https://spillwords.com/why-i-dont-run-away-anymore/
I ran away
from home twice.
The first time I was five years old.
It was right after my sister was born and I guess I was feeling sorry for
myself what with the attention my parents were paying to her and all. I
remember I put some plastic dinosaurs in my pocket, tied a cape around my neck
(a raggedy old towel, actually) like superman, my favorite superhero, put on my
Minnesota Twins baseball hat and left home. My jerk older brother just laughed
at me. I got two blocks away before Mrs. Nelson, a kindly kindergarten teacher
out working in her garden saw me, figured something wasn't quite right and
brought me home. I don't believe I could sit down comfortably for a week after
the spanking my father gave me.
The second time, seven years later,
I should have known better.
"God damn it, you big bully,"
I yelled at Sean. He grabbed me in another head-lock and ground his knuckles
over my skull, giving me a knuckle rub, just one more torture in his bag of
tortures he was forever dishing out on me, his unfortunate little brother. Then
he threw me to the ground, punched me in the back, rubbed my face in the dirt
and walked away, laughing. It was just another normal day.
Older than me by three years, Sean
outweighed me by fifty pounds, was almost a foot taller and was becoming the horror,
the absolute terror of my existence - something I certainly didn't need. Mom had left home
with her boy friend the year before, never to be heard of again, leaving me and
Sean and my younger sister, Lea, under the care of my poor excuse of a father and
his girl friend Sally who my dad, I kid you not, always called Sexy Sal. Geez.
Now when I say that the two adults responsible
for taking care of me and Sean and Lea left something to be desired in the
parenting department, that would be putting it mildly. Dad worked for some kind
of auto parts store and drove a delivery truck between our home in the little
town of Long Lake, located twenty miles west of Minneapolis and St. Cloud, seventy
miles to the north. Sexy Sal worked at cut rate (no pun intended) hair salon in
Brooklyn Center, about thirty miles away. I think it was called the 'Cut n' Go'
so you could probably imagine what it was like.
Sexy Sal wore her bleach blond hair
in a bee-hive style like it was the year 1965, smoked Kool cigarettes and liked
to drink any kind of beer that was available. Dad wasn't much better, but
without the hair. He was a large man - a camel straight smoker with a big beer
belly who shaved his head when he started going bald ten years earlier and had
grown his beard out so he looked like an outlaw biker. Maybe that was his
fantasy. Who knows? All I can tell you is that he didn't own a motorcycle. I
knew that for a fact. Being an outlaw? Well, not that I knew of but you'd have
to ask him if you really wanted to know.
I'm telling you all of this to let
you know they were gone from home a lot. leaving us to supervise ourselves and
let me tell you, the end result wasn't pretty. Especially that summer. I guess
Sean at fifteen was supposed to be in charge but he was a mean little kid when
he was young and the older he got, the meaner he got. My belief, from the time
I could think at all, was that he was born mean and nothing in my life up to
this point contradicted that idea.
I suppose, in the long run, I should
have counted myself lucky to be just getting knuckle rubs from him. After all, in
the beginning of the summer he had started carrying a Buck 110 folding knife
with a four and a half inch blade that locked in place and the things he used
to do to frogs and toads and the occasional baby bird...man, it still makes me
sick just thinking about it. It was my ever growing fear that he could easily
start doing the same to me. Or worse.
Fortunately he didn't bother with my
poor little sister Lea. I guess he thought that being a girl, she wasn't much
worth the time. She mostly stayed in her room and played with her dolls, smart
enough to stay out of the way of her two older brothers who fought all the time
and, in general, made life around the house pure hell.
Add to that the fact Dad and Sal
liked to party a lot when they were home...well, like I said, they weren't
going to win any prizes when it came to parenting, that was for sure. In fact
more than once I heard them talking late at night, beer bottles rolling around
on the floor, watching some late night talk show and smoking a final bowl of
weed. Something to the effect of,
Dad: "God those friggin' boys
are a major league pain in the ass."
Sexy Sal: "No shit, Sherlock. Losers,
both of them. Give me another hit."
My teacher last year in sixth grade
used to read to us from a book the final half hour of the day on Fridays. We
ended the year with "Tom Sawyer" and I have to tell you that I liked the
main character a lot. The two things I got from the book were: one, even though
Tom was a hellion (big word, huh? I might have gotten it from the book), he at
least had his aunt who loved him, and two, sometimes running away was a good
idea.
So that's what I did.
School had ended in early June and
by the middle of July I'd had it with Sean. He was supposed to be working that
summer at Jorgenson's hardware store, a place near enough to us so he could
walk or ride his bike but he kept getting to work later and later until finally
Mr. Jorgenson the owner just up and fired him. I heard that his final words to
Sean were, "Send Quinn back here when you get home. He's ten times the
worker you are."
Now, how he knew that I had no idea,
but it pissed off Sean to no end and when he got back to our house he beat me
up, apparently just on general principles. He must have enjoyed it too, deriving
some perverse, sick pleasure in pounding on me because it started him on his
campaign of terror, tormenting me every day, beating me up whenever he had the
chance and making my life miserable. And for no good reason, I might add, other
than I was small for my age and couldn't fight back. He was just as mean to me as
he always had been and getting meaner with each passing day.
I remember the last time he did it
very clearly. It was a Tuesday morning and he'd caught me in back by the garage
cleaning the spokes of my bike, not paying attention or being on the lookout
for him like I normally was. He jumped me from behind and pounded the crap out
of me, twisting my arm up behind my back just for good measure while I begged
him to stop. When he was finally done with me he threw me to the ground, stomped
on my back and left me lying sprawled out in the dirt.
Then he sneered at me and said,
"I'll see you later," which of course meant he'd beat me up again,
and sauntered inside to play on the Atari set up in the living room.
I sat up and wiped the blood from my
nose and wondered how I was going to ever survive until school started because
now with him not at work, Sean seemed to take it as his new job to torment me a
will. Full time! Not a pleasant future for me at all. Fall looked to be a long
time away.
You might wonder, 'Why doesn't this kid just tell
his dad?' That's a very good question. I momentarily thought about it that day but
had a feeling it would be as fruitless as the approximately five hundred other
times I'd told him over the years - about Sean and how he made my life a living
hell on a daily basis. But there wasn't a lot a lot of sympathy for my plight
from dear old Dad on that front. 'Just suck it up and deal with it, Quinn,' was
his basic answer, often followed up with 'Be a man, for christssake,' tacked on
at the end for good measure. Thanks a lot, Dad. So no, I didn't spend a lot of
time that day thinking about telling my dad anything about Sean and what he was
doing to me. I figured I'd just have to find a way to learn to live with it.
I was just rousting myself to get to
my feet, get on my bike and go for ride just to get away from that big idiot of
a brother for a while when something happened that I'll never forget. Lea quietly
opened the back screen door, walked across the thread bare patch of grass we
called a backyard and sat down in the dirt next to me. She was seven years old and
a skinny little snip of a thing. She had long, stringy blond hair and liked to
wear soft cotton dresses that probably were colorful once but were now faded
away to gray after so many washings no matter what the color they'd been. And,
like I mentioned before, she liked to stay in her room and play with her dolls.
Barbie's. I think she had three of them. She and I were pretty close, maybe
because of Sean. I liked her and she liked me and I even gave her rides on my
bike every now and then, you know, just goofing around.
Anyway, she never talked much and
she didn't this time either, but she did something then that I later thanked
her for over and over and over again in the years to come. She reached her hand
into the pocket of her dress, pulled out Sean's knife and handed it to me only
saying, "He left it on the kitchen table. I don't think he's missed it
yet." Then she got up, brushed the dirt off her dress, skipped back to the
house and went inside. It was the most she'd ever spoken to me in I don't know
how long.
Stunned, I held the knife in my
hand. It had a golden brown handle and when I snapped it open it's shinning,
razor sharp blade gleamed in the sun. Sean had brought it earlier that summer at
the hardware store with his first paycheck and was as proud of it as anything
else in his life. Probably more than the Atari even. I knew it was only a
matter of time before he noticed it missing and why Lea gave it to me I could
only guess at. Maybe for my own protection. But if I kept it and he found
out...man, I pictured him beating me up in a way so bad that I quickly had to
erase the image from my mind because it was too disturbing. Then I imagined him
coming at me with his knife, using the blade on me like I'd seen him use it on
those poor defenseless creatures...
God, why was I thinking about those
kinds of things right now? Stop it! I told myself. So I did.
But what I did think about right
then and there was this: now is the time to go. Now's the time to get away from
this hell-hole and move on to "greener pastures," (another phrase I'd
heard once in school, maybe in Tom Sawyer). And that's exactly what I did.
I stood up, put the knife in my
front pocket, crept to the back door and listened through the screen. I could
hear Sean playing Space Raiders on the Atari so I knew what little mind he had
was now completely occupied by his make believe world of outer space aliens and
what not. I quietly opened the door, holding my breath when it screeched a
little, and tip-toed across the kitchen floor, glad I was wearing my converse
sneakers. I crept to Lea's room and went inside, closing the door quietly behind
me. She was sitting on the floor with her dolls arranged in front of her in a
half circle. She looked up at me with her big eyes and greeted me with a little
smile. I went to her, knelt down and gave her a hug.
"I just wanted to tell you good
bye," I said, holding her tight, "I'm leaving and I'm taking the
knife with me." I couldn't think of what else to say. I sat back, looked
at her once and then hugged her again. She held me close and I almost didn't go
then, not wanting to leave her all by herself, but I forced myself to pull away
and stand up. I quickly stepped back before I could think too much about what I
was intending to do and maybe talk myself out of it. I went to her door and
opened it, looking back once when Lea said, "Be careful." I waved to
her and whispered, "I will," as I stepped out of her room, watching
as she waved to me while I closed the door behind me. With the sound of it
latching in place I felt like I was not only saying goodbye to her, but saying
goodbye to part of myself, too. I have to admit, it was pretty emotional. But
since I now had the knife I had a strong reason to go or else face Sean's wrath
- my desire to runaway stronger than doing the smart thing which would have
been to put the knife back on the kitchen table and forget the whole thing.
Lea's image would come back to me again and
again over the course of that day. Dad and Sexy Sal? I never thought of them
once.
I snuck across the hall to the room
I shared with Sean. It was a mess. I had made the beds that morning and picked clothes
and stuff off the floor like I always did because it was one of my jobs round
the house, but after pounding on me Sean must have decided to trash the room
just for good measure. It didn't take much to set him off. I looked around,
thinking to myself that I should I pick it up and straightened things out again.
Then I almost slapped myself on the forehead. Who's the idiot, now? I thought. Not
me. Nope, not anymore. The hell with it. It's his room now and he can do
whatever he wants to with it. And to hell with him, too, by the way. I'm outta
here.
I reached under my mattress where I
kept my wallet hidden. It had seven dollars and thirty seven cents collected from
the odd jobs I did for my next door neighbor and I figured I could use the
money on the road. I put it in my back pocket and then glanced in the mirror,
choosing not to dwell on my small size and skinny build, concentrating instead on
what I was wearing. I had on a tee-shirt that once was white but now was kind
of gray (like my sister's dress) and cut off blue jeans. I wondered if I should
maybe bring a jacket. Naw, I thought to myself, it's too hot out. I'll get a
job somewhere if I need more clothes. The idea of traveling light appealed to
me. Just like a hobo or something.
I took one last look around and said
good-bye. I was really going to do it. I was really going to run away. I was
both excited and nervous, but not that nervous. Good bye forever, I said, and
then I was gone.
I snuck out of my room, down the
hall, through the kitchen and out of the house. I ran to the garage and jumped
on my bike and rode it through our little town out to the highway where I
stopped, looking back and forth in both directions. Right would take me past
the lake our town was named after and eventually all the way to the big city of
Minneapolis. I really didn't want to go there so I started riding my bike west,
in the opposite direction, out toward the country. Besides, there were a lot of
cars on the road going that way and I figured I had a better chance of catching
a ride.
A mile of riding brought me to the
far outskirts of town. I hid my bike a weed filled ditch and climbed back onto
the highway. It wasn't even noon yet but the sun was burning hot and I was already
sweating. I stood on the side of the road and put my thumb out, just like I'd
seen them do on the television. I had no idea where I was going or what I was
going to do when I got there. All I knew was that I was running away for real
this time. I felt in my front pocket. The first time I ran away I brought toy
dinosaurs. This time I had Sean's knife. It gave me a sense of security and I
liked that feeling. It was a feeling I wasn't used to. It felt good.
Highway 12
is a two lane road that leads west to the Minnesota boarder with South Dakota
and beyond that all the way to Montana and I think eventually the Pacific
Ocean. He pulled over after I'd only been standing there for maybe fifteen
minutes, long enough to get hotter and sweatier than I already was and to start
looking longingly at the Texaco station about a quarter mile down the road,
thinking maybe I could find a hose or something and get a free drink of nice,
cold water.
He was driving an old, faded red and
slightly rusted pickup truck with a big dog kennel in the back but no dog.
There was also a roll of dark green canvas tied up with rope. I bent down and
peered in the side window as the truck rolled to a stop.
He leaned across the seat toward me,
"Hi there, young man. Need a lift?"
He seemed nice and polite. He was
maybe thirty years old, clean shaven with light brown hair that fell across his
forehead. He was wearing tan colored slacks with a sharp crease in each leg and
a clean white, short sleeve dress shirt, open at the collar. For some reason I
remembered his shoes as being fancy. They had tie laces and were shinny and
black. Coming from where I was coming from with a dad who was big, bearded, and
scary looking, this guy looked like a choirboy.
I was hot and frankly starting to
get bored. "Sure, "I said, happy to get out of the sun and trusting
he was as innocent as he seemed. I opened the door. "Where're you
going?" I thought to ask, not that I cared. Anywhere away from my home and
Sean was good enough for me. I climbed in and settled onto the front seat.
"Anywhere you want," he joked,
laughing, showing me a row of small front teeth stained brown. He put the truck
in gear and carefully accelerated back onto the highway.
His response to my question seemed odd and right then and
there my rather cavalier attitude about hitting the road and living on my own
began to diminish. I started to get just the tiniest bit nervous. In rethinking
my actions that day, I should have jumped out while I had the chance. But I was
just a kid who didn't know any better. I'd made my decision earlier that
morning and right now it was up to me to live with it and make the most of it.
Well, what the heck? I finally thought
to myself. What have I got to lose? He seems nice enough. Everything should be
Ok. I set my suspicions aside and settled in on the bench seat of the truck
thinking I might as well enjoy my ride and whatever lay ahead, just like a real
adventure.
"What's your name, young
man?" he asked as he brought the truck up to speed. The wind blowing through
the cab was hot, but it felt lots better than standing on the side of the
highway baking to death. He had a soft voice with kind of a southern accent and
seemed very well mannered.
"Quinn," I told him,
wondering if I should tell him my last name was Charles. Naw, I decided not to.
I'd taken enough ribbing in my life for having a first name as my last name.
"What's yours?" I asked instead.
He told me his name was Ronny.
"Like Ronny Milsap," he said laughing. "You know, the blind country
singer?"
I had no idea what he was talking
about. Dad was a big Lynard Skynard fan. Ronny Milsap? Never heard of the guy.
"Don't know him," I said.
Ronny just shrugged and grinned with
those brown teeth which for some reason were starting to irritate me. How hard
was it to take a minute and brush your teeth every day, anyway? Even Sean did
that and he hardly had the gumption to get dressed in the morning. Plus, now
that I was in the truck, and even though the windows were down (the day being
so hot and all), there was a stink inside that was starting to make me a little
sick to my stomach. Maybe it had something to do with the dog that kennel was
for. But there was no dog around. To take my mind off the stink and my nausea I
asked him where he was going.
"Out west, Quinn. Got a job
lined up."
That sounded great. I'd never been
further away from home than Minneapolis, and once up north to Duluth. Out west?
Never.
"What kind of job?" I
asked, just to be polite.
"Anything they want me to do, young
fella. I'm a self made man. I do a little bit of this, and little bit of
that."
Well, that sounded good to me and I
turned completely toward him, interested. Dad was always complaining about his
job and the delivery truck he had to drive. At my young age 'doing a little bit
of this and a little bit of that' sounded like a pretty good deal.
"Does it pay good?"
He laughed long and hard at that
one. "You bet it does, my boy. You bet it does."
My boy? I shifted a little in my
seat. The stink was starting to go away, or maybe I was getting used to it. I looked
at Ronny thinking that the guy was definitely a little strange but, all and
all, he seemed pretty harmless. At least he wasn't mean like Sean or ignoring
me like my dad always did. That counted for something. I felt myself relaxing a
little bit more. My stomach was a little better, too. This ride might not turn
out to be so bad after all, I thought. In fact, it might turn out to be pretty
good.
Ronny liked to talk. He told me he'd
grown up in Oklahoma on a ranch (that's why his accent sounded so different)
and had worked at a bunch of jobs of which I'll list a few: cowboy on a ranch
in Montana, maintenance worker on an oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico, forest
ranger in Idaho, gold miner in Colorado and a riverboat captain on the
Mississippi River. I think he also had been a bush pilot in Alaska and worked
on a lobster boat up there, too. So he'd done a lot, and I remember being
impressed - my imagination running away with me, picturing myself in each of
those scenarios. Despite my initial misgivings I was beginning to warm to the
guy. Not once did I think for a moment that he might be making all those jobs
up to impress me, relax me and get on my good side.
Around mid afternoon we stopped for
gas in western Minnesota near the town of Benson. I got out and stretched my
legs. The temperature had to have been around ninety - the heat reflecting off
the payment was rippling and even the tar in the parking lot felt soft under my
tennis shoes. I looked west out across a big cornfield toward the horizon. There
was nothing out there but more and more corn. The stalks looked shriveled, the
leaves faded. The wind blew hot air from the south. The only thing alive were
some crows across the highway, feeding on something on the ground. It was
pretty humid too. Even though I'd never been in one before, I got that feeling
that being outside right now felt like what it must have felt like to be in a
sauna.
I was picturing myself swimming in a
nice, cool lake somewhere, floating on an inner tube, when Ronny asked,
"Quinn, are you hungry?"
His voice startled me. He'd finished
with the gas and had come up beside me. He put his hand on my shoulder. I was
surprised to see him not sweating at all. But I was. It was running down my
back and I could feel it beading up on my forehead. I looked toward the gas
station, still conscious of his hand on me. It felt a little strange - my dad
never did stuff like that, but to be honest, it didn't feel too bad either.
Next to the gas station was little cafe with a sign that read, 'Ma's Place.' It
looked good to me.
"Sure," I said, thinking
suddenly that I really was hungry. Visions of pancakes with butter and syrup
dripping off the sides and an order of sausage filled my mind. All I'd had to
eat that day was my usual breakfast of a bowl of cheerios and I'd had to eat
them dry since Sean had taken the last of the milk. I suddenly realized that I
was beyond hungry, I was starving. "That'd be great," I turned and
smiled at him.
Ronny smiled in return and said,
"Be right back." I watched as he went to the truck. I had a sudden
clutching feeling inside that he'd take off and leave me stranded in this
little town all by myself out in the middle of nowhere. But to my relief he
didn't. He simply started the engine, pulled away from the pumps and parked by
the cafe. Then he got out, came over to where I was standing, put his arm
around my shoulder and led me inside. I have to admit, I was relieved he had stayed with me.
The cafe was air-conditioned and the
cold air hit me so hard it took my breath away. We sat in a booth with red vinyl
seats that were slippery but comfortable. I quickly cooled off and entertained
myself watching the sweat dry on my arms. The waitress was young and, to my
inexperienced eyes, really good looking. She had dark, wavy brown hair that
fell past her shoulders, just like my mom used to have. She brought us an icy
pitcher of water and I drank down a glass in about ten seconds - the water so
cold it made the sides of my head hurt.
We sat across from each other and
Ronny made small talk with the waitress (her name tag read 'Annie'). He even
turned around and chatted with the people seated behind him - an elderly couple
who looked to me like they just stepped in off the farm. I tried not to stare
at the ring of white around the farmer's hairline and forehead that was
probably from the hat he wore when he was working outside, driving his tractor
or something. The lower half of his face was deeply tanned and he had on plaid,
short sleeve shirt and clean pair of bib blue jeans. His wife wore a pretty floral
dress and a bonnet. I got the feeling this was a special outing for them. I
caught a faint aroma of manure, maybe from the guy's boots, that I have to say
wasn't all that unpleasant. For some reason, I liked seeing them in the cafe
with us.
I ordered three pancakes which, when
Annie set them down in front on me (I think she might have even given me a wink
along with her smile), blew me away. They took up the whole plate. I drowned
them in maple syrup and slabs of butter and wolfed them down along with my side
order of sausages (just liked I'd imaged.) Man, they tasted fantastic. Ronny
didn't order anything. He just sat and watched while I ate and smiled at me. I
was so hungry it never even occurred to me how strange it was that he didn't order
or eat anything. He barely drank any water.
After I finished I excused myself to
go use the bathroom. When I was done, I washed my hands and splashed cold water
on my face. As I was drying off I looked at my reflection in the mirror. I
couldn't believe how red my face was and my freckles stood out like crazy. I
was a little sheepish about my looks. Most of the boys I knew and went to
school with had nice, shinny, longish hair - long enough to blow a little in
the wind. Dad had something against that kind of hair, probably because he'd lost
most of his, so whenever he used his electric razor to shave his head he also
did me and Sean. Buzzed us right down to the nub. So, along with being outcasts
in town because of our family situation, we were also outcasts on account of
how different we looked because of our hair, or lack of it. Now that I'm on the
road, I thought to myself, I'll let my hair grow out. Smiling into the
reflection in the mirror at my great idea, I finished drying my hands and
joined Ronny back at the table.
He greeted me with, "All set,
there, Quinn?" He had been using my first name ever since he'd picked me
up. The fact that he was getting so familiar with me was kind of odd, but not all
that bad. At least he was talking to me like a person. Not like my dad, who
just ordered me around, getting him beers and stuff, or Sean, who didn't talk
to me all, preferring instead to push me around and, of course, beat me up.
Ronny talking to me was different but in a good way, like I was a real person,
and that was just fine with me once I got used to it. In fact, it was kind of
nice.
"Yeah, I'm good."
He pointed to my water glass.
"Drink up, my boy. We might not be stopping again for a while."
"Ok."
I dutifully finished off my water
and stood up. I noticed Ronny hadn't left a tip for my pancakes and sausage. I
thought about using some of my own money from my wallet, but Ronny seemed in a
hurry so I didn't. He hurried me out of the cafe and hustled me to the truck. I've
always felt bad I didn't leave the nice waitress at least a quarter.
We got in the truck and I got
settled. Ronny started the engine and drove out of the parking lot onto the
highway. I was pleasantly full and feeling really good, thinking that running
away was the smartest thing I'd ever done and that life on the road was the
perfect solution to all my problems at home. But after a few minutes staring at
cornfields, cows and the occasional farm house and barn, the heat must have
started to get to me, because I began to feel kind of groggy. I put my hand on
my forehead and was surprised that it felt cold and clammy instead of hot which
was weird because I was sweating heavily under my tee-shirt again.
"Quinn, are you feeling
Ok?" Ronny asked, looking at me with a strange expression. One I can only
describe as both concerned and excited.
"Not really," I said,
feeling my words slur.
He patted the seat. "Just lay
your head down here, my boy. Rest. I'm sure you'll feel better soon."
He sounded like he cared about how I
was feeling so I trusted him and did just as he suggested.
"Ok," I said. And I lay my
head down.
The next
thing I knew I was waking up. Well, coming to was more like it. I was lying
completely stretched out across the front seat of some sort of vehicle with my
head jammed under the steering wheel. I was looking at the foot well and saw a
brake pedal and an accelerator pedal and a steering column and a bunch of wires.
It took a minute for me to work it out, but when I did I remembered I was in
Ronny's truck. Then it all started coming back to me: the hitch-hiking, the
truck, Ronny, the cafe. But why was I here by myself? Where was Ronny?
I sat up and rubbed my eyes, feeling dizzy and
disoriented. I looked out the driver's side window and saw cleared spaces on
the ground, grass, a few trees and some picnic tables. I looked out the front
window and saw I was about fifty feet from a big, muddy river rimmed with brush,
bushes and some tall trees and it dawned on me that I had to be a camp ground
somewhere. The river looked to be about a hundred feet across and, if I had to
guess, I thought it might be the Minnesota River since we'd been heading in
that direction the last I knew. I looked to my right and there seated at a
picnic table about thirty feet away was Ronny. And of all the things to be
doing in a camp ground by a river, the thing he was doing was reading. It
looked like magazine. What the heck?
I watched him as I took a few moments
getting my bearings. I was really kind of out of it. My head felt fuzzy and it
was hard to think. My mouth was dry and felt full of cotton. My eyes were caked
with sleep and crap and I rubbed them as clean as I could. My stomach ached
too, pretty awful, like the flu. I'd been sick bad in my life before but not much
worse than this. Then my stomach heaved once and I fought back an urge to throw
up. Thankfully both windows were down, not only because of potential vomiting,
but also because it was still hot out and it helped to have a little air
movement in the truck. I could see out the front that we were pointing west.
The sun was above the trees on the other side of the river but starting to go
down, it's rays shinning into the cab, adding to the heat. I was woozy but
sitting up seemed to be helping. I was slowly starting to feel better.
For some reason I had the feeling I
should be as quiet as I could be, so instead of yelling out and greeting Ronny
with, "Hi there. I'm awake," I scrunched down and peered over the
edge of the window, spying on him and getting a feel for my surroundings. He
had set up a tent near to the picnic table. It was of those old fashioned dark
green, canvas ones with no windows that looked just plain hot to me and it
occurred to me that it must have been what I'd seen in the back of the truck
when he'd first stopped for me. From my seat in the cab (which now, with the
sun shining in, was starting to burn a little), I carefully looked all around
outside, expecting to see other campers. But the eerie thing was that I didn't
see anyone else. Not a sole. Which was really surprising considering it was the
middle of summer and everyone in Minnesota knew this was the height of the camping
season - even me and I'd never been camping before in my life. So maybe that's
what we were going to do, I thought. Me and Ronny were going to go camping
together. That would be fun. But it was strange that Ronny really didn't appear
to be camping. He didn't have a fire going, or any firewood, or fishing poles, or
a cooler or anything. All he was doing was sitting at that picnic table reading
a magazine. What was that all about?
I watched him turn a page. The
magazine looked worn out and old. I thought most people went fishing or
something when they went camping. And how he was acting seemed doubly odd to
me, now that I thought about it, because I hadn't seen any luggage or camping
gear or anything like that when he'd picked me up other than that roll of
canvas which turned out to be the tent. Then I saw he'd put the big dog kennel
next to the tent. He must have moved it there from the back of the truck. Maybe
he had camping stuff in the tent, but if he did, where had it come from? I was
confused and beginning to get both nervous and suspicious. What was he up to?
Just to be sure, I cautiously turned
around and looked out the driver's window and then out the back, and then it
dawned on me - not only were we all alone, but I was here with this guy who all
of a sudden was starting to seem kind of creepy, just like when he'd first
picked me up and I'd gotten in his truck. That feeling I had back then was
coming back to me all over again. My heart thumped a little in my chest. Something
wasn't right.
I scrunched down again and went back
to watching him over the edge of the window. For a few minutes he just read, turning
the occasional page. Nothing strange about that. I started feeling a little
better about my situation. Maybe I was making things up in my mind. Maybe it
was only my imagination getting the better of me. After all, he'd been nice to
me, getting me lunch and all. He'd been friendly the whole time I'd been with
him, and he'd even talked to me like I was more than just a kid. Like I was a
real human being. Maybe things really were Ok.
I was about to call out and greet
him and get on with this camping business, when all of a sudden he reached down,
ran his right hand along his right thigh and began moving it back and forth. Back
and forth. Back and forth. Then he casually moved it into his crotch, massaging
and rubbing it, keeping his hand there for a long time - like he was playing
with himself or something. Then it hit me and a feeling of dread washed over me
that made my entire body go weak. My friends at school sometimes talked about
weirdo's who played with themselves and other stuff. I wasn't sure if that's
what he was doing right now but whatever it was it didn't seem right. And I'll
tell you what, it scared the hell out of me. My heart jumped and started racing.
Call it a gut feeling or a premonition or what have you. It was same feeling
I'd get when Sean looked at me a certain way, just before he started to chase
me hoping to catch me and beat me up. But this feeling I had now toward Ronny
was a thousand times worse. It was a feeling of stone cold fear.
I quickly ducked down. My heart
started pounding away and a wave of terror washed over me. I had to fight back an
urge to scream. Then it occurred to me that if I screamed no one would have
heard me anyway and, I couldn't help it, but knowing I was so alone just made
it worse. I was so scared, so terribly scared. I didn't want to anything bad to
happen to me and I made myself hold back my fear and tried to think. I had to
do something, but what? My whole body started shaking. I kept my head lowered
below the window and searched in my mind for what I should do next. I came up
with nothing. Absolutely nothing. I realized I was trapped. The shaking got way
worse after that.
And who knows...I might have lost it
right then and there and surrendered to my fate with Ronny except for one
thing. My mind went to the safest place I knew, my home. I saw Dad and Sexy Sal
and Sean and Lea. I focused on Lea, my sweet little sister who I cared for more
than anyone else in the whole wide world. Then I remembered: Lea had given me
Sean's knife. I had it in my pocket. And it wasn't so much the knife (all though
that was certainly comforting in a totally bizarre kind of way) but it was the
thought of Lea giving it to me that helped calm me down. I centered my mind on my
last vision of her - my little sister playing with her dolls, nice and safe in
her bedroom, and I made myself keep that vision in my mind as I tried to reason
out what I should do. There was one thing for sure. Ronny was some kind of
weirdo, there was no doubt about that, just like my friends at school used to
talk about. I wasn't safe and it was only a matter of time before he came for
me. I had to figure out how I could get away.
My first idea was this: maybe I
could just climb out the opposite window on the driver's side, slide to the
ground and make a break for it. But then where would I go? And what if he saw
me? What if I couldn't outrun him and he caught me? Then what? Oh, man, 'Think
Quinn,' I told myself, 'Think.' But I was so scared my mind was starting to go
blank.
I took a chance and snuck a peek
over the edge of the window frame to check on him and that was my undoing. Ronny
suddenly looked up from his reading and, seeing me staring at him, grinned and
closed his magazine. I froze.
'Well, well, well. Look who's awake,"
he said, smiling and standing up, "It's my little pal, Quinn. How are you
doing, young man? Sleep well?"
He took a last look at his magazine
and then started walking slowly toward the truck, all the while staring straight
at me.
My mind started racing, grasping for
an idea. Any idea. I had to do something. My fear was so overwhelming I almost
wet my pants. But I didn't. Instead, I did the only thing I could think of. I
put my hand in my pocket and took out Sean's knife. I carefully held it below
the sight line of the window and opened the blade, waiting, watching as Ronny came
toward me, his smile confident. But, I have to say, holding that knife didn't
help all that much. I had no idea what I was going to do with it.
And that creep took his time coming
for me, that was for sure, one step after another, slow and steady, while my
heart pounded in my chest like a kettle drum. And with every step he took my
fear grew and grew until my mind almost went blank. But it didn't, although I
almost wish it had, because instead I was left with watching him while my mind
whirled out of control, knowing that if didn't do something there was no doubt
that this guy who had once been so nice and kind to me, now was going to do
something bad to me.
As he walked he kind of sauntered,
swinging his hips a little, which freaked me out even more. Then half way to me
he took a length of thin rope out of his back pocket and dangled it from his
right hand, twirling it in a circle. With his left hand he raised it a little
and started moving it back in forth like he was waving at me.
It took him maybe half a minute to
all total to cross to me. Both the shortest and longest half minute of my life,
and as he got closer, my fear turned to panic. I knew for sure I was going to
die. When he was a few steps from the truck he started beckoning to me with his
index finger like that witch in The Wizard of Oz. I'm coming to get you. God, I
couldn't help it - I started shaking all over again.
When he reached the truck he put his
right hand on the handle, rope dangling from it while he paused waiting, toying
with me I guess, looking at me to see how'd I react. We were less than three
feet apart - my only protection the door of the truck, but with the window down
that wasn't much. I took a deep breath to try to quit shaking without much
success. He was so much bigger than me and he acted so confident. Like he could
do anything he wanted to me. My eyes welled up and I fought back tears as I
tried to get myself ready.
"Here
I come, Quinn," he said, smiling with those brown teeth. "I'm glad
you finally woke up."
With his right hand he pushed in the
latch, opened the door wide and held it there. He suddenly seemed to grow taller
right before my eyes, growing until he was gazing down upon me, looking me over
while I crouched and cowered. And he just stood there, silently tormenting me
with eyes that now started to look like some sort of weird, slimy reptile's
eyes. I tried not to faint dead away with the worse fear I'd ever felt in my
whole life - I knew he was going to kill me.
I'm sure he was thinking that I was just a small
for my age kid so I'd be easy prey for whatever sick thing he had in store for
me. Still holding the door open he put his left hand out toward me, reaching
for me, thinking god only knew what unthinkable horror he had planned for me.
But I wasn't going to wait. I had kept the
knife in my right hand hidden behind me and I didn't hesitate. I fought through
my fear as adrenalin took over. I screamed as loud as I could as I lunged out
at him, stabbing out at his hand with my knife. I might have been small, but I
was quick and I must have startled him because he moved at just that same
moment I lunged and I missed his hand and instead slashed that razor sharp
blade right across his forearm. Deep.
He stopped, startled, and looked at the
cut. So did I. For an instant nothing happened and I remember thinking, Oh, my
god, I'm in for it now. What did I do wrong? Why wasn't he bleeding? But then
the blood came. In torrents, flowing out of the gash, running out of his arm,
covering it like he'd dipped it in a bucket of red paint. Big drops started falling
to the ground, followed by a river of blood. Ronny screamed in shock (and,
hopefully, pain) and fell back against the wide open door of the truck as he
tried to stop the flow of blood with his right hand. He wasn't having any
success. His knees sagged a little and he looked at me with disbelief as he
tried to collect himself. But only for a moment. Then his eyes pierced me with an
anger and hatred so deep I almost froze again. But I didn't.
In an instant I slid off the seat
and hit the ground running. He tried to grab for me but I was able to push his
bloody arm away and he screamed again. I bolted to the back of the truck,
around it and then ran like hell to river. I slid down the embankment and
jumped into the muddy water thinking for some reason how refreshingly cool it
felt. Then I fought my way out to the middle where I started swimming and floating
downstream with the current. Was Ronny yelling and screaming and running after
me? I don't know. My world had closed in and all I thought about was survival.
But I'll tell you this: I never looked back. And I didn't know where I was
going, either, but I didn't care. I was getting away and that's all that
mattered.
It was many minutes later I realized
I still had the knife griped in my hand. I rolled to my back and floated, closed
it and managed to stuff it in my front pocket, thinking that Sean would kill me
if I lost it. Funny what can come to your mind sometimes. Anyway, once the
knife was safely put away, swimming became a lot easier.
I stayed in
that river for as long as I could, my fear that Ronny was going to catch me
becoming less and less the further I dogpaddled and swam. But I was still
frightened and might even have floated in that muddy water all the way across
the state of Minnesota to St. Paul if a farmer hadn't been tending to some
cattle on the shore and seen me, called to me, and waded out into the water to
drag me to safety. I realized then that I was close to being drowned, my
thoughts of Ronny and what he might do to me if he caught me the only thing
that was keeping me going - keeping me afloat so to speak. The farmer was old, strong,
and kind enough to bring me up to his farmhouse (in fact he carried me most of
the way in his arms). It was a big two story white home with a wide porch -
just like you see sometimes on the television.
He brought me through the back door,
right into the kitchen and set me down on a rug by the door, saying, "Greta,
look at what I found."
Whether he was making a joke or not
I didn't know but his wife, who was stirring something on the stove, took one
look and ran straight to me, smacked at her husband with her wooden spoon and
told him to get some towels which he did. She took over, helping me to the
kitchen table where she sat me down, knelt on the floor and began drying me off
and fussing over me which, I have to admit, even to this day the memory of
still makes me feel really good.
The farmer looked on, his eyes
topped by white eyebrows that I swear stuck half way up his forehead, giving me
the once over while his wife worked on pampering me.
At one point she looked over her
shoulder and said, "For pity's sake, Clive, don't just stand there
dripping on the rug, get a towel and dry yourself off. I'm sure not going to do
it for you." And he did.
When he was finished he took a pipe
out of his overalls and filled it with tobacco and lit it before asking, "Your
name wouldn't be Quinn by any chance?"
What the...? "Yes sir, it
is." I told him, wondering how the hell he knew that. Then I immediately
got suspicious and frightened all over again. After what I'd been through, who
wouldn't? "Why?" I looked toward the back door as I wondered if I'd
stepped into another bad situation and I'd have to make a run for it. Again.
"Clive, quiet down and don't
bother the boy," his wife told him. "Can't you see he's frightened
enough."
She turned to me and smiled,
reassuring me, "Don't let him scare you, young man. His bark is way worse
than his bite." She looked past me toward the old farmer and I could
almost see daggers coming out of her eyes.
Clive, I guess that's what his name
was, shuffled his feet on the rug, shook his head and said, "Didn't mean
anything by it." He sucked on his pipe some more and conscientiously blew
the smoke outside through the screen door. By this time got the feeling his
wife pretty much ran the show in that household.
She made sure I was comfortable in
my chair at the table, and after she'd dried me off she went and got a big
quilt that she wrapped around me. It smelled clean and fresh, just like the out
of doors. Then she went to the refrigerator and took out a bottle of milk.
"You're all over the news," she said, pouring me a big glass."We've
been listening on the radio. The police have been looking for you. We heard
you'd been kidnapped."
She brought me the milk and a heaping
plate of chocolate chip cookies and set them in front of me. Suddenly I was
famished and I started eating them right away. They were the best cookies I'd
ever tasted. Then or since.
While I was eating, Greta stood next
to me, watching over me with a concerned expression. She was a large woman with
her gray hair pinned up on top of her head and she wore an apron over her
dress. Then she knelt down and felt my forehead. It didn't bother me at all -
her attention felt kind of nice. She had blue-green eyes that I especially noticed
when she peered closely and asked softly, "Are you Ok, Quinn?" Her
breath smelled sweet, like peppermint.
"Yes, maam, I am," I told
her, swallowing after finishing off my third or fourth cookie, "I'm fine.
I really am." And for the first time since I'd run from the truck I truly
believed I was and, I have to say, with the relief I suddenly felt, my eyes
filled with tears and I almost started to cry.
She pulled me to her bosom and
hugged me tight.
Well, I never...
Then she released me, like she'd had
a sudden thought and turned to her husband, "Lordy, Lordy, Clive,"
she exclaimed, "What in heaven's name's the matter with you? What are you
waiting for? Get on the phone right now and call Sheriff Nelson. Quick. Tell
him we've got that boy they're looking for. Tell whoever answers that he's Ok
and that he's sitting right here in our kitchen."
Clive, who I got the impression
wasn't the fastest man alive, moved pretty darn quick under his wife's command
and made the call.
That night I spent in the hospital
in Ortonville. The next night I was home and I'll tell you this, after all I'd
been through, even seeing Sean felt pretty good.
The morning
after I got home and Dad and Sexy Sal had gone to work. Sean and I were alone
in the house for the first time since I'd been back. Everybody wanted me to
rest so he'd had to sleep that night in the living room on the couch which I
don't think he minded too much because he could be close to his precious Atari.
I'd given his knife back to him the evening before and received nothing in
return but a menacing scowl.
That morning as soon as Dad and Sexy
Sal left, he came into the bedroom. I immediately got nervous, my stomach tying
itself all up in knots.
"So you stole my knife,
huh?" he asked, sitting down on my bed and moving close.
I didn't answer right away. If I
said No, he might find out Lea took it and gave it to me and I didn't want her
to get in trouble. If I said Yes, well then...my imagination took over, leaving
me with nothing but an unhappy ending. But hell, I'd had to deal with Ronny and
I got through that all right. I figured I could take on anything - even whatever
Sean had to dish out.
I puffed up my chest a little, "Yeah,
I did," I told him, trying to sound tough, "So what?"
I looked at him and he looked right
back at me. Two days ago the next move would have been me trying to get away
and probably not succeeding, suffering Sean's version of justice with him
proceeding to pound me into a bruised and battered, bloody little pulp, then
walking away with a self-satisfied smirk on his face.
Sean surprised me by doing nothing
violent. Instead, he put his hand on top of my covers on my leg, but not in a
mean way. I only flinched a little.
"You don't have to lie for
her," he said. "I know what happened with the knife. Lea told
me."
"What?!" I screamed.
"Is she all right?"
I tried to get up, but he held me
back. I pictured my sweet natured little sister submitting to his wrath. The
image was more than I could bear. Then I had a thought. Wait a minute. I'd
already seen her when I got home. She'd been perfectly fine. She'd even given
me a big hug and everything before retreating to her room with her dolls for
the rest of the evening.
"Relax, man, she's Ok," he
smiled. I accepted that Lea really was unharmed, but now Sean was smiling at
me, which was creepy in and of itself. He never smiled at me. What was up with
that?
"Seriously, she's just
fine." He sounded almost like he was trying to reassure me. Like he knew I
cared about Lea and he didn't want me to have to worry about her. Weird, was
the word that popped into my mind. He was acting really weird.
And he was also confusing me. Big
time. He was right about my sister, of course, she truly was Ok, but his
behavior was so different from how he normally acted that I have to admit I was
stunned. I looked at him like he was nuts and he must have seen the disbelief
in my eyes because he waited for me to say something. But I didn't. I couldn't think
of anything to say. I was speechless.
Maybe a minute went by before he continued,
"I admit I was mad. Pissed off is more like it. I really was ready to kill
you." I involuntarily shuddered. "But then you were gone and no one
knew where you were and someone found your bike up on the highway and called Dad
who got mad and worried and he called the cops and..." he stopped and
shrugged his shoulders, "And everything else happened and I just sort of
forgot that I was mad at you."
What the hell? Was this real life or
had I stepped into a fantasy world where nothing bad ever happens and there's unlimited
ice cream and hot dogs every night for dinner and a happy ending?
I was pondering the significance of
such a world and finding it to my liking when I sensed a movement at the
bedroom door. I pulled myself back to reality and looked. There was Lea,
peeking around the doorframe. She was safe and unharmed and she looked great. She
took a tentative step into the room. "Hi," she said, shyly.
"Lea," I grinned and
almost shouted, "Come here." I patted the side of the bed as I moved
over.
She smiled back and ran to me and
hugged me so tight that for a moment I wondered where she got the strength for
such a little thing. It almost hurt. Almost. And it felt great.
Sean stayed and sat on the bed with
us and it suddenly came to me that it was the first time we all three had been
together in our room before in I didn't know how long. If ever. And without
fighting or anything. Like a normal family. I have to say it felt pretty good.
We talked a lot. Sean couldn't hear
my story enough, especially the knife part, and he had me tell it over and over
again until I finally got tired. I had been through a lot and it was still
catching up to me. Finally he stood up, telling me that Mr. Jorgenson from the
hardware store had called the night before and offered him his job back.
"Yeah, he told me that when he'd heard what you had gone through and what
you had done to get away, he thought maybe there was something in me that he'd
missed. What do you think he meant by that?"
I had my own idea that Mr. Jorgenson
hadn't missed anything, but I certainly wasn't going to tell Sean that so I
said only, "Maybe he was just being nice."
Sean shrugged. "Maybe. Anyway,
I'm going down there now, he glanced at the clock on the night stand by my bed.
I followed his gaze. It read a few minutes after nine. "Shit. I'm late. I'm
supposed to be there right at nine. See ya'."
I watched as he ran out of the room.
Then I caught Lea's eye. We looked at each other for a moment before my little
sister pointed to Sean's disappearing back, then pointed to her head with her
finger and twirled it around like 'he's crazy' and rolled her eyes. I couldn't
believe it. She was making fun of Sean and it was funny! I laughed out loud for
the first time in I don't know how long. It was then that I had this thought:
it was actually great to be back home.
You know
what? They never found Ronny. When the sheriff came and picked me up at the
Greta and Clive's place, he talked to me on the way to the hospital. I was able
to give them an idea where I had been and he immediately sent some deputies to
search the area. The car, the tent and the dog kennel were all still there and
surprise, surprise, no camping gear. But Ronny was nowhere to be seen. They
searched the river, sent out hundreds of police type bulletins, dragged the
river, everything they could think of. They never found him. My fervent hope is
that he followed me into the river, the current got him and he drowned and was
eaten by some big ugly fish with dull teeth. It would have served him right.
Dad and Sexy Sal pretty much acted
the same as ever to me after I came home and I don't really want to talk about
them.
But Sean and I got along better with
each other. A lot better. I think the job at the hardware store helped - made
him feel older and more responsible maybe. Anyway, he didn't pick on me so much
afterwards, only sometimes joking with me, pretending like he was going to hit
me, but he never did. I guess he just started to grow up some.
Lea and I became closer. I couldn't then,
and still can't now, ever thank her enough for giving me Sean's knife that day.
But maybe I was able to in some small way. She got me to play dolls with her a
lot the rest of the summer right up until when school started (and even after
that) and I didn't really mind. She was fun to be with and she had a really
good imagination, especially when it came to using her dolls to play a game she
called Family. I never did understand why she never ever had a lot of friends. Well
any, actually. Maybe she just liked being by herself. But she was a sweet kid
and I figured playing with her and being kind of a friend to her was the least
I could do after what she'd done for me, even if it had been inadvertent
(another word I learned about in school.) I'm positive I wouldn't have escaped
without her .
Next year in seventh grade in the
fall my teacher, Mrs. Rademacher, had us studying 'The Adventures of Huckleberry
Finn.' Now there's a lot of fancy imagery and stuff in the book that I didn't
understand, but there were some other things that I kind of got what she was
saying. Like at one point she talked about how at the end Huck sort of is
rescued from his life on the river and ends up living with his Aunt Sally and
everything is fine for him. But he doesn't like being civilized and decides
light out for the west. One of the points she was trying to make was about how
life sometimes works in mysterious ways and there's no accounting sometimes for
why things happen the way they do. Huck was rescued and had the good fortune to
have the easy life all laid out for him: good food, clean clothes, a roof over
his head, someone to love and care for him, and he chose to give it all up.
Mrs. Rademacher looked at me when
she talked to us about that but didn't mention me or refer the class to my
story from last summer about how I'd run away from home and what had happened
and that I'd returned safe and sound. (Thankfully most people didn't talk to me
too much about it.) But when she said it and I thought about, I had to agree. I
think I might even have nodded my head at her because I think what she meant
was this: if Sean hadn't bought the knife and if Lea hadn't stolen the knife
and given it to me, I wouldn't have been able to use that knife to get away.
Weird, huh? Or lucky. But yeah, I think I got what she was saying. Sometimes
life does work in mysterious ways.
By the way, Mrs. Rademacher was
really nice to me that whole entire year.
And that knife. Later that first day
I was home, Sean came in from his first day of working at the hardware store and
sat down on the bed next to me and woke me up from a nap.
"Here," he said. He handed
me his knife. "I've been thinking about it all day." Which was
surprising to me. Was I still dreaming? I actually pinched myself a little. No,
I was wide awake. I'd never thought of Sean as much more than a bully. A
thinker? I didn't think so. Maybe he was changing. In one day? I doubted it but
I guess stranger things could happen. He looked at me like he meant what he was
saying, "Seriously, I want you to have this." He reach over, gently
took my hand and put his cherished knife in it.
I was shocked. I watched him to see
if he was kidding, but he put his hand over mine and said, "Really. After
all you went through, I want you to have this. You deserve it."
I took his knife and held in my
hand. I opened the blade. The sheriff's department had wiped it down for traces
of blood before they gave it back to me. They must have cleaned it too because
it was gleaming. I looked at it and saw my image on the blade reflected back. I
looked tired. Real tired. Then the image changed and I saw something else. For
the briefest moment I thought I saw Ronny smiling at me with those ugly brown
teeth of his. Grinning at me like I was all his and he could take me and do
anything he wanted to me. It freaked me out. I might have screamed. I don't
know. But I do know that I quickly closed the blade and handed the knife back.
I swear it felt hot to my touch like maybe it was possessed or something. I
knew one thing. I didn't want to touch it again. Or have anything to do with it
again. Ever.
I tried to compose myself and told
him, "That's Ok, Sean. But thanks. I think I've had it with knives for a
while."
He looked at me for a moment or two
before putting the knife in his pocket."Ok. I think I get it."
Well, that made only one of us
because I certainly didn't. In fact, I just let the matter drop, but sometimes
still to this day an image of Ronny will appear in my mind. And when it does, it's
scary. People tell me that it's normal for that to happen, especially after all
I had gone through. But I have to say, others have been through a lot worse. A
way lot worse, and for the rest of my life I always counted myself as among one
of the lucky ones. I got away.
Now I'll tell you one last thing. In
the summer three years later Sean started driving a delivery truck for the
company my dad worked for and I began working at the hardware store. Even
though I was still small for my age, Mr. Jorgenson was happy to have me,
saying, "Sean turned out to be a good worker, but I'll bet you'll be lots
better." Well, Sean had changed and actually gotten to be a pretty good
guy and I didn't want say anything against him so all I did was to tell Mr.
Jorgenson that I'd do my best.
The first thing I did with my first paycheck
was to take my money and go to the knife display case. I'd spent many long and
enjoyable hours looking at the knives in there in those three years since
Ronny, picturing myself having one of my very own. One like Sean's except a
little bigger. I knew exactly the knife I wanted and so I bought it, snapped
open the blade a few times, getting the feel of it and the balance of it. It
felt good. Finally, I closed it up and put it in my pocket, said goodbye to Mr.
Jorgenson and went outside to get my bike.
Now, I'm not sure I really
understand it all that much, but ever since I escaped and came home, Lea started
to not like to go outside the house alone. She took the bus to school and it
was hard for her, but she was able to build up her courage and do it, but that
was about it. Once she was back home she pretty much just stayed inside. So I
sort of made a commitment to myself to be with her as much as I could. To be a
friend to her. After all, if it hadn't been for her, I wouldn't be here to tell
my story. So I told her that morning that when I got home from work I'd take
her to the park, which was referred to by the locals as the City Park. It was located
a short bike ride away on the shore of Long Lake and it was something we had
started doing pretty often over the last three years. We liked to go there and
goof around and play. She liked swinging on the swings and so did I. As I rode
my bike home that afternoon I looked up at the sky. It was bright and blue with
a few puffy clouds. A perfect day to play outside. I rode faster and got home
in record time.
Lea was standing at the back door waiting
for me. She ran outside, jumped on the back of my bike and we rode down to the
park. We spent an enjoyable hour, swinging on the swings, playing on the
merry-go-round, climbing on the jungle-gym and running up and down the slides, acting
silly and goofing around. We had a fun time. She even laughed out loud a few
times.
Before we came home we found some purple
and white wildflowers that Lea liked so I cut a bouquet of them for her with my
new knife. She carried them carefully in her hand all the way back to our house
and then put them in a small juice glass that she filled with water from the
kitchen faucet. Then she took them to her room and set them on her window
ledge.
"My dolls like them,
Quinn," she told me. I was standing at her door watching, happy that she
was happy. She looked at me and said, "So do I." And then she smiled
and waved as I closed the door. Standing in the hall and listening, I heard her
saying, "Come on now girls, let's play family."
I went into the kitchen, got an
apple and went outside and sat on the back step to eat it. I used my knife to
cut it up. It sliced really good. Tasted good, too. When I was finished, I
cleaned off the blade on my jeans and put it in my pocket. I've kept it there
ever since.
After all these years I'm not sure if
it helps or not, but I have to say that I like having my knife with me. It
gives me a sense of security that I just can't explain. But when those images
of Ronny appear and I start to freak out a little, I put my hand on my knife
and they go away. I like knowing that I can do that - that I have a some
control. And it gives me a little sense that I might not be a victim after all.
Or ever again. But, I carry it with me every day. Just in case.
And you know what? I never once
thought about running away from home again.
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