This is another science fiction story. It is what can happen when children want something with all their might.
“I Want….”
“Mikey,
don’t touch that.” The little pre-school age boy pulled his hand slowly back
from the bag of chips he had been reaching for.
“Michael,
Mommy says don’t touch ANYTHING.” Again the little boy pulled his hand back,
this time from the box of cookies, watching his mom as she moved on down the
isle of the grocery store. She added some snack crackers to the shopping cart,
while talking baby talk to the fussy, whining baby sitting in the seat of the
cart. “Come on, Mikey.” After a moment Michael followed.
They
turned down another isle, moving by and around other shoppers. Several things
were added to the cart. The baby cried. “I want cookies,” demanded Michael.
“No,” said his mom, picking up a can of green beans, and then a bag of noodles.
They moved on.
“I
want cookies – cook-ies – cook – kook-eyes, cook-ies,” sang Michael. “Want
cook-ies – kook-eyes.”
“Mikey,
please be quiet. If you’re quiet I’ll get you some cookies. Okay, Mikey.” His mom
was getting more flustered as she tried to finish her shopping. Michael knew he
had her going now. “Goodie, goodie, goodie,” he sang. “I’m going to get cookies
- cook-ies, kook-eyes.”
“Mikey,
be quiet,” wailed his mom while the baby echoed her. She checked her list.
“Need to get milk, juice, and baby cereal. And some hamburger.” She added a jar
of pickles to the cart, and crammed a pacifier into the mouth of the crying
baby. She wished she could give one to Mikey, too.
“Cookies,
kook-eyes. I want cookies – kook-eyes, more kook-eyes. Kook - .” Michael
stopped singing. “Mommy, Mommy. What’s that? Mommy, are those eyeballs.”
Michael pointed at a jar. “Those look
like eyeballs, Mommy.” He took a step backward. “Mommy, that jar there. The
eyeballs are moving. Their rolling around in the jar, Mommy, how do they do
that.”
“Of
course not,” said his mom, hardly glancing at where he was pointing. “Those are
olives, Mikey. Come on.”
“No,
there not ‘lives. Their eyeballs. Kook-eye balls. There looking at me. Make
them stop looking at me. I don’t like kook-eye balls.” Michael grabbed his mom
around the leg and hid his face, then peaked back at the jar.
“Stop
that, Mikey, those are only olives.” She pried him loose from her leg.
Michael
looked back at the jar. “Don’t look at me, kook-eyes,” he yelled, and flung a
small fist at the jar, barely grazing it. It was just enough to cause the jar
to fall to the floor, where the glass shattered and the contents rolled here
and there, helter-skelter. “Mommy! The kook-eyes jumped off onto the floor.”
“Now
look what you’ve done, Michael!”
“They
jumped, Mommy! Honest they did!”
You’re going to get it now, Michael. Do you
hear me? Your in ….in….trouble….now,……” her voice slid to a halt, as she took
in the sight of the broken glass and the still rolling ----
jumping, ----- and rolling ----- eyeballs.
There
were hazel eyes, blue eyes, brown eyes, and green eyes; some with the eyelids
still attached. And all those many eyes were staring at her. As she watched
back, her mouth still open, she gave a little screech. When she did one of the
eyeballs winked at her.
Horrified
at the sight she and several other customers screamed some more as they began
to move away from the wilding rolling eyeballs, and toward the exit doors. An
excited stock boy yelled for a manager, wanting to know what he was supposed to
do with the run-a-way eyeballs.
“Mikey,
we’re leaving NOW!” shouted Mikey’s mom as she grabbed the boy by the arm, and
drug him with her, while pushing the cart with the screaming baby, toward the
nearest door.
Eyeballs
continued to roll after her while Mikey sang about Kook-eyes.
The End
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