The Day the Bomb Blew!
by
Tom Chartier
by Tom Chartier
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It was horrible…
horrible. We heard a deafening explosion. The earth shook. A fraction
of a second later a blizzard of shattered glass flew around us,
and then it lay in drifts about our feet.
Then, horrors
of horrors we heard the screaming: "You did it! We saw you
kids throw that rock"!
My close friend
Bob and I were branded as terrorists!
I can’t remember
the year. Suffice it to say, it was back in my glory days. Bob and
I were about thirteen years old… I think. We lived in a middle class,
suburban housing development. One broiling summer afternoon, we
had been innocently walking down the street carrying boxes of slot
car track. We were going to make the biggest layout in Southern
California.
What
had happened? By chance, just as Bob and I were walking by the Griswold
residence, the rear window of Mr. Griswold’s pride and joy, a shiny
Dodge El Puerco, blew out all over the place. Parked halfway in
the garage, with the back window exposed to the fierce sun of a
Southern California summer, the Griswold’s Dodge was as explosive
as Lucy’s pressure cooker.
Now in that
heat, not only would smart people entirely cover their car, but
also they would at least leave open the car’s side windows. However,
the Griswolds weren’t the sharpest knives in the drawer. That Dodge
El Puerco was sealed up tighter than the Green Zone. Well, hot air
expands and builds up pressure… kind of like Senator "Bull"
Horn. Something had to blow and it sure as hell did. It was spectacular.
You would have paid money to see it!
As kids we
may have uttered something witty like "cool." Unfortunately
the Griswold’s next-door neighbors saw the explosion and with sharp-as-a-tack
logic, modified by middle class good will, jumped to the conclusion
that either Bob or I had throw a rock. Our reputations had preceded
us.
After all,
the neighbors knew they didn’t do it. And the hapless Griswolds
were not the most popular family on the block. So why not throw
a rock at their car? Besides, people who park their cars in a half-assed
way usually have untidy herbaceous borders littered with broken,
cast off Big
Wheels, pink garden flamingos and car parts as well as other
sundry debris. Their property was a likely target for subversive
insurgents and terrorists: Bob and Tom. After all, we were well
known on the street for being… and I shudder at the thought… normal
kids! That’ll get you busted every time.
An investigation
ensued. Mr. Griswold was summoned. The neighbors swore they saw
everything in videotape detail!
Fortunately
it was not a Bush Administration Military Tribunal. We saw the evidence.
We were allowed counsel. My dad was called to our defense.
As well, it
was fortunate that my father was a science teacher who was logical,
smart and not likely to lose an argument. Alan
M. Dershowitz couldn’t have been a better choice.
Let me present
the evidence for the defense. There were a whole lot of little chunks
of double layer safety glass all over the Griswold’s driveway as
well as on the trunk of their Dodge. None of the glass particles
were inside the car. There was no rock, brick or projectile to be
found anywhere. And to cap it off, Bob and I were carrying big boxes
of slot car track. We didn’t exactly have our hands free.
Now if any
of you have ever thrown a rock at a car window… hold it… you, gentle
reader wouldn’t do that… ok, so that’s a bad example. Right, how
about this: If any of you have had a rock hit your windshield, what
happens? Does it explode? Hell no! You get a cool (or ugly, depending
on your point of view), round crack. Fact is, it’s deuced hard for
something thrown at a car window to cause that kind of explosion.
Even if the object thrown causes breakage, where does the glass
go… out? No way! It goes inside the car!
To Mr. Griswold,
my father made these points. Mr. Griswold uttered only one thing…
"safety glass." The charges were dropped. He wasn’t happy
but he knew that the error lay in his court and that it had been
foolish to leave his car in the broiling sun with the windows rolled
up.
Mr. Griswold
paid the body shop to replace the window and that was that.
Not so easy
to convince were the neighbors who wanted to administer a good caning
and chop off our hands. Unfortunately for them, Congress had yet
to make torture and mutilation legal. Instead, the neighbors condemned
us to Eternal Stink-Eye!
Thus terrorism
began and ended on Nardcore Avenue… well, it ended until Bob and
I discovered the joys of bio-hazardous
culture grenades (eggs), di-hydrogen-oxide projectiles (water
balloons) and potential ignition fibrous rolls (toilet paper).
Yes… I’m ashamed
to say, the following Halloween, we retaliated on our accusers and
terrorized them! Dang, that was fun!
I confess.
Where’s my orange jumpsuit?
Elizabeth
Gyllensvard edited and contributed to this story.
November
10, 2006
Tom
Chartier [send him mail]
played lead guitar in legendary Los Angeles punk band The Rotters
for 26 years until their final appearance in January of 2004. He
has lived in Tokyo and Los Angeles. Currently he resides somewhere
in the Caribbean.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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