Lori and Danny, our best friends and neighbors, are over this morning to help us finish unpacking.
Iâm pretty sure Lori must have completed some covert training last night because she seems to be off basic patrol and is now on the F-Bomb Special Forces.
I accidentally move the coffee table on my toe while trying to roll a rug out under it, and, well, it really hurts. So, maybe I let a tiny little F-bomb fly.
Quietly.
Lori glares at me. âJade, really?â
âFine. I hurt my toe.â
She smiles at me.
But, later, when I hammer my fingerârather than a nailâinto the wall, I might say the F-word again.
Because, ouch, it hurts.
Apparently, I am not skilled at home improvement.
Lori scowls at me and covers her stomach with her hand. âSeriously? Did we not just talk about this?â
âLori, I just hammered my, uh, finger into the wall, and it hurts. Shouldnât you be offering me some sympathy?â
âUm,â she says, âI really donât think is appropriate either. Can you picture sending a child who says fricking to preschool?â
No, I canât really picture that, so I come up with a better idea. âOkay then, how about, I hammered my finger into the wall?â
She scowls at me. âDo you really think thatâs better? Effing? Are you kidding me? You canât say that either.â
So, I do what any sane person with a hammered finger and a sore toe would do at this point. I become extremely frustrated and throw my hands in the air. âWhat the freak am I supposed to say then?â
She glares at me.
âWhat? I canât change the way I talk overnight. I also find it very hard to believe that youâve stopped Danny from swearing. Heâs the freaking king of the F-bomb!â
âWell, Iâm working on that,â she says with a slightly maniacal grin. âSee the rubber band?â
I glance over and notice a skinny blue rubber band around Dannyâs wrist. âUh, yeah?â
âEvery time he cusses, I snap him, and it hurts.â
âIsnât that like husband abuse?â
She laughs at me.
âWhereâs your rubber band?â
âI donât need it. I can control myself.â She digs a rubber band out of her pocket and dangles it in front of me.
And Iâm like, âNo.â
And sheâs like, âYes.â
âThis is bullshit, Lori. Sorry, but it is.â Iâm gearing up for a big fight, but Danny stands behind her, begging me with his eyes to let her put the rubber band on.
And Iâll be damned, but I do it. I must be a really good friend.
Later, heâs like, âJay, come help me figure out where you want this ⦠blah, blah.â
I donât even hear what he says.
He might have said , but when we are both upstairs, he goes, âThank you for not arguing with her. After the whole bleeding thing, seriously, Jay, no stress for her, okay? I think she gets some wicked little pleasure out of snapping me with the band. Like Iâm in the pregnancy boat with her or something. She has had a time with it. Constantly sick and then the spotting that scared us to death. So, just try.â
âFine,â I say, hanging my head in defeat.
He gets his Devil Danny grin. âCall her every dirty name in the book if you have to, just do it all in your head.â
âIs that how youâre surviving this?â
âWell, that, and Iâm being trained.â
âDanny, Iâm sorry. I love her, but this is bullshit.â
He leans over and snaps the rubber band on my wristâhard.
âOww! That hurts!â
He grins at me. âYeah, I know.â
âThen, why did you do it?â
ââCause you said bullshit.â
âOh, really? So did you.â I snap him back.
Pretty soon, Danny and I have our rubber bands off and are shooting them at each other, having a rubber-band war. I manage to nail his arm just as heâs trying to duck behind the kitchen island.
But then the Fun Nazi comes upstairs. âWhat the hell are you two doing?â
Danny and I share a smirk.
âUm, Lori, do you need a rubber band, too?â I giggle.
âNo,â she says. âWhat I need is for you two to grow up.â
Then, we all just laugh. This is sort of ridiculous.
After she goes back downstairs, Danny gets the sneaky look again and pulls a little flask from his hoodie pocket.
âOh, youâre bad,â I say.
âHow do you think Iâm surviving this?â
We do a shot together.
Lori is downstairs, fluffingâwhatever that meansâmy bookshelves.
Phillip ran to get us some pizza since we have zero food in the house.
So, instead of Danny helping me maneuver the mattress pad and sheets onto our big, new bed, we are back to our rubber-band war.
Every time he hits me, he makes me do a shot. Iâve gotten hit a couple of times, but heâs a good friend, and he has been drinking with me.
But no food and a few shots is not a good idea.
When Phillip gets home with the pizza, I quickly scarf some down.
It tasted great, but now, Iâm feeling a bit nauseous.
Next thing I know, Iâm throwing it all up, and I donât feel well.
At first, I thought it was from the alcohol, but Iâm feeling achy and feverish. I must have the flu.