Ten-year-old boys have a way of spurring you to heights you would otherwise never imagine. Their cruelty as well would surpass the evilest of men.
Brent
Fraser had charm, smarts, and natural leadership skills. He had the
looks of an elite German Aryan: cropped blond hair, cold blue eyes, and spoke with the authority of an S.S. officer. He was handsome, brave, and intelligent, and we all looked up to him – he was also a Master
bully.
Brent
was the leader of the Belford Drive gang. A group of ten-year-old
boys who thought they ruled the territory of our one-block street. As
most boys at that particular age will do, Brent would put up dares or
dangerous challenges, usually directed at a single member of the
gang. If you complied and succeeded, your membership and acceptance
in the team were assured. Non-compliance or failure resulted
in banishment – an unthinkable fate worse than death.
The
days of summer that year, 1967, were hot and long. Our small gang
roamed the outer fringes of suburbia known as the field, the ditch, and the lake. We swam in the lake to escape the heat, played war
games at dusk in the area using rocks and dirt clods as weapons in
the field, and constructed secret fortresses made
from pieces of wood and clay along the ditch.
One
sweltering afternoon the gang decided to head for the lake to catch a
swim. Upon our arrival, we found Brent standing beneath the most prominent tree at the shore of the lake with a coiled rope lying at his
feet.
We
all knew instantly that a challenge was about to be
proposed.
"What's that for?" one of the gang asked.
Brent
smiled. "It's a swing, you idiot!"
"Cool,"
David exclaimed. "What a neat idea!"
"And
one of you pansy asses gotta climb that tree to tie it: Any
volunteers?"
No
one uttered a word.
Brent
smiled. "See that branch up there – that's where it's gotta
be tied."
Our
gazes followed Brent's pointing finger to the thickest, highest
branch of the tree. It had to be at least twenty meters from the lake's surface to the branch. (Sixty feet).
"Well,
Brent shouted, who's it gonna be?"
"Why
don't you do it, Brent? You're bigger than all of us." I
said.
To
this day, Brent's sardonic smile remains firmly in my memory.
"I
don't think so, bubble butt. You do it!" Brent shouted.
The
gang burst into laughter of embarrassment.
"Craig, the little wimp. Forget it. He'll fall and break his neck." Tim
said in a harsh tone.
"Shut-up
ass hole!" Brent shouted.
"C'mon,
Craig. You've been putting up a lot of dares lately but not taking
any!" Danny exclaimed.
"Yea,
man!"
C'mon,
pussy!"
"Yea,
faggot – let's see you break your skinny neck."
The
exclamations and insults reached a crescendo as I peered upwards
towards the intended branch as the late afternoon sun blinded my
vision.
"Well?"
Brent asked. "Are you gonna do it or not?"
Brent's
eyes scanned over the whole gang. Finally, he picked the rope up and walked
towards me, smiling like a professional executioner whose pleasure
in life resides in seeing someone else's pain. He tied the rope
around my waist and pushed me towards the tree.
"You
got a choice, faggot. Either you climb the tree, or we'll kick your
skinny ass. It's up to you."
Let's
face it, my honor was at stake. There was only one place to go, and
that was straight up.
Small
wooden boards acting as a makeshift ladder extended up the tree's trunk, only about two meters. The rest was an improvised
guessing game between life and death.
Then
something extraordinary happened.
Closing
my eyes, Captain James T. Kirk from Star Trek began his
preamble:
"Space,
the final frontier. These are the voyages of the starship
Enterprise. Its five-year mission, to explore strange new worlds,
seek out new life and new civilizations – to boldly go where no man
has gone before!"
Opening
my eyes slowly, I found myself horizontally wrapped around the tree's highest branch.
I
could hear David below saying, "Hell, I've never seen anybody
climb a tree that fast before."
Either
by the hand of an angel or the extraterrestrial help of Captain James
T. Kirk, I found myself hanging for dear life around the highest
branch of this 300-year-old tree. Then, in an instant, the realization
dawned on me: my angel or Kirk may have helped me up here, but they
sure as hell were not going to help me down!
"Don't just lay there, stupid. Tie the rope!" Brent ordered.
My
body had frozen – I couldn't move even my little finger.
"Are
you gonna stay up there all day, pansy-ass?"
"He
looks like he's dead or something."
Brent
yelled, "Tie the rope, you little shit!"
Tim
yelled, "Should we call the fire department or something?"
The
gang all laughed in unison.
As
afternoon turned to even and slowly into night, each gang member wandered off one by one, leaving me alone to deal with my own
plight.
A
calm wind skimmed across the lake, and the rustling of the leaves
around me soon was the only sound…
"Damn, if I'm leaving my friend alone in some fricken tree."
Looking
down through the shadows, I could see Dave pacing around the trunk of
the tree.
"You
gotta do something, man! You gotta jump. The water looks deep enough.
Jump, man. Friggen JUMP."
A
gust of wind thundered across the lake. I shut my eyes tightly and
slowly loosened my grip around the branch. Letting go, my descent was
fast and painless. Finally, I found myself submerged in the cold, murky water
of the lake.
Coughing
and spitting, my body finally surfaced. Dave had jumped in after me and now was dragging me to the shore.
We
now sat side by side on the shore of the lake in the dark. Both
drenched to the bone, we began to shiver from the cold.
"You
wimp! Why didn't you jump four hours ago?"
"I
don't know. I was just, you know…stuck."
We
left the lake and walked home on that clear and warm summer
night. We talked about important matters like Cathy, Jenny, and Sharon
– the three "foxes" in our grade. We also talked about
football and the last Star Trek episode on T.V., and for some reason,
nothing about the day.
Later
that night, after a hot shower and a beautiful dinner, I lay in bed
thinking about Brent Fraser, Dave, and the Belford Drive gang. Was it
essential to have a lot of friends? Or was it alright to just have
one good one? I fell asleep that night without answering my
thoughts.
As
I grew older, the answer to these questions started to become
apparent.
Although now living continents apart, Dave and I are still close friends.
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