the negotiator again

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The Negotiator is a tough nut to crack.

BANSHEE BOY: Tee Tee.
ME: Yes?
BB: Please to not tink I eem moved by your do-inks.
ME: Uhmm …… I really don’t know what you meannn ……
BB: Please. Tee Tee. Let us speak de troot here.
ME: Uh, sure.
BB: I see you do-ink dat ting you are do-ink.
ME: You mean, looking at you?
BB: Tee Tee. No.
ME: You mean …… taking your picture?
BB: Tee Tee. Please to not pretend vit me.
ME: But —
BB: I see you do-ink dat ting vit your lips.
ME: What thing?
BB: Vhere you mek your lips become like de blubber.
ME: Blubber?
BB: And vhere dey move vedy fast.
ME: Oh, really? Hm.
BB: And vhere you mek de veird noise.
ME: There’s a noise?
BB: Yes! Tee Tee. Please speak de troot! You are tryink to mek me lef.
ME: “Lef”?
BB: Yes. De “ha ha ha” ting.
ME: Oh, I see.
BB: Yes! Tee Tee! And I eem not moved by your do-inks, hokay?
ME: Sure. Okay, Banshee Boy. Whatever you say. We’ll see.
BB: No! Ve vill not “see.”
ME: We’ll see if we’ll see.
BB: Please to mek sense, Tee Tee.
ME: That’s not how I roll, kid.
BB: Vell, den, I vill say dat ve vill see if ve vill see if ve vill see.
ME: All righty. So. Isn’t it your bedtime now?
BB: Yes. I find I grow veary, Tee Tee. Please to carry me to my crib.

the negotiator

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BANSHEE BOY: So. Tee Tee. Ve meet agin.
ME: It seems we do.
BB: Vhat is dees offer you heef for me?
ME: Well, it’s like this, booboo. Your butt smells and you need a diaper change.
BB: Dis, I do not beleef.
ME: You’re 3 months old. Your sense of smell is underdeveloped.
BB: Vhat is counteroffer?
ME: What?? I don’t have one. You’re supposed to have one. That’s the offer: diaper change or rash.
BB: Is rash like cruddle kep on my head?
ME: Kind of, except it’s on your butt.
BB: Vell, den. We heef a deal.
ME: The elastic pants are coming off, bub.
BB: What feex you have for Polish sausage arms?
ME: That’s God’s job, kid.
BB: Mebbe I can negotiate with heem?
ME: Yeah. Good luck with that.
BB: You geef me much to tink about, Tee Tee.
ME: Great. I’m covering up your woowoo so you don’t pee on me.
BB: Vedy gud. Hokay. Dis is part vhere I scream and cry.
ME: Yeah, me too. (pause with screaming) Okay. All done.
BB: Gud. Until next time, Tee Tee.
ME: Yes, until next time, booboo.

dad steps in

So the saga of Creepy Computer Geek continues. My dad emailed me. “He volunteered to come to your house to fix this, so I don’t understand why you brought the tower over here.” (Geek lives 5 minutes from my parents.) “Seems like that would have been a lot faster.”

So, as Lynne suggested in the comments of that post, I ratted him out to my dad in an email.

Now my dad is a man of few words. He didn’t ask me any further about it. He didn’t question my perception. His email in response simply said:

I will deal with him directly until this problem gets resolved.

Don’t you love that? Apart from the part where I’m a little narc, don’t you love that?

little games

I’m on the phone with Mom, walking her through something on her PC, which she essentially doesn’t know how to use and declares she doesn’t like. Now I’m a Mac girl, but I’ve learned my way around a PC of necessity, so I know I can help her with this.

I’m sitting at my desktop PC talking her through it. This is the actual conversation.

“Okay. I’m gonna walk you through this over the phone, Mom.”

“Well, why don’t you just come over and show me?”

“Mom, I can’t come over right now. Even if I could, it would take me 45 minutes round trip to show you something that will take less than one minute to do.”

“Oh. Well, my laptop isn’t even on.”

“Okay. Do you know how to turn it on?”

Reluctantly. “Yeaaah.”

She just wants me to come over.

“Okay. Turn it on, then.”

“Well, it will take a while.”

“I’m not going anywhere.”

We wait. Idle chit-chat.

“Okay. It’s on.”

“Great. Do you see the desktop?”

“What’s that?”

“Well, it will be your screen with different icons on it. Do you see that?”

“What’s that word you’re saying?”

“Desktop?”

“Yeah. What are you saying?”

“Desktop.”

“Spell it.”

“D-e-s-k-t-o-p.”

She is being deliberately obtuse. Her hearing is fine and her brain even better.

“Oh. So that’s what it’s called?”

“Yes. Okay. Do you see a start button or some kind of button in the lower left-hand corner?”

“No.”

“You don’t?”

“No.”

This isn’t possible.

“Hm. I have a green button that says “start” on mine. You should have some kind of button there in the lower left-hand corner.”

“Well, I don’t.”

This conversation is not actually about computers, you see. She really wants me to come over. My resolve not to come over instantly hardens to stone. I rub my forehead.

“Okay. Mom, are you sure the computer is on?”

“Yes.”

“What do you see?”

“It says Manila Firefox.”

She means Mozilla, but I let it slide. Oh, her eyesight? Also fine.

“Okay. So you see the little orange fox?”

“Yes.”

“So you have a window open?”

“What’s a window?”

“Let’s do it this way. Is there a red square with an X the upper right-hand corner?”

“Yeah.”

“Click on that.”

“Okay.”

“Did the thing that had the red square on it go away?”

“No.”

What??

“It didn’t?”

“No.”

“And you clicked on it?”

“Yeah.”

I don’t believe her, but I can’t tell her I don’t believe her. At this point, it would be faster to go out there. She either didn’t click on it at all or she did click on it and the window did go away, but she really wants me to come over, so she was less than forthcoming about the results.

“Okay. I’m not understanding how you don’t have some kind of button in the lower left-hand corner –”

“Well, I don’t.”

“– or how you clicked on the red X and that window didn’t go away.”

“Well, I still see it, Tracey.”

“Well, Mom. You have a very strange computer. I can see why you don’t like it. Is Dad there?”

“Yes.”

“Put him on the phone. Maybe he can help.”

Heavy sigh. “Okay.”

She doesn’t want the problem solved because that means I won’t come over.

Moments later, Dad’s voice.

“Dad, is there a button or a start button or something in the lower left-hand corner?”

Said like a “duh.” “Yeah.”

“Why did Mom say there wasn’t one?”

“I don’t know.”

That’s the only way my dad has stayed sane all these years — by not knowing the answers to most questions about my mom. He prefers blissful ignorance. I understand. At this point, though, I’m sure he really doesn’t know.

“Well, could you point it out to her?”

I hear him tell her. Then I hear her protest, “Well, it’s not green. Tray said it was GREEN.”

I can’t stop rubbing my forehead.

In less than one minute, I walk Dad through the process I started with Mom. Answer found, problem solved.

As we hang up, I tell him again to make sure Mom knows about that button, green or not.

I sit and rub my forehead for several minutes.

tee tee x 6

I will become Tee Tee x 6 at some point in the next 24 hours, I imagine.

SIL was induced this morning.

Banshee BOY is on his way!!

A boy banshee.

Yamahama.

rings

Our anniversary is coming up on Groundhog Day. It’s one of those multiple-of-5, kind of a big deal ones.

So I came up with this idea.

I thought I could keep it a secret from MB, but I couldn’t. Well, I could, but I actually couldn’t for practical reasons.

Back in December, I stumbled across this site for wooden rings. Sounds kind of weird and quaint and who but a hobbit would want something like that, right?

Oh, pippa. Not so fast.

Look at them:

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(Juniper heartwood with greyed maple interior)

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(A tapered Blackwood ring with narrow greyed maple inlays)

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(Hawaiian Koa Wood with birch interior)

(I like the simplest ones or the ones with the knots the best. Go check out all of his galleries.)

They’re pretty much breathtaking, don’t you think?

I went through all the galleries on this site, drooling over this man’s work. On New Year’s day up at my brother’s, I went through all the galleries again on his laptop, with Original Banshee sitting next to me. Every time I clicked on a new image, she proclaimed her approval or disapproval. Literally, before I’d even opened my mouth to render my opinion, she was making declarations loudly in my ear. Precious, you’re snuggled right next to me. It’s okay if you don’t shout. I promise.

We liked exactly the same ones every time. Exactly. Without me saying a word first. I’m beginning to think we’re more alike than not.

So, basically, all December, when I should have been shopping and decorating and baking, I was on that site, drooling and dreaming and pining for a pair of those rings. MB had lost his ring recently and he was a bit allergic to it anyway. My ring is a ruby ring — my birthstone — not a band, and I was suddenly jonesing to have matching or complementary wooden rings. It just seemed so “us.”

Really, all I wanted was to live in a hobbit hole, grow hair on my feet, and smoke pipes whilst wearing not some pain-in-the-ass One ring but a gorgeous, simple wooden ring.

That’s all I wanted.

But, sadly, I didn’t have the moola to purchase a pair of these rings and become a hobbit.

Then one day, a possible solution hit me.

Dad.

My renaissance man dad.

My tie-dying, rock-stacking, stained-glassing and wood-turning dad.

Dad could make the rings. Okay. True, he’s never actually made wooden rings, but I know two things for sure about my dad: He loves a project and he loves a challenge.

So I sent him a proposal immediately. He accepted. I offered to pay him. He refused.

Instantly, he became like a little boy about the whole project. He talks to me in excited tones about things like lathes and waxes and mandrels. He talks about thickness and edges. He talks about angles and degrees. I have no idea what he’s saying. All I know is he’s in full-on GO mode. It’s kind of adorable.

At first, he was so over the moon about it, he wanted to keep it a secret from MB. The ensuing conversation went like this:

“But Dad, MB lost his ring. I don’t know his ring size. How am I gonna get that secretly?”

“Just cut a piece of thread and wind it around his finger while he sleeps.”

“Dad, that’s not gonna work.”

“Why not? Sure it will.”

“It’s not very exact. What if he wakes up and sees me wrapping a string around his finger? Yeah, that’s not weird at ALL.”

“So what?”

“Okay, genius. What do I tell him if that happens?”

“I dunno. You’ll figure it out.”

“Oh, thanks. You know, I think I’ll just tell him.”

“Okaaay.”

And when I did, MB was over the moon about it all too.

Dad is using wood from a tree in my parents’ yard. I love that. I love that my dad is making them and I love that he’s making them from one of our trees.

The meaning in these rings ……… I can hardly stand it.

Tomorrow we have a “fitting” with our designer.

We are so excited.

the short little hall

There’s a problem at my in-laws’ house in the deep dark middle of nowhere.

That problem is me.

Well, really, it’s not just me. I don’t know why I’m heaping this all on myself like some glittering martyr. That’s really unlike me. So let’s spread this problem around more equitably.

Yes, the problem is me and the fact that it’s way too easy for me to see certain people not married to me in various stages of undress and, turns out, I really don’t care for that and that’s how I’m a problem, I guess.

It comes down to a logistics problem, really. Well, that, and a me being second generation Amish-by-association problem.

I blame it all on the room with the clawing tortoise in the drawer. This room, lacy and pretty to cloak all the scraping desperation, is at the end of a short little hall. If I stand in front of that door about to enter, my in-laws’ bedroom is immediately on the left, a bathroom immediately on the right. All these entrances and exits are separated by mere feet. Mere feet, pippa. And for me, that short little hall is all about feet. How there are way too few in terms of space and way too many in terms of appendages.

Lots of human feet. Taking up space. Doing things. At night.

This too-close door to my in-laws’ room is flung wide open at night while they’re sleeping. I have issues with this that I won’t get into here. There’s another door on the other side of their bedroom that they also keep open, a door that doesn’t border the short little hall, a door that leads to the kitchen and the other bathroom on the other end of the house, a door, sadly, they never seem to use at night. Basically, their bedroom has more than your typical number of bedroom doors, with everything wide open, lots of options for entering and exiting, and yet these options are not as maximized as one might hope, in my now-traumatized opinion. On top of that, all this free-swinging openness extends to all the doors to the house which are left unlocked at night so that any number of serial killers roaming about the deep dark middle of nowhere could have easy access to them in their sleep.

You see, they’re hospitable people, my in-laws. Well, sometimes I’m not sure if it’s genuine hospitality or an alarming lack of personal boundaries — I dither on this point — but their whole philosophy basically is “Come in anytime. Chat. Eat. Drink. Chat some more. Stay forever. If you’re so inclined, kill us while we sleep.” I imagine this is true of all the lock-shy neighbors in this trusting little town.

Oh, the small town hubris, thinking they won’t be bludgeoned by a hungry, thirsty, chatty serial killer!

But, eh, I don’t care about that. I got me some bigger issues. Cramped hall. Overpopulation. Open door with a view to the sleeping inlaws. I mean, serial killers are the least of my worries in the face of all that.

Besides, there’s the kicker:

My FIL sleeps in his unmentionables.

Look, I’m sure many FILs sleep in their unmentionables. That’s fine. Sleep in whatever you want, FILs. I’m not a sleepist.

However.

The presence of another woman in your home who is not your wife and who is, in fact, married to your son means you need to sleep in some pajamas — or better yet, clothes — for, oh, 4 days out of the year. I’m sorry. You just do. That is the rule. The law. Didn’t Obama just sign that bill? Well, if he didn’t, he needs to get on that, Crackie, because recently, in the short little hall with too few and too many feet, my FIL and I shared a late night, half-dressed moment.

And that just ain’t right.

The fact that I know my FIL sleeps in his unmentionables is something I should not know. I can honestly say that in all our years of marriage, it’s never come up in conversation with MB. Or my FIL. I’ve never inquired or even thought to inquire “So, hey, Dad, what do you wear when you sleep?” because it’s just icky and creepy and wrong. Since I had no interest in ever learning this tidbit through simple conversation, I think it’s safe to assume I would never ever want to learn this tidbit from firsthand experience. But it seems God and my FIL’s bladder had other plans for me.

MB and I had gone to the local 2-screen multiplex to see a movie. We came home around 11:30. While MB headed towards the kitchen, I headed down the short little hall towards the lacy bedroom. At that precise moment, the door to the bathroom opened and my father-in-law, all 6-5 of him, stepped into the hall, resplendent in nothing but his tighty whities.

It was dark in the short little hall. Those tighty whities lit up the place like a torch. The world went very white then very black. I froze in place. There was nowhere to go except backwards and I didn’t want to seem rude or as if I were retreating in blushing terror from his virtual nudity, so I just stood there. Like a statue. A frightened deer. He, in turn, instantly clamped his hands over his nether regions and stood there too. Neither of us fled because we didn’t want to acknowledge that this was an urgent flight situation, which it obviously was. No, flight would have forever labeled it as something horrible and embarrassing that you speak about only in whispers and never to each other, which it obviously was. So there we stood, two frightened deer in the short little hall, one clothed, one in tighty whities, in a standoff of courteous horror. Hours passed. The rooster crowed dawn. We didn’t breathe. We didn’t speak. The only sound was the distant clawing desperation of the tortoise in the drawer.

Finally, my father-in-law, an unfailingly courteous man, spoke to me, his large hands still clamped over his nether regions like a little boy.

“Soo ….. Trace-ums, how was the movie?”

Oh, sweet baby Jesus. There he was, the world’s nicest man, standing there in his tighties asking how the stupid movie was. I wanted to die. I stared at the wood plank floor. My body was aflame with embarrassment, but I managed to choke out an answer.

“Uhm …… good, good. It was good.”

I nodded my head like a crazed woodpecker.

“Oh, that’s good, Trace.”

“Uh-huh.”

I just nodded and nodded and stared at the floor. I cursed the very existence of the short little hall. But he spoke again — the world’s nicest man — and that night I learned that politeness is much more knee-jerk to him than even modesty, which I suppose is kind of sweet, despite feeling that my formerly useful brain was turning to utter swill from the wrongness of this late-night encounter.

“Well, good night, Trace-ums. See you in the morning.”

Oh, Lord. You mean I have to see him again?

“Yes, uhm …. good night.”

At that, he ducked into his bedroom and I bolted into mine, hot with embarrassment, and plopped onto the bed waiting for the irregular pounding of my heart to either stop or hurry up and kill me. In the silence while I crossed my fingers for death, I heard the soft insistent scraping again, and suddenly, I understood him, that tortoise.

And we were one, the tortoise and I.

The short little hall was now my own dresser drawer and I would never stop clawing, clawing, clawing to get out.

snippets (one rated hard r, but it’s married hard r, so that’s like g, right?)

So I’ve put up a warning before my married hard R snippet. Seriously. I put the post up and some random new person I shall call Slappy emailed me about it, so I took the post down, but now it’s back up with a “warning.” (Happy, Slappy??)

Maybe Slappy — and Slappy’s husband — would be happier if Slappy engaged in said married hard R behavior.

Just a piece of advice from me to you, O Slappy dearest.

********

BABY BANSHEE: (shaking her little butt for me) Do the bootie dance, Tee Tee!
ME: (shaking my butt with her) Okay.
BABY BANSHEE: (bending over into the perfect number 7) No, Tee Tee! Like this!
ME: (bending over into the perfect number 7) Okay.

*******
I finish describing a really boring dream to MB. There is nothing I can say to make it more thrilling.

HE: (a yawning silence)
ME: I know. I’m literally embarrassed by my subconscious. I woke up and was like, “Seriously? That’s the best you can do??”
HE: It’s like dreaming you were writing a note reminding yourself to buy stamps.
ME: I know. What’s the point? Why bother dreaming?
HE: Really. At least awake there’s TV.
ME: Well, thanks, hon.
HE: Sure.

********
MARRIED HARD R!! ALERT!! DON’T READ!! WE’RE GODLESS ANIMALS!!

We are walking out to the car. I suddenly start making huge ridiculous “O’s” with my mouth. MB sees me. I smile and keep going.

HE: What are you doing?
ME: Exercising.
HE: What?
ME: For later. You know.
HE: Oh!
ME: Yeah. Happy birthday, baby.
HE: Better stretch it bigger.
ME: Hahahaha.
HE: I’m serious.
ME: Hahahaha. I know.
HE: I love you, baby.
ME: Oh, I know.

********
MB and I have strict regulations on whom the other is allowed to marry/not marry in the event one of us cacks it in an untimely fashion. We review these regularly just for, you know, a little bit of threatening fun. There are beyond-the-grave consequences for stupid choices here, you see. Sometimes, there are specific names involved; sometimes just a type.

This, after a long list of women from deep dark middle of nowhere (aka his hometown) who openly pine for MB:

ME: Basically, you have to find yourself a fresh hag. No rehashes.
HE: So no rehags?
ME: Hahaha. Right. No rehags. Get a new hag.

********
At the bookstore. A dad and little boy — about 5 — who was really exploring his testosterone.

BOY: Whey I grow up, I want my OWN family where I’M the dad!
DAD: Okay.

Later:

BOY: Daddy, do you think there are man ladybugs?
DAD: Well, calling them manbugs would sound funny. They’re ladybugs.
(Uh, Dad? You’re not listening.)
BOY: Well, there SHOULD be manbugs! I WANT there to be manbugs!

Me, too. You go, kid. Fight the power. Hooray for men!

********

ME: We’re gonna have our special date this month, Banshee.
ORIGINAL BANSHEE: Yay! What are we gonna do?
ME: Ohh, let’s see. I think we’ll sit on a wall and spit, how’s that?
OB: Tee Tee!
ME: It’ll be awesome.
OB: TEE TEE! I don’t wanna sit on a wall and spit!
ME: Really?
OB: REALLY!
ME: I’ll bring green beans.
OB: Well, I like green beans.
ME: I know. So do I.
OB: But I still don’t wanna sit on a wall and spit!
ME: I’ll bring broccoli.
OB: I like broccoli.
ME: I know. So do I.
OB: (torn) But …. but …… I STILL don’t wanna sit on a wall and spit!
ME: (heavy dramatic sigh) Okaaaaay.

the zombie trampoline

It is the Sunday before Halloween and we’re at my brother’s house to watch the Chargers commit seppuku yet again. The game hasn’t even started, but that’s what we say to each other: “Hi. How are you? Come in. Watch the Chargers kill themselves.” We are very positive in our negativity, which is nice, don’t you think? Positive people make the world a better place.

Within 2.79 seconds of our arrival, The Banshee Sisters — Original 6, Baby nearly 3 — insist I jump on the trampoline with them. No problem. I love the trampoline. I could jump on it for hours and hours but I worry that my boobs would bounce off my body or prematurely stretch themselves into irreparable “knee shooters” as MB respectfully calls old lady boobs. Of course, I share none of this with The Banshee Sisters because it’s not their problem now, is it? Although if they take after Tee Tee, it will be some day.

So we climb through the net onto the trampoline. It’s crisp and cloudy. The air is moody grey, my favorite kind of day. I start jumping, but by my second jump, Original Banshee is channeling her inner despot, barking her critiques.

“Tee Tee! You’re going too high! You’re too close to me! Don’t chase me! Or tickle me! Don’t be scary! No smoking on the trampoline! Recycle your bottles and cans! Bring your seat backs and tray tables to their upright positions!”

I mean, when one is a 3-and-a-half foot dictator, one must be very thorough, because that is all one has.

I smile down at her, keep jumping.

“Uh, Banshee, next time, do you think you could you post these rules on the trampoline net? Tee Tee can’t remember all 653 of them.”

“Tee Tee! I am serious!”

“So am I.”

Smile. Smile. Jump. Jump.

Finally, I jump too close to her on purpose, bouncing her in the air about 6 inches. You know, just to jar the tyrant out of her.

“Tee Teeeee!!”

Oh. Oops. If one can say oops for something one did on purpose.

But suddenly she’s up and jumping and laughing like a kid instead of barking like a despot, for a few minutes anyway. Until the unfortunate return of The Little Dictator. I love her to bits, but the kid is a Shirley Temple movie on steroids.

“Tee Tee, you need to be a zombie.”

“I do?”

“Yeah. Doesn’t she need to be a zombie, Baby?”

“Yesh,” breathes Baby Banshee.

Baby is sitting on the perimeter of the trampoline, little fingers smushed in her mouth, little legs folded under in that rubbery inhuman way that only a toddler can do. Her big moon eyes go up down up down as she watches me jump. These days, Baby Banshee is a shy and whispery girl, even around family. Outside of her parents and Baby Banshee, she will hug only Younger Nephew and me and we had to really work for it, had to earn the reluctant hug privilege.

Still, for such a reticent child, she has an opinion on the zombie thing.

“Yesh. Tee Tee needs to be a zombie.”

I shrug.

“Okay.”

I assume a zombie stance. Stare down at Original Banshee. Start to slowly make my moaning way towards her. Baby Banshee giggles.

Original Banshee does not.

“NO, Tee Tee! That’s not how you do it!”

I moan out my words.

“Suuure, it isssss.”

“NO. NO, Tee Tee! First, you need to suddenly look sick. Then you need to fall down and die but make it look good. Then you need to get up real slow and realize that you’re a zombie. Thennnn you need to make me a zombie so I can do all that stuff and make Baby a zombie. Oh, and you can’t chase me.”

“I can’t chase you?”

“No.”

“Have you met me?”

“What?”

“I’m Tee Tee. I chase you.”

“You can’t.”

You know, I can’t work this way. I mean, who does she think she is? Fritz Lang?

“Okay. GO, Tee Tee!”

But I don’t go. I question.

“So, Banshee, how will I make you a zombie if I don’t move towards you in some way?”

“Well,” replies little Fritz, “you can get me, you just can’t chase me.”

“But zombies are pretty slow. What if you’re faster and I have to speed up and it looks like I’m chasing you?”

“Well, I’ll go really slow.”

“Gee, thanks, Banshee.”

Her eyes glow with a mania beyond her years.

“Then I’ll be a zombie, Tee Tee! And I’ll make Baby Banshee a zombie! Okay, Baby?”

“Yesh,” nods Baby Banshee with a small smile.

Just then, Uncle Beloved crawls through the net onto the trampoline.

“So, what about your uncle?” I ask.

“No. He can’t be a zombie. He has to stay there. You can bite him if you want.”

I brighten. “I can?”

“Sure.”

MB interjects. “No, you can’t.”

“Hm. Too bad. Your niece said I could. I’m starting to like this game.”

“I’m not,” says MB, rolling his eyes.

But the dreaded Fritz will have none of our playful banter and cracks her whip again.

“Okay! Tee Tee! Do the zombie thing!”

I try to remember her directions. I do my best to “look suddenly sick.” I do my best to “die and make it look good.” Then I do my best to “realize” I’m a zombie — an astonishing act of self-awareness that you wouldn’t think zombies capable of — and begin to make my lumbering zombie way towards Original Banshee.

“NO, Tee Tee! NO! You didn’t die right! You fell too fast!”

“I fell too fast?”

“Yes!”

“Well, I don’t know how I can fall any slower, Banshee.”

“You can! You have to do it again!”

“I do?”

“Yes!”

“Can’t I just bite Uncle Beloved?”

“No!”

“Can’t I just bite you?”

“NO!”

I sigh, quietly. I don’t want Bossy von Blondenstein to hear me.

But at that moment, a blessed reprieve. The Banshees’ mother calls to us from the window.

“Pizza’s here!”

MB bolts from the trampoline, but even the promise of greasy cheesy sustenance can’t deter Little Fritz from her artistic vision.

“Okay, Tee Tee. When we’re done with pizza, we can come back out here and do the zombie thing again. Okay?”

Whatever, Fritz.

“Uh, sure, Banshee.”

“Good.”

“Uh-huh,” I say and basically sprint towards the salvation of pepperoni pizza, the Banshee ever on my heels, rattling off more scene notes to the back of my head.

You know, I really need to call my agent.