Surprised and nervous, Marty hastily tried to think up an excuse. “My bike got a flat tire, and I had to…”
“Come here.” His Highness sounded drunk and pissed off as usual, and Marty didn’t really want to get a lecture. He could never talk to his father without feeling worse than before he started.
“Badder than ol’ King Kong, meaner than a junkyard dog.”
Thanksgiving was going to be interesting in our new living situation, Marty mused to himself at school, just before the long weekend. Most kids were talking about travel plans or ski trips, but Marty wondered if there would be any holiday at his house at all. This would be the first big event without Good Ol’ Dad around, and nobody knew what to expect. He usually turned holidays into a phony military pageant, with a strict but mysterious protocol the kids never really figured out. As it turned out, this would be the best Thanksgiving they’d ever had.
Marge announced she was going to have some friends over, and didn’t bother to ask any of her kids what they wanted to do. Jimbo slept over the night before, and Jack showed up later with a couple of guests. One was a tanned, short man, strong and plump with long black hair and a walrus mustache. He wore a battered cowboy hat and boots, with a leather vest that couldn’t be buttoned over the pot belly under his best t-shirt. He had the squinty, wizened face of a Tibetan Sherpa and remarkably sharp, black eyes that missed nothing. The woman was quiet and much taller than anyone else in the house, with wide hips and long, straight hair the color of wheat. The pot-bellied stranger walked directly over to the eldest male with no patronizing guile, and stuck out his hand. “I’m Otter. Pleased t’ meet ya.” He smiled unabashedly, showing off a missing front tooth. Marty liked him immediately, and shook his hand. He had an axe-handle grip that would impress Captain Hook, and moved as if he was walking on snow. “An’ that’s Rabbit, my old lady.”
“Rabbit?” Susie asked, suddenly interested in the formalities.
Marty was tempted to play along with what he thought was a game, and introduce himself as a frog, but just said, “Hi, I’m Martin.” The formal name welled up from some unexpected response to the situation, in which he suddenly felt as if he had to appear more of a man.
“I’m Maggie,” the tall woman said in an unexpectedly deep voice, stooping slightly to shake the boy-man’s hand. She didn’t look like an “old lady” at all. She had compassionate eyes that flashed behind a face that was worn down by the cares of the world.
Jack brought a huge ham, and Marge had been cooking a turkey since before dawn, so there would be plenty of food. Maggie was bearing a pumpkin pie and a plate of half-eaten brownies. She saw Marty looking at the latter and warned, “Oh-ho no, I’m not your mom, you’ll have to ask her if you can have one of these.” She had a tired but happy look on her face. Later, Marty learned she had already eaten some of the mysterious brownies she brought for dessert. Julie suddenly became very interested in that plate, and her eyes followed it into the kitchen.
Jimbo supplied the adults with fresh beers, and showed Otter around the place as if it was an unusual cultural museum. They laughed at the far-out wallpaper design, the plastic chairs and tables, and the groovy wet bar in the family room. As carpenters, however, they were impressed with the huge deck Marty’s dad had built with his own hands, which was big enough for a full basketball court. Maggie (or Rabbit?) chatted in the kitchen with Marge, and Jack was clumsily setting up the large folding table he had brought, and giggling for no reason. In a flash of insight, Julie leaned over and whispered covertly to Marty, “Those are pot brownies!” He was about to inform her that he didn’t care in what sort of container they had been cooked… and then he understood.
“Oh-h-h.” He nodded sagely, and tried to remember what he’d read about marijuana brownies. Marty’s only memory of weed was when he was about four years old, and some customs men at the border looked at the stuffed squirrel he always carried, and speculated with winks and grins that it might be a hiding place for illicit contraband. “I don’t have any marijuana in my squirrel!” the little boy cried at the time, not wanting them to cut open Rocky… Snapping back to the present possibilities, his mind projected ahead for what possible hiding places in the kitchen might be accessible to Maggie at her higher altitude.
“Are we going to have pot brownies for dessert?” Julie was beside herself with rebellious glee, and excitedly sought her usual outlet for breaking news. “I’ve got to call Dick.” Yes, her boyfriend was named Dick. It wasn’t really necessary to make jokes about that – some facts were just too conveniently ironic – but Marty could never waste an opportunity for a joke. For him, every moment was a cartoon that required a caption.
“Are you still ‘hanging out’ with Dick?” The severity of the taunt was in proportion to the distance he was from his older sister, which was sufficient that she couldn’t punch him. She reduced the aperture of her eyelids and glared at him malevolently.
Jack was laughing at the conversation, and having undue difficulty with the table, and it occurred to Marty that he’d probably eaten some brownies, too. Then he realized that Jimbo and his own mother were surely partaking of the illegal substance, as well. He helped Jack get the contraption upright and covered with a tablecloth, and they brought mismatched chairs from all over the house to complete the arrangement. Susie helped set the table, while Marty struggled to fold the napkins the way fancy restaurants do. Marge and Susie started to bring in the food, and the feast was on. The smell of meat drew the men back inside, and Rabbit laid out some freshly baked bread he hadn’t seen her bring in. He checked, and there was no marijuana inside. Julie came downstairs, scanning the table. “Where’s the brownies? Can I have Dick over?”
Marge rolled her eyes. “No Dick.” Otter and Rabbit froze, mouths agape, wondering if they had stumbled in on a very personal conversation, and their wondering faces turned to her. “Dick’s the name of her boyfriend,” she scolded them, and they looked relieved and contrite.
“She likes Dick,” Marty droned on cue for the thousandth time in a bored tone, the way a comedian recites an old line. He moved his legs defensively before Julie could kick him under the table. The adults all roared, with a mixture of bawdiness and embarrassment. Susie looked perplexed; unaware of the jest as usual.
As if Marty’s lame, worn out repartee had broken the ice, Marge decided Julie could have half of what she called a “clowny brownie,” and her newly-teenaged son could have a quarter. “What about me?” Susie whined, knowing the answer and hating that she was left out again. Her older siblings gobbled the funny-tasting treats and drummed their fingers on the table, waiting for something to happen. Susie folded her arms stubbornly and kicked her chair. Rabbit hoped the kids wouldn’t overdose and die. Otter winked in their general direction, and helped himself to another plateful of turkey and pumpkin pie. Jimbo stroked his beard thoughtfully, eyes half closed, like a bemused god of Olympus contemplating the foibles of mortals. Marge had a hand over her mouth like, “Oh my god, what have I done?” Marty felt nothing.
“Boom!” Jack broke the silence, fingers expanding from his scalp in a mock explosion of the brain. “Two more innocent youths corrupted for life.”
Otter winked again, “You can’t go back now.” Marty still felt nothing.
“Whoa, I think I’m stoned,” Julie said melodramatically. What was the big deal? Marty puzzled, still not feeling anything. Soon the adults got tired of waiting for their brains to detonate, and the conversation turned to growing pot, a topic about which Otter apparently had a shaman’s knowledge. He wove tales of his adventures in such an entertaining way that the kids became enraptured. Minutes went by, and they drank his words the way kittens lap up milk.
“But you have to watch and separate the males from the females if you want good buds.” This caused Marty to burst into uncontrollable laughter. It was by far the funniest thing Otter had uttered in a long and fascinating yarn. The merry boy looked around and nodded, because everyone else was laughing, too! What a funny story! He had to remember it so he could tell Steve. Wait, what happened with the males and females again? Then he realized everyone was not laughing with him; they were laughing at him. On no! He was stoned!! There goes my chance of getting into college, Marty snickered inwardly, and realized that the world was full of cartoons, and he could watch any channel he wanted.