When I was four years old, we moved from the suburbs of Burke to the
big city of Wallace. We did not initially buy the house on Cedar Street,
but instead we rented a house on a street that no longer exists,
Hemlock Street. Hemlock was about where the Wallace Inn laundry room is
today. It dead ended at what was then the main highway, Hwy 10.There
were only six houses on Hemlock Street when we moved there, and at the
end of the street where it met HWY10, there were about three steps that
went up to the sidewalk. At the bottom of those stairs was a perfect
place to build a snow fort.
I was only a kindergarten
pup, but big brother was three years my senior, and his friend was about
a year older than my brother was. It was a great fort that they built,
and in that fort was an arsenal of snowballs that we had spent hours
packing with snow and a little bit of ice. Now, what are we going to
throw those snowball at? Trucks, of course, that came along Hwy 10. We
never threw at the cabs, but only at the trailer.
I,
being of little arms and lousy aim, never hit anything, but Leon and
Craig had already developed good pitching technique, and they hit their
targets with accuracy and they hit them frequently.
Now, I,
only being a small tot, mostly watched the "big boys" practice
their snowball throwing craft, and on this particular very cold Wallace
winter day, I was just being a spectator. I was always afraid that
someday we would get in trouble, or worse, get clobbered by some angry
trucker for hitting his truck.
I had that sense of foreboding that day, and so, I was on " run as fast as you can" mode.
I
don't remember who threw that snowball. All that I know was that I did
not throw it. The semi came into view, and the snowball flew through the
air like a Nolan Ryan fastball. Plunk, it hit something, but wait a
minute, it wasn't the truck that it hit, nope, that would have been
fine. Instead, it landed like a perfectly placed pitch smack against the
windshield of the police car behind the truck.
Well,
legs don't fail me now, I said to my shaking limbs, and off I ran as
fast as I could go. My brother and his friend, being older and wiser
than I was, did not run, and, of course, the cop did not chase them.Yes,
it was me he was chasing. I had just committed the crime of eluding a
police officer.
I ran as fast as my kindergarten legs would carry
me, straight in our back door, and up the stairs to my bedroom. Of
course, I was not savvy enough to realize that officer only had to see
which house that I went in.
My heart was beating what
seemed like a thousand beats a minute when I heard my dad's voice
calling me. " Son, come down here. Someone wants to see you."
By
now, the tears were rolling down my cheeks, and my whole body was
shaking. I was so sure, probably from having watched too much "Dragnet",
that I was going to be hauled off to jail. Perhaps a diet of bread and
water was in the making.
Well, I entered the living
room, and there was the officer, and my folks, as well as my brother.
The officer told me that the older boys had already told him that I was
not the one who threw the snowball. He then proceeded to lecture my
brother and I on how such a stunt could cause an accident, perhaps even
leading to serious injury for the driver. He then looked sternly at me
and told me to never run from a police officer, and that he, at first,
thought that I was the guilty one because I had run. He then left, and
that was the end of it. Well, almost. There was, of course, the visit to
our room by my dad, and the lecture of how this was going to hurt him
worse than if would us. Yea, right.
The next day, Fort
Hemlock was torn down, never to rise again. Now, did I learn my lesson?
Well, stay tuned for the time that we were playing baseball at the
intersection of Third and Bank, and a policeman pulled up, and well, you
guessed it. Story at 11:00
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