by James Bates
ice cold lemonade
The flat, treeless, chunk of land on the cliff outside
the town of Granite, Minnesota was the best place around to fly kites. It was
the size of a football field and me and Joey were flying ours that summer when
we noticed a new kite soaring on the wind. A pink one that made us
laugh.
"Ha. Man, look at the thing,"
Joey guffawed. "What a sissy piece of crap."
"No kidding," I said, just to
go along with him. We were eleven years old between sixth and seventh grade, and
peer pressure was alive and well in our little town.
My kite was a black winged
batman and his was a red and blue Spiderman, both simple kites we picked up at
the drug store in town. There were nearly twenty kites in the air that day, a
lot of them fancy ones flown by the summer kids. Me and Joey were townies. Our
fathers worked in the Steel River iron ore mine fifteen miles inland. Cheap
kites were the way to go for us. They worked just fine.
Later in the afternoon everyone
else had left and we were by ourselves. We had lost interest in the pink kite
and were talking about baseball when we heard a scream. It came from the far
side of a rise near the edge of the cliff. We quickly pulled in our kites and
ran to see what was going on.
What I saw made my blood boil.
About five or six older kids had surrounded a young girl and had her pined up
against the side of a huge boulder. They were taunting her, pulling at her
clothes and making rude gestures by grabbing their crotches. Their laughter
reminded me of hyenas I'd seen some nature program. I looked at Joey. He was
frightened. We were both small for our ages, no match for a group of big guys
that looked to be in their early teens at least.
"Let's get out of here," he
whispered.
We'd stopped about fifty feet
behind them. They had their backs to us, but the young girl could see us plain
as day. I could see in an instant that even though she had to be scared, she was
defiant, trying to hold her own. She even had a stick in her hand she jabbed out
whenever someone tried to attack her. It was only a matter of time before they
descended on her like a pack of those hyenas I'd seen on the
television.
I looked around for a weapon.
The ground was bare, just smooth granite and lichen, but I did find a fist sized
rock. It'd have to do.
"Come on," I said to Joey,
"Let's help her."
Joey...Man, too this day I
still think of that moment. He could have run and saved himself, but he didn't.
He picked up a rock even smaller than mine and said, "Okay. Let's do
it."
Screaming at the top of our
lungs, we ran at them. I'm not sure what we were yelling but we startled the
hell out of them. I remember them turning toward us, looking perplexed. Then
they looked bemused. Then they looked angry.
But by then it was too late.
The girl had taken their distraction as her chance and she bolted toward us. We
turned and ran with her and didn't stop until we got to the safety of the wide
open space on the top of the cliff.
We stood panting, nervously
looking over our shoulders to see if we were being followed. We weren't'. They
must have decided we weren't worth the effort. We were safe.
She was the first one to speak.
"Boy, you guys were amazing," she said. She was maybe a year older than us, and
taller by a head. She had short cropped dark hair and green eyes and skin so
smooth I had to stop myself from reaching out and touching her to see if it was
real. In that instant I felt myself tumbling down a slippery slope I'd only
heard about.
She hugged us both. "I owe you
guys my life." Her smile was so sweet I thought I'd die. Instead, I swooned. She
smelled like vanilla.
She looked at each of us for a
moment and I felt like she was looking into my soul, a soul I never knew I had
until that very moment. Then she grinned, turned, waved her fingers and said,
"Well, thanks. See you around."
I watched as she sauntered away
toward the road. I could see her bicycle parked there and I panicked, not
wanting her to leave. I yelled, "Say, was that you flying that pink kite?"
She stopped and turned. "Yeah,
that was mine." She pointed, "Those bastards wrecked it. I'm going to have to
get a new one."
Joey and I looked at each
other. He mumbled, "Go ahead, ask her."
"Do you want us to go with
you?"
She took a stick of gum out of
her pocket, slowly pealed the wrapper off and started chewing. My heart rate
went through the roof. All I could think of was being close to her.
"Sure," she shrugged her
shoulders, "Why not?"
That was good enough for me.
We joined her and went to the
drug store in town and helped her pick out her kite. Superwoman. By then it was
dinnertime and Joey had to go home but I just couldn't bear the thought of
leaving her. She told me her name was Angie. We went back and flew kites until
sundown.
And we flew them every day
afterwards for the rest of the summer, some days joined by Joey. Those were
great times. Just before Labor Day her parents put her on their sailing yacht
and left for their home somewhere on the Saint Lawrence River. We never saw her
again
Joey and I stayed in Granite
where we eventually finished high school and went to work in the mines like our
fathers. We still live there, raising our families and making lives for
ourselves. This summer we've been teaching our kids to fly kites outside of town
on that same spot we met Angie.
We were there a few days ago
when Joey turned to me and asked, "I wonder whatever happened to her, you know,
Angie." He was helping his four year old son launch his blue and red Superman
kite.
"I have no idea," I told him,
tugging at the string, helping my five year daughter save her Wonder Woman from
crashing to the ground."I liked her a lot. I just hope she's happy."
"Me, too." Joey said,
thoughtfully, before adding. "That was a great summer, though, wasn't
it?"
"It really was," I told him
smiling. "One of the best."
And we were quiet then, lost in
our own thoughts, standing in the sun, the wind blowing clean off of Lake
Superior, enjoying the day and having fun with our kids, our minds drifting back
to that long ago summer, a time that with every passing year faded a little more
from our memories.
Just then the wind died and the
kites started to fall. We
hurried to help the kids, each of us grabbing a string and running backwards,
the kids racing alongside laughing at our antics, us laughing with them.
Finally the breeze returned and the kites lifted into the air. We handed the
strings back to our kids and grinned at each other, completely in the moment,
this summer rapidly becoming more and more memorable.
Joey gave me a high five.
"Nothing better than flying kites."
"No kidding," I said, watching
Superman and Wonder Woman dip and dance on the wind, feeling like this was one
of the best days I'd had with my young daughter in a long time. I knew Joey felt
the same way about his son. I turned to him, "Say, I've got an idea. How about
if the wind is right, let's grab the kids and come back here
tomorrow?"
Joey smiled and nodded,
"Absolutely. I was just about to suggest the same thing."
I laughed. "Great
minds..."
He laughed, too.
And the next day, we
did.
About the author
Jim is a kite flyer and lover of spending time near Lake
Superior. Unfortunately, he doesn't do either as much as he'd like, situations
he plans to rectify in the near future.
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