“And every time
the herald Cherub sings we rattle with the car parts” – Page France
Charlie never liked being short. He never particularly liked
the way people were (literally)
looking down at him. He was just as able as other kids; in fact he was incredibly
athletic. He could climb rope twice as fast as Jake and when you really think
about it he would have to do twice as much work because he’s nearly half Jake’s
size. So, adjusting for inflation, Charlie was the best rope climber by nearly
4 times… but Charlie hated math.
“Ms. Franklin does.”
“Who cares about Ms. Franklin?!”
His father stood there silent. Reaching down to the flash
cards that sat on the coffee table his face was worried. He shuffled them while
staring at Charlie, examining his enraged disinterest as if looking for a crack
in a wall.
He pulled a card out.
“7 times 8”
“are you kidding me?
That’s the hardest one!”
“7 times 8”
“No.”
His father set the card aside.
“Don’t you say no to me young man,” grabbing another card
from the pile.
“7 times 6”
They were both silent.
“7 times 6”
… “no” Charlie’s voice was soft.
His father stared at him, adopting the angry that was once
his, as if sucking it out of his soul. Rage filled his eyes.
“7 times 8, 56. 7 times 8, 56. 7 times 8, 56. You’re telling
me you can’t do this?”
Charlie was still as he saw his father become the beast that
was once inside of him.
“You can’t remember? 7 times 8? 56. 7 times 8, 56. 7 times
8… what is it Charles! You can’t do it, can you? You can’t do it!”
“No!”
Charlie ran up the stairs, tripping over the carpet. He ran
into his room, slamming the door behind him.
After a few minutes his sobbing died down and he noticed the
rug burns on his knees and hands. His father hadn’t followed him. He knew he
was being childish, but he didn’t care. He couldn’t do math.
…
The soil seemed to exhale as Sam sank into it. Sam could
feel the pain starting in his lower back but it wasn’t nearly as bad as he
expected.
“Charlie!” he yelled again.
His eyes shifted from left to right but saw nothing he could
recognize. He gripped some of the soil with his hands; it was wet and mossy. He
knew he had ruined his new jeans because he could feel the moisture of the
grass stains.
Hoisting himself up with his left arm, he brought his view
to an old rusted refrigerator. Lying
next to it was a pogo stick, but he wasn’t sure since he’d never seen one
before. He shifted his body to the other
side, an old type-writer, a rusted old divers suit, and a bear skin rug all
made up the crest of the wave of junk that went back for what seemed like
miles. Twisted rusted metal jetted up toward the clouds making a skyline of
relics. Sam lay there in amazement. He began to reach for the bearskin rug and
could barely feel it in his fingertips. It was warm.
Suddenly a wooden rod came down, pinning Sam’s hooded
sweater to the ground. As he looked up he saw an old bearded man standing above
him holding the walking stick firmly and staring into his eyes. His eyes
weren’t angry.
“He doesn’t like petting much.”
“CHARLIE!”
…
Charlie had been able to write it off the first time. He was
probably just hearing things. This time he heard it again, a little more clear.
He had grabbed a stick and ran it against the chain-link fence to help him
clear his thoughts. If Sam didn’t want him around he wasn’t going to stick
around. He didn’t need to know what was up in that tree, and he was happy to
save the money he would have lost. Who needs friends like Sam anyway? All he
ever did was talk about himself and the girls at school.
“CHARLIE!” it was louder this time, and terrified. Sam
dropped the stick and ran back, turning the corner so quickly that his shoes
almost lost their grip. He looked up at the tree. No Sam.
“Sam!”
He looked down at the base of the tree, afraid he’d find Sam
curled up in a ball at the bottom. Both luckily and unluckily, Sam wasn’t
there.
Charlie ran to the base of the tree, examining all the
branches and creases to find a place low enough for him to reach. He jumped up
to get the lowest branch and grazed it with his fingertips, scraping his knee
on the bark on the way down.
“Sam! Are you okay?!” No answer.
Charlie rubbed the back of his neck, playing with the two
moles that were there as if somehow they would make him smarter. He examined
the base of the tree again. A root stuck out of the ground a little higher than
the others and about 3 feet up there was a crease in the bark. If he summoned
all of his amazing parkour powers he might just be able to leap up, place one
foot on the crease and reach the highest branch.
Charlie laughed at the taught and then imagined Jake. He
imagined Jake laughing from the top of the rope climb, staring down at him as
squirmed himself up inch by inch. The rope grew thicker and covered itself with
bark and leaves until it had morphed into the tree he now saw in front of him.
He took in a big breath and stared up at the Jake that was in his head.
With one grunt he propelled himself off of the branch,
placing his foot up on the crease, he felt the loss of the grip that he had
from taking that corner too fast. As his foot slipped from the crease he
reached his hands as high as they could and felt his fingers ringing around the
branch. He foot slipped out from under him and his fingers tightened.
Now what.
Charlie dangled from the highest branch, now somewhere in
between “too high to let go” and “not high enough to reach the next branch.”
Charlie just dangled there and laughed.
Bringing one hand in front of the other he slowly brought
himself closer to the tree trunk until he could barely reach it with his feet.
He brushed it a couple of times before finally finding traction and lifting his
lower body up onto the branch. He hugged it with relief for a moment before standing
in victory. Suddenly all the branches seemed easily conquered. Leaping from one
to the next he reached the top of fence and peered over.
“Sam! You down there?” He saw the imprint from where Sam
fell and then footprints leading toward the old rusted house marked “The
Junkyard”.
“Game on Sammy-boy”
Charlie leaped from the tree and into the Junkyard.
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