“Doc,” said Loretta, from the cash register, “phone call
for you, Hon.”
“Here? Okay…” Doc
walked over and
picked up the phone.
“This here Doc?” said the caller. “The Doc what lost his
squirrel?”
“Uh …” Doc looked around for help. There was none. “Yes.
Yes it is.”
“Found your dang squirrel here, Doc. That reward thing
still good?”
“Well … yes.”
“Five dollars and a quarter, right? Now is that cash or
check? I don’t
take no checks.”
Doc is looking all around and looks wilderness-type lost.
“Cash I
guess.”
“Only thing is, Doc. Need to be sure this is your
squirrel, right? So
can you describe him for me?”
“He’s … gray.”
“All gray squirrels are gray, now, ain’t that right? How
about any
distinguishing marks? Tattoos?”
“No tattoos.”
“So far so good. Now you said in the ad his name is
Chipper. Well, I
called him Chipper and the son of a gun bit me.”
“He did?”
“What I mean to ask here, Doc, is did you and your
squirrel get along?
No squirrel problems? He looks like he needs a square meal to
me. You feed him
good?”
“What?”
“You know … like Squirrel Chow free choice, or did you
put him on a nut
ration? I mean, he ate like there was no tomorrow. Dang near ate
up the whole
five dollars and a quarter rewardmoney in squirrel food.”
Steve and Dud walked back into the café, then, with the
cell phone still
at Dud’s ear, and the laughing began.
“You were right all along, Doc,” said Bert. “In winter,
everyone can use
a good hoax.”
Doc paid for the coffee.
----------------
Brought
to you by Ol’ Max Evans,
the First Thousand Years by Slim Randles. From the
University of New Mexico
Press.