Elaine Smith Writes

Anything She Wants

Nothing to fear

but lizards in the house.

And the miracle is that I’m getting past that.

Actually, lest my sister refuse to visit me again, let me hasten to explain that I don’t have many lizards in the house.  Hardly any.  In fact, I’ve been here nearly three years, and the one of which I am about to speak is only the second.  That’s not bad considering the number that hang around outside. (I have named the house Casa Lagarto, after all.)

Mostly, we have chameleons (which are, probably, really anoles) and geckos and a few skinks.

The lizard in my story was, I think, a chameleon.  Although I have an easier time distinguishing them from the geckos when they are their native green.  Once they’ve decided brown is the color of the day, it’s a little harder.  But, judging by shape, this was a chameleon.

I have long been accustomed—well, okay—I have for a couple of years been accustomed to seeing the lizards scuttle around outside without the need for a gasp and an eek.  I don’t even have that zero at the bone* feeling when I come face to face with an enraged anole hanging head height on the garage wall and inflating its throat and glaring at me.

This does not mean, however, that I want them to come to breakfast. And thereby hangs a tale.

Fortunately, thereby does not hang a tail.  You do know that many a lizard will just leave its tails behind if you happen to grab it, right?  Then, if ever, is the time for “eek”—and likewise, “ugh.”

But, I digress.

The breakfast lizard did not actually come to breakfast.  It was not, in fact, anywhere near the breakfast table.  I, however, had come downstairs early in the morning with a view toward getting something to eat.

The first thing to do, in my house, when you come downstairs of a morning is to open the curtains.  You want to see the creek in the morning.  Often, the coots are there to offer matutinal greetings. (Hah!  Never thought I’d get to use “matutinal” in a sentence!)

So…I opened the kitchen curtains.  I opened the venetian blind on the side window.  I opened the bay window curtains.  And then, I went to open the curtains to the two big picture windows, creekside.  At this point, since I don’t have the official, I-picked-these-out-and-I-love-them window treatments, this requires the use of a long stick to nudge the 4 panels of temporary curtains aside.

One slides left, a second slides right, a third…holy cow!  There’s a lizard on the window sill.

Eeek.

Outside, I am accustomed to the unexpected—if that’s not an oxymoron.  Inside, it’s a little different.  First, there’s the involuntary gasp and recoil, by which time it never seems to me that there’s any point in a scream of any sort.  (I sometimes envy the women who scream.  My reaction is always too silent to awaken the MotH.**)

But, eek.  There’s a lizard on the window sill—and a MotH who won’t appreciate being awakened and who is, properly, scoff-ful (is that a word?) of irrational fears.

And then came the miracle.

I decided I—I!— would catch (and release, of course) the lizard.

Tune in tomorrow to hear how I fared.


* Dickinson, Emily,  The Snake—but the principle is the same.

** MotH = Man of the House