Thank you for all the birthday wishes. It was just a quiet day which was fine especially since my daughter gave me a party last year.
The promised break in the heat and humidity came Thursday night when the big storm front started moving through with rain. It rained all night, mostly just light to medium with small breaks, some lightning but no thunder. Regardless, the little neurotic dog panted and shivered in constant motion, this side of me, that side of me, all night. Guess who didn’t get any sleep besides the little dog. Well, maybe a couple of hours. Friday morning, still raining, sky dark, it rained all day mostly light to medium with some bouts of heavy rain and very chilly. The electricity blinked in and out a few times. The third time I declined to start my desktop back up so I plonked myself down on the much cleaner loveseat and read all day. The rain tapered off early evening. I finally got my butt up around 6 pm as it was my night to fix dinner…fried catfish, mustard greens, and leftover rice and black eyed peas from the night before mixed together. Daughter Sarah stopped by on her way home from work with my birthday present, fancy desserts, cookies, and a Lush shampoo bar (some consumption has already taken place.)
Saturday was cool, clear and low humidity, a really pleasant and pretty day. I decided that it wasn’t a possum that got the cardinal eggs but a squirrel which makes much more sense. I see squirrels in that small tree all the time and so I looked it up and yes, squirrels will eat bird eggs if they have a nutritional need and I think a possum would have just eaten the whole thing instead of just biting into it and lapping out the contents. The last time I checked, before the rain, the mockingbird was still sitting on her nest and I’m pretty sure the little wren in the garage is too.Too wet again to do any digging or weeding or getting zinnia seeds in (my neighbor says we got 2 1/2” which just soaked right in) so I just puttered around out in the yard enjoying the day. I cut out some of the foliage on the tomato plants to help with circulation, pulled up the concrete pavers in the corner of my tiny little patio outside the back door that had sunk considerably and leveled them,
mixed another bag of potting soil and a half bag of compost and repotted a plumeria cutting and the toad lilies, planted some leftover green onions in a pot, picked a handful of green beans which are supposed to be blue lake, so said the packet, but they look more like kentucky wonders.
The little acorn squash fell off but the other is getting bigger, the butternut vines are growing but so far all the little squashes have failed to grow. Only one of my tomato plants is putting on fruit, the one the late unexpected freeze didn’t affect, but the others are blooming so there’s hope.
Today the agenda includes mowing the little backyard and repotting my struggling miniature rose but I didn’t sleep well last night with the dog on one side and the cat on the other. They both want body contact so I’m penned in with two 14 pound weights and can’t move and couldn’t get comfortable so we’ll see. I’m more than halfway through my current book so I may devote the afternoon to that.
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We Are All Guilty Here by Karin Slaughter - When two teenage girls are abducted on July 4th during the town’s fireworks. Deputy Emmy Clifton must find them before time runs out and it does. Emmy finds their bodies. The ensuing investigation eventually sends a man to prison but was he really the killer? Twelve years later evidence surfaces that says no. When he is released from prison, another teenage girl is abducted and a new investigation ensues helped by FBI consultant Jude who specializes in psychopath serial killers who turns out to be Emmy’s long thought dead older sister. Emmy is now Chief Deputy and becomes acting Sheriff when her father, the sheriff, is shot in a confrontation over the newly released inmate. Now it is up to Emmy and Jude to unravel the town’s secrets and find the real killer.
Whistle by Linwood Barclay - Annie is a successful children’s book author who suffers two tragedies back to back, a child who pretended he could fly after one of her books and plunged to his death and the hit and run death of her husband. Deciding she needed to leave the city for the summer she and her young son move to a house out in the country near the town of Fenelon. When Charlie finds a train set locked up in a shed and sets it up, strange things start happening. Twenty five years earlier people start disappearing and a train shop suddenly appears in the little town of Lucknow several hours away from Fenelon and as the very weird little proprietor sells his sets, tragedy strikes the families. As Annie and her son Charlie are drawn towards Lucknow, it’s up to Annie to protect herself and her son. Seemed like a silly premise, evil toy train sets, but it’s a good story well told all the way to the conclusion.































