The dread cookies have arrived.
They are delicious, I will give them that. But they irk and
annoy me, and there is a mountain of them in my garage.
I don’t like selling things. I never liked selling things. I
am clearly not the cadet in the family, but unfortunately 11 is a bit young to
be pounding the pavement solo. Sending them out alone is against the girl scout
code or something, whatever. It’s not like
I looked it up. cough.
So last Sunday, my girl and I geared up and set out to hit
the streets and pimp some cookies. It was slow going, but I can’t explain all
the details about the pesky obstacles we faced on the road to our success,
because although 11 is too young to make sales on the street, it’s too old to
be made fun of on your mom’s blog. It wouldn’t be right for me to tease my
sweet girl about the complicated schema of observable details that rendered
seemingly random houses unapproachable. Let’s just say that she skipped many
houses.
After almost two hours, sales were slow and we were tired. I
was the sherpa lugging the wagon, which was supposed to be growing lighter as the
boxes flew into our wealthy neighbors’ hungry pieholes. Our neighborhood is hilly with high curbs, and
after a while I got tired of moving to driveway ramps to cross each street and
I just started blowing over the curbs, much to my girl’s despair. I reassured
her that the wagon could take it, Jidoo built that wagon and Jiddo built things
strong.
It was tempting to call it a day and head toward home, but
that would mean having to find another way to rid ourselves of the mountains in
the garage. We talked about it as we approached a crossroads, then as we agreed
to soldier on, an old man and his little dog turned the corner towards us.
My girl got right down on the ground to frolic with the
mange beast, and I chatted with the man. He told us that the dog had been
abused and was nervous, but of course my girl was gentle and sweet and won his
little rat-sized heart right over. The old man commented about the cookie mobile,
not for its wares but for what lay beneath. I told him that my dad built the
wagon when my first child was born 14 years ago. He nodded his appreciation, noting
the clever design and fine touches. It was a nice moment. We all smiled. As we
started to move along, he said he’d like to buy some cookies, but then he
realized he didn’t have his wallet. He pointed up the hill to where he lived,
told us to circle back that way and hit him up. We moved on.
My girl asked if/why I was crying.
I miss my dad.
We got to the end of the block and looked back at that hill,
we wondered for a minute if he really cared whether or not we came back. By the
time we finished wondering, we were at his house and could see him in the
window, watching for us. He came out and bought a few boxes, wished us a great
day.
We felt renewed, and pushed on for a while longer before
heading back toward our street. As we approached the last turn, a car pulled
over and the driver rolled down the window to talk to us. She was an older
woman, she said she’d been waiting for someone to come and sell her cookies,
her son was coming over and her neighbor’s wife was sick and he was afraid he’d
missed his chance to buy some. We didn’t quite know what the heck she was
talking about, but it seemed really important to her that we agree to come to
her block. She gave us her address and insisted that we write down her neighbor’s
phone number. They lived at the big cul de sac at the very bottom of a very
large hill, so I told the woman that we’d drive over with cookies for her and
her neighbor.
We went home, did our Sunday thing, I sat outside in the sun
and got sucked in to my book and started dinner. There was some drama with the
garage door and we had to call a repairman to protect the valuable mountain of confections,
and yada yada yada. When it was started to get dark, I remembered the promise
we made, and we gathered up some inventory and got in the car.
We found the lady’s house, and she was expecting us. It was
weird, her whole family was there and the son she had been so concerned about
providing cookies for informed her that the next door neighbor also had a
mountain in her garage, so….awkward. They were cool, though. They bought a
bunch of boxes and pointed us in the direction of the neighbor she had
mentioned. There was some really boring back story she kept telling about how
he though it was the last day to get cookies but it was really the first day to
get cookies and the dogs were yapping and there were so many people and finally
we got out of there.
The neighbor was on the next block, they had adjoining back
yards. We found the house and the door sprung open the second we knocked. He
had been waiting for us. We walked in and saw his wife, who the lady in the car
had mentioned was sick, and was clearly nearing the end in a hospital bed
facing the huge windows open to the canyon. I guess there was a time when an 11
year old wouldn’t know cancer when she saw it, but there were no questions on
this day. Her husband told us about her. She had been a girl scout troop leader,
and one time when she got to camp she busted her co-chaperones with booze in
their thermoses and kicked them all out. They volunteered at the maritime
center museum. They’d always had cats, but none of them ever liked him before
this one, who stayed glued to his side and only stepped away to roll and
present his belly for my girl to rub. He bought 14 boxes of cookies, we had to
go home and restock to fill his order. He made us promise to come back any time
we had anything to sell, even if it was “something stupid for school.”
My girl and I held hands as we walked back to the car.
I love selling girl scout cookies.