A quick one:
On Sunday we had no electricity for about 12 hours, from 8
am until 8 pm. There was a rumor that this was because Hillary Clinton visited
Lilongwe that day (for about 5 hours), but I have thus far been unable to
correlate the two events. It was a long,
somewhat boring day, especially challenging because no electricity means no
coffee, and life is just harder when you’re under-caffeinated. We did arts and crafts (then spent twice as
long cajoling the kids into cleaning up after themselves). We built blanket forts in the living room (then
spent twice as long cajoling the kids into cleaning up after themselves). We brought pizza back for dinner (then
cleaned it up ourselves, because it was just easier). Eventually, at about 6:30
pm, I decided it was bedtime. I lay on
the bed and let the twins crawl on me and drool in my hair, while the girls brushed
their teeth in the bathroom. It was pitch
dark by this time, so they had a wine bottle with a tall wax candle in it
burning on the edge of the sink (only the best for the Fitzgerald kids). Suddenly, from behind the closed door, I
heard a loud crash, and the sound of shattered glass. This was followed closely by the high-pitched
sound of AIne’s voice as she screamed “Fire!!!” There was the muffled sound of
movement and then the anguished cry from Malawi, “I pooped my pants!!”
I leapt up, startled twins dragged in the crook of each
elbow and flashlight in hand, although I did not see any obvious signs of fire.
Putting the babies down outside I opened the door. Both girls were standing in the bathroom,
afraid to move, surrounded by shards of broken glass. There was no fire. Poor Malawi stood looking forlorn and
physically uncomfortable, her jeans unbuttoned.
Aine had knocked the wine bottle over with her elbow while
brushing her teeth. Always expecting a natural disaster of some kind (no idea
where she gets that from), she had screamed in anticipation of fire.
Malawi, who had just started to settle down onto the potty, leapt up and
soiled herself in the process. Unable or
unwilling to deal with the enormity of the situation (did I mention that our
bathroom floor is dark brown?), I extricated the girls from the room and Malawi from
her pants, then made the executive decision to abandon the bathroom until
electricity was restored. God Bless my
husband, he cleaned the majority of the mess while I had a quiet nervous
breakdown.
On the upside, it makes a good story.