Yesterday afternoon was a bit of a dramatic affair. Ernesto worked from home and was able to pick the kids up from the bus stop. The bus stop isn't far, but it's up the street... which is up a hill... which is not up my alley as I'm now hugely pregnant and tire easily. So off he went.
About 30 minutes later they arrived at the house. I had assumed the bus was slow in arriving because of the rain. But as Ernesto and the children entered the house, my darling husband let out a "Jesus Christ!" and I knew something was amiss. Ryan appeared before me with a look of fright and bewilderment and then I found out what had happened.
Ernesto was waiting for the bus, and when it arrived he noticed that somebody important was missing. Kiera got off the bus, but Ryan didn't. And then the bus drove away.
Uh, we're missing a kid here?
And of course at that very moment of panic, my husband didn't have his cell phone. Doesn't it always happen that way? Kiera insisted that Ryan had been on the bus. So luckily, one of our neighbors and a fellow parent of one of the students offered Ernesto a ride in her car to chase down the bus. Ahhh yes. A dramatic chase. A mystery to be solved. And parental panic sky high.
I'm so glad Ernesto was the one dealing with the situation... what with my delicate emotional condition and all. I swear I would have peed my pants in sheer terror that my child was missing.
Long story short, they were able to flag down the bus, and ask the bus driver if there was a Ryan Loveless on board. The bus driver said no. He said Ryan was still at school because he cut his hand and his parents needed to pick him up. Yes, let's add even more confusion to the whole situation. Not to mention the fact that Kiera had insisted that she saw Ryan on the bus. Anyhow, Ryan ended up being on the bus, completely oblivious to the fact that he had missed his stop. Apparently he was engrossed in his library book called "Special Effects," and he was daydreaming about his future scientific inventions. My little boy, his head in the clouds could've ended up at the school bus garage... or wherever those buses go at the end of the day.
So we had to have another conversation about paying attention. Another conversation about how daydreaming should be reserved for moments when he doesn't need to focus on anything. And that perhaps he shouldn't read on the bus.

On a lighter note, Kiera was being her normal precious self this morning. As I perused the newspaper at the breakfast table, she decided to look at the classified section. She found two Yorshire Terriers for sale and insisted that we buy them. I told her that they were Yorkies, and that they are expensive and does she have $500 to pay for them? She insisted that she had the money to buy the "Dorkies." Why, as a matter of fact she has a few coins in her piggy bank. I told her that the YORKIES were too expensive and that if we decided to get another dog, it would be from a shelter. But she didn't listen. She just smiled and said that she wanted a "Dorky," and that she would get a girl "Dorky," and she would get one of those fancy carriers that had a little rug and pillow to keep her "Dorky" comfortable. And that she would name her "Dorky", Layla.