyke and a bag of little OshKosh trainman's overalls in the cart and took him
home. “He’s going to be a great kid,”
they all told me. “He’ll do every chore
you give him, and then some. You just
wait and see.”
I brought him home, and watched him grow. Chores came and went, and still I waited. In the blink of an eye, he was walking around
and babbling nonstop. But he would not
work on command. “Go shovel the
driveway,” I told him that first winter.
He just giggled and rocked back and forth on the floor. I put him in a snowsuit and carried him
outside. I handed him a shovel. “Let’s go,” I said. In response, he just swung the shovel around in circles, making
shapes in the snow and howling with excitement.
I never did get that driveway shoveled. Finally, I bought a snowblower. Pour the gas in, pull the handle, and it
clears snow. No talking back. One by one, my dreams of child labor were
replaced by machines. Meanwhile, the kid
got bigger and ate more food. He took my
things and claimed they were his.
Eventually, he grew up.
Now he lives on his own, and denies any of this ever happened. “I’m a hard worker,” he says. Look here, and you can see his latest
creation:
Here's another one:
I’m very proud of him.
And this is only the beginning . . . Read the whole story in my newest book, The Best Kid in the Store, coming in January from Crown. Woof.
And this is only the beginning . . . Read the whole story in my newest book, The Best Kid in the Store, coming in January from Crown. Woof.
Comments
I wrote a poem about my son and would be honored if you'd read it and let me know what you think:
http://kevinrouthpoetry.blogspot.com/2011/05/connor.html
And happy birthday to your son, too.
Woof!
I should learn so that I can better predict when they plan to walk all over my homework and sleep on my laptop.