“And while we’re in town we can pick up some of the stuff
you wanted from the corner store—pens, a notebook, some a those
sore-throat candies,” Andy said with the uncertainty of a person who has never
purchased pens, notebooks, or cough drops. “I can grab some jerky, too. Hell,
we can get whatever we need while we’re there.”
Timothy gave a quiet, breathy laugh and said, “Yeah, that’s
great. Kill two birds with one stone, right?”
“Well, uhh… I guess we could try that,” Andy said, shifting
in his seat. “I mean, I’m not real sure how to go about that. There’s gotta
be some real skill involved…”
Timothy furrowed his brows and cocked his head to the right
in disbelief. Did Uncle Andy not hear me
laugh? he thought. Does he not know that idiom? He has to know it—how could he not know the expression ‘kill two birds with one
stone?’ Doesn’t everybody know that? I thought everybody’d at least heard it before...
It was pretty clear by Timothy’s expression that he and Uncle Andy were not on the same page, but Andy was too caught up in his own thoughts to notice the confused and disapproving stare coming from his nephew.
“You’ve gotta get a real big stone, I ‘spose. That
or you use some sorta mathematical equation to calculate what angle and
speed you’d need to throw the rock at to make it hit one bird, bounce off its skull and hit the other…” Andy continued, simultaneously horrifying and
impressing his guest—impressing him in the way that a psychopath might impress
a person with normal emotions, not exactly an admiration but dredging up some
weird, momentary jealousy in the normal person.
But how could Timothy not be somewhat entertained by the
determination in his uncle’s face? He’d never seen Uncle Andy work this hard at
anything before, never in the entire 23 years they’d known each other. Not
once.
Timothy wondered, is
it possible that creative problem solving could be Uncle Andy’s passion? That all these years he’s
been hiding some sort of intelligence, hiding well-honed critical thinking
skills out here in the middle of the cornfields? Or maybe he’s just been harboring
some sort of deep-seated hatred of birds, some weirdly strong resentment with
origins unknown to me?
“You know, you might be better off using a slingshot. Don’t
you think?” Andy continued. “I mean, to get a rock to bounce off a bird’s skull
and hit another one hard enough to kill
it? That rock’s gotta be movin' pretty fast, if you ask me. Plus the slingshot
would help with, like, accuracy and that stuff.”
Timothy, his full attention back on his uncle, realized that having a passion and voicing a fantasy about killing birds were two entirely different things. He hated himself for confusing the two, even if it was only for a moment. One moment of stupidity, but it felt more like the beginning of the end to Timothy. It wasn't just the whole
stupid conversation, but the whole stupid town—it was throwing him off his mental game already. After only three days, country life was getting to him. He wasn’t a
country-man like his uncle Andy, he was a city-boy with a city-education and
the sense of arrogance that is virtually nonexistent in the country.
Andy was still rambling on about how to kill two birds, but
he had somehow escalated to thoughts of killing entire flocks of birds with a
handful of rocks.
“I don’t know, Timmy. This whole damn thing seems a little
silly, if you ask me. Why don’t we just head into town and grab a couple of
beers with the guys and see what they think about it? You know they’ll have somethin' to say,” Andy concluded, already
grabbing the keys to his truck and heading towards the door.
Timothy, shaking his head, laughed quietly and muttered to himself, “You can do this, Timothy. Bond with Uncle Andy while you're researching for your next story. Kill two birds with one stone."
Timothy, shaking his head, laughed quietly and muttered to himself, “You can do this, Timothy. Bond with Uncle Andy while you're researching for your next story. Kill two birds with one stone."
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