--SOMETIMES
AN ESCAPE ROUTE IS THE BEST THING
Lava and Light
(Near Mount St. Helens, May 1980)
In
the morning they woke to find the sky a dark purple, not so much the color of a
bruise, but something strange and dire, like an admonition from God.
Each
of the young men was nervous about it, but they would not say so and instead
they exclaimed minor wonder or made jokes about an apocalypse.
This
was years and years ago.
They
loaded their car quickly and headed back to the university. It was a three hour drive but they planned to
make it in two.
As
they drove, the sky grew darker, even though that seemed impossible, the morning
looking like dusk at 10 am.
On
the radio they learned what had happened, and the news filled each young man
with individual relief or disappointment, depending on their desire for danger.
They
talked about their friend they’d left behind, the one who had dropped out to
get married at the questionable age of eighteen. Each said they would never do such a
thing. Two of the three friends said
they would never even marry. All said
the groom was a sap, though secretly each of them was astonished by the groom’s
determined leap into the real world, a place they greatly feared.
They
could not see the regal volcano, but an hour into the drive they saw the
remnants of her power and anger and resolve, ash falling as wide gray leaves,
clotting the sky, then blinding them like a blizzard.
They
played a Jimmie Buffett tape, singing along because it seemed perfectly
fitting. “I don’t know where I’ma gonna go when the volcano blows.” They played the song several times until
the radio went dead and the headlights turned useless against the insistent
storm of falling ash. After a while, the
motor began to whine and cough and one of them said they should pull over and
another said no way, are you fucking nuts, we don’t know what’s out there.
It
took them seven hours to make it back to campus. They’d later find out the car’s engine was
ruined. They’d later learn the groom’s
bride was pregnant. They’d later learn
more about life than they ever thought--certainly more than they required--and
through this they’d discover disillusionment.
But
that night, alone in his bunk, one of the friends lay under a great swath of
blankets, teeth chattering, lights off but for a luminous lava lamp that burped
eggs of assorted shapes and hues. He hadn’t known why he was so afraid, but the
lamp’s glow soothed him. The different
globules of color became capsules of his future. In the yoke-yellow blob he saw himself a
happy groom. In the moss-green bead of
goo he skimmed stones across a lake with a boy who liked to squeal and say Good
one, Papa! He watched his life form and
reform, and in doing so decided from then on, he would build himself a life predicated
on light.
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