Time Warp: Adventures in Babysitting [Josh]
Feb 28, 2014 18:41:29 GMT -5
Post by Tomer Berelowitz on Feb 28, 2014 18:41:29 GMT -5
Mid-July, 2005.
It was a situation that didn't come up often. Both Tomer's parents had to work, Abby was away at camp, and Vivy was at a playdate with her preschool classmates. That left the Berelowitz's single son home alone, and after calling the various sitters they normally used (who were all busy), Talia got the super idea to call Josh. And her brother was free!
What could possibly go wrong.
In the heat of July, Tomer wore khaki-colored shorts and a dark blue polo shirt. His hair was a bit on the long side, achieving an effect in the humidity that Vivy liked to call 'fluffy'. The air-conditioned apartment toned that down a bit, but it would curl a little if they went outside. This was not the first time a single Berelowitz child had been home alone, but it was the first time none of the usual sitters had been available. It was a bit of an experiment, calling up her big brother, but Talia thought between Josh's enthusiasm and Tomer's sense they'd live through it.
By dint of having a November birthday and being near-pathologically shy, his parents had decided not to put him in kindergarten at age four, though intellectually he'd been ready. He'd start school this September. There were numerous library books in the family room about First Days of School, including old standbys like the Berenstain Bears, Curious George, Ramona Quimby, and Franklin the Turtle, and a few newer ones like 'Wemberly Worried' by Kevin Henkes and 'Junie B. Jones and the Stupid Smelly Bus' by Barbara Park. Tomer wouldn't be taking a bus to school (thank everything), but the rest still applied.
Uncle Josh was to arrive around noon and sit till around four, when Talia would be back, Vivy in tow. A pair of sandwiches sat in the fridge on covered plates, fresh veggies were cut up and submerged in water in containers, and there was plenty of milk. Talia had drawn a map showing where the playground was (just three blocks from the apartment building), and had left a list of emergency numbers.
Tomer had been briefed all week about his 'special visit with Uncle Josh'. He was, to put it mildly, anxious and skeptical. His uncle was loud the way Grandma was, and he was sort of smelly. His mom said it was because Uncle Josh smoked. Tomer thought it was inaccurate. What his uncle did was set little sticks on fire and put them in his mouth, and it was therefore 'firing' and not 'smoking', but adults could be stubborn.
Downstairs, the buzzer rang, and Talia, in skirt and low heels, buzzed him in. Tomer disappeared.
Letting her brother in, she smiled apologetically. "He's hiding under Abby's bed. Don't worry, he'll come out. Lunch is in the fridge, and there's documentaries he likes by the TV. Offer the park too, there's directions to it on the counter." Eyes twinkling just a little, she pecked him on the cheek. "Thanks for doing this, you're a doll. Bye Tomer!"
And Talia was out the door.
The apartment was very quiet.
Under his sister's bed, Tomer sulked.
It was a situation that didn't come up often. Both Tomer's parents had to work, Abby was away at camp, and Vivy was at a playdate with her preschool classmates. That left the Berelowitz's single son home alone, and after calling the various sitters they normally used (who were all busy), Talia got the super idea to call Josh. And her brother was free!
What could possibly go wrong.
In the heat of July, Tomer wore khaki-colored shorts and a dark blue polo shirt. His hair was a bit on the long side, achieving an effect in the humidity that Vivy liked to call 'fluffy'. The air-conditioned apartment toned that down a bit, but it would curl a little if they went outside. This was not the first time a single Berelowitz child had been home alone, but it was the first time none of the usual sitters had been available. It was a bit of an experiment, calling up her big brother, but Talia thought between Josh's enthusiasm and Tomer's sense they'd live through it.
By dint of having a November birthday and being near-pathologically shy, his parents had decided not to put him in kindergarten at age four, though intellectually he'd been ready. He'd start school this September. There were numerous library books in the family room about First Days of School, including old standbys like the Berenstain Bears, Curious George, Ramona Quimby, and Franklin the Turtle, and a few newer ones like 'Wemberly Worried' by Kevin Henkes and 'Junie B. Jones and the Stupid Smelly Bus' by Barbara Park. Tomer wouldn't be taking a bus to school (thank everything), but the rest still applied.
Uncle Josh was to arrive around noon and sit till around four, when Talia would be back, Vivy in tow. A pair of sandwiches sat in the fridge on covered plates, fresh veggies were cut up and submerged in water in containers, and there was plenty of milk. Talia had drawn a map showing where the playground was (just three blocks from the apartment building), and had left a list of emergency numbers.
Tomer had been briefed all week about his 'special visit with Uncle Josh'. He was, to put it mildly, anxious and skeptical. His uncle was loud the way Grandma was, and he was sort of smelly. His mom said it was because Uncle Josh smoked. Tomer thought it was inaccurate. What his uncle did was set little sticks on fire and put them in his mouth, and it was therefore 'firing' and not 'smoking', but adults could be stubborn.
Downstairs, the buzzer rang, and Talia, in skirt and low heels, buzzed him in. Tomer disappeared.
Letting her brother in, she smiled apologetically. "He's hiding under Abby's bed. Don't worry, he'll come out. Lunch is in the fridge, and there's documentaries he likes by the TV. Offer the park too, there's directions to it on the counter." Eyes twinkling just a little, she pecked him on the cheek. "Thanks for doing this, you're a doll. Bye Tomer!"
And Talia was out the door.
The apartment was very quiet.
Under his sister's bed, Tomer sulked.