Vermin Alert!
Posted in rantings and ravings on June 14th, 2026 by skeeterThe era of door-to-door sales was, or so I assumed, relegated to the distant past. Tinkers from the 1800’s, Avon and Fuller Brush in the 20th Century, thieves in my ghetto neighborhood selling stolen TV’s and stereos in my urban nightmare days, encyclopedias and magazines, cutlery, gyppo loggers, the list is long but not long now. Until last night when I heard a rapping on the front door and found a uniformed young man introducing himself as a Pest Exterminator. As he explained more than a few times, he was in the vicinity, had clients across the road who needed his services and wondered if we might be looking for similar remediation of our mice, wasp, spider, ants, bats or any other varmint problem.
“I have traps and poison in the van already,” my Willy Loman explained, “so I could offer you a considerable discount since I’m here already.” I said that’s mighty generous but we’re doing okay so far. “Don’t you get mice?” he asked. I said we get all those things, it’s the country, kind of comes with the territory.
“You take care of those by yourself?” he wanted to know. Gee, maybe he’s guessing my age, calculating the geriatric decay and figuring this old geezer probably is past setting mice traps, just let the buggers run rampant in the house, maybe keep one room sealed and locked, live like refugees. But I told him yeah, I’ve kept them at bay so far. He told me again how the neighbors were signing up for pest eradication and since he was here, he could make me a helluva deal, then pulled out a price list of services. Curious, I took the laminated sheet and perused it for a bit, prices based on square footage starting at 400 bucks, then a monthly service of just under half that. I’m guessing the buggers adapt to the poison or mutate like bacteria no antibiotic will kill.
The kid wanted to know, since I obviously underestimated the threat to person and property if these rabid rodents and disease carrying creepy-crawlies managed to penetrate past my insufficient barriers, how long I’d lived here, no doubt thinking I’d just fell off the turnip truck and had no clear notion whatsoever of the danger we were putting ourselves in by thinking we could handle the scourge plaguing our neighbors single-handedly, probably city refugees.
I said 50 years come this fall. My salesman immediately concluded his next line of argument was probably doomed, unlike ourselves. He took back the laminated price list and asked if I wanted his bizness card, the price list he couldn’t leave with us. “Not really,” I said, but to hasten the removal of his shoe in the doorway, I said I’d take it. “You never know,” I said and he agreed whole-heartedly.
After he handed me his company card and wrote his name on the back, he turned to go back down the driveway to his van full of toxins, traps, poisons and god only knows what killing strategies. I said, “Wait.” Of course he figured, maybe, just maybe ….
“Listen,” I said seriously. “Do a good job with my neighbors’ rats and mice and all the rest. I sure don’t want them escaping across the highway. We got our own varmints, don’t need a mass migration.”
The kid nodded. “I’ll do my best.” I was pretty sure he would.