--I AM YOUR BURNING ONE
…Hey Hi. How’s your weekend?
“Love Actually” is playing on the TV downstairs. I love that movie and can’t really see it too
many times.
…Here’s one of my first published stories (in Juked) that got a little
bit of good press at the time it came out:
The Launcher
That
summer we were bored or stoned when we could afford to be. It was Barry’s brilliant notion to build the thing
but I didn’t have any ideas of my own so I went with his, which was the start
of our trouble.
It looked like a homemade bazooka,
made of plastic and duct tape, because that’s what it was, more or less.
“Do these things have a name?” I
asked.
Barry said, “Hell if I know. What’s it matter?”
So we called it The Launcher and
started off with spuds. Barry’s mom had
a twenty pound bag of them. They looked
like aborted infants, only solid and heavy.
They sailed into the sky, hung there for an astounding thirty seconds
before landing in a violent splatter. It
felt like discounted murder without any of the consequences.
When we ran out of potatoes we used
every other vegetable we could find—tomatoes and squash, zucchini,
cabbage. We moved onto solids out of
necessity. First it was soda cans, then
soda bottles. The shattered glass
sizzled, hissing at us like pissed off snakes.
Looking back I suppose those
potatoes were something of a gateway drug because we got over them real quick, yet
their minor thrill left us wanting more, a different fix that might kick-start
some sedentary neuron in our brains.
We went to the pet store and bought
two litters of mice. I can still recall
their furious scratching in the bag behind my car seat. Their breathing was husky. I found it fascinating that they never
squeaked because in every mouse story I’d ever read there always seemed to be a
lot of squeaking or squealing.
Barry’s house was a dilapidated
cabin that his grandfather had built a hundred years ago. It leaned eastward, toward the rising sun,
and from a certain angle you might have thought it had lost balance and was about
to fall into the water.
Chain Lake was no more than two
blocks long and maybe one block wide on the other side. I never thought we’d hit the guy’s
house. If I’d believed we could, if
Barry had, we would have tried first thing.
As it happened, the third mouse
landed on the old geezer’s roof. It
surprised me how dull and empty the resonance of death could be—nothing but a
thud and short skid sound. It depressed
and disappointed me. I thought of my
parents and wondered if they had gasped or screamed before that car hit
them.
We shot two mice at a time. I don’t know what I expected. Perhaps I thought of my cartoon watching days
and that they’d clasp their furry paws like a varmint couple desperate to enter
the afterlife conjoined. But they just
flew apart and landed apart, two separate thud-and-skid noises.
Uncle Rory says things happen. It can be fate or it can be God’s busy. When I broke his windshield with a bat he
didn’t seem such a believer in fate. Or
the time I lit the drapes on fire and almost burned the house down. His notion of fate was dropping me off at
juvie and letting some other sucker adopt me.
When they arrest you they put your wrists in handcuffs. Feels like glass cutting into your skin. Feels like chains and you feel like a slave
or the very criminal you were meant to be.
Ha, so maybe that is fate.
Across the lake, the old man came
out of the house around the time we were nearly finished. Barry took off, dust vapors rising up where he
had been.
I watched the guy sight me with his
rifle, heard him yell, “One more time.
Go ahead. I ain’t afraid to
shoot.”
It felt like someone had given me a
belated birthday present. I loaded the
launcher, pulled the makeshift trigger, puffed out my chest and waited.
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