As we approached the Municipal Complex, the kids, excited by alarming and possibly disastrous situations, noticed a mob outside the fire station who both appeared to be hard at work placing letters on a large sign by the road.
“Look, Firworks!”
Nothing says small town like a budget without enough spare change to buy a vowel.
Boys are natural fans of pyrotechnics, particularly the pyro
part, and I’m always on the lookout for fresh air opportunities, so we whipped
a U-turn at the abandoned gas station and came back to join the crowd.
The public parking places were occupied by the fire truck
and a wheelbarrow, so we parked the car in the Fire Marshal’s yard, and struck
up a conversation with the boys’ Scout Leader. It seems the Town Council had a
son who got them a good deal on fireworks, so a Fourth of July blowout was in
full swing.
At the time, we didn’t realize the importance of the word
“blowout.”
The kids, with a genetic instinct for finding free food,
headed toward a table dripping with slices of watermelon. An unlimited supply of
a fruit that’s 90% liquid. There’s a good thing to have on hand when the yard
is full of free-range kids and the bathrooms are locked up.
In the fenced pasture across the road, the fireworks launch squad
strode into view. The crew chief carried a cardboard box full of bottle rockets
and a disposable lighter. His wife wore blue jeans and a motorcycle bedecked tank
top that didn’t leave much room for the handlebars.
Son Two materialized out of the twilight. His cheeks were
sticky and there was a misfired watermelon seed stuck to his chin. “I have to
go to the bathroom.”
Across the street, the launch chief sorted through the
rockets like he was searching for the half inch piece in his socket set, and
carefully arranged a bouquet of bottle rockets in a soda bottle.
“It’s about to start. Can you wait?”
Son One appeared beside his brother, wearing a pained grin
and dancing a familiar jig. “You, too?” He nodded just as the first rocket took
off with a sizzle of sparks.
Both boys disappeared. Nothing comforts nature’s call like a
lit fuse.
The fireworks display proceeded with random showers of red
and gold sparks, interrupted now and then by an unmotivated dud rocket that
bailed on liftoff and headed back to the picnic table that served as Ground
Zero. Once, the launch team was visible through the gloom and gathering smoke,
stamping out embers in the tall grass of the pasture.
Son One appeared by my side, clutching another slice of
watermelon like it was a football and I was the defensive line of the New York
Giants. “They set the bench on fire, but they put it out with a juice box.”
I’d had a slice of watermelon myself and the juice box reference made me think fondly of indoor plumbing. I squinted at him. “Don’t you have to go to the bathroom?” Across the street the launch crew ducked as another dud rocket zoomed in low over the pyrotechnic staging area.
“I can wait.”
Stephen King never came up with a scarier line.
He dashed away, weaving a path around knees and ankles like
an Olympic skier on a timed run.
Suddenly, the grand finale accidentally erupted. The entire
area lit up in a patriotic display of billowing smoke and crackling fire. The picnic
table and the box of fireworks were ablaze and nearby portions of the pasture
showed signs of imminent ignition. The fire truck swept out of the driveway and
across the street where it made short work of the ambitious embers.
As the excitement died down and the crowd drifted away through
damp ash flakes floating in the air, both sons appeared at my side, eyes
alight, wearing Junior Firefighter stickers. They smelled like bacon.
“This is the best Fourth of July ever!”
“So, where’d you get the stickers?”
We heard a blast from the fire truck and turned to see the
driver give the boys a wink and a wave.
“What’s that all about?”
“Well you know how you always tell us to use our natural
resources wisely?”
I’ve been a mom long enough to know that when they remind me what I’ve said, I wish I hadn’t said it.
“The firemen said we used our superpowers to put out the fire!”
Determination and a strong bladder. That's what makes this country great.
Captain American would be proud.
Determination and a strong bladder. That's what makes this country great.
Captain American would be proud.
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