One night, me and Buzz were lying out back in his
mama’s yard just hanging. We wanted to go hiking across the top of Yellow Ridge,
but his mama was having none of it. Since Buzz’s pappy had gone, she was feared
people coming to her house and stealing things; to be honest with you, his mama
had nothing worth stealing.
So there we were looking at the stars, we must have
been about five years old and right there and then I convinced my friend that
the fireflies were little people and the lights were their little city. I kinda
guessed back then that Buzz wasn’t gonna be no Einstein.
Now Buzz would tell you that he’s a gnat’s wing
taller than me but he ain’t telling the truth. All thru’ schooling he was
always the small one - I guess he thought back to the fireflies and was hoping
that he wasn’t the smallest thing on this here planet.
Nope, between you and me and the kitchen stove, I
was always the first between me and Buzz to feel the rain, I swear on a stack
of bibles that’s true.
Then one day he grew more than me, and I was kind-a
suspicious until I check and see he’s been messin’ with his boots, stuffin’
them with old socks, so he looks taller.
In his naked feet, he still ain’t bigger than a
grasshopper – I tell ya he could look one right in the eye.
I swear that boy has an inferiority complex, at
leastways that’s what Stevie (the cleverest kid in school) told me. Not too
sure what it means.
One day Buzz says to me ‘Jay, ain’t it time we
headed over to Duchess County a spell’ and of course I asked him if that was
where all the short kids went these days.
He said nothing until his fist hit my face. He was
that quick that I didn’t see nothin’ till it was right there on the end of my
nose - which was now as flat as Corry Mitchin’s chest.
Of course, I ain’t for hittin’ my best friend, on
account that he’s so stupid – no sir, so I did what anyone would do, I threw
his boots into the river. Even the Sunday preacher would have said I had a
right.
No man should put a fist to his best friend’s nose.
Buzz keeps saying that on account of his good looks
– only his mama told him that – that maybe we should think of headin’ out west
to California.
I drag him to the old barbershop to show him on the
Civil War map that hangs on the wall there, how far it is.
Buzz says, ‘it can’t be more than 11 or 12 inches
at most’, and that wasn’t too far - from where he was standing. Can you believe
my best friend, just how stupid he is?
So the upshot is, me and Buzz are heading out west
just as soon as he finds another pair of boots.
Guess he’s scared he might get beaten up by the
grasshoppers on the way there.
bobby stevenson 2020
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