We went to the five and dime first, to buy Mom’s Christmas
Present. Then we would go to the
hardware store. My dad and my brother
Walt, even at age six, were no strangers to hardware stores. The smell of a hardware store made their eyes
glassy. At age three, Mel could see over
enough counters and into enough glass cases to be mesmerized himself.
At the counter, as I paid for the gift, Walt asked if he and
Mel could start for the hardware store.
Dad said yes, and they went off, steps ahead of us. Dad and I left the dime store and went next
door to the hardware store. Dad looked
around briefly. No boys. He took my hand and we commenced an aisle by
aisle search. No boys. Back to the dime store. Ask all the clerks. Other shoppers alerted. Up and down the
sidewalks. I was hustled into the car and dad went home
for help. Neighbors set out in cars to
search. Neighbors came to stay at the
house.
A couple of hours later, two little boys came in the back
door. Very tired and very cold. Especially the three year old. As the searching neighbors checked in they
were given the good news, and by midnight the cold, dark adventure was
over. To be recalled in later years as
the night the boys walked home from Temple Square.
The next summer we spent a weekend in St. Louis. Dad was at a convention there and mom drove
the family down for the weekend and to bring dad home. We stayed at the Roosevelt Hotel. We went to the St. Louis Zoo.
You know what happened.
We walked for miles and looked at everything. We were watching a sea lion performance when
they went missing. First parents scan
the near horizon. Then the far
horizon. They snatch the hand of the
remaining child and go into full search mode.
Park authorities are notified.
Mothers cannot remember if they put red T shirts or blue ones on
children that morning. And, why has
every mother in the park dressed her little boy in a colorful, striped T shirt! We walked more miles, accompanied by a zoo
ranger.
Suddenly, in the sea of little boys, mom saw them! Sitting on an amphitheater bench, watching an
elephant performance. They thanked the
ranger and hauled me down the aisle. The
boys looked up, then back at the elephants.
We sat down behind them and waited for the show to end. At least, Mom said, they didn’t walk home.
Lucky, lucky advertures.
ReplyDeleteshould be adventures
ReplyDeleteThat brought back memories of the day we took our 3 kids to The American Adventure Theme Park (now derelict) child no 3 quietly took off in just that way... he was completely unperturbed when we eventually found him... he wasn't lost, he'd just wanted to look at something different.
ReplyDeleteLovely story Joanne. When our daughter was six, we were on holiday in Cornwall and she went missing on the beach. One minute she was there, the next she was gone. We searched for hours and finally found her at the Missing Children's' tent way down the beach. I can imagine the nightmare your parents must have gone through.
ReplyDeleteThe same evil lurked back then as it does nowadays. It just wasn't spoken of then. There is nothing like the panic you feel when you cannot locate your child!
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like your mom took those things in stride which is probably a good thing with two such adventurous boys. I think every parent has gone through an episode like that. Happily, it usually turns out OK.
ReplyDeleteLost ours once in the mall and nearly had a heart attack.
ReplyDeleteBoys will be boys :-).
ReplyDeleteThis made me laugh. Well, sort of. I've never lost my daughter anywhere,but just the thought of it makes my stomach clench.
ReplyDeleteI grew up in a small town in Iowa. When we went to the city to go Christmas shopping one year, I deliberately got lost and went up to a sales person and asked her to help me find my mother. I had heard that they announced your name over a loudspeaker when that happened and that is exactly what happened. The sales clerk said loud and clear over the loudspeaker: "Will the parent of Maria Lastname please come to the house and garden section to claim their child?"
My mother was horrified, but I was thrilled. I GOT TO HEAR MY NAME OVER A LOUDSPEAKER!
My son really needed a leash. I can't tell you how many heart attacks that child gave me running and hiding...giggling. He thought it was funny.
ReplyDeleteMy brothers not only wandered astray, they headed off in opposite directions. Which must have caused imminent heart failure often.
ReplyDeleteI lost my daughter in a theme park, fifteen minutes after arriving and going on only one ride. She was just five. I can still feel the panic in my body while recalling this story. We found her at the lost children's station and immediate left the park. I had paid over $100 dollars for myself and two of my daughters, but I couldn't get out of there fast enough.
ReplyDeleteIt seems your brothers had a little of the wanderlust in them, wandering off like that. Did they continue to wander off in later years?
ReplyDeleteThanks for visiting. I'm allergic to wasps, too. I could not find your email so here I am.
ReplyDeleteGreat post by the way.
Your poor mother.
ReplyDeleteOh, I know that panic to a quiver! There is nothing worse! wonderful story!
ReplyDelete