It was listed on the map as “Farmington River Watershed” and in the early spring it would flood over and just about—well, once—filled the ‘Subway’ shop with about a foot of water. It was an ideal place to swim—if one did not mind swimming with various flora, fauna and whatever that was that brushed against your leg—along with just walking on the side. It was the place, that as a kid, you assumed only you knew about. Only you knew of the secret locations: those paths through the water that lead to sunken treasures that you would boast to anyone in your third-grade class who would listen to you.
In sixth grade, it was the place you braved to go to at night on a dare or when it swelled and the current would drag you along, perhaps a mile or two until you were in a foreign county—and the sheriff would radio your hometown that he was bringing you home. Of course, he’d tell you about his great adventures in the past—and how he was younger when he tried to battle the flow of the water.
In junior high, those awkward times, called for awkward winter days as one would try to walk across the ice and proclaim that it was solid as a rock. You played two-man hockey, minus skates, and kept an ear open for a subtle “cracking” noise. However, even if the ice splintered and broke apart around, you’d have to think that it was a cool, maybe surreal feeling to hear that sound break through the silence of a snowy day.
Which leads to high school, when one day you’re not caring about anything or anyone to the day that you take a particular person to those points in your memory. Showing them where you found a fossil, the place you nearly drowned, and where to not stand in the early spring. You would say all of this in the summer, before the school year would start. And, if you were fortunate, it would be in a secluded area, a place set apart from everywhere else that had a small waterfall. We considered this to be a place of tranquility and we called it Dragonfly Pond.
Spring brings in the new life, if you believe in the romanticism of everything coming up from the dark and cold winter. For our small town, spring guaranteed only one thing: that one family would leave as a generation died and a new family—usually one who didn’t really know what they were getting into—would move in. We’d pass by a recently vacated homestead and wonder how long it would take for squatters to take it over for a few weeks, teenagers to use it as a crash or party pad—providing the electricity was still running, and how tall the grass would grow before you couldn’t see a two-story house from the gravel and dust road.
There were three paved roads: the main highway coming in and out, the street where the school and churches were, and the one that the late mayor John King and his family resided. Considering how much money was spent on that section of road—complete with painted lines—and not on the main drag, the King family home would be pelted by eggs and other forms of ammunition—I mean, the smooth road made it easy to fly by and throw a cherry bomb or two.
Not that I participated…I’ve only heard the stories.
Spring break—in other towns—usually had everyone leaving for the week, but in our neck of the woods, it was the same as it was the week before: nothing. Except, due to school being out, you had more time to do it. So, as I had done for years prior, I spent it doing stupid things.
“How fast you think it’s moving” I asked Rob, my best friend and fellow doer of stupid things. Up until that year, he had gone by “Bobby” or “Robby” but he goes and grows ONE short, stubby--one needs a magnifying glass to see it--hair on his chin and he felt that childish things were beneath him.
Legos? Childish.
Playing games of imagination? Only if it involved death and destruction.
Cap guns? No, he had graduated to an Airsoft rifle…at the age of thirteen.
“No idea. Want to see where it takes us this time?”
I nodded, of course, so, on the count of three, we jumped into the swirling water.
Of course, if my grandparents or his parents asked what he had done that day we’d say nothing much and would never speak of being dragged across sunken trees and passing by what may be a water moccasin or a simple stick bobbing along like we were. There were some spots in the channel where we had to guide over in order to go down a particular run. There was a time that we tried to use a ramshackle raft made up of wood, plastic and loads of duct tape but it gave out at the first fork in the water—and we were taken in completely opposite directions, which caused me to be introduced to St. Charles County’s Sherriff Garrett Marshall. Rob ended up on top of a downed tree and he proudly proclaimed that he stood upon it and announced that he was king of the world. A part of me wanted to believe him, the other half assumed he was frightened out of his gourd and had to find the courage to down the waterway.
Dangerous? Maybe, but with the lack of a video rental store that actually had action films, no driver’s license, no car to speak of, and two mangled bikes—courtesy of trying to do a few BMX tricks off the top of an abandoned house—and that the waters would recede sooner than later, then we just did it. Other kids could go to ‘Oceans of Fun’, but we had our own log flume course.
We’d arrive water-logged and slightly disoriented at an unknown location, pull ourselves onto the muddy banks and just flop onto the ground.
“We need to think about how to get back faster than walking, you know?” Rob asked as I crawled on my hands and knees a few feet away from him.
“What? That’s how we dry out.”
“Chaffing though, burns.”
I had no idea what he meant, but it sounded bad, so I agreed.
I was almost thirteen, maybe twelve point seven at that time, and it was during that time of the year that my grandmother bought me a stick of deodorant—and I had not touched it at all. Didn’t think a thing about it, at least not until Rob told me it would be a good idea if I ever wanted to talk to girls.
The thought never really occurred to me. Girls were annoying. They looked at me like I had
something on my head. They didn’t understand the inspiration of playing like you were a secret agent or a ninja. They didn’t understand my drive to not want to talk to them.
So, to avoid the ribbing from Rob and possibly everyone else once at school, I applied the chemical equivalent of being told Santa Claus no longer exists and that one day I would have to go to work, pay taxes, and care about how much water I used when taking a bath. One could say this was a sign of growing up. I felt like throwing up thinking about how one day I would like to see girls as more as someone to play tetherball against.
Rob and I would stay out until the mosquitos decided we were a fast-food banquet and we’d go to our separate houses—except every other day when one of us would go to the other’s for the night. I ran back through the trees to the opposite end of my grandparent’s farm, the place I had called home for the past twelve years of my life. My grandparents weren’t exactly farmers, they just enjoyed the country. They had three horses and a lot of chickens but the fields behind the house and to the left of the barn were used to grow hay that was sold to others who had farms and needed it for theirs. They did not seem to mind driving several miles to the local grocery store or across the county to the tractor supply shop as the tractor they owned was usually 85% inoperable most of the year. It would miraculously come to life during baling season.
My grandmother, Sue, would be in the kitchen when I opened the glass doors leading to the back patio. She was a Bob Ross meets Julia Childs: able to place together four ingredients that you would think could never work and end up with something that Gordon Ramsey would be left speechless over. My grandfather, Will, but everyone called him. “Billy” would be sitting in a large recliner in the living room reading the newspaper or sleeping. Either way, as soon as I stepped into the living room he would tell me “go wash up for supper”. When Rob was with me, he’d add a “y’al” in front of that.
We would go upstairs to wash our hands and then at least change our shirts so grandma wouldn’t look at us and mutter how dirty our clothes were. In the past, we could get away with it. Young boys were known to get filthy dirty and require a bath either before or after eating but once you reach a certain age, you’re expected to figure that out for yourself.
Later on, we would sit in the study room where my Nintendo was plugged into a small TV. I had the basic games of Super Mario Bros, Donkey Kong, and Duck Hunt, but nothing more. Rob would usually bring a few titles from his extensive collection or we’d rent one from “The Video Trailer”. Literally, a hitched horse trailer on the back of a truck. In any other town it would be considered shady but it was owned by Mr. Tony Sanders, a man who may have been friends with Methuselah in his youth. The choice of movies and games were hit and miss. I recall renting a carton movie called “Legend of the Overfiend,” thinking it was an adaptation of “The Legend of Zelda”. It wasn’t...not by a long shot and it made me uncomfortable as my grandfather walked in during a particular scene. He turned the TV off, ejected the tape, whipped my butt a few times, and muttered under his breath about “that damn Sanders”.
So, I had to have one of them take me into town in order to rent a movie or game as all they had at the time was four channels.
“When I was younger, we only had two,” Grandpa would say when I asked why we couldn’t pick up the afternoon cartoons on Fox.
I would nod in agreement, not that I watched a lot of TV at home. My television watching only occurred at Rob’s house. He had cable. He had Cinemax. He was not allowed to watch Cinemax. Can you guess who watched Cinemax late at night? Those movies, like the cartoon, were a confusing mess. With guns, gore, nudity, sex, the things that call to a young man’s subconscious and lodge into their brains, never to leave. I may not be able to recall a phone number which was just given to me, but I can recall what happened at one hour and five minutes into the movie “The Lonely Lady”.
We watched the adult stuff only once but that was enough to give us another bad representation of how relationships—and girls—went. It was another something that could be damaging if one tried to use any of it as advice later in life, let alone junior high school. We actually had adult-ish conversations about what we were going to do when we grew up. Rob had ideas at least. I had dreams.
“I’m telling you. Lawn care is the way to go. Everyone always needs it and no one under the age of fifty who doesn’t have a riding mower likes doing it.”
“It’s hot.”
“The smell of the fresh cut grass.”
“The Humidity.”
“The smell of money.”
“A lot of walking from house to house.”
“Oh no, my friend. We’ll soon have a fleet of trucks and equipment.” Rob stood up on the remains of a stump on the side of his house like he was addressing the Roman senate and proclaimed: “We’ll call it ‘Grassbusters’.”
I had hoped Rob would never mentioned the words “job”, “business” or “work ethic” around my grandfather, at least for a few more years. Otherwise he would have me start my career by cleaning our the barn on a weekly basis. As it was, I only had to sweep it every other month and I felt like that was a bit too much for my twelve, nearly thirteen year-old self to do.
“We’ll start with two mowers and make our way around town. Starting on our street here and spreading out. And hey, they’re building more houses a few miles away.”
I nodded but had the visions of pushing or pulling an old, large, manual push lawn mower to someone’s house and then push it a few hundred times more across someone’s lawn and then push it back to 175th road, which, unfortunately, did not have any hills that I could sit on the mower and coast my way home and was it not paved.
Rob jumped off the stump, but still had his arms in the air and animated his words like we playing charades.
“And think of the money. We start with two mowers, and a weeder, and a couple cans of gas and we have some heavy profits to use for whatever we want, you know?”
I nodded once again because the wheels in my mind were indeed turning. I could give the money to my grandpa so we could get cable TV, maybe a Super Nintendo, and some more clothes. I thought really hard on that last part. I was going to be going into high school in about a year and maybe it would be good to have some flashy shirts, a few designer jeans, and maybe a new watch that could tell the time in twenty-four time zones at the push of a button.
“I’m in, Rob, how do we start?”
“We start with the parents and convince them to let us borrow their mowers.”
“I kind of already got one,” I replied, which was kind of a truth. Grandpa put me in front of an old, large, manual push lawn mower and told me that it was a present that I’d be happy to use. Which was half a sentence. The other half was “to get some muscle on ya, boy.” Said mower would only start if you kicked it, played with the spark plug connection, and then kicked it again. It would growl and roar as it was ready to take-off like the planes from the Air Force Base.
“Perfect. We need to create posters and flyers. Just the name, a logo and the phone number and we’re in business.”
“I can get some poster paper,” the pending smile ran away from my face, “if I ask my grandma.”
“Okay, so?”
“And she’ll be so excited that she’ll tell my grandfather who will tell me: “Sonny boy, when you value your time and work and use that ethic to make your life better then you have graduated to being a man.”
Rob stepped up to me and put his hands on my shoulders. “Think about the girls who will want to bum rush for a ride in a sweet 4x4 with a CD changer.”
“I don’t know any.”
“I’ll write you a list.”
I nodded again.
“Let’s go inside and get this started,” he replied with a clap of his hands.
Rob was so into his idea that he bounded in front of his parents and announced his intention to be an entrepreneur in landscaping. This was not his first big idea to start a business. He once tried to do a paper route, but crashed his bike when the chain broke away and papers went flying into a gutter. I heard it was both a tragedy and a divine comedy as Rob should a few choice words at the loss of his bike, the papers, and the skin on his knees and arms.
His next intention was to sell chocolate door to door. We had to go door to door for band class one year to raise money for our new music stands and Rob decided that he could continue selling afterwards by changing to a different kind of candy bar. He was doing pretty good until he left said chocolate in a car on a day that would have made Satan wonder if he was at the North Pole.
Finally, he attempted to try to capitalize on Dragonfly Pond by showing others how to navigate the waters and have a “grand ol’ time”. However, a rumor started that someone found themselves standard on a downed tree and cried their eyes out until someone came to rescue them. I still think that was Rob.
The good news was that Rob never tried to cheat anyone. He didn’t play a shell game or attempt to swindle anyone in a get-rich-quick scheme he was just unsuccessful in his earlier endeavors. The lawn mowing business had promise and I felt a little better about it when he stated we would be working together. He only needed a little capital to get it started and said he’d sell every all of his video games in order to buy a weeder.
His parents were impressed and nodded a lot. His younger brother, Ryan, was not impressed but he was interested in buying the games for all of the money he had: five bucks.
I went home that night and sat at the dining table with just my grandparents. I told Rob it would be better if I told them the plan so they wouldn’t think I was being strong-armed, although I kind of was; but it was something that I had to. Yes, I finally figured I would have to grow up but, I could still watch Saturday morning cartoons.
“I’m going into business with Rob,” I stated.
Grandma nodded and continued nibbling her cornbread, but my grandfather stopped eating and looked at me with a dumbfounded look. He held that expression for an entirely too uncomfortable time before he placed his fork down and looked at me and one word: “Continue.”
I tried my best to recall Rob’s speech and if I had put in as much effort as he had then I would have prepared notecards, but I had to wing it through the presentation on how we were going to help others and better the world. I left out the part about girls and 4x4 trucks with CD changers.
Grandpa nodded and then continued eating. This was usually a good thing. If he hated the idea then he would slowly shake his head and make some growling snarl that sounds slightly like a dog throwing up before telling whoever it was who brought up said idea that it wouldn’t work.
I helped grandma with the dishes and thought of how I could help out more around the house and since I had voluntarily said I was going to work outside for a living, grandpa took it upon himself to start his own rendition of “Miyagi-Do”, starting with climbing on a ladder and removing the muck and growth in the house gutters. Did I want to? No, I didn’t, but Grandpa promised what he called “seed money” if my work was up to snuff so I worked like a madman to the sounds of the radio on my Walkman. I had no idea if he was going to give me a quarter or ten bucks or so. Any amount would go towards paying for gas so I picked up leaves, needles, mud, a small pine tree that was actually growing in the gutter. A small tree that was not supposed to be there, that should have been the trees in the woods behind us, but here it was, making do. My grandparents stepped in to take care of me when I was little, so I took that “Charlie Brown Christmas” looking tree and carefully placed it and a lot of the earth debris in a planter that was in the garage.
“Give it a pull there, now.”
I pulled the cord with all my might, and nothing happened.
“Again.”
I took a deep breath and pulled back again.
The engine coughed, sputtered, and died.
Grandpa tapped at the mower with a hammer and then took a large strike at the side.
“Do it one more time,” he replied as he took a few steps back which made me wonder if it would throw the blade or explode in such a spectacular display it would make “Bridge on the River Kwai” look like just a few firecrackers had gone off.
I nodded as I held onto the control bar once more and tried to bring our 1980’s Day Prometheus back to life. The mower sputtered, choked and then, to the astonishment of my grandpa, myself and maybe all of mankind, the engine got to full power, and I pushed it forward into the grass. I was ecstatic to see it working as it had been kept in a secluded corner of the storage shed as grandpa had a riding mower. He said I could use it over his dead body.
I ran down the road to Rob’s house. Rob said he would work on the flyers, so I let him do it. His mom was some graphic artist or something with her computer, always printing out old-school looking banners and cards from a very loud printer. That day was no exception as Rob showed-off the artwork: a tuft of grass in a circle with a line crossing over it. I realized where Rob had gotten the name from and wondered if we would be taken seriously with our name homage to a great comedy by Bill Murphy.
“Can you take us into town, so we can put a few signs?” Rob asked his mother.
“Get some tape and maybe some tacks to put them up.”
“Where should we go?”
“There’s the beauty shop in town.”
We stopped and looked at her in what must have been the most confused expressions known to modern man.
“I believe you’ll find some ladies who would value your services. And then there’s the laundromat and the coffee shop. We’ll think of a few more on the way to town.”
When anyone said, “to town”, it meant driving ten minutes to the “new part” of town where there were actual restaurants like Panther Steakhouse and not a small building that served ice cream and maybe had ONE hot dog available by the time you got there. I sat in backseat with Rob and his younger brother. His sister and mother were in the front seats.
“And one day, we’ll drive ourselves.”
“And you take your brother and sister to school.”
Rob shot his mother a look of absolute terror—you’d think he’d seen the end of the world or the results of an Algebra test.
“I would expect you to help, Robert. Like I’m doing right now. Hint, hint?”
Rob nodded.
“You’re going to be my chop-fer,” Ryan stated with a tone that had I said it like that to my grandfather, he would have drop-kicked me thirteen miles into Pettis County.
“Only if I can drop you off at the state line. I hear Kansas is nice this time of the year,” Rob replied.
His mother tried to hide a smile behind a frown.
Our first stop was indeed said beauty parlor. We stood on opposite sides of the door and looked back and forth at each other. Rob’s mom had dropped us off so she could go to a store down the road.
“Well, let’s go in,” Rob stated as he gestured for me to open the door.
I shook my head. I knew what the inside of a southern beauty shop looked and smelled like, for having to sit down on an uncomfortable bench and try to not watch the soap opera playing on a tiny television set sitting precariously on top of an old snack machine while my grandmother would have her hair cut, trimmed, sprayed, and whatever else. It was, in fact, that very same shop, but I wasn’t about to walk in like everything was cool.
“We need to ask about putting up a flyer.”
“That’s where you come in,” I replied.
“We should split the conversation. Show everyone we’re together on this.”
“Can I just be the silent partner?”
“I’m opening this door.”
“Okay.”
“And you’re coming in with me.”
“Alright,” I said with a sigh and then took a deep breath—as our noses were about to be attacked by the smell Aqua-Net and hair dye.
Rob opened the door and we hastily stepped in and then closed the door. There was a blast of a hair dryer and several ladies talking but the sounds screeched to a halt as fifteen eyes were all on us.
“My name’s Robert Bent and we wanted to know if it was okay to put up a flyer for our new business?”
“And what business is that?” A woman whose hair nearly reached the ceiling only stopping short of the slowly rotating fan above her.
“We will perform any type of lawn service you need.”
I moved forward to hand the flyer to the lady. Her expression was a cross between my grandmother’s when someone---not naming names—ate the last of her strawberries and of someone who was wondering when we were going to leave. I feared she’d tear my hand off with her knife-like fingernails. She took it and looked hard at it. Was there a huge spelling error? Was the price too high? Did she understand the Ghostbusters reference?
Then, she gave us a cigarette-stained teeth smile. “Sure boys, put one up on the board and give me this one.”
Rob obliged and hung the flyer on the bottom of the already stuffed board. He used two thumbtacks for good measure.
“What are they selling, Sue?” A woman under a hair dryer asked.
“Thelma, didn’t’ you say Ray was argue’n about your backyard?”
“He’s always yelling about the yard.”
“Looks like you boys have a new customer,” she said with a wink.
“Thank you,” Rob replied.
“Thank you very much. Have a good day.”
We waved bye to everyone, walked out of the shop and down the sidewalk in front or the strip mall.
“See, wasn’t that easy?”
We had similar interactions at the laundromat, the hardware store, and the drugstore. The owners would look at us like we were trying to hold them up or bore them to death but, they’d take our flyer, allow us to hang one up and then take a few notecards that we—well, Rob’s mom—fashioned into colorful business cards proudly displaying our name and a contact phone number, which would be Rob’s as my grandparents hated using the phone. I’m sure my grandfather would have preferred sending a hand-written letter before even attempting to look at a computer.
Which was fine by me. It would be like being a fireman: when the call comes in, you scramble to get to your destination in order to squelch out the flames. You don’t pretend to be a hero or comment about good you are, you just get in there, through the heat and fire and do it.
Heat and fire….a great description of a summer day in my neck of the woods. Tragically, the pond was gone by the middle of summer: when it would have been perfect to cool off. Instead, one had to use a garden hose and maybe a slip-n-slide…until it’s taken away because someone’ younger brother thought it would be a great idea was to walk on it with a pair of soccer cleats. No amount of duct tape could fix it. I tried.
Our next stop was Panther Steakhouse, a place I had been to a few times before with Rob’s family. It was like a time warp with ancient, we’re talking from the early 70’s and 80’s, decorations all over the walls. If my grandfather had ever walked in he probably could have identified everything in the dining room and grandma would have critiqued their lack of grits and bland gravy. They had largest hamburgers known to this twelve year old and nothing was ever bland to me, so I had no complaints.
We asked to put up a flyer which we placed prominently in the middle of a cleared-out message board.
“There it is. Front and center.”
I nodded.
“I keep saying it, but I think is going to work. We have all summer and a little into the fall. Hey, maybe we could work on weeds too.”
“Like, pulling them?”
“No, I mean like lobbing a few grenades of weed killer and, poof! Goodbye crabgrass!”
It was ideal thought, but Rob had forgotten what had happened at the mayor’s estate when he used week killer on his grass…which happened to be a form of well-manicured wild grass that was, surprise, surprise, surprise, susceptible to that form of herbicide.
We walked back into the dining room and sat down at a table designed for four but were able to cram Ryan onto the end with an extra chair. The lunch went by pretty quick a little back and forth from Rob’s mom and the two us as she asked what our plans were for the money we received and if we were planning on saving any. She specially looked at Rob and annunciated on the word “any”. Rob replied that he was going to save up for a car. A basic vehicle to get back and forth to school. I kind of wanted to laugh because that was entirely east from the west from the “Big Foot” machine he wanted, the one where the tires alone would be a house payment. Ah, youth.
“You have ten new messages,” the answering machine at Rob’s house announced. We waited anxiously, like waiting for the bar on the TV to scroll through the school closings in our area and hope that our school’s name would be there, shining in all of it’s “Snow Day” glory. The tape clicked a few times and then played the first message, which was someone wanting to ask Mr. Bent about his car warranty. The second was a political ad. The third was one of Ryan’s “friends” screaming into the phone about something. I took a few steps away. One could not expect the heavens to open and a choir of voice singing that they wanted to hire a just turned teenager and a preteen. Maybe we could acquire a mercy job. A bless your heart gig.
“There’s one there, I know it, I know it, I know it” Rob chanted.
I only nodded as messages four and five were hang-up,
I stopped listening at six and became oblivious to the garbled voice as I thought we’d have to try harder. Maybe do one for free? Show that we could indeed do it as good as the fabled “Lawn Commander” could.
“Yes, this is Miss Karmine. I, uh, uh saw your ad. Could you call me please at six, six zero …”
I didn’t recall the reset of the number but Rob frantically grabbed a pen and paper to write it down.
“One call. It only takes one.”
I nodded.
Mr. Bent arrived at six in the morning to pick me up. My grandparents were amazed I had gotten up before breakfast and had taken a shower without being ordered. I wouldn’t say I moving into a grown-up phase of life—I was still only 12 and some months but there I was: abandoning Saturday morning cartoons to go do something I would considered a punishment for mouthing-off a few weeks before.
There were two mowers and a weeder tethered and strapped down on a small trailer. I sat in the back with Rob.
“I feel this, man. How bout you?”
“Yeah, yeah, I feel it. How many do we have?”
“Two,” Rob replied as he flashed “victory” fingers to me. “Dad’s packed a cooler for us,” Rob pointed at the trailer.
“Water?”
“Yeah, and some fruit. I asked for a Hershey’s bar or something sweet but Mom said it was granola bars or nothing.”
“Works for me,” I said as the truck turned down onto a gravel road and the dust kicked up.
“We’re going to be driving one day and do this all by ourselves.”
Rob stated he wanted to play football in Super Bowl, be an astronaut, win a million dollars and, yeah, that 4x4 truck. The issue was he seldomly even stayed with anything. Football required getting up early each morning to practice, then go to school, then more practice, and then a team of guys get to smash into your head. Being an astronaut required math skills that Rob could never do even if he hired a tutor for a million dollars. However, if he could keep up with this grass cutting job then maybe the truck thing was still possible.
We came to a stop in front of a large house with large front yard and a huge backyard. A huge backyard that was built onto a hill. A huge backyard that was built onto a hill that looked like it had not been touched in over a decade. One could go on safari in it. One could lost in it and have to yell “Polo!” For someone to find them. I’d either get paid for this or have my picture on a milk carton by the afternoon.
“Smells like money,” rob replied.
“That’s not what I smell as I looked to the other side of the house where there was a corral with several horses.
“You boys off-load the trailer, I’ll let them know you’re here.”
“We can do that, Dad.”
“You unload your stuff, okay,” His dad shot back. It wasn’t a stern or sharp rebuke. More of a “do as I say” tone of voice. Usually Rob would counter would some kind of sarcasm but he simply nodded as we jumped out of the truck and walked to the trailer.
There was a little heat and stickiness in the air. The kind of feeling that, sometime around now and later the skies would open up and the deluge would fall. We quickly removed the tethers and bungee cords from the mowers as Mr. Bent came back to the truck.
“You boys sure you can get this?”
“Of course, Dad. We’re up to the challenge.
Mr. Bent’s expression was a cross between “I’m proud of my boy,” and “the boy ain’t right.”
We’ll get this done in record time.
“Well, if it going to be done in record time, then, I’ll stay here with truck and read my paper.”
Rob motioned to me. “I’ll take the front if you want to start on the back. Then, I can meet up with and tackle the other side. We can meet in the middle.”
“Okay,” I replied as I pulled my socks up and rolled my mower towards the quasi-bamboo forest. I looked at how tall it was—some of it towering over me—and wondered why I didn’t ask to bring the tractor. I also kind of thought that, maybe, this was a test to see if we were serious about this as our first customer’s land was like a junior version of Mt. Everest. This would be our Sisyphus moment and either come out of it on top or be given the second worst punishment known to young man: to have an older man and woman look at your work, lower their heads and make that guttural sound that sounds like they’re about to die and kill you with silence.
I think I had been mowing the corn maze incognito for over an hour before the mower sputtered and died. I took that time to take a look at my handiwork and I had cut through through a rather large swath ground, so I felt pretty good as I hiked back to the truck to get the gas can and a drink of water. Rob had half of the front lawn completed. I had a feeling that he wasn’t going to be joining me anytime soon. That was okay, I thought nothing of it. We’d get through the project and be paid the same, so I was fine with everything.
I opened a bottle of water and took small sips in-between wiping the sweat from my brow.
“How is it in back nine?” Mr. Bent asked as he looked at me through a pair of sunglasses.
“Kind of think. Ran out of gas.”
“Well, rest a bit. Don’t get over-worked,”
“Yes sir,” I replied as I picked the gas can and walked back to my work-in-progress with a leisurely pace. My knees cracked as I bent down to take the cap off and fill the tank. My socks and shoes had a fine assortment of souvenir briars, brambles and cockleburs I could take home with me. I walked the can and my bottle of water back to Mr. Bent. Rob was standing a few feet away from his dad. Mr Bent appeared to inch away from Rob and the closer I got the more I could smell why. The consequences of growing up was be to be bathed in the essence of eau de sweat.
“How’s it going back there?”
“Pretty good. Hoping to avoid ticks.”
“Chiggers are worse,” Rob replied and then took a swig of water.
I nodded as I sat the gas can down and my water back into the cooler. Then, I ran back to try and get as much done as possible.
Mr and Mrs. Williams were impressed with our work and they talked with Mr. Bent as I assisted Rob with loading the mowers back onto the truck. What we thought would take an hour or two ended up being almost five hours from start to finish. If I known how sore I would be feeling the next day I would taken it down a notch but, at the time, the adrenaline was flowing so much I hadn’t noticed my skin was as red as a crayfish in butter sauce.
We thanked the Williams’ and the three of us walked back to the truck as the sound of thunder pealed in the distance.
“Looks like the second job will have to wait, boys.”
“It may pass us,” Rob replied as we looked at the slowly darkening sky.
“Just a pop-up storm, but enough to make it dangerous to be standing out in it. We’ll go home and call the second job and reschedule for tomorrow afternoon,” Mr Bent stated as lightning flashed overhead.
I came home smelly, dirty and sticky from the sap in all of those weeds I had to whack out of existence. Rob and I ranked so badly we were forced to sit in the bed of the truck as it rained. Which wasn’t bad as we had cold bottles of water, the wind rustling all around us, and a good seventy-five dollars each. I felt proud, almost grown-up…except without the bills and worrying about what to cook for dinner.
The rain had stopped shortly before we arrived to my house and we off-loaded my mower from the trailer. Mr. Bent gave me my seventy-five dollars. Rob gave me a high-five.
“We got two jobs, maybe three tomorrow afternoon.”
“You got it,” I replied as I wheeled away from the trailer and to the storage shed, which was locked.
If I ran into the house smelling like a pigpen the smell would linger in my grandfather’s nose like bad ground pork so I opened the door and stood in the mud room.
“I’m back and I need the key to the shed.”
“It’s on the desk.” Grandpa said from den.
“You don’t want me coming in like this.”
Grandma walked toward the room, took one look at me and smiled. “That looks and smells like hard work.”
“Yes ma’am,” I replied.
She moved her hands to invite me to run pass her to grab the keys.
“I smell work!” Grandpa shouted.
“Yes sir,” I said back as I sprinted past to the desk and then back outside.
I rolled the mower into position and then opened the shed door. The door was just wide enough to allow me to roll it back in. Placing it in was easy. Rolling it backwards already ended up with a wheel striking the door frame and my chest slamming into the control bar. I dreaded ever having to park a car into a small garage.
I missed eating dinner with my grandparents while I took a shower. There was a plate of a pork chop with green beams, rice and gravy waiting for me.