The
words of the popular Easter song warning me that Peter Cottontail was hopping
down the bunny trail could send me into a fit of hysterics as a child. I didn’t care if hippity-hoppity Easter was
on its way or not. I wanted that dang
rabbit to keep his distance. I had a
love/hate thing with ole Peter Cottontail.
I loved that he brought me a basketful of candy on Easter morning. I hated that he would show up at the last
place I’d expect to see him.
I am not
sure why this unjustified terror took hold of me, but I know where it
started. I'm not entirely sure it's unjustified. Though completely accidental,
the deeply seeded fear was planted at Jack’s Surplus, a discount store. My dad called it Tokyo Jack’s. I guess because most of the merchandise was
made in Japan, or maybe it was cheaply made.
I’m really not sure, but I do know that was about my favorite place to
shop. It never benefited me much to go with my mom
because she never bought me anything.
We’d roam the aisles while I made mental notes on what I’d ask Grandma
Coleman to buy me the next time we shopped.
My
favorite section was the shoes. They had
some of the greatest clogs anyone in Indiana could possibly lay eyes on. And there were wedgies, too. Grandma had taught me all about them because
while I might have shared my love of dogs with my grandpa and my love of
Spanish with my kindergarten teacher, Grandma knew a good pair of shoes when she saw
them.
I
admired a pair of avocado green sling back wedgie clogs. These shoes had it all, including a cork
heel. I would have to figure out a way
to get grandma to take me to Jack's.
My mom
was the best mind reader in the world.
Never mind what they said about moms having eyes in the back of their
heads. If my mom had them, she didn’t
need them because she somehow knew what I was thinking. If she had a crystal ball and some scarves,
she could have been a gypsy fortune teller. Even
without the accessories, she knew what I was up to.
“Don’t
you even think about having your grandma get those for you,” she said. “You’re feet aren’t big enough, and you aren’t
old enough.”
It was
useless to try to clue her in on how grandma showed me that you could take a
piece of newspaper, ball it up, and put it in the toes of shoes if they were a
little bit too big. I’d done it all the
time when I played dress up in her things.
It wouldn't be long until I could wear a woman's size 5 1/2, anyway. Everyone said I was growing like weed.
I could
have made my argument, but a voice came over the speaker and caused me to stop
and listen.
“Attention: The Easter Bunny has arrived!” a cheerful
voice sounded throughout the store.
This was
mom’s chance to lead me away from the shoes I didn’t need, but wanted. “Let’s go see the Easter Bunny.”
I don’t
know what the voice was so happy about because he was scarier than my mental
image of the devil who was going to load my parents up and take them off to hell since they didn't go to church (no dying required). All the storybooks
and cartoons I’d seen had made me think he was a cute and lovable sort who
hopped around his bunny trail delivering chocolate rabbits and jelly
beans.
There
had to be some mistake. This guy was at
least 15’ tall and was wearing bibbed overalls.
His fur was matted and crazy like a cat with mange or a dog that was in
need of a good de-burring.
“Go on,
go see him,” my said and pushed me forward.
“No!” I
screamed and ran the other direction.
“Oh,
c’mon,” my mom urged.
The
rabbit didn’t speak, but just stared at me with those huge hollowed out
eyes. I couldn’t threaten to kick his
big, vacant eyes out because someone had apparently beaten me to the punch.
“He
won’t hurt you,” my mom continued to urge.
"Kelly Kay."
Yeah,
that’s what they all say, I thought while my mom tried to coax me out from a
rack of polyester pantsuits, promising me we could go home.
The worst
part was that he was stationed by the cash registers. I felt him eyeing me with those huge empty
eye sockets. He looked like an Easter
zombie. I kept my eyes peeled should have make any sudden moves and leave his Easter area as my mom checked out.
I never
felt the same about Jack’s Surplus City.
Even when Grandma took me, she had to promise me that the Easter Bunny
wasn’t there before I’d even get out of the car. Not even the love of fashionable shoes could
make me trust the place again.
Everyone
tried to convince me that it wasn’t the “real” Easter bunny that I saw. In fact, they said it was a man dressed up
like him. He was just one of the Easter
Bunny’s helpers. I wasn’t buying
it. No one who loved children and
delivering candy, and withstood the likes of Iron Tail in the cartoon would
send something like that to Jack’s. I
didn’t care and no amount of convincing was going to work. I did not, nor would I ever, trust that
rabbit.
Completely
unassuming of any impending jeopardy, I later found myself at church for an
Easter party. I really didn’t want to
go. I would have been happy to stay home
and color or play with my dolls. I'm sure my mom saw it as an opportunity for a break, so she loaded me up, and dropped me off.
A lady
used the feltboard and taught us about the very first Easter. She put up a picture of a cave with a big
rock against the doorway. But since it
was a good Friday for God, he sent angels to roll the rock away. This made the angels happy because Jesus was
his son, and had raisins. Or something like that, anyway. The details were sketchy, and I was too busy
wondering how they paper stuck to the board without falling off.
That was
definitely something I needed, and I would ask Grandma C to get me one. Maybe they had them at Jack’s, and I wanted
one badly enough that I would risk seeing that scary rabbit if it meant I got a
feltboard. But then again, maybe I would
tell Grandma to look the next time she was there. The image of the rabbit who was a man
pretending to be a rabbit picked by the real Easter Bunny still haunted
me. I had planned on staying in bed that
Easter night, not taking any chances as to what I might see if I got up to get
a drink of water and go to the bathroom.
“Okay
everyone,” the feltboard lady said as happy as the voice on the speaker in
Jack’s, “We all have to hide now because the Easter Bunny is coming!”
If there
was never a real reason to be afraid, I now had one. I might have been a scaredy-cat, but
something told me it was bad news if you had to hide somewhere from
something.
They
took us into the stairwell leading up from the church basement to the first floor and closed the
door behind us. I hunkered down on the
steps to not risk being seen from the small window on the landing. I was sure if the rabbit saw me that would be
the end of me.
Something
translated in a most twisted way that day adding even more reasons to fear
Peter Rabbit. Okay, he was coming. We were hiding. Why would we hide from him unless we were in
eminent danger? This was not a good sign
at all, and apparently, my paranoia was just.
The Easter Bunny was obviously wicked, as I had suspected.
An older
girl saw me crying and tried to make me feel better. She told me that there was nothing to be
afraid of, and unless she knew something I didn’t know, she had to be
nuts.
After the coast was clear, the lady
tried to lure me back to the basement.
When I wouldn’t budge, and had drawn a crowd of the other grownups, she
grabbed my wrist and dragged me down the last three steps. Not only did I have great mistrust for a
giant rabbit wearing overalls and sneakers, I came out of hiding for nasty
malted robin eggs and some jelly beans, which were disgusting, too.
As long
as I had no in-person encounters with the Easter Bunny, all was fine. I was torn, though, when Dad teased that
Toby, our sheep dog, might chase off the Easter Bunny. I
didn’t know whether to cheer on my dog, or be upset that I might not get my
allotment of chocolate.
I never
watched Here Comes Peter Cottontail,
in the same light again. When Peter
Cottontail was pitted against the evil Irontail, the nasty, mean rabbit that
sported a metal tail because he was ran over by a child on a tricycle, I no longer knew who to root for. Peter Cottontail or Iron tail. Hmm, it was the lesser of two evils, and at
least Iron tail was supposed to be scary.
The best
I could do was to stay out of his way, and I hoped that he would do the same
for me. It didn’t stop me from double
checking what month it was anytime we pulled up to Jack’s Surplus City or I was
sent to church for some sort of party. I
wasn’t taking any chances.