Bluegrass

The chronicles of Poodle endeth

by | Jul 23, 2015 | Opinion

Ruminations From An Old Goat

Editor’s note: This is the third of a three-part column.

A neighbor lady about half a mile down the road had called the sheriff’s office because it sounded to her like a full-fledged riot was breaking out at Maidie Belle’s house. The sheriff’s department consisted of the sheriff and one deputy. The sheriff was answering the phone himself until his wife got back from the beauty parlor. He wasn’t too concerned because he figured it was just Maidie Belle hollering at Ruthie, so he called his deputy on the radio to go by and see what was going on.

Slats, the long time deputy, didn’t get very excited about it either. He was busy driving Bigelow Brigham’s cows out of the road and back into the pasture they’d broken out of. That was a regular part of Slats’ duty because old Bigelow was too stingy to keep his fences up. The sheriff didn’t much like this abuse of the taxpayer’s money, but he put up with it because Bigelow had considerable political influence at election time.  Slats was pretty philosophical about it. He figured it just gave him job security.

Traffic was light, and the people who used that road regularly were accustomed to watching out for Bigelow’s cows, so Slats didn’t see any problem with leaving them grazing belly deep in Johnson grass along the ditch. They weren’t likely to wander off very far, and whatever was happening at Maidie Belle’s place might break the monotony. So he got in his pickup and drove the few miles there.

When he pulled up, Beulah Bess was still sitting in the road, mournfully surveying her mortally wounded big shiny black car. It had apparently bled out because nothing was dripping any longer. He took her by the arm and got her back up on her feet.

When he asked her what was going on, she immediately launched into a near hysterical tirade about Truman committing hit and run against her poor defenseless car and a naked wild man running around Maidie Belle’s house and she thought it might be Ruthie and things were coming to a pretty pass when an honest citizen was subjected to all that kind of indignity and……………….! She finally ran out of breath, giving Slats a chance to calm her down.

He still didn’t know what was going on, so he walked up on the front porch and knocked on the door. When Maidie Belle came to the door and saw Slats, she opened it questioningly. Before either of them could stop her, Beulah Bess had elbowed her way in. Maidie Belle wasn’t at all impressed with Beulah Bess’ highfaluting ways, and she sure hadn’t invited the stuck up old biddy to come in.

Slats asked where Ruthie was, and Maidie Belle pointed toward the back.

Beulah Bess shoved Maidie Belle aside and stomped back to the kitchen where she saw Ruthie almost completely immersed in a bathtub in a little alcove. “There the pervert is. I demand you arrest him for indecent exposure,” she shrieked at Slats.

Ruthie, his misery having eased, had been peacefully dreaming of the breakfast he still hadn’t gotten. Now, startled by Beulah Bess’ outburst and having no idea what was transpiring, he jumped straight up and stood there dripping in the tub, looking not unlike a nude blue statue from ancient Greece and wondering why everybody was staring at him.

Up until that point, Maidie Belle had been totally speechless, shocked by the whole turn of events; but now she had found her voice. This was her house and her husband and she was just as good as Beulah Bess and she didn’t intend to look up to her or anybody else. She said a lot more too, but this is a family newspaper so the narrator cannot repeat the rest of it verbatim. Suffice it to say, she used language that even Slats had never heard, not even around the jailhouse.

Slats, a veteran of many such skirmishes, realized it was time to decamp. He hustled Beulah Bess out to the road; and in his sternest deputy sheriff voice, he addressed her, “I don’t see Truman anywhere around here, and I don’t see any evidence he hit your car. As far as Ruthie is concerned, it looks to me like he’s been punished enough. And you are going to be lucky if Maidie Belle doesn’t decide to file charges against you for bodily assault and breaking and entering. Now then, I got a chain in my pickup; and I’m going to drag your car down to the filling station and maybe they can fix it for you. After which I’m going back to Bigelow’s place and drive his cows back in the pasture and prop up the fence before it gets dark.”

And he proceeded to do just that.

There are three morals to this story directed specifically to those listed below:

  1. To Ruthie – keep the grass cut short so you can see to mow around the ant mounds instead of plowing straight across them.
  2. To Maidie Belle – Ruthie is not ever going to change. You ought to run him off. It would make your mama happy; and besides, it would save you enough money on groceries you could afford to quit that night job.

3.To Beulah Bess – Stop following Truman around. People are beginning to talk.

Thus endeth The Chronicles of Poodle.

Oh, one more thing. The boys down at the filling station have quit calling Ruthie, Ruthie. Now they just refer to him as Little Boy Blue.

Collin FP Summer/Fall 2026 registration

0 Comments

FISD Grad

Related News

Summer of ‘76

Summer of ‘76

Columnist John Moore still has and uses the radio that kept him, his cousin, and best friend company during the summer of the 1976 American Bicentennial celebrations. Photo John Moore By John Moore | TheCountryWriter.com Author’s note: This week’s column was...

read more
Raising the steaks

Raising the steaks

Columnist John Moore's great grandfather, Thornton Parmer Moore, is pictured circa 1935 in his blacksmith shop. Like most of the era, he made just about everything he needed. Photo John Moore By John Moore | TheCountryWriter.com As a kid, I often heard the...

read more
In the cards

In the cards

Columnist John Moore spent most Saturday nights of his childhood watching the adults play cards and drink lots of coffee. Photo John Moore By John Moore | TheCountryWriter.com In 868 A.D., according to Chinese historical records, a princess was said to have...

read more
Who’ll stop the rain

Who’ll stop the rain

Columnist John Moore wonders if we can stop the rain we started. Photo John Moore By John Moore | TheCountryWriter.com Back in 2011, it didn’t rain. It didn’t rain for a long, long time. It didn’t rain for so long that fires began to pop up where I live. One...

read more
State’s wind projects at a standstill

State’s wind projects at a standstill

Dozens of Texas wind projects have been halted because the Department of Defense has not approved the federal permits required for them to move forward, the Austin American-Statesman reported. Data from the American Clean Power Association indicate that the state...

read more
Rockin’ down the highway

Rockin’ down the highway

Columnist John Moore has played guitar since he was eight. The Doobie Brothers helped remind him of why he still plays. Photo John Moore When I first picked up a guitar in 1970, my fingers didn’t make the sounds I wanted to hear. But I knew that if I kept trying, I...

read more
Listen here

Listen here

Columnist John Moore has a book on communication his wife bought him in the early 90s. He intends to read it soon. In the early 90s, there was a self-help, relationship book called, “Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus.” The goal of publishing this was for the...

read more
That whatchamacallit

That whatchamacallit

Columnist John Moore speaks Southern. He learned it in his grandfather's blacksmith shop. Photo John Moore Southern folks don’t need proper nouns. We have whatchamacallits and thingamajigs. My grandfather had the only blacksmith shop in Ashdown, Arkansas. That’s where...

read more
Berry berry good

Berry berry good

Columnist John Moore picks blackberries each spring. Something he’s done for a very long time. Photo: John Moore There wasn’t anything accidental about blackberry season in our family. When harvest time came, dad had the harvest trip mapped out long before the berries...

read more
Sounding off

Sounding off

Columnist John Moore still listens to the albums he bought over 50 years ago. Photo John Moore New music coming out used to be an event. Most of the time, you and your friends knew it was coming and you were waiting, money-in-hand, at the record shop to buy it. I...

read more
Subscribe 300x250 - Love