As we get to know each other a little better, you may realize that I live on a hobby farm. This includes a few goats, chickens, rabbits, barn cats, and ducks.

I also sometimes fix up houses with my sister to flip. A recent project was more demanding than a hungry toddler. 

This all began the morning when I was running late for work and I needed to turn out the ducks for the day.  I found a duck egg lying on the ground beside the ducks’ water tub, a forlorn brown egg caked in mud and grass.  

I didn’t have time to coddle this egg, no matter how sad it looked, so I did the next best thing: I grabbed a fast food napkin from my pickup,  wrapped the egg, and threw it in my purse. I’d take care of it later.

Photo by Kathy Brasby

 Somehow a purse seems out of place among all the power tools, so I left it in my pickup while we worked. For two days. 

When next I rummaged around the abyss of my purse, there was the egg, still wrapped in the napkin. My sister, Ann, and I were on our way to the hardware store. I handed the egg to Ann so I could find keys. 

“What is this?” She held it between her thumb and forefinger like it was a dead mouse.

“An egg,” I said. “Just hold it.”

“I don’t want it.” And she put it in the glove box.

Fresh farm eggs have a coating of something that poultry people call bloom. The coating keeps the egg fresh without refrigeration for a long time. Commercial eggs are generally washed which removes the bloom, requiring the eggs to be refrigerated.

The magic of bloom was why there was no rotten egg in my pickup.

A few days later, we took my pickup to the Chinese place for lunch. 

“I think I’ll leave my wallet here,” Ann said.  Upon opening the glove box, she caught the napkin-wrapped duck egg. “Haven’t you done anything with this yet?” Speaking of Captain Obvious….

“No, I forgot where it was.”

“Well, get it out of here.”

When we got back to the project house, I put the egg with a plastic bag of supplies that I planned to take home.

At the end of the day, Ann claimed the plastic bag so she could wrap her paintbrush. “How did your egg get in here?”

She didn’t sound curious like you’d think with that sort of question. She sounded like I’d hidden a dirty diaper in there.

“Oh, I’ll take care of it.” I grabbed the egg and put the egg in a box I needed to take home.

The next morning, the egg was still in the box at the flip house. Somehow it then got moved to another room and covered by boards and trim. If you think I’m admitting to that move, you’re nuts.

“We need to get these rooms cleaned out,” Ann said a day later. She started hauling things out, so I grabbed stuff, too. When we got the boards moved, I spotted the box. Of course, Ann walked by at that moment. “Is that your egg?” she said.

She made it sound like I was storing soggy seaweed or something. 

“Yeah. I lost track of it.”

“You and that egg.”

I carried the egg to my pickup again and put it in the glove box. I’d toss the egg when I got home.

Four months later, a police officer pulled me over for a license plate check. “I need to see your registration and insurance cards,” he said.

“Yes, sir.” I opened the glove box. My faithful egg was still nestled in its muddy paper blanket. I realized in a flash that the magic of bloom isn’t very reliable after four months.

I tried to explain. I really did. But the officer backed away slowly with one hand doing a halt motion and the other squeezing his nose. You’d think I was holding a hand grenade.

I haven’t let Ann check my glove box now for a long time. Just in case I forgot something.

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