.
It was New Year's Eve. Inexplicably, the lads had started to balk at raising a little Hell. I was starting to get impatient.
"Gimme that damn thing ..."
I was throwing on layers against the cold. Last of all, the pak boots; you must keep your feet warm, or all is lost.
I stopped for a moment to admire them, the way they looked, how they felt. I carefully tucked my jeans in, blousing them just right. They reminded me of soldiers in the Great War, their mud-stained puttees, crouching in trenches, dirty fingernails and sweat-drenched brows. As of late it felt we all languished in trenches in this old part of the city.
"What about the cars? We can't put it in the middle of the street."
"Fuck 'em. This is our street, ain't it?"
A half-smile grew on young Brad's face - out of nervousness or admiration, I couldn't say.
"It was you guy's idea in the first place, right?"
Their uncertainty was starting to piss me off. KC was still apprehensive. He hadn't seen me this way for a long, long time.
"We'll miss the opportunity. C'mon!"
Quickly now, our boots sounded down the stairs, only thirteen steps into perdition and winter's ire. I stopped and put my hand up like some point man on patrol.
"Wait for it."
A quick scan of the street for trouble, not to mention the police. Fifteen minutes past midnight and a few cars might still be on the prowl. As luck would have it, we were able to march directly to the middle of the road. By coincidence, the storefront church across the way was just letting out. It was the only inhabitant on a block of boarded up businesses, their ramshackle fronts the only clue to a bustling, bygone era. The congregation eyed us with trepidation.
Another day, another new religion, from the old chapel back home, another class of migrants making their way. River City singing the praises of history's rhyme, exactly as the century before.
Kneeling on the center line, I produced a lighter from my pocket: 'guaranteed to have a thousand lights'. Headlights glimmered, timeless and magical in the distance of season and snow.
"Move your hand - get your face outta there."
A few tries with even more muttered oaths produced an alluring hiss and sparkle. We stood up quickly just as a beat-up SUV drunkenly rounded the corner. I made a motion for the driver to stop, causing him to honk his horn incessantly. Standing my ground, legs wide apart, I pointed my index finger sternly.
"Hold it right there, buddy!"
Precisely at the moment a barrage of fireworks erupted into a thousand showers of glittering balls behind me.
Strobes of colored light illuminated the old brick buildings while an explosion of cracks and whistles amplified and echoed down their narrow alleys through the icy night air. In an open window above, little Izzy jumped up and down, clapping his hands with joy while the lady of the house bellowed a drunken, "Happy New Year!"
A few more cars appeared, slowing down in caution. After a time they sped past the gunpowder's roar, gunning their engines in annoyance, or, could it have been delight? I couldn't be sure, though the patrons of Iglesias Cristiana Cedros del Libano appeared enthralled at our display. Was this a tradition in their home country? I didn't care. I just couldn't stop grinning.
Out of the corner of one eye, I noticed a movement deep in the darkness of the alley.
Mother rabbit -- leaping adrift and back again, never to touch down.
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4 comments:
You're getting good at this.
wow! We shot off some fireworks but you took your experience of it to a whole new level.
Hey Swede,
A belated thanks. From you, that means a lot.
willie
Robin,
It was their idea!!!
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