FIRST LIE
By Richard Banks
Mother
had told Charlie to always tell the truth and that bad things happened to
people who told lies. He assumed that she held fast to this advice until one
day Granny arrived wearing a new hat full of brightly coloured feathers that
would not have been out of place in an Indian headdress. Her contention that it
was new seemed unlikely as it was well known within the family that Granny did
her clothes shopping in charity shops. What happened next was definitely a lie.
When asked what she thought of the strange object on Granny’s head mother
replied, without a flicker of guilt, that it was the best hat she had seen that
year.
Charlie
took a sharp step back, expecting his mother to be struck by lightening, but
nothing happened. He watched her take another sip from her tea cup and waited
for her to choke on a tea leaf, but nothing happened.
At
the end of Granny’s visit mother saw her to the front door saying that she
hoped Granny’s friend, Mrs Geraldson, was recovered from the flu and to thank
her for the delicious cake she had made for the church fete. That was another
lie, the cake was mouldy, and mother had thrown it in the bin.
These
were lessons well learned and when Charlie broke a window in father’s
greenhouse he was able to say without a twinge of conscience, “it wasn’t me,
Dad, it must have been some other boy”.
The End.
Copyright Richard Banks
Nice story, shame about the cake...
ReplyDeleteI’m suddenly transported back to when I was ten. My dad made me pay for the window
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