by Jim Bates
ice cold Lemonade
My nephew and I had always been close, but when he
called instead of texting and asked me to meet him at his home, I knew something
was up.
I drove to where Josh and his
partner lived, high in the foothills, a few miles from me. He answered the door
with a smile and a "How you doing, Kenny?"
I told him I was fine, but
quickly cut to the chase, "What's going on? You doing okay?"
For the last six months he'd
been undergoing treatment for prostate cancer. It was in remission, but still,
you never knew.
"I'm good, I just want to talk
to you about something." He motioned me inside. "And no," he added with a grin,
"it's not cancer related. The treatments are working just fine." We walked
through the welcome coolness of his stucco home to his shaded back patio. "Have
a seat."
I was getting antsy, but did as
I was told.
He looked past me down the long
sloping hill toward Lake Havasu, five miles away. The fresh, clean desert air
seemed to invigorate him. "I've got a big favor."
"What's up?"
"Funny you should put it that
way," he laughed. "I want to go on a hot air balloon ride for my fortieth
birthday. I want you to come with me."
I gulped. Jesus, that wasn't
fair. I loved Josh with all my heart, but I have to be clear: I was deathly
afraid of heights. I paid a guy to climb a ladder to clean debris off my
one-story roof, for Pete's sake. Elevators at the mall made me queasy. Ride in a
car in the mountains? No way. But this was my nephew asking, a man I'd helped my
sister raise ever since his father died when Josh was five. My wife and I never
had any kids, and I looked at him as my own son. Fear of heights or not, it
didn't take but a blink of an eye to decide to go. Besides, it's not every day
you get to face your biggest fear, especially, with someone who's dying. The way
I looked at it, it'd be a once-in-a-lifetime experience. Turns out I was almost
right.
"I'd love to go," I told him.
"I only have one question."
"What's that?"
"Do they provide air sickness
bags."
"Funny."
It was good to hear my nephew
laugh. Six months ago the doctors had told him he had between six months and six
years to live. Josh was a fighter and definitely had his sights set on the six
year option, if not longer.
Three weeks later, at dawn on Josh's fortieth birthday,
I pulled my jeep into the tiny parking lot for Big Air Balloon Rides, located at
an abandoned air field on a spit of land that jutted out into Lake Havasu, a
half mile wide stretch of the Colorado River on the border between Arizona and
California.
We got out and headed for the
rainbow colored balloon tethered a hundred feet away near a dented Winnebago
that I assumed was the office, if not also the home, of Galen Pickle, the owner
of the company.
Galen was checking out the
basket but stopped and walked over extending a callused hand. "Hi Josh. This
must be Kenny. Welcome," he said, shaking our hands. Then he spent more than a
few moments looking me over. Josh was tall and lean and, in spite of his cancer,
still remarkably fit. He worked for Desert Adventures, a company that led
outdoor excursions around the Lake Havasu area, primarily hiking, camping and
kayaking. Me? Well, think the opposite of my nephew and you'd get a pretty good
picture. I was short and stocky, a little doughy to be honest, and retired after
teaching geography at Lake Havasu High School. I though Galen was being kind
when he said to me, "You look like you'll be able to handle this just fine."
Josh grinned and gave me a high
five, "See, Uncle. This'll be great."
Thirty minutes later we lifted
off and were soon soaring high above the southwest desert. Did I mention I was
afraid of heights? Well, for some reason that morning the fear disappeared. I
was having the time of my life watching the desert landscape unfold beneath me
with ragged hills stretching to the horizon set against a fiery orange sunrise.
It was a thrill I'd never anticipated. I'm sure having Josh with me helped. But
then...
Josh said, "Here, Kenny,
help me put this on." I looked. He was holding a parachute and a harness. He
grinned, "We're jumping together."
That's right, jumping .
Together. Seems Josh had a little joke up his sleeve to play on his old uncle.
He'd been taking skydiving lessons for a year. Who knew? One minute I was
enjoying a mellow morning sunrise, silently congratulating myself on conquering
my fear of heights, the next minute I was air born, strapped to my nephew's
chest, silently screaming.
Just kidding. Once I got past
the fear of losing my stomach, I have to say, jumping out of that hot air
balloon was the most exhilarating adventure of my life. We went out at six
thousand feet and opened at four thousand. It was a five second drop of
unrelenting terror followed by twenty minutes of magical floating that I never
wanted to end. The whole experience was fantastic beyond words.
We landed a mile from where
we'd lifted off.
"What do you think?" Josh
grinned at me after he'd wrapped the chute up.
It took a minute to get my
thoughts in order, not to mention my equilibrium. Finally, I grabbed him in a
tight bear hug. "I loved it."
"Want to go again?"
"Anytime."
That was ten years ago. Since
then, we've jumped every year on Josh's birthday. A once in a lifetime
experience every year for the last ten years. In spite of his cancer.
About the author
Jim is a frequent contributor to CafeLit. He travels to
Arizona every February to visit his brother and is always inspired to write a
series of stories set there. This is one of them.
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