A Patriot's Day Story
Jokingly, I turned to Raegan:
"I wonder how long it'll be before Nance drives by."
And as soon as I spoke the words, there she was, at the wheel of a Pontiac convertible, waving like Miss America and handing out miniature flags. You know the kind: tiny dowels with the flag part stapled on (btw: isn't that illegal, stapling the flag?).
"I gotta catch up to her. She'll get a big kick out of it. It'll be hilarious."
Nevertheless, a brisk walk and I was beside the car.
"Hi Nance," I said. "How you doing? How's about a flag?"
"They're for the kids." She said without a moment's hesitation.
I glanced in the back seat. They had literally thousands of flags, rolled-up, packed in boxes marked MADE IN CHINA.
"Well, how bout for a patriotic adult, then?"
"Where's your Red, White, and Blue?"
The funny thing is, I was wearing Red, White, and Blue. All three, in fact.
"You're joking, right? Let me have one for Raegan."
"Nope."
"Well, then, how about a flag for your neighbor who you've lived next-door to for the last thirty or so years and who you've helped raise-up yourself from the tender age of three, causing your own begotten son to become so enamored of our faith that he married into it, meaning all of your grandchildren will forevermore be Jews?"
She thought about it for a moment.
"Sorry, no can do."
I wondered if maybe there wasn't a law that says if you're handing out thousands of cheap U.S. flags in a Patriot's Day parade in Lexington, MA (birthplace of American liberty) and a fellow American comes up and asks for one, that you are obligated to oblige.
Then I realized it wasn't a law. It was just common courtesy I was thinking of, and that Nancy had in fact become a real politician after all.




