The Short Humour Site









Home : Writers' Showcase : Submission Guidelines : A Man of a Few More Words : Links

Writers' Showcase

Snakes Without Colors
by Zach Smith

They taught us in boy scouts how to tell if a snake was poisoned. Red touches yellow kill’s a fellow, red touches black friend of Jack (or in this case Zach). Or is it Red touches yellow friend of a fellow and red touches black kills Zach. I have trouble remembering, but it doesn’t matter because I don’t know what red and yellow are.

I was playing catch with my father in my grandmother's backyard. The ball we were using was bright day-glow orange, or so I've been told. At one point I didn’t catch the ball and it rolled into the grass. I could not find it, even though it was right at my feet, or as they say: if it was a snake it would have bit me.

For five minutes my dad told me the ball was right there in front of me and he thought I was joking, until I got frustrated and sat down, not wanting to play anymore.

They took me to an eye doctor, who showed me Ishihara Slides, made up of dots of (apparently) different colors. Usually these slides have numbers hidden in them, however since I was so young at the time, they actually had pictures of animals. I could see the cow, and the snake, but not much else.

“Your son is colorblind,” said the ophthalmologist.

No kidding.

“There's blood everywhere,” I told my mom, after walking out of the bathroom in the doctor's office.

She checked, but all she saw was the marble finish with pronounced blue veins.

A few months later, we took dugout canoes on the Great Barrier Reef.

“Why are there so many candy canes in the water?” I asked.

“Zach,” she said. “There aren't any candy canes.”

I didn't want to be wrong, so I reached in and grabbed what turned out to be a Simoselaps or one of the ultra poisoning black and white Australian Coral Snakes.

Nothing happened of course, I must have been predestined.

White touches black, that's not in the Boy Scout Handbook. But it must have been in the Mom handbook because she threw my candy cane back into the sea.