Some nights Toad slept alone in his trailer. He like to read late
into the night, but he couldn’t if he was out on the platform. When his father
was ready for bed, he forbid any lights on outside. After Jimmy dropped off to
sleep, his parents would talk. They acted as if they didn’t know Toad could hear
every word.
“When we got married, I never figured we’d be living in
three trailers connected by a covered outdoor platform on a dirt road in the
middle of nowhere.” His mother never let his father forget he’d lost the
families money when his business failed.
“Right now, we don’t have a choice. This place is free, and
we need to save money to get back on our feet.” His father sounded resigned to
their situation.
His grandfather owned the twenty-acre plot off Route 66 but
no longer lived there. When his grandfather’s health declined, he moved into
town to be closer to the hospital.
“I just wish your father had told us what to expect.” His
mother complained often about the difficulty of their lives in the compound.
“He should have told us everything about this place before we moved up here.”
The power company had run lines along the highway years
before, so the trailers had electricity. One even had a small window air
conditioner, a necessity because that was where his mother cooked. Toad and
Jimmy had to make do with a fan in their trailer. Most nights the whole family
slept outside on cots on the covered platform. A television antenna on the top
of the largest trailer brought in three black-and-white stations. Evening
viewing centered on what his parents wanted to watch. During the summer the
television was outside, but Toad suspected that when the weather changed, his
father would move it into the main trailer, because that was also where his
parents would sleep.
What the compound lacked was running water, hence the
outhouses. His mother took large water bottles to work with her once a week to
fill at a public tap.
“What could be better than not having to take a bath every
night,” Jimmy said.
Sun heated water in a large outdoor tank. During the week,
the boys took sponge baths every night; on Saturday a full washtub bath was the
rule.
Toad had grown brown and sturdy under the relentless sun. He
was no longer the pasty stick-boy he had been when his family left the city for
a new beginning in the desert.
Rex sat patiently, tongue hanging out, tail sending up small
plumes of sandy dust with each wag. Toad pulled Rex’s ear and gave him a
scratch under the chin. In a pen at the far side of the compound, adjacent to a
pair of outhouses, Shorty thrust her head over the rail and blew softly. When
he walked up to the gate, she nuzzled his pocket for a treat. He clipped a lead
to her halter, opened the gate and led her through the main opening in the
perimeter fence. His parents trusted him to leave the compound to play and
explore as long as he took Shorty and Rex with him. Usually, Jimmy tagged
along. When he became too tired to walk, Toad would boost him onto Shorty’s
broad back. He hooked and locked the gate behind him to keep wild animals and
strangers out. With only two wooden houses on his dirt road and no children
except his brother, these animals were Toad’s best friends.
Behind him came the whoosh of big rigs running north. Toad
headed toward the end of the world far away from the rising sun and the
highway. This had become his daily routine since the family moved in May after
school ended. Rex took a couple of steps toward the highway and whined. Toad
whistled.
“No, boy. Not that way. I don’t want you to get hit by a
truck.”
Thirty minutes after he started walking, Toad noticed a
slight shift in the sand near his foot. He froze, stooped and saw a tiny
dinosaur sunning itself beside a rock. He picked up the horny toad and stroked
its armored head and spiny back.
“You just stay here and warm yourself,” Toad said to the
dinosaur. “I can’t play with you today. I got bigger things on my mind. I have
to meet the spacemen.”
Toad put the reptile back on the ground where it burrowed
itself halfway into the sand. He continued his hike toward the spaceship.
Behind him, half asleep, Shorty bobbed her long-eared head. Rex flushed a
rabbit but lost it down a hole and barked at a snake on a patch of sand. Toad
turned away from the snake, but kept marching toward a low rise. He saw a
scurry of activity when a striped head with two shiny black eyes popped out of
a hole. He squatted in the sand and held out his hand. A striped body and short
bushy tail followed the head out of the hole and into Toad’s hand.
“Hey, Chip. Where’s Dale?” Toad stroked the little critter,
which rewarded him with a chirp and a couple of pellets of poop in his hand.
Toad had named the chipmunks Chip and Dale after his favorite comic book
characters right around the time he made friends with them.
Dale ran out of a different burrow a couple of yards away.
He chattered as if complaining that Toad wasn’t petting him.
“You’re such little beggars. I’ll save some of my sandwich.
You can have it when I get back,” Toad promised. He played with them until they
jumped out of his hand, and with twin swishes of their tails disappeared into
their holes.
Ever since his family moved into the compound, Toad had
spent his days exploring and daydreaming. At first he didn’t know anything
about this new world. To keep him safe, his father and grandfather taught him
and his brother how to identify snake trails, ant nests, clouds on the distant
horizon, and plants that bit if you touched them. Toad forgot about the plants
once and came home one afternoon full of sharp spines. It hurt like heck when
his mother pulled jumping cactus out with tweezers.
He had no idea how much land he had to roam in. He and Jimmy
started close to the fenced perimeter of the compound, gradually working their
way outward.
“What do you want to play today?” Toad asked every morning.
“Cowboys and Indians.”
But sometimes when Toad grew tired of cowboys and Indians,
they dug a shallow fort and played war. What one boy couldn’t dream up, the
other could.
Not only was Toad more imaginative, he was also the braver one.
Jimmy followed his father’s instructions to the letter, even when they got in
the way of a grand adventure. Toad thought those instructions were suggestions
for good behavior, not orders to be blindly obeyed.
“You are never, ever, to go into the dry wash. It could
flood in minutes if there’s a storm to the north,” his father had warned. “It’s
the most dangerous place around here. Other than the highway, that is.”
What could be more exciting, more dangerous than finding
spacemen? Natural hazards had nothing on the possibility of a real spaceship.
Toad had crossed the wash a few times. before. Jimmy tattled on him once. His father spanked him; he ate dinner standing up. Well, his brother couldn’t tattle
today.
### Toad continues on November 27.
### Toad continues on November 27.
###
Betsy Ashton is the author of Mad Max, Unintended Consequences, and Uncharted Territory, A Mad Max Mystery, now available at Amazon and Barnes and Noble. I'm really excited that the trade paper edition of Uncharted Territory was released this week. Please follow me on my website, on Twitter, Facebook and Goodreads.
7 comments:
Very interesting story, Betsy. Can't wait to see the spacemen.
I'm very much enjoying Toad's great adventure!
Toad's got an imagination...and a way of stretching the rules. Looking forward to next time.
Fun. Let's get the next part!
Great story, Betsy!
Love Toad's strong connection to nature. Looking forward to the rest of this adventure.
So cute! Very original and creative. Looking forward to more!
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