When I Was Tom Sawyer
by
Fred Reed
Back before
the beginning of time, in the late Fifties when the sun lowered
over small-town Alabama like a steaming towel, and it was so humid
a tadpole could just about fly, we kids of eleven didnt have
many store-bought toys. We didnt need em, neither. On
slow barefoot afternoons with nothing to do, we did things anyhow,
most of ’em the which you couldnt do now. Some, probably,
we shouldnt have done.
Well, maybe
it wasnt quite before time began, but it was before it got
more than a rolling start. Anyway, Im going to explain to
you how to be a kid. This is going to be a technical manual. A few
of you already know it. You can hum along.
To begin with,
we all had BB guns. It was a rule. You couldnt be a kid without
one. Well, a girl could, and Alabama had some mighty fine girls,
but we were four years away from figuring it out. Me and Jimmy Jack
Callister and Don Berzette and
all of us, had BB guns and lived
as small hunter-gatherers.
Today BB guns
would be illegal and send mothers screeching and hiding under sofas
and calling for federal help. Alabama knew about federal help, and
didnt want any. There was a little country store behind our
house on Prior Street, really mostly just a shack, that sold Moon
Pies, RC Cola, peach soda, and twelve-gauge shotgun shells. Pickled
pigs feet too, and Vienna sausage and mayonnaise, which a
lot of people ate because it was all they had.
Anyway, the
shotgun shells were sold loose, so you get just as many as you needed.
I discovered I could stick them in the middle of a roll of toilet
paper, then buy the toilet paper and get the shotgun shell. It wasnt
honest. It was what I did.
It was a different
country then, and the South was a differenter part, warts and all.
Nobody much watched us. You could do sensible things, like line
shotgun shells up on a board and shoot at the primers from fifty
feet away with the BB guns. Contrary to what a Yankee might think,
this didnt produce much of a bang because the shell wasnt
confined in a barrel, but it was better than nothing.
I guess things
were kind of unsupervised. You couldnt do it today. Youd
need a Caring Adult to be in charge, meaning some tiresome school
marm who didnt think you should make black powder and blow
things up. Whats black powder for, then? Tell me that.
Sometimes wed
cut the front part of the shell off with a pocket knife, which werent
illegal yet. Now they would set off the x-ray machines everywhere
and get everybody prosecuted as terrorists, even if they were nine
years old. Back then they were just pocketknives. Nobody cared.
You could go for years without hearing about a case of pocketknife
terrorism.
Wed take
the birdshot out of the shell and make spoke guns with it. You got
a bicycle spoke with the little sleeve on the end, unscrewed it
partway so there was a cavity you could mash a match head into,
and then jam a piece of birdshot on top. Then you could hold a lit
match under it until, snap! it fired like a real live gun. Only
not very much like one.
We mostly did
this in the back field near the College where this sort of scraggly
undergrowth glowed bright green like it had batteries in it when
the sun slanted sideways through it late in the afternoon and it
looked like fairy castles from a storybook or maybe space-alien
invaders that needed shooting with a spoke gun.
Then there
were match guns. (We had all manner of guns, and bombs too. I used
to fill Nytol bottles, which were some kind of patent medicine,
with baking soda and water and snap the tops back on. A minute later,
ker-POW the top flew off. Maybe it was violence. Tough.)
Anyway, match
guns. You got one of those old clothes pins with the two wooden
sides and the spring in the middle. There was a way I could
show it to you today to take it apart, put the sidepieces together
backward with a rubber band to make a V, and cock back the spring
till it caught in that little half-moon declivity you ought to know
about but probably dont. Then you could stick a Lucifer match
into it headfirst, though the matches would be illegal today because
they might start a fire. When you pulled the spring, it snapped
forward, lit the match, and threw it maybe a yard. It was no end
satisfying, though not real useful. Maybe not everything has to
be useful.
You could buy
dynamite fuse at the hardware store on the town square. Contrary
to what ninety-eight percent of Washington might think, dynamite
fuse doesnt blow up. It goes Ssssssssssss. However,
it will do it underwater too. Fuse had many uses. One was wed
take it to the pond behind the science building at Athens College,
all covered with nasty green slime, and chuck burning fuse in tied
to weights. Sulfurous smoke then bubbled up most impressive.
I guess we
did this because we were deprived. The times were premodern. There
was no crystal meth whatever in the whole town, and nothing called
Idiot Barbie for the girls, who also amused themselves perfectly
well, and we didnt have a Three Inch Stare from fiddling with
video games. It was just like, you know, the Depression, or the
Dust Bowl.
Once I got
the idea of going out behind the house where apples fell from the
tree and rotted with a sticky sweet smell and most of the worlds
wasps came to eat them. If you needed some dead wasps you could
spray them with bug poison. I did. Then I stuck them on an old empty
wasp nest with Elmers Glue and walked around town carrying
what looked like a real nest full of active wasps. If you ever wanted
to make an impression I usually did you sat down in the
Limestone Drugstore and started reading comics with a nest of wasps
in front of you.
I
was going to tell you about how I was a mad scientist and made rockets
with zinc and sulfur stolen from the college chemistry lab, or smeared
mercury on pennies and made them shiny and slippery like frog eggs.
You probably arent ready for it though so youll have
to wait until another time. Which, come to think of it, this sure
is.
August
1, 2006
Fred
Reed is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well and the just-published
A
Brass Pole in Bangkok: A Thing I Aspire to Be.
Copyright
© 2006 Fred Reed
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Reed Archives
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