Imagine it's 1960 and you're only eleven years old hanging with your best friend on a Sunday, collecting bottles along side of the road. Probably can't get in trouble. Or could you?
You've met these young boys before in one of my short stories but they're a year older now, a little more experienced. Let's see what happens to them.
Part one today and watch for part two in the middle of the week.
(copyright is held by the author)
Two Boys and Some Smoke
The
gravel pit is overgrown with alder bushes. Big chunks of sandstone
poke out of the earthen walls, others lie in heaps at their base.
Some are the size of coffee tables, some no bigger than dinner
plates, most are two to three inches thick but they’re all mixed
with sand that hasn’t stirred for years. The giant hole is
abandoned now, only frequented by lovers and miscreants. Fourteen
feet deep, it is wide enough to hide the fifteen to twenty trucks
that have carried the gravel away over the years. The entrance is
almost a quarter mile from the main road. Beans and Chops are halfway
down the dusty lane. Chops, as usual, is pulling the wagon even
though it belongs to Beans.
It’s
the end of April, last Sunday of the month, the sun is just west of
its zenith. They left just after dinner. In the country there is
still snow in dark forest crevices and deep ditches. The fields are
lifeless, the dull brown of dead grass, dry as old paper. Bushes and
trees stand naked awaiting their robes of green. Seeds and roots will
awaken soon to fill the air with the scent of wildflowers and growth,
now the ground smells like the dust the boys’ sneakers kick up.
There had been little rain in the last two weeks and the side road is
finally dry.
The
boys decided to begin their weekly bottle run officially today. Their
chatter accompanies the creaking of the small wheels, the cawing of
the crows, the shrieks and whistles of other birds. Their
conversation has gotten serious when they began to discuss their
names. The taller of the two is saying,
“I
don’t think I wanna be called Beans anymore. From now on I’m John
Jr.”
Chops
is about three inches shorter than his best friend. He’s a little
pudgier. A serious frown rearranges his freckled cheeks. His
reddish mop bobs up and down as he ponders this serious remark.
“Well
I sure as heck don’t want to be called Chadwell, or Horatio, or
Orville or Phil. Phil the least. I’ll stick with Chops. But you’ve
been Beans since we were in grade two. Why do you wanna change it
now?”
John
Williams Jr. turned eleven last month. His hormones are changing
gears. Chops will be eleven next month, his hormones have had a head
start.
“My
brother was telling his friend Christopher how I got my nickname when
we saw him at the movie theatre yesterday afternoon.”
Chops
is tugging the wooden wagon, the red sideboards and front wheels
wobbling from the uneven ground along the gravel road. He has both
hands behind his back griping the handle. He hurries to catch up to
Beans who is in front of him.
“So
what? Everybody knows that story.” “
“Christopher’s
sister Nancy was with him and she started laughing.”
Chops
has stopped walking to stand straight staring at his friend’s back.
Bean’s hears the noise stop and looks back. Chops is on the
opposite side of the road with a wide smile on his boyish face. It’s
only the downcast look on his buddy’s face that contains his
laughter.
“Well
sure she would. You thought having gas would be good for your Dad’s
car and someone told you you could get gas if you ate beans. You ate
nothing but beans for three or four days. I still remember you
farting in class. It’s your brother Dave’s fault, he’s the one
that started calling you that.”
Almost
ready to let go with the titters, Chops has a revelation.
“Oh
wait! I get it. You have a crush on Nancy Smith. Ha! And you teased
me all winter about Mary Jane.”
This
is too much for Chops. Beans has always claimed girls were not as
smart as boys and hard to understand and he never, never, ever wanted
to be kissy kissy with them. Yuk! Chops lets go off the wagon handles
to hang on to his belly. He laughs so hard he can hardly breathe. His
yuks are high pitched and he dances around as he fills the air with
glee. Beans, whose face is a reddish beacon just gapes at the
laughing boy.
“It’s
not that funny”
“Yes”
More laughter “Yes it…” He’s tittering too hard trying to
talk. “Yes it is!”
Just
then the wagon surrenders to gravity, it begins to roll backward down
the shallow incline behind them. The road has a crown in the center,
the wagon decides to go right. The wooden handle that fell to the
ground is swinging back and forth Iike a wooden windshield wiper, the
small wheels can’t decide which way to go. The wagon picks up
speed until one of the front wheels hits a small rock. The
obstruction causes it to head directly for a three foot deep ditch
filled with dead grass and small bushes. Losing its balance when the
back wheel goes over the lip the wagon tilts to its side and flips
onto its top. The clunking sound it makes doesn’t suggest soft
earth. The four wheels they had shined up only a half hour ago are
spinning in the air, dirt all over the rubber. They stop rotating in
a small cloud of dust.
The
wagon belongs to John Jr. His parents financed his scheme to use a
wagon instead of hauling burlap bags over their shoulders when he and
Chops collected empties along the road every Sunday. He had paid them
back at the end of autumn last year. The gravel pit had become more
popular as a drinking spot or a place to take a girl on a hillbilly
date. It proved to be a goldmine for the boys last year. John Jr ran
up to the edge of the road.
“Look
what you did Chops! It landed on some rocks, its gonna be scratched.”
“I
didn’t do anything.”
“Well
that’s it isn’t it. You let go of the handle.”
Chops
is not laughing now. When he stands beside John Jr both looking at
the wagon, he thinks right away of how much he loves the wagon even
though it is not his. He always asks to pull it. He always works
hardest at shining it up. He’s disappointed just as much as John
Jr. Looking up at his friend who is frowning at him.
“I’m
sorry.”
John
Jr looks directly into the shy green watery eyes and knows that
statement comes from the heart. He knows the Sangster’s can’t
afford one for Chops who flutters about the wagon with obvious joy.
“It’s
okay Chops, nothing is broke I don’t think. Help me get it out.”
They
jump down into the ditch, the road up to their bellies. The edge
beside the road is more vertical, the opposite side slopes away
towards the field, rising gradually for six or seven feet. One on
each end they lift and turn the wagon onto its wheels. The metal part
you put your hand through on the end of the handle is bent. John Jr.
lifts it up and shakes his head. Chops only studies his friend and
remains quiet.
“I’ll
hold the handle and you lift that end Chops and we’ll get it back
onto the road. And don’t let go until I get out.”
“Okay.”
“Okay.”
The
boys lift their ends pushing it onto the road. Chops holds the back
end while John Jr, climbs out. Soon they’re on the road facing the
pit. Chops pulls a rag from the back pocket of his coveralls to start
wiping the side boards. The paint is nicked and scratched on one side
and on the end of the uprights in each corner. John Jr tries to pry
apart the hand hold with no success. Their knees are dusty, as are
their black and white sneakers. The forearms of their plaid shirts
are smudged with dirt. Chops shirt is brown and beige and the dust is
not as noticeable as on John Jr’s red and black one.
“We’ll
have to bend that back with pliers when we get home. For now we can
wrap our hand around the wood part behind it.”
Chops
stops wiping to watch, still sad over the incident and casts down his
eyes. John Jr, glad that Nancy Smith has been forgotten about waves
a hand at his friend.
“Forget
it Chops. It’s just a few scratches. We can paint it up again.
C’mon, let’s go.”
John
Jr is still puling the wagon when they start down the incline cut
into the ground. The road descends to ten feet and swings to the
right where powerful shovels have dug dirt from the foot of a small
rise at the end of the field. Fifty feet back, a forest stands at the
edge. The wall of dirt on the right is hidden from the road. It is
here that the bottles are more plentiful. The sun throws tiny beams
from the scattered glass where one has broken, the shards are sharp,
to be avoided. More than a dozen bottles are scattered about the
gravel. Quart beer bottles, clear and green soda bottles, mickeys, an
empty quart of Captain Morgan dark rum; all waiting to be picked up.
The boys are soon filing the wagon. Chops is all grins at their find.
“Wow,
we can almost fill the wagon with what’s here. We might have to
make two trips Beans.”
“I
said no more Beans okay? Call me John Jr. No... Just John, yeah just
John.”
“Like
going to the john?”
John
has an armful of bottles and he stops to look at his friend who is
tittering by the wagon.
“Watch
your mouth and whoever decides to crack a joke will get the rough
side of my fist in their face.”
“Even
Nancy Smith?”
He
has to stop to think about that. His lips are tight shut and they
move make and forth as he concentrates. After fifteen seconds he
says,
“Well
okay, John Jr then.”
Chops
starts to laugh and John Jr can’t help it, he cracks up too. They
chuckle for a minute before snatching the last of the bottles. They
have fifteen all together. The racks are almost full. They are
rubbing their hands on the dusty rag Chops has, trying to get the
sticky soda off that spilled from one of the bottles.
“Yeah,
this is great. We might even make a dollar today, fifty cents each.”
In
1960, a dollar is something to be excited about. With four more cents
you could buy a gallon of milk or twenty five stamps or five loaves
of bread or four gallons of gas. If you had 2600 of them you could
buy a car. While the boys are rearranging the bottles to fit better,
they talk about what they might do with the money they save up. Chops
says, “I’m saving for a wagon, like yours.”
“Oh,
yeah, now that mine’s all scratched up, you want your own.”
“No,
no, I was going to do that anyway.”
Chops
sees that his friend is joking.
“What
about you?”
“I’d
like to get my dad a new electric drill for his birthday. He was
looking at them pretty close at the Canadian Tire last week when he
got the winter tires off. I know he’d like to have one.”
“Gee
that’s nice.”
They
kick at the dirt and chuck a few rock as they fantasize about things
as if they had a full time job for a few more minutes until Chops
tires of it.
“Maybe
we should head back.”
John
Jr is looking at his friend seriously for a few seconds before
speaking.
“I’ve
got some tobacco.”
“Tobacco?
Where did ya get it?”
John
Jr pulls a blue hanky with white polka dots and plain edges from the
front pocket of his faded denims. It’s shaped like a ball at one
end and the edges are scrunched together with an elastic band. He
removes the rubber and opens the bag to reveal enough loose tobacco
to roll about three large cigarettes.
“It
belongs to Dave. He started smoking but Mum and Dad don’t know.”
“What
are ya gonna do with it?”
John
Jr looks at his buddy as if he grew another eye.
“I’m
gonna make fairy dust out of it and turn you into a frog, dummy.
We’re going to smoke it.”
Chops
holds up his hands and backs towards the end of the wagon. “No way,
I’m not smoking it. My mother hates smoking and if I get caught,
she’ll have Pa take me the wood shed.”
The
Sangster’s woodshed is where punishment is doled out in private.
Mr. Sangster hates the chore but to keep peace with his Mrs., he
doles out the strokes she deems suitable to the crime committed.
Thank goodness it wasn’t often, usually the threat of their
father’s switch is sufficient to cool tempers. All three of the
boys and both girls have felt the sting of the tiny whip even through
the cloth of their trousers or skirts.
Pointing
to a small group of alders near the side wall twenty feet away, John
Jr assures him.
“They’re
not going to find out, I brought gum too. Hide the wagon over behind
those bushes and let’s go down to the river.”
To be continued...........
Please drop by on Wednesday to find out how the smoking goes.