"I.Know.What.To.Do" - читать интересную книгу автора (Navarro Yvonne)

Her face twisted. "That's revolting!" What can I say? It was too late anyway; as I left for work she was hauling bucket and rags and pine cleaner out of the pantry. I figured in the hour before she'd have to get ready for work she'd have our white bathroom smelling like a hospital too. The next morning I saw it. Maggie was in the kitchen packing my lunch and thankfully didn't see the dog crouching half inside the bathroom door, or Chanci would've probably gotten a couple of whacks for doing it two days in a row. I couldn't stand to see that -- Chanci may be big (she's half Lab and half Great Dane), but she's nothing but a silly puppy in a ten-year old body. And normally well-behaved: she doesn't bark, bite, or crap in the house. It seemed a shame for her to get cracked just because the bathroom had bugs and she was curious. Though I could understand why! The damn thing was huge, maybe as long as my thumb, a couple of inches at least -- no exaggeration. It went scuttling backwards under the tub when I reached around and flipped the light switch, but I could have sworn that it was only about a half a foot away from the dog -- like it wasn't afraid of her at all. Well, Mama didn't raise an idiot and I'd be damned if I was going to stick my hand back under the tub. To be honest, the memory of that pain was enough to make me hesitate about kneeling down and looking, but in the end I did, after glancing out of the door and making sure Maggie was still messing with my lunch box. It would really make her crazy to think there was a roach crawling around
the bathroom she'd practically sterilized yesterday. I thought I saw it, way back in the corner -- the same spot as yesterday, when I'd stupidly tried to grab it. I got back up and strolled into the kitchen without saying anything, first making sure that Chanci was in the other room to stay. "I think I'll pick up some bug spray on the way home," I said. Maggie whirled. I could see her fingers clench around the peach that was slotted as today's dessert and resigned myself to bruised fruit. "Did you see another one? Where? In the bathroom again?" "No," I lied. "Just a precaution. We never did catch that one yesterday. Unless you...?" She shook her head. "That goes to show you. It'll probably come back, maybe with a family." She scrunched up her shoulders and shivered. "We'll start spraying, everyday at first, then once a week. That'll kill them off and keep them gone." Friday morning I sat at the kitchen table -- sometimes it seems we spend our lives at the kitchen table -- and made out Dolly's check. Maggie paid the other bills that were due and pushed a few aside that she figured could hold out another week; I could feel a breeze in a few places in my boots, but new ones would still have to wait. The alimony was the only bill I had to take care of personally and after four years writing that check still hurt to the heart. While Maggie didn't complain -- which wouldn't have made any difference -- she refused to write the check out and made me mail it myself.