I got the impression he was wondering if I’d even realized that he’d come home late
His face was red; sweat dripped from his face. Before I could ask anything, he told me he was on a hunt. The words came out in a jumble of English and Hebrew as he hungrily munched his Erev Shabbos pizza.
“Mommy, I have to go back out to search for the rabbit,” he said while rummaging through my fridge for appropriate rabbit fare. A conversation ensued with his older sister as to the most tempting rabbit food. “Carrots? Why carrots?” Avi asked. “Lettuce is better.”
In the nanoseconds I had before he bolted from the house, I warned him to be home in time to shower and get ready for Shabbos.
Busy with the last Erev Shabbos preparations, I didn’t have time to get many details about Avi’s rabbit hunt. From the few facts I unearthed, it appeared that the rabbit was white, grey, and beige. He was spotted “near the stairs.” As my neighborhood straddles a mountainside, there’s a plethora of staircases. I was therefore unclear which staircase the rabbit was residing near. It seemed that he belonged to a boy who lived in the building next door.
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