[Frederica-l] Pizza Trouble

Frederica at aol.com Frederica at aol.com
Fri Sep 15 12:56:29 EDT 2006


This is an essay I wrote some years ago, and couldn't find a place to 
publish; there aren't many outlets for humor any more. A friend who is teaching a 
high school writing class found it and is using it, complete with a quiz! Enjoy. 

*******************

            Pizza Trouble
 
I'm a pastor's wife, mom of three, short, plump and southern, so people are 
generally surprised to hear that I was once under investigation by the FBI for 
making death threats on behalf of the Mafia.
 
It could happen to anyone, really. 
 
One night we were having dinner with a couple in our congregation, Bob and 
Cathy, while our combined five kids played downstairs in the rec room. My 
husband's gingery Chinese stirfry was disappearing fast, and Cathy's special 
Chocolate Overload cake was waiting in the kitchen.
 
Then Cathy put down her chopsticks. "Oh, I forgot to tell you!" she 
exclaimed. "Bob's writing an investigative piece--real investigation, not just the 
city-budget kind. It's a little scary."
 
Bob leaned back and affected a nonchalance usually associated with 
trenchcoats and dangling cigarettes. "It's about the Mafia," he said. "It's big time. 
Did you know that they're all around us? Even here in our little town."
 
This seemed unlikely. We lived in a suburb a hefty commute from the big city. 
We had a few stop lights, discount stores and fast food joints, but nothing 
like the ominous urban grime associated with a major crime syndicate.
 
"How it works," Bob went on, "is that they bring young guys over from Sicily 
and put them to work in pizza joints. Every morning they get up and make 
pizza, and every night they come home; if you watched them for weeks, that's all 
you'd see. Then one day a phone call comes in, an order to knock someone off. 
They go out in the night, do the dirty work, and the next day are back spinning 
dough."
 
"It's kind of scary," Cathy repeated.
 
Suddenly Bob looked at me. "Hey, you know that pizza place in the mall, the 
one in the food court? 'Pizza Supreme'? It's one of them. It's a front."
 
"No!" I said, feeling uneasy.
 
"Sure is," he responded. "That's one of the places I'm keeping an eye on."
 
A few weeks later I was at the mall and thought I'd just stroll by the food 
court, though the idea of a smiling killer's face watching me over the 
pepperoni was unnerving. But to my surprise the "Pizza Supreme" counter was boarded 
up. Instead there was a sign announcing, "Coming soon, Ocean Breeze Pretzels!"
 
I clicked on a mischevious idea. My camera was in the car so I ran and got 
it, then took a photo of the boarded-up business. When the film was developed a 
few days later I sat at my kitchen table, thinking through my plan. First, a 
plain, unmarked envelope addressed to Bob and Cathy. Then I took the photo of 
the forlorn shop and turned it over, a laundry marker in my hand.
 
What would be the broadest, most obvious joke I could make? I wondered. I 
clutched the marker in a fist and scrawled in shakey capitals, "YOU WRECKA MY 
BUSINESS, I BREAKA YOU FACE."
 
I dropped it in the mailbox, chuckling. Bob and Cathy would wrack their 
brains trying to figure out which friend had pulled this clever practical joke. 
 
A joke. I swear, it was a joke.
 
Several days passed. It was time for our annual vacation, and I was rushing 
around packing for the next day's departure. I almost didn't answer the phone.
 
It was Cathy. "Oh, hi," I said, a bundle of kid's tshirts in my arms. I tried 
to sound casual, so as not to give away the game too early.
 
"I know you're busy," she said, "but I was just calling--well, to ask your 
prayers. Something terrible has happened. I'm going to take the boys and go stay 
with my parents for a few weeks, but Bob will stay here. There are FBI agents 
in his office right now. You see," she whispered, "we've had a death threat."
 
"Oh, no!" I said, genuinely shocked.
 
"Yes," she said, "we got a photograph in the mail, with a threatening 
message. They're dusting it for fingerprints now. Tomorrow they're planning to go 
confront John Gotti with it."
 
Of the calvalcade of collapsing emotions I felt at that instant, the 
strongest was that I would really prefer John Gotti not find out anything about this, 
ever.
 
"Listen, Cathy," I said, "I think I have some good news for you, because I 
actually know who sent that photo. Actually--it was me."
 
It took a few more exchanges to convince her; the menacing big guys had taken 
on such realistic bulk in her mind that it was hard to replace them with her 
diminutive pastor's wife.
 
"So, do you think Bob will be angry?" I asked in a small voice.
 
"Oh, I'm sure he'll eventually find some humor in it," Cathy replied, 
politely. She was clearly still a little stunned.
 
As she hung up to phone Bob with the good (?) news, I went back to the 
kitchen. I pulled out an identical envelope and the same marker, and wrote a note of 
such abject apology that it seemed extra stamps would be required for the 
weight. My husband was home for lunch, and picked up the finished product. 
 
"I'm going back to the office now," he said. "Do you want me to drop this in 
the mailbox for you?"
 
"No," I said. "I have to crawl there on my knees."
 

********
Frederica Mathewes-Green
www.frederica.com
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