Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Ransom for Teddy

Ransom for Teddy
Noel Laflin
9-22-14

It was generally assumed that camp staff scoundrels made off with the old black and white teddy bear when the program director was not looking that Sunday afternoon in late August long ago.  Most agreed that it was a dastardly kidnapping indeed – a first in Camp Ahwahnee’s long and honored history.  And, it was such a shame as it was the closing week for an otherwise outstanding camping season.

A crude hand-written note was left behind on the young man’s upper bunk in place of the bear.  It threatened that the frayed, stuffed old critter, which stood no more than a foot high, would never see the light of day unless a ransom was raised.  And there was a deadline as well.  The young camp counselor squinted in the darkness of the dim cabin light and read the note several times before he eventually slumped to the edge of the bed, note still in hand.  Had you been there you would had heard him sigh.
 
In the sunlit forest, not too far away, a battered old shoe box, carefully wrapped in thick plastic bags, lay recently buried beneath a stately Jeffrey pine tree.  Scattered pine needles disguised the shallow grave.  The spot was marked with a discarded film canister pushed half way down into the dark rich earth.

Much later that night, a shadowy figure crept into the camp’s deserted dark room.  An hour hence the mystery man emerged, turned off the photo enlarger and killed the safety light.  He locked up behind him while carrying something in hand.  The loner was last seen headed for the darkened assembly area.

So the high jinks were now on.  Despite the darker nature of the prank, the goal of the teddy-kidnapping was to raise funds for the children’s charity that the camp staff backed each year.  And, as was assumed by most of the staff, it was a most creative way to mess with their boss, the program director - the very guy responsible for the introduction of said charity several years before.  They generally collected about fourteen dollars a month – typically spare change dropped into the old Folgers coffee can in the trading post.  It was enough to keep that poor girl in India off the streets, fed, clothed, and in school.  She wrote thank you letters to her Camp Ahwahnee benefactors each year. She also enclosed photos of herself, school and meager belongings.  The young girl had a sweet smile.

The ransom note was read at the general assembly of the troops gathered in front of the flag pole that Monday morning.  It stated that unless one hundred and forty dollars was raised by Saturday morning - enough to keep the poor girl in India fed, clothed, and schooled until the next summer camp session commenced -  the bear was toast.  A black and white eight-by-ten photo of the old black and white panda bear, shown stuffed in a shoe box, had been mysteriously taped to the flag pole.  Kids and staff gathered about to study the evidence in the early morning light. No one knew who had placed the photo there.

The old Folgers coffee can, recently liberated from the trading post, was passed about.  A tinkling of coins could be heard in offering.  By the end of the meal a tally was announced.  Fourteen dollars and sixty-five cents had been collected.  Words of condolence were whispered to the bear’s owner as he walked out of the dining hall shaking his head and looking crestfallen – yet brave.   It was bandied about that he’d had that bear all his life. It had been a gift from Santa long, long ago, or so it was rumored. He always brought it to camp as a touchstone to his youth.  'The poor man,' many sighed, going about their chores that last week in camp.

On Tuesday morning more photos of the bear, now shown with a tattered Scout neckerchief loosely tied about his black button eyes, were found tacked to various camp buildings.  By Tuesday night the grand tally for the ransom had reached twenty-nine dollars and ninety-six cents.
 
Come Wednesday, photos of a bear in miniature handcuffs could be found tacked to the pool fence.  The collection grew to sixty-five dollars by the end of the evening meal.

Thursday morning broke with campers and staff finding new photos of the bear’s head shrouded in a tiny black hood, handcuffed, blindfolded and still stuffed in an old shoe box.  Funds collected for the charity/ransom reached one hundred and four dollars. 

Friday morning bore witness to final eight-by-ten black and whites plastered about camp and staff hill.  The image was simply that of a shoe box, with cover now loosely in place, lowered into a hole in the ground.  A black and white bear paw stuck out from beneath the box’s lid.  As it was a close-up, no incriminating details of where said burial were available.  The clinking, chinking, plunking of coins rattled about in the old coffee tin once more.  Some of the change hitting bottom were muffled by the cushioning of paper money.  By meal’s end, a new tally was announced.  The ransom funds had grown to a total of one hundred and twenty-nine dollars and ninety-nine cents.
 
At the Saturday morning assembly, Scouts and staff gathered for their last meal together.  The old coffee can made the rounds of the crowded mess hall one last time.

Members of the trading post staff dumped the latest contents on a hastily cleared table in order to do the tallying.  Amongst  the pennies, nickels, dimes, quarters and occasional one-dollar bills, they discovered a tiny sealed envelope addressed to the program director.  They passed the envelope his way while they scribbled down some numbers and quickly did the math on an old napkin.  When finished, it too was then passed along to the program director.  He looked at the napkin, smiled, and climbed atop the table.  There was dead silence in the place.

He announced that the most recent passing of the can had netted an additional twenty dollars and seventeen cents.  The goal had been surpassed.  The charity fund was solvent for the next ten months.

Loud cheering reverberated throughout the old tin hall.

Silence was quickly called for once again, as the young man straddling the table opened the envelope addressed to him.  He scanned its message and read it aloud.  It congratulated the campers and staff for having successfully raised the money needed in order to secure the bear’s whereabouts and release from captivity.  Attached was a crudely drawn map.  It also noted that there was a shovel leaning against the outside wall of the mess hall.  The note suggested that it be grabbed on the way out.

With map, shovel, and sixty kids in tow, the program director bounded across the parade grounds, went down the old dirt road and finally delved into a secluded patch of sunlit woods.  He did some glancing of the map and pacing about until the toe of his boot tripped over a half-buried plastic film canister.

He grabbed the shovel and carefully dug into the recently turned earth.  The blade struck something not too far below the surface.  The young man tossed the shovel and gently brushed dirt and pine needles aside.  He brought forth an old shoe box wrapped in plastic.

Loud cheering sent a covey of quail flying across the creek. 

Later that night, after the place had emptied, one could find the camp’s program director addressing a letter.  He placed a recently purchased money order and a quickly scribbled note within.  Before sealing the envelope, the young man took the note out and opened it for one last read through.  He turned to the bear sitting on the bunk bed beside him and read aloud.

“Please find the enclosed check for one hundred and fifty dollars and sixteen cents.  Our next donation will occur  in July, 1977.   You would not believe to what lengths I had to go in order to secure these funds.  But it was worth it.  The old trusted friend sitting beside me is a bear of few words, but he sends his regards and best wishes.  And, he looks none the less for wear despite being buried alive for a week in the woods.”

He replaced the note back in the envelope  along with a folded over eight-by-ten black and white photo of an old teddy bear sitting jauntily atop a shoe box.  You would swear that bear was smiling. The young man sighed.
 
A stamp was put in place and a return address hastily written in the upper left corner.  The handwriting bore an uncanny resemblance to that found on a tiny envelope mysteriously placed in an old coffee can earlier that day - not to mention a crudely penned ransom note. 


Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Lost Sock

Lost Sock
Noel Laflin
9-17-14


A friend of mine has been looking for a particular lost sock for years now.
 
I hope she finds it, because according to her, there is cold, hard cash in that old piece of footwear.

She hid the sock somewhere safe in her small house nearly a decade ago.  Somewhere along the line she just forgot where, however, and has been poking about in every nook and cranny in search of the loot ever since.  I am reminded of the scene from the movie, Stand By Me, where one of the boys (Vern) is seen digging a hundred holes under his house in search of the mason jar filled with pennies that he had buried – but subsequently lost as his mother had thrown out his hand-drawn treasure map.

I remember my friend first telling me about the misplacement of Jacksons and Franklins some five years ago as we had dinner together one evening.

“So, how much are we talking about?” I inquired at the end of her sad admission.

“Oh, about eighteen-hundred dollars, I guess, give or take,” she said.

“Jesus!” I exclaimed, spitting a mouthful of coffee across the table.  “How do you misplace almost two grand?”

“Well, I just wanted to make sure it was safely hidden you know,” she responded sheepishly.  “Could you pass me a napkin please?” she replied pleasantly.  My friend is cheerful by nature, even while dabbing at coffee stains.

“I had been saving the money for some time,” she continued.  “I would wrap the bills in a rubber band, hidden in that old sock and hide it, of course.  I kept thinking of better places as the amount grew.  Guess I found a really good spot with that last move – wherever it is,” she sighed.

And so the search continues.

I am dog-sitting for my friend this week.  The little guy and I will have the whole house to ourselves for three days.

If we get lucky, I am hoping that he can keep a secret.   I am sure he will as I promised him an old sock to play with.  And, I told him that he can keep the Sherlock Holmes outfit as well.









Thursday, September 11, 2014

The Dollhouse

The Dollhouse
Noel Laflin
9-11-14



Breakfast was a feast consisting of bacon and eggs, toast with orange marmalade jam, sliced tomatoes, hash browns, sausages, orange juice, and hot coffee.  

“Eat hearty.” Will said, cracking a half dozen more eggs on the griddle. “Hard climb today.  Beverly’s going to pack some sandwiches for lunch up there.  Bring extra water - you’ll need it.” 

An hour later, Will led the four of us a quarter mile downstream from camp and pointed up at a steep dry wash leading to the escarpment high above – a stretch along the Colorado River near Spanish Bottom, Canyonlands.  The vista of tall, silent stone sentries far above us was known as the Dollhouse.  

He and Beverly led off.  We picked our way carefully over and around giant boulders and slid backwards on slippery patches of loose gravel and baseball- sized rocks.  Intrepid guide and girlfriend unintentionally loosened stones of all sizes, which came tumbling our way.  A sudden shout from above usually gave me time to signal to Jeremy to scramble out of the way of the mini-landslide.  Dust would settle and the climb continued.  Will led the way, ever upward, like some kind of stealthy Indian guide.  The warm sun enticed us to remove shirts and tank tops and take frequent water breaks.  Jeremy had done in half of his water before we even crested the ridge.  I warned him that peanut butter sandwiches would be hard to swallow without fluids at lunchtime.  He sadly capped his canteen and pushed on.  Within the hour we had reached a semi-level plateau. 

Crossing this area we came to a twenty-foot-high wall of rock, which seemed to run on forever.  Will walked purposefully to one shadowed section of this barrier, turned sideways and disappeared. Beverly did likewise.  A three-foot-wide fissure perfectly split the rock for some fifty or sixty feet.  We could see the other two half way down this strange stone tunnel, daylight clearly visible at the other end.  With Egyptian-like moves, we entered the secret door.  Some terrific force of nature had split this giant slab of rock.
  
On the other side of this lay a magnificent plain.  Small caves dotted the walls, some at ground level, others six, ten or twelve feet up the rock’s surface.   

“These are burial caves,” Will informed us. 

We followed our guide for some distance while he checked his bearings.  A small cave was perfectly hidden by shrub and shadows.  We knelt down while Will sifted through the fine sand.  He pointed to an ancient sleeping mat, meticulously woven and although fragile, in remarkable shape.  Shards of pottery were also buried in the sand, as was a beautiful white arrowhead.

“This weapon is old, pre-Anasazi,” he said.  “Maybe fifteen hundred-to-two thousand years old,” Will continued.  “Not sure how it got here, as this type of rock is not natural to the area.  I found it buried with the other things a year ago.”   We left the mystery to the shadows and moved on respectfully.

We spent the better part of the next two hours exploring every nook and cranny which gave even the slightest indication that it could be a new treasure trove of some sort. Sun-bleached logs had been placed against some of the walls and used as makeshift ladders in order to peer into some of the highest caves and former crypts.  We had the entire valley to ourselves (as well as whatever spirits still lurked about).  As it neared lunchtime, Will led us on to a large cliff dwelling that commanded a terrific view of the surrounding countryside.  It was an ancient home, still containing crude grain bins and bricked-off sleeping rooms.  It was a perfect sanctuary by which to hide from the sun, sit, eat and imagine.
                                                  
 After lunch, Beverly brought forth a little mother nature tightly rolled. She lit it and passed it about.  The four of us became spiritually enhanced as we stared at the river below and a range of mountains far off in the distance.  Time was on a new continuum it seemed.

Dark clouds had moved in during our break and the wind began to pick up.  Will said a storm was moving in fast and that it was time to head back.  We would return to camp by way of a different route, he added.  As long as it did not involve narrow crevices through which to squeeze, I was in full favor of the new path. 

I looked at Jeremy through bloodshot eyes. He had a very happy grin spread across his face.  He was signing and finger spelling to himself.  Reality was a little goofy at this point for both the deaf and the hearing.

So down and down we trotted.  The wind was growing fiercer by the second.  Fine sand from the river was nearly blinding.  Tiny shards stung both skin and eyes.  It was hard to breathe without chocking on the flying grit. We removed head and sweat bandannas and covered our faces.  We took on the look of river-rat bandits.  I grabbed Jeremy’s hand and ran with him down the trail of switchbacks.  I had seen neither hide-nor-hair of our two companions for a bit now.  But as I felt that I was in some sort or primitive time warp, I did not care.  I only prayed that we were on the right trail. Flying sand and fresh rain was obscuring our view.  It was one hell of a blind run. We were laughing despite it all.

 “This is living," I screamed above the howl of the wind to my deaf companion.  He looked at me, questioningly, not comprehending my masked lips.


“Live and remember!” I signed.  He smiled and nodded.  We fled down the trail into the raging sand storm. 

Post Script: 

Some twenty-five years later I found myself on the very same trail. My sixteen-year-old daughter was my companion for the week - along with a host of other river rats testing the limits of Cataract Canyon.

When we had pulled into Spanish Bottom to break for lunch, I had talked the group into making the climb.  I was the last one up the steep trail once more.  

As we headed back to the rafts, the wind picked up and a storm suddenly blew in.  Rain pelted us as we ran down the trail.

"I remember!" I slowly signed to myself - and smiled.

Cataract Reflections

Cataract Reflections
Noel Laflin
9-11-14




The rain was unrelenting.  Sudden bursts of newly created streams began to cascade from the red cliffs above.  Rushing torrents of water from the flat desert plateaus of Canyonlands sought their way to the Colorado River below.  Massive walls of red water soon poured over the ridges creating hundreds of instant, fantastic cataracts of every description, height, width, and voracity.  Nature was having a field day.  The sound of water was everywhere. It was a scene I shall never forget.  Mud and water threw themselves crazily over the escarpment from high above and landed on either side of us as we sought a safe middle road down the twisting, ever narrowing canyon river. 

To be a spectator to this show was truly humbling.  Was anyone else even remotely close to us in order to also see these phenomena? I will never know.  All I do know, with great certainty these many years later, is that I have never experienced anything like it since, but would gladly pay good money to be in the midst of such a marvel again.  Nature was giving us a fantastic private show.  I felt grateful to just be alive and a witness to this awesome power.  

Although bundled in several layers of long johns, jackets and rain gear, we all felt the chill of the non- stop rain pounding our tiny rubber craft.  The youngest member of our tiny crew, Jeremy, seemed to be most sensitive to the cold and damp this mid September morning.  He shivered beneath his rain slicker, teeth chattering incessantly. Our guide, Will, discussed the possibility of hypothermia. We decided to make an early camp that day. He scanned the canyon walls narrowing in on us ever closer as we rafted through the steepening landscape. 

Will suddenly nosed our raft toward the right bank, skirting and dodging several falls.  He had spotted our badly needed camp.  Despite the raw beauty bounding all around us, we were all quite chilled by now, especially Jeremy.  We needed dry warmth quickly.

What our intrepid guide aimed for was a cavern.  He maneuvered the raft to the ledge. Our enclosure was some thirty feet in length and perhaps fifteen feet deep.  There were no footprints in the soft sand.  Beverly, the fourth member of our small band, proclaimed it our virgin cave.

We got to work quickly starting a fire and removing wet clothing.  Within the hour our steamy, smoky home warmed quite comfortably, giving every appearance of a gypsy encampment.  Jeremy sat close to the fire, warm and snug once more.  The waterfalls still poured all around us. They raced over the canyon wall across the river, as well as to either side of our overhang. Beverly broke out her magic wand and soon filled the cave with shimmering bubbles.  Will tinkered with the porta-potty, waiting for the storm to abate, so he could find a suitable viewing point for its placement. 

The rain did stop abruptly by late afternoon.  Within fifteen minutes the raging cataracts gave out altogether.  The sun broke through and lit up a range of mountain peaks, far in the distance, glistening in the late light of day.  

As promised, Will went in search of a proper viewing area.  Upon his return, he tossed several rocks at our feet, as we sprawled upon open sleeping bags.  They were of two distinct types, geodes and fossils. Tiny crystal gardens twinkled within some of the split round rocks. Miniature fossil ferns and other exotic tropical plants were imprinted within compressed layers of stone. I envisioned this area a million years ago, a land that time forgot.

“Found these about seventy-five feet from here,” Will announced.  “One of the waterfalls must have washed them down from a gully above; the fall broke some of the geodes open. There’s a lot of ‘em.  Wanna see?”  

We followed our guide, balancing along the narrow ledge as we walked Indian file. A small landslide had piled the natural treasure smack dab in the middle of our path.  The porta-potty stood to one side of Will’s find.  Now we had not only a room with a view, but a treasure trove over which to ponder, literally at our feet.

Dinner, along with a few good stories and a passed-about bottle, took us late into the evening.  We let the fire burn down on its own as we lay side-by-side listening to our river rush by, not more than six feet away.  We drifted off to sleep, lulled into oblivion by the sound of the Colorado.  We lay curled against one another, protected from the elements, within our snug cavern. 

With dawn came Indian Summer weather once more.  We pushed off late that morning and entered new twisting canyons filled with sunlight and inviting natural clear pools, begging us to jump ship and have a dip.  We stopped frequently to do just that.   We heard voices up ahead and soon realized that our solitude was broken.  We had entered the backed- up waters of Lake Powell, which brought motor boaters up-stream in search of a canyon swim or shade.

The hurried good byes are all a blur now.  Upon reviewing the photos of the trip, I find the final shot of us.  With arms thrown over one another’s shoulders and wide grins spread across our brown scrawny bodies, we hang drunk-like clinging to one another.  The small plane that took us back to Moab stands motionless behind us.

Over time I went on to explore and challenge other rivers.  All held their allures and adventures.  None ever rivaled the natural rawness and surprises, however, which captured our spirits within the cataracts of Canyonlands.


I should like to see a summer storm of this magnitude once more.  I’d like my eyes to be blinded by the sheer, raw power and spectacle created by the flowing of the mud-red cataracts, bringing down crystal gems and ancient reminders of jungles past - just to be laid at my feet.


Monday, September 8, 2014

Breaking the Surface

Breaking the Surface
Noel Laflin
9-8-14


Tom prepared well for his last months.  And although he had just celebrated his thirty-fifth birthday, he knew his days were literally numbered.  He only had eighty-nine, to be exact.

While he still had the energy, he built himself another world in which to escape the ravages of a young body rapidly deteriorating.  The final stages of AIDS had forced his hand into taking action.  But Tom was an artist – so he got to work.

When I saw his final creation, I had to lie down beside him on the narrow single mattress and marvel at the scene to either side of us. For a moment, I felt as if I were aboard the Submarine ride at Disneyland.  Brightly lit electric tetras, cichlids, darters and rainbow varieties swam in quiet procession below and among the waving strands of java fern and moneywort.  Beautifully colored snails and plecos slowly moved across the glass, keeping the view clean, clear and pristine.  Swordtail fronds stood on green tippy-toes in hopes of reaching the surface.   

The only thing missing were waving mermaids.

But this was no ride in Tomorrow Land.  Rather, it was Tom’s idea of creating the most peaceful setting by which to rest for the tomorrows; however few there might be.

And so, the boy had built his sanctuary in the following manner.  He put his small mattress – as Tom was small of stature and took up little space - upon its box spring directly in the middle of his tiny Ojai room.  To either side of his bed he place one-hundred gallon aquariums, butting up to the edges of the mattress.  Each large and narrow aquarium ran the length of the bed, supported by cinder blocks placed high enough so that the bottom of each tank was level with one's body stretched out fully.  The affect was such, that when you looked up and out and to either side, you felt like you were part of this enchanted underwater world.  The hum of the bubblers provided low white noise. The only lighting in the room was that which softly glowed from the tanks.  It was an aquatic heaven for the weary. 

There was a television, VCR, CD and tape cassette player placed at the foot of the bed, perfect for reclined viewing and listening.  A stack of favorite movies, books, tapes and CD’s were near at hand – along with a myriad of pills labeled with near-unpronounceable names.

I spent a warm September weekend with Tom, back in the fall of 1992.  He had enlisted my help with his garden.  Always preparing ahead, as witnessed by his indoor sanctuary, he worried about the ponds and plants out back. He no longer had the energy to attend to his garden. So, I spent two days rigging up automatic misters and soakers, ensuring that the garden could sustain itself on days that he could not leave the house.

My intention was to sleep upon the old couch, but Tom suggested that I lie beside him and take in the wonders and charm of his night-time aquatic view.  The fit was snug as I crawled into the shadowy cave-like dwelling.  But, the dreamy motion of waving plants and gliding fish was hypnotic and I soon succumbed to weariness.  I slept peacefully for the most part.  But the young friend beside me would venture in and out of reality, keeping one foot barely attached to this world while the other tested the firmness of a shore beyond my reckoning. 

Tom took final leave of us, in order to venture on to that other world, on the morning of Christmas Eve, some three months later.

I bet he grabbed the hand of an angelic-looking mermaid and made for the surface, where swordtail fronds basked in the light above.


Thursday, September 4, 2014

Crying Wolf

Crying Wolf
Noel Laflin
9-4-14



Early Morning - Late October, 1997

When my daughter was quite young, she spent many mornings napping on the old black leather couch in the living room as I went about my daily routine.

I could watch the news or crank up the stereo or clatter about in the kitchen preparing breakfast, perfectly content that she would sleep through the entire racket – as children are so universally capable of doing.

On this particular morning I decided to get a jump on things and begin to decorate for the Halloween party coming up on Saturday night.  The battery-operated witch with the blinking eyes and her hideous motion-detection laughter was placed upon the old Italian marble piece.  Flying bats and streamers were strung across the dining room.  Theme related candles were set about most everywhere.  I even dragged out the heavy extension ladder, angled it above Krysten’s sleeping form, climbed up and over the open stairwell in order to hang the crazed-looking scarecrow dummy from the big beam running across our high pitched ceiling.  It had become a Halloween tradition of sorts, in preparation for parties – this hanging of the straw man, complete this particular year with a skull mask for a face.  And so, I thought nothing of it as I went about my labor of love in honor of the impending holiday on that crisp, cool October morning some seventeen years ago.

I forgot to consider fully, however, what kind of affect the sudden room transformation – especially the life-sized hanging figure dangling directly above and staring down upon a sleepy four-year-old just might have …

My daughter still reminds me, on occasion, that this was probably some kind of child abuse.

Our dummy was actually just a left over Halloween prop - stuffed with real straw, of course - and dressed in an old flannel shirt and a pair of tattered Levi’s.  He had giant black clown shoes as foot ware and a cheap mannequin head.  Covering the head was the current mask.  It was creepy-looking enough, but not as good as the old wolf mask that used to precede it – although parts of the old wolf had melted and permanently fused itself to the Styrofoam head.  After twenty years of use, however, the old mask had finally just crumbled to the touch.  I grieved.  It had served me well over time, even if it had nearly gotten me killed and then stranded on one occasion.

Late at night - July, 1976

I had taken the nasty-looking, teeth-baring, red-tongue-lolling, suffocating, rubber wolf mask to summer camp one year. 

Remembering how it had scared many a Trick-or-Treater in its heyday while living at home, I thought it would bring joy to lonely souls traveling the darkened pathways of Camp Ahwahnee.

Deciding to first test my theory on fellow staffers, I donned the mask and burst into one of the staff cabins.  There were three individuals contained within said cabin.  One screamed, another just stared dumbfounded, and the third grabbed the closest heavy object at hand and threw it at me.  The claw hammer missed my head by a hair and lodged itself into the old plywood cabin wall.

Cabin number two presented itself with similar reactions.  The screwdriver thrown my way also missed, gratefully, and stuck harmlessly in the flimsy door.

I skedaddled.

As I quickly made my way off of staff hill, hiding behind a giant ponderosa momentarily, I could not help but be rewarded by several of the  un-Scout-like oaths being tossed about  as fellow staffers exchanged information – none of them quite sure who the masked man was.  That was encouraging.

So, I crossed through the woods and spied the next victims – two young lads tending to the camp’s Citizenship Fire ring. 

The area contained a large rock, upon which a bowl-shaped fire pit had been created with smaller stones.  In the old days, an actual statue of an Indian sat cross-legged on another pile of stones behind this rock.  But heavy snows and weather in general had done him in overtime.  So, the large rock now stood alone as a rather plain altar upon which the summer’s perpetual fire burned.

The fire was always lit on the first day of the summer camping season in June and extinguished on its last day in late August.  The flame was to never go out.  To see to that, a different Scout was chosen each day to be the guardian of the fire for a twenty-four hour period.  It was considered an honor to be chosen for the watch.  In recognition of his service the boy was awarded his Ahwahnee Citizenship Fire Keeper patch at the following evening’s flag lowering.  He would then hand off the axe to the next fellow chosen to do the fire tending honors.  I still have my own patch from a stint done back in 1966.

But I digress and this tale is growing overly long.

As it was nearing midnight, not another soul was around, other than the two young Scouts huddled about the small fire.  Most kids had a friend or two keep them company through the lonely evening hours.  Camp could be spooky after dark and I was about to prove that to them on this particular night. They chatted quietly as they occasionally fed fuel to the flames.  I donned the mask one last time and leapt out into their midst all the while howling and growling.

Pre-adolescent screams ripped through the parade ground.

A large block of firewood was hastily tossed my way by lad number one.  I ducked.

A hand axe sailed by my head, courtesy of the fire keeper himself.  It bounced harmlessly off of the tree behind me.

And then they were gone.  Just like that, the two vanished.

I removed the mask in order to make myself appear less frightful and to be heard more clearly as I hollered out that I was sorry.

I was greeted with silence.

The two did not return that night.

And thus, I was suddenly stuck with the chore of keeping the fire going throughout the rest of the cold, damp night.  I grabbed the axe and started chopping wood.
  
The two little cretins crept back to relieve me at first light.
 
I made them a deal that I would not snitch on them for abandoning the fire if they in turn did not discuss my role in their having made said decision to split so hastily.

We shook hands and I departed for a power nap before the day’s activities got underway.  I put the mask safely away before lying down.  My uniform smelled of wood smoke.

Back to the October Morning - 1997

After my daughter calmed down on that crisp fall morning seventeen years ago, I tried to cheer her up with cinnamon-sugar toast and the relating of my near-death by hammer, screwdriver, block of wood and axe - all aimed directly at my head. I also tried to stress just how lonely the fire-tending responsibility/ punishment turned out to be - due to my foolishness with the old mask.

She said that I deserved it – and see what I got for crying wolf?  She then asked for more toast – with extra, extra cinnamon sugar please.

Her own bed downstairs became suddenly more appealing to my daughter for a while. 

She resumed napping on the old couch once more when the only new feature in the living room turned out to be a Christmas tree.



Monday, September 1, 2014

Clover Hearts

Clover Hearts
Noel Laflin
9-1-14

 
The young private spit upon the wet stone and slowly drew the blade of his whittling knife back and forth, back and forth. 

He studied the small red chunk of cherry wood sitting beside him and listened to the rhythm of the scraping.  The man closed his eyes and looked for inspiration. And, then, he had it. He envisioned a ring – a lucky ring to bring him home.

It took a year of tramping and camping and fighting in eight ferocious battles and then months of hospital recuperation in order to complete the carving.  But in the end, he had his ring – as well as his life.  He took them both home.

The cherry wood root and its youthful creator went unscathed through the likes of The First Bull Run, Ball’s Bluff, Seven Pines, Savage’s Station, Glendale, Malvern Hill, and Second Bull Run – where it had all begun ironically enough.

By then, the ring had taken shape.  Viewed from above it bore the likeness of four connecting hearts, giving the added illusion of a four-leaf clover.  Two additional hearts were carved opposite one another on its sides.  ‘Heart is where the home is,' the man thought.  A four-leaf clover is mighty lucky too, his Irish roots reasoned further.  He was nearly done with the talisman by the time his regiment made camp outside of a creek called Antietam.  They were out to stop Robert E. Lee from making further advancements into Union held land.  It was the morning of September 17, 1862.

A musket ball tore into his upper thigh later that day, taking him out of action.  He was one of the lucky ones.  Twenty-three thousand soldiers were either killed, injured or went missing over a twelve hour span.  It went down in history as the highest number of American casualties in a single battle.  The bodies of the dead and injured were packed so thick in a place called The Cornfield that men could not help but step on their fallen comrades as they rushed into the relentless slaughter.  The Union forces prevailed that day.  But Lee escaped nonetheless and the war would drag on for another two-and-a-half years.

Meanwhile, my great-grandfather and his ring were taken to a hospital in Maryland where both survived and later discharged from the Army of the Potomac on St. Patrick’s Day, 1863.  The ring’s four clover-shaped hearts were graceful, pure of form, and smooth to the touch by then.