When it’s all too much, this dad decides to quit

I quit.

I am hip-deep in laundry. There are 17 more shoes than feet in our front hall — not pairs, just individual shoes. There’s a kid I don’t know sleeping on the couch. There’s a dog I don’t know drinking out of my toilet. My fridge is loaded to the gills with old Chinese food and outdated Gogurts. I’m out of bread, eggs, milk, hot dogs, and Ho Hos. I haven’t shaved in four days. I have no clean towels.

I wander into my son’s room where he’s fallen asleep like a true warrior, in a puddle of drool surrounded by a crenelated edifice of Brisk cans and spent instant snack Ramen bowls. It’s Snackhenge.

The dinner table is piled to the roofbeams with clean clothes. I put them there with the admonition that my kids ought to put away their own duds. They just started changing in the dining room.

There’s a Wii avatar staring at me from the flatscreen. He seems angry, impatient, like he’s been standing there a long time. He’s looking at me like he’s thinking, “Well? What are you going to do now?”

What am I going to do? The only sane thing left. This experiment called “summer” has run its course, and it’s an epic fail. I know when I’ve been beat. I grab my keys, my giant leather manbag, and my panama hat, and walk out the front door.

I quit.

I’ve been a slave for nine long weeks. A kept man. A minion for my miniature overlords, and I’ve had it. I need to refill my man card.

I go to my favorite cigar lounge and disappear into a deep leather chair under a cloud of fine Nicaraguan smoke. I break out a good book. I order a cup of coffee so strong it can bend time. I wallow deeper into the leather, tilt my hat down over my eyes, and crack the spine on the book.

Then the texts begin.

“Dad where are you?”

“Nicaragua.”

“Srsly. I’m hungry.”

“I quit.”

“LOL, dad. You’re funny. Danny needs a ride home, and his dog pooped in the kitchen.”

“I quit.”

“Dad?”

It’s a good cigar. I mean, really, really good. I keep smoking and stare into the haze until my phone vibrates a hole in the chair.

“Dad, Connor is GrubHubbing a pizza. Can I get a pizza?”

“I quit.”

“LOL. Hilarious. I’m starving. Some dog pooped in the kitchen.”

“I quit.”

“Dad?”

The thing about a Partagas Maduro is you have to take time to smoke it right. You can’t smoke it too fast, it’s like fishing. You have to …

“Hon? The kids seem concerned about you.”

“I quit.”

“It’s been a long summer. You probably need a mini-vacation.”

“I quit.”

“Our house is full of kids and dogs, and they’re all starving to death. Maybe you should … ”

“I quit.”

“If you quit your duties … I’ll quit mine.”

I’m back at the house in 10 minutes flat.

Chris Garlington lives in a standard two kids, wife, dog, corner-lot, two-car dream package. He drives a 2003 Camry, sports a considerable notebook fetish, and smokes Arturo Fuente Partaga Maduros at the Cigar King as often as possible. His stories have appeared in Florida, Orlando, Orlando Weekly, Catholic Digest, Retort, Another Realm, The Dead Mule School of Southern Literature, South Lit, and other magazines. His short story collection, “King of the Road,” is available on Amazon. His column “My Funny Life,” was nominated for a national humor award. He is the author of the infamous anti-parenting blog, Death By Children; the anti-writing blog, Creative Writer Pro; and co-author of “The Beat Cop’s Guide to Chicago Eats.”