Like a lot of my stuff, I have no idea where this came from. Places anywhere in the Voyage timeline.
Sharon H
~<<>>~
It was early
morning and the sun was just peeking up over the eastern horizon, filling the
kitchen with a warm glow that's only possible on an early summer morning.
Matriarch of the Morton clan, Marie Morton, gave the eggs in the skillet
another brisk stir, added a handful of chopped red and green peppers and let
them simmer a few minutes longer. The bacon was already done, waiting on a
plate, and the biscuits in the oven were just browning up. When the eggs were
finally done to suit her, she spooned them out into a big green, egg-shaped
bowl, and set them on the table next to the platter of hashbrowns. From the
fridge she pulled grape and apple jelly, a bottle of ketchup, milk and butter.
With everything on the table, Marie stepped back and appraised her handy work. Was
it enough? Marie certainly hoped so. Chip could eat his weight in scrambled
eggs, and Lee was addicted to biscuits and jelly. Marie, wiping her hands on a
dishtowel, stuck her head into the living room and got her husband's attention.
Anthony 'Tony' Morton glanced up from the sports section of the paper.
“I told those
two fifteen minutes ago breakfast would be ready. Would you go make sure they
haven't fallen asleep in the shower and drowned or something?” she said to him.
He nodded and rose from the chair and headed upstairs. Seconds later Tony's
voice rumbled through the house and Marie rolled her eyes upwards. Five days
of this, give me strength.
“This how you do
things in the Navy? You were told fifteen minutes ago breakfast would be ready,
now let's move it! Move it! Move it!” The footsteps overhead sounded like the
last stretch of the Kentucky Derby as two pairs of feet thundered across the
floor and down the stairs.
Seconds later
two bleary-eyed young men came stumbling into the kitchen, took one long sniff
and grinned at each other. Tony walked in behind them and sat down at his spot.
Marie gave her husband a look and he shrugged.
“Pete and
Re-Pete did get in rather late,” Tony said with a jerk of his thumb at the
eldest Morton and his best friend.
“Which one am
I?” Chip asked, heading for the coffee pot.
“Re-Pete,
because I outrank you,” Lee replied, getting an elbow in the ribs for his
remark. He accepted the empty coffee cup from Chip and poured his cup full of
the dark, fragrant brew.
The two 'boys'
settled themselves down and started filling up their plates. Marie watched as
Lee helped himself to the eggs and reach for a biscuit. His long fingers
grabbed two out of the pan. While his attention was off his plate, Chip reached
over and dumped another heaping spoonful of eggs onto Lee's plate. Lee noticed
the addition, but missed how he acquired it. He did glare at Chip, but the
blond went about the serious business of adding bacon to his plate and coating
his hashbrowns and eggs under a layer of ketchup.
“That's gross,
Chip. Looks like you caught and killed something. Can't you eat eggs like a
normal person?” Lee asked, crunching away on bacon.
“At least I eat,
unlike SOME people,” Chip grumbled and proceeded to mix his eggs.
“Well, SOME
people don't think that eating is the center of the world, “Lee shot back.
Marie smothered the smile as she listened to them.
These two never ceased to amaze her. The teased each other like brothers,
although Lee certainly wasn't like any of her children. All five Morton
children were tall, blond and blue eyed. Lee, with his darker complexion, and
molten amber eyes with flecks of green, stood out like the proverbial black
sheep. When Chip phoned and said they were coming by for a visit, Marie had
been excited, faced with the chance to see her son and his friend for the first
time in months. What she hadn't been expecting was to find Chip sporting
bruises that ran up the length of his right arm and Lee walking with a slight
limp. Judging from the look on her husband's face, he hadn't missed it either.
“So what's
Nelson got the pair of you doing that makes you look like you've been rode hard
and put up wet?” he asked with a smirk and a raised eyebrow.
The two men,
both in their mid thirties, suddenly regressed to age twelve as they fidgeted
with everything from their juice glasses to their forks and plates. Chip shoved
another mouthful of eggs in his mouth, eyeballing Lee with suspicion.
Obviously, Lee’s slightly bruised condition was a mystery to him as well. Marie Morton was staring at her son, waiting
for an answer. Chip grabbed for his glass.
“Turbulence. I
hit the plot table. I’m fine. It looks worse than it is,” he relented under his
mother’s glare.
Marie switched
her gaze to Lee, clearly expecting an answer from him as well. Finally Lee gave
in. “I fell.”
“You fell? From
what, a fourth story window?” Chip asked, digging into his hash browns.
Lee
snorted. “Actually it was a third story
window. I landed in a hay cart.”
“A third story
window?” Chip asked.
“Yeah, you know,
between the second and fourth stories. Seriously, Chip, you need to get off the
boat more.”
Chip bristled as
Lee reached for the grape jelly at the same time as Chip. Chip slapped Lee’s
hand off the jar, but Lee turned and slapped at Chip’s hand. The blond
retaliated with a butter knife, slapping the flat of the blade across the back
of Lee’s knuckles. The brunet grabbed his fork and with the flat side of the
tines, he slapped at Chip’s hand. The two “crossed swords” and dueled, the
object apparently to knock the utensil out of the opponent's hand. Hardware
wars—kitchen table style.
Marie finally
got tired of their antics. Deftly reaching over, she snagged the jelly jar and
pulled it from their reach.
“He started it,”
Chip pouted, not giving up on scoring some grape jelly.
“Well, I’m
finishing it.” Marie replied tartly and spooned a generous amount of jelly onto
each of her ‘boy’s’ plates. She sat the jar down between her and her husband,
out of Lee and Chip’s reach.
Lee eyed the
translucent purple jelly on his plate, and then examined Chip’s share. “I’ve
got more jelly than you do,” he said.
Marie groaned.
“Lee Crane, do not start! You’ve both got an equal share. Good grief, anyone
would think you two were ten years old.”
The ringing of
Tony's cell phone got everyone's attention. With a chagrined look, he shrugged
and rose to take the call in the living room.
“Wanna bet he
has to leave?” Chip asked his mother. Marie rolled her eyes.
“You know he'll
leave. He's senior detective and he takes every case seriously. I just wish
they'd let him have a meal in peace.”
Marie had barely
gotten the word out when Tony’s head popped around the corner. “We’ve a break.
Gotta run. I’ll call if it looks like I’ll be late,” Tony said.
Marie took a
deep breath. “You’ll be careful?”
“Always,” Tony
promised, maneuvering around the table to plant a quick kiss on his wife’s
lips, then he vanished out the back door. Marie tried not to show her
disappointment that her husband wouldn’t be around much while their son was
home, but such was the nature of Tony’s job. Over the years, Marie had gotten
used to it.
The doorbell
chime sounded through the house. Marie raised her eyes to the ceiling and got
up from the table. “I'll bet that's Amanda Simpson, from the church. We're
organizing the spring bazaar. She said she was coming over early, but blessed
be, did it have to be this early? You two finish eating, and you can do the
dishes when you finish.”
Marie darted out
of the room, leaving Lee and Chip alone.
“You hit some
turbulence and you fell into the plot table? What else did you do to my boat
while I was gone?” Lee queried, munching on a jelly-laden biscuit. (unless it
was way overdone, it wouldn’t crunch would it?)
“Your boat? I
don't think so buddy. She's mine when you're off playing super spy. And it was
nothing; just a little turbulence. At least I never fell out of a window.”
“We can fix that
really quick,” Lee shot back. “And I was thrown, I didn't fall.” Too late he
realized his mistake. He should have never mentioned it.
“How the hell
did you get tossed out of a window? I swear, one of these days, there might not
be a hay cart for you to fall into. How long are you going to keep this up?”
Chip hissed with a glance toward the door.
“I can't exactly
say no, now can I?” Lee hissed back. Without thinking, he flicked a small piece
of chopped green pepper at Chip's plate. It went wide, bouncing off Chip's arm.
“Lousy aim, so
sad,” Chip said mournfully, and flicked a piece of egg at Lee. It landed dead
center on Lee's gray shirt. “Bulls eye,” Chip declared with a grin.
Lee wasn't going
to be outdone. With his fork he speared a piece of grape-jelly-dripping-biscuit
and flicked the projectile at Morton. It sailed high and Chip had time to duck.
And so the
battle began. With declarations of 'Fire one!' and 'Load tubes one and two!' the
two grown men took turns tossing eggs, and pepper at each other, using forks
and spoons as 'launchers' while Chip grabbed the lid of a skillet to use as a
shield.
The battle came
to an abrupt end as Marie cleared her throat, standing in the kitchen doorway.
She took in the scene; eggs on the floor, pieces of green pepper and bacon
strips scattered over the table, hashbrown clinging to the refrigerator door.
Lee glanced up at her though his long, dark lashes, as a glob of grape jelly
slid out of his hair and onto his nose. Her son stood wide-eyed and innocent
looking, totally oblivious to the fact that he was holding a skillet lid dotted
with ketchup spots, jelly and bits of egg and a smattering of pepper.
“Seems you
forgot to post a lookout.” She tried not to laugh, but it was so hard when they
looked like a pair of schoolboys. “I don't want to know what started this, but
you can clean it up.” A second glance showed that both their shirts were
spotted with red and purple that would stain if they weren't attended to soon.
“And you can do
the laundry today. It's your mess, you figure out how to get the stains out.
Understood?”
“Yes ma'am,” a
duet of subdued voices said even as they fought not to grin.
For a second
nobody moved. “Well? Do I have to make it an order?” she added.
Lee and Chip
spun into action, gathering up dishes and running water in the sink. Marie
closed her eyes and turned, leaving Chip and Lee to the task of cleaning up
their mess. She could just make out their voices as they “discussed” who was
washing and who was drying.
Raising her
voice, Marie called out to the pair, “I don't care who does what, just try not
to drown one another in there.”
“Yes ma'am,” the
duet sounded off once more.
Once more Marie
Morton lamented the fact that these two were going to be here all week. She
wasn't sure she could survive another four days. She promised to ask Admiral
Nelson how he managed to keep his sanity while those two were around.
On second
thought, maybe that was the reason he tossed them off base from time to time.
Marie wondered briefly if she could dream up enough chores to keep them out of
her hair for a few hours each day.
A metallic crash
and a splash from the kitchen made her stop in her tracks. She waited, trying
to decide if she wanted to investigate or not. She decided she didn't really
want to know and resumed her steady pace to the study. If she were lucky,
they'd leave her enough dishes to cook dinner with.
Another splash
and a muffled curse that Marie was sure she wasn't suppose to hear drifted
through the house. Since they were having so much fun in her kitchen, they
could cook dinner tonight as well.
Marie only hoped
the house would survive that long.
~end~
srh.