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Sandbagged

Bill and Jill have a large assortment of handmade European dolls, too many to fit into the bungalow they hope eventually to own. How natural to set up a booth at a doll and teddy bear show and use that venue to downsize their household clutter and sell books at the same time? Brilliant, Bill thought.

original by
Elizabeth Pongratz


original by Elizabeth Pongratz

original by
Joelle Lemasson

original by Joelle Lemasson

Bill 's unique book-signing venue

Bill 's unique book-signing venue

Metropolitan Exhibiters 7th Annual
Doll/Teddy Bear/Collectibles Show

 

In retrospect, maybe it should have been obvious that people who go to doll and teddy bear shows are not the same people who buy novels about computer attacks. Several visitors to the booth actually picked up the book and examined it, their faces lined in puzzlement. “What is it about?” they asked, as if they had not just read the blurb on the back cover. “It’s about a computer attack on the country,” Bill would start with enthusiasm, and then watch the sparks of curiosity flicker out. He didn’t sell any books, but one person did request an autograph on his business card.

Bill and Jill did finally get a chance to sell Jill’s spectacular Swiss cookies, from a family recipe dating back to at least 1850. They’d set out a bowl of free cookies, which met with great acclaim. The conference host stopped by and savored a sample to her great satisfaction. Bill noted that she could have a free pack if she bought one of the booth items. “Packs? You have packs? How many do you have?” Bill pulled back the cover on the large canister. “Why don’t you sell them?” The lady asked and then insisted. Bill and Jill obliged. “I’m tired of raising people,” the lady said as she walked away, shaking her head. The great disappointment of the show was that, although patrons uniformly loved the cookies, not a single one sprung for a dollar to buy a small pack. This shattered Bill’s dream of Jill becoming a female Famous Amos.

Sales progressed at a moderate rate, despite dreadful weather--steady rain that followed close on a two-foot snowfall. All went well until noon, when a water main broke, flooding the parking lot and the hotel. A lake of inch-deep water emptied the hotel restaurant, closed the kitchen and lounge, and lapped against the ballroom in which cowered the doll show. Steadfast organizers used towels to “sandbag” the walls and keep the water out of the ballroom. The maneuver succeeded, but few customers chose to ford fifteen feet of flowing hallway to pay their entrance fee and float into the show.

Some vendors packed, even though only two hours had passed of the six-hour show. Most vendors held firm, their faces determined -- until a waterfall burst through the ceiling. Oh, there had been drips in lots of places, as you would expect in a one-story, flat-roofed building huddled under thick snow and waterlogged from two days of steady rain. But when a ceiling tile gave way, the stream that burst forth might have come from a fire hose.

A simultaneous water attack from below and above told Bill and Jill that Mother Nature was not in a dolly mood. They joined most of the vendors in packing, although some stubbornly held tight, their faces grim, as though they would go down with the ship. Bill and Jill drove to their neighborhood lounge, where they spent their proceeds on a meal and drowned their sorrows in wine. By the time they returned home to their three cats, they were in fine spirits. Interesting how liquid on the inside can counter liquid on the outside.

Lake Doll Show Entrance

Lake Doll Show Entrance

wade in the waters

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Updated: 19-Oct-2005