My wife of 32 years and
six months is as far from a termagant, harridan or virago as you can get.
Nevertheless, when Uncle Slappy and I left the house this morning, we were
under strict orders: Come back with three pounds of fresh figs or don’t come
back at all.
We are having Rosh
ha-Shanah dinner at our house, and my wife’s latest recipe called for figs,
figs and more figs.
Fortunately, she gave me
a list of stores that claimed they had fresh figs. I first went to the one
furthest away from our apartment—a little specialty store about 25-miles from
home that promised they had the out-of-season fruit.
Though they had assured
my wife on the phone that they had fresh figs, by the time we arrived at the
place, they were no more.
“You must be cooking
that recipe from the Times,” the clerk said to me. “There’s been a run on
figs.”
He recommended a place
one town over.
Uncle Slappy and I piled
into the car and made it there post-haste.
“No,” the salesman said,
“we have them at our sister store. It’s about ten miles from here.”
We called the sister store.
“Do you have fresh
figs,” I asked.
“We certainly do,” said
the kid on the phone. “I’ll put some aside for you.”
Uncle Slappy and I once
again jumped into my 1966 Simca 1500, buckled up and drove down the highway. We
arrived in just minutes.
“I’m here for the fresh
figs,” I said to the clerk.
“You said dried figs,”
he claimed.
My voice went up about
40 decibels.
“I spoke to LaMar on the
phone,” I said, a bit too loudly. “He said he had fresh figs.
“Sir,” the kid said to me, “you are causing an incident.”
Uncle Slappy escorted me
out of the store, lest the local constabulary appear.
We called two more places in two more towns and got two more assurances that they had fresh figs. When we had arrived at those places, they had nothing.
Finally, dejected, and
more than a little bit scared, I called that paragon of animals, my wife.
“I have come up empty,”
I said. “We went to six stores from one end of Westchester County to the other.
I could no more find fresh figs than Donald Trump can find votes from the black
community.”
“Oh, no problem,” she answered,
cheerfully. “I found them at Grace’s,” she said mentioning a food market about
a mile from our apartment. “But thanks for trying.”
Uncle Slappy and I rode
silently back to the city.
But first we stopped at Carvel for an ice-cream.
But first we stopped at Carvel for an ice-cream.
It somehow made the
whole trip worthwhile.
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