If Will
Stevens cared what other people thought or even took the time to think about it,
he'd probably figure that people would think he was nuts, spending his days
sweeping the sidewalks of the little town he lived in. But he really didn't care
about what the residents of Long Lake thought about him at all. He couldn't
help what he did, he just did it. They should walk a mile in his shoes, was
what he'd say, no pun intended, if any one asked. But they never did. They left
him alone, and that was just fine with him.
It all started a few weeks after his
dear twin sister died, this sweeping compulsion. It just seemed like the right
thing to do. After all, she liked to keep her room neat and tidy. Even when
they were barely in kindergarten, it was little Sally who would have to
straighten up her toys and dolls and clothes before they left for school. Will?
Well, to put it mildly, he never was one for neatness. Not until she died,
anyway.
Oh, they were close, those twins
were, everyone said so, even though Will was sometimes taken out of Mrs.
Peterson's first grade class to have some "Extra help." It didn't bother
Will or Sally that they were sometimes separated because there was something
between them, something special. You see, their mother had died giving birth to
them. In fact, she'd died moments after Sally was born. Will had to be
surgically removed and seemed to struggle from the beginning, but he never had
to worry about being alone. His sister was by his side from day one, and they
lived their short life not just as siblings but as best of friends.
Throughout grade school, Will fell a
little further behind every year. "It's a learning disability," was
what the professionals said, but that was okay with Will and Sally. Long Lake
Elementary was close enough for them to walk, so they could be together and talk
on the way to school, and they could catch up on the events of their school day
as they walked home. And, a few years later, into junior high and high school,
when boys became interested in Sally, and she in them, she still made time to
be with Will: talking, watching television together and playing the latest video
games, or going on weekend trips to the mall or to movies.
They were as inseparable as could
be, and if Sally's life was fuller than Will's, well, that was alright with
him. He liked to read. He liked to build model airplanes. He liked to watch
birds. All solitary activities which suited him just fine.
So when seventeen year old Sally and
her date were killed in an automobile accident out on country road six that
summer, and his dad told him a few weeks after the funeral to clean out his
sister's room, he did. He roused himself from his malaise, grabbed a broom and swept
it. When he was finished, he did his room. Then he swept the stairs down to the
first floor, and then he did the living room, the kitchen, his dad's bedroom
and the bathroom and the spare bedroom. Then he swept the basement.
When he was done with the house, he
moved outside and he swept the brick walkway and the driveway. He didn't stop
there. He swept the sidewalk to the corner, and then the next sidewalk and the
next sidewalk, and he just kept on sweeping until it was dark and he was
exhausted. Then he went home.
He walked in the back door into the kitchen
to the aroma of dinner cooking and set his broom against the wall. His father looked
up from where he stood at the stove and asked, "What have you been doing,
Will?"
Will looked at the worn and
withdrawn man who was his dad, shrugged his shoulders, and said,
"Sweeping."
His dad looked at him for a long
moment and then said, "Well, you must be tired. I've got dinner ready.
Meatloaf. Why don't you go sit down? Let's eat."
So they had dinner and then Will
went to bed. His dad didn't seem to mind that his son had spend most of the day
sweeping. He had his own problems.
The next day Will got up, fixed a
bowl of cheerios for breakfast, and walked over to Leaf Street where he'd left
off the day before and started sweeping again. He spent the entire day at his
self appointed job, and, while he swept, he spent every moment thinking about
Sally: how they would play together when they were young and talk to each other
as they got older and what great times they had together; how much he missed
her; and how, now that she was gone, the only time he could be with her was
when he was sweeping, reliving all those times with his sister; all those good
times when they were together.
That was
twelve years ago, and Will is still at it, sweeping the town he and Sally grew
up in; summer, fall, winter and spring. He still lives with his father and he
only stops his work to eat and sleep. But not for long, because he's soon compelled
to start again. After Sally was killed he had sunk in a depression so deep and numbing
if seemed as though he might never recover. He was lost. But that was before he
started sweeping. It was only when he picked up his broom that he found
himself, and when he found himself, he found Sally. When he's sweeping his
memories of his sister are clearest; she's still with him and he is not alone.
But he does have one all
encompassing fear and it is this: What happens if he stops sweeping and her
memory fades? What if his memory of Sally goes away? He can't have that. She
was the most important person in his life, and she still is. If her memory leaves
him, then what will he have? Nothing. So he keeps sweeping, day in and day out,
remembering Sally. They are together, then, and life is as it should be. It's
the only way he can cope with the agony of her loss. He is both sad she is dead
and happy he has found a way to keep her with him. He has his life's work cut
out for him. He's a sweeper. There are a lot of sidewalks in his town, and with
Sally by his side, he doesn't think he'll ever stop.
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