“They should
go back into the store,” Toad said. “Somebody
lost them.”
“Somebody bought them, then,” Pete said.
“They’re paid for fair and square.”
The two brothers, one 8 and the other not quite 7,
sat on the sidewalk in front of the small neighborhood
store. A box of wooden matches rested on the ground
between them, where it had fallen, scraping one corner,
and sliding open an inch or so. Knocking the red-headed
matches into view.
Toad, the younger boy, sat Indian-style, his legs folded
under him, his arms crossed and resting on his battered
green lunch box. Pete had tucked up doglike close beside
Toad, resting on his hands and knees, keeping an eye
on the front door of the store. As they sat, an ancient
elm tree dusted them with shade, its high branches making
loose, lopsided circles in a listless midday breeze.
The boys had often taken matches—one or two—from
the holder high above their mother’s kitchen stove.
To roast an ant or grasshopper. Or to hide them away,
savoring the dark excitement. The power to set the fire
in them free.
They always lit the candles on their birthday cakes.
This spring they helped their dad burn the ditches clear
of last winter’s tangled weeds, which flowed into
rivers of ash, leaving the ditch banks ghostly white.
To the boys each match had its own purpose. Each was
special. Individual.
But this was a whole box. An army of them, tiny wooden
soldiers in formation, resting ramrod straight, row
after row, waiting for orders. Uniformed, each red helmet
topped with its own miniature white crown.
Toad, marching home from school, had almost trampled
them.
“We should see who bought
them, then,” Toad said. “And give
them back.”
“It could be anybody, Toad,” Pete argued.
“Some old truck driver, passing through. Maybe
he bought more than he could use. And just threw them
away. You know, to travel light.”
Pete’s argument did not seem right to Toad, who
wrinkled up his nose to think.
One match had broken rank, popping half out of the
box. Pete held it up to his eye, inspecting it, turning
it slowly, stripping a splinter from one side of the
square white shaft. He almost put it back. But then
he laid the match lengthwise along his ring finger.
Rocking back on his heels, he whipped his arm with a
fluid motion. A gentle roll at first, like those he
used to put his yoyo to sleep, but ending with a hard
snap of his wrist. The match shot to the pavement, cracking
into flame, then sizzling out, its black head sighing
a whisper of smoke.
The boys’ eyes darted to the store. The front
window was empty still, the old clerk nowhere to be
seen.
Without another word, Toad opened his lunch box, pushing
a half-finished peanut-butter sandwich to one end. He
put the box of matches in, carefully rolling the banana
peel inside the rumpled napkin so the gray, sandpaper
striking strip along the side of the matchbox would
not get wet. Making a safe place for his newfound friends.
Toad closed the pail, setting it back in his lap, and
refolding his arms.
“Finders keepers,” Pete cried, grabbing
Toad’s lunch box and running up the street.
Toad scrambled to get his legs free, giving Pete a
good head start. As he started after his older, faster
brother, a brief flash of anger melted into cool determination.
He hadn’t lost anything yet.
“Finders keepers, finders keepers,” Toad
said to himself. “I found them.”
Pete danced ahead, whirling, running backwards, keeping
the distance between the two of them just great enough
to enjoy his victory. Close enough for taunting, but
not close enough for getting caught.
Toad pursued Pete at a steady pace. Pete, with all
his dancing and despite his greater speed, began to
tire. When they were about a hundred yards from home,
their mother came out on the porch, as she usually did
when they returned from school, and waved to them. At
the sight of her, Toad gave out a wounded wail.
“Give it back, Pete. Oh, please, please,
Pete, give it back.”
This cry for mother’s help—a dirty baby-trick,
long since banished from their combat rules—startled
Pete. Toad was cheating.
Pete stumbled. Toad charged, Pete regained his footing
just in time to run into his mother’s waiting
arms. It was useless to pull away. Sullenly, he waited
for his brother to come the last twenty yards.
“Here, Toad,” Pete said, smiling at their
mother. “Only teasing.”
Toad, red-faced, reclaimed his prize.
“Losers weepers,” he whispered
in Pete’s sweaty ear.
“Baby!” Pete hissed back.
Putting on an injured look, Toad shuffled slowly toward
the house, his breath all ragged jerks. As he reached
the porch, he turned to see where his mother was. Then
with a loud sniffle, he raised his arm as if to wipe
his nose. The green lunch pail hid his face from her.
Grinning widely, he stuck his tongue out at Pete.
But Pete did not see this salute. He stood stock still,
his arms stiff at his sides, his head thrown back, his
chin tucked in, bravely staring dead ahead, into his
mother’s sad-strong gaze, waiting for the scolding
that would give Toad enough time to hide the matchbox
army.
Next morning the brothers rode
their bicycles around the house, as they always
did. Circling the giant apple tree that held their clubhouse.
Coasting out into the street, and pumping back, standing
up to pedal. Whistling and nodding, they bided their
time, silently. Unable to break their deadlock. Neither
wanting an open fight.
Pete knew every hiding place his brother had. But,
while Pete was pinned down for his tongue-lashing, Toad
had stuffed the matchbox in the bottom of the canvas
bag tied to Pete’s handlebars. The one they used
to carry empty bottles to the store. The matchbox was
within Pete’s reach, buried beneath a dusty quart
of Hire’s root beer.
“Going in the house to pee,” Pete said,
propping his bike against the tree.
He checked the laundry basket, and behind their mother’s
bed again. He had looked everywhere. As he stood peeing,
he could see Toad through the window, smiling, watching
him. Pete rushed back to the yard, zipping his pants
as he ran.
“Where are they?” he demanded.
“Where’s what?” Toad asked, innocently.
“Where’s what,” Pete growled. “Guess
I’ll have to go find Ma.”
Pete started toward the house.
“There was another box,” Toad called.
“Bull,” Pete called back, stopping.
“Where?”
“By the tree,” Toad added, poker-faced.
“But you ran away.”
By the time they searched the
sidewalk and the shade under the tree, then up
and down all the streets near the store, Pete had lost
all hope of finding his own matches. But he did find
a six-pack of empty beer bottles. And lucky Toad found
a dime and four pennies in the gutter.
Enough to buy three cream sodas.
The best place to drink sodas was the knoll that rose
a mile or so from their house. They followed the paved
road past MacAdam’s place, then turned off on
the dirt road that wound up the hillside, their favorite
place for sledding in the winter, and for coasting bicycles
on hot summer days. Coasting fast the brothers could
make their own wind.
After a few trips up and down the bumpy gravel path,
Pete and Toad put their bikes behind the big rock at
the top, the one they called Scout Peak. They crawled
up onto it. Not a chance of anyone sneaking up on them
here. Scout Peak, although it rose only two hundred
feet above the valley floor, commanded a full circle
of view.
Pete pulled a rusty can opener from a crevice in the
rock where they kept it hidden, prying the brassy caps
from two of the sodas, which now seemed very cold against
their sun-baked lips. The brothers leaned against each
other, back to back, sipping the sodas, their knees
drawn up, like bookends, each surveying half the world.
In every direction the boys looked, the dry grass was
dense and matted, like shaggy fur. The few clumps of
khaki brush scattered here and there were too small
to conceal any Indians or wolves. Nowhere for anything
to hide.
Toad gently set the matches on the rock beside his
brother.
“Why, Pete,” Toad said in mock surprise,
“lookie here.”
The matches were all still resting
in their boxed formation. The brothers took turns, lifting
them out one by one and lighting them. It seemed an
endless feast of what had always before been a special
treat.
They each struck several on the scratch pad, and several
on different parts of the rock. A few times they each
took one match, holding them together as if dueling,
head to head, white cap to white cap, lighting them
on each other.
Pete lit one on a rusty can, another on the bottle
opener. Toad struck one on his pant leg, like a cowboy
they had seen at the Saturday matinee. In an hour, the
box was half empty. And the boys had their fill of matches.
They were thinking more and more about the third soda.
The hot air was making dust-devils out over the road.
A lone jackrabbit sat sentinel outside its burrow, its
long ears steady, watching them. Somewhere not far off,
a meadowlark was tapping out its song.
Toad gathered the dead matches, laying them out in
rows.
“I’ll play you for that cream soda,”
Pete said.
“Play what, Pete?”
“Whoever lights a match with his own bare hands
wins,” Pete said, thinking that if cowboys could
light matches with their fingernails, so could he.
The boys took turns with this new trick. First Pete,
then Toad, then Pete again. One or two sparked, several
broke. Finally, Pete made one sputter for a second.
“My turn,” Toad said.
“Hey,” Pete said, indignantly, “that
lit.”
Toad just shook his head, lips squared.
“I get another chance,” Pete said. “It
half lit.”
“Okay,” Toad said. “Same match. Then
me.”
Pete rolled the scorched match on his palm, blowing
on it like a favorite marble, before sliding it, quick
and firm, across his thumbnail. With a pistol-pop it
burst into flame, but the white cap sliced off, lodging
under his nail. Pete dropped the burning stick, which
bounced from his shoe into the open matchbox.
Pete, ghost-white, gaped at his thumb, which burned
with pain beyond imagination as the glowing phosphorus
beneath his nail cooled slowly into dead white ash.
In the matchbox, the tiny soldiers were springing to
life. First they ignited one by one, touched by their
neighbors, and then row by row, called to arms in whole
columns.
Both boys grabbed for the box at once, scattering the
burning matches. Most of them smoked out. A few fell
into cracks on the rock, making cheerful little fires
in the dry dust and twigs. A single match escaped the
rock, unnoticed.
As Pete sucked on his thumb, a soft swirl of afternoon
wind tumbled the burning match into the bone-dry apron
of tall grass around the outcropping. They saw the wisp
of smoke at the same time. A slender thread which rapidly
grew into several ropes, which then wove into a snarled
net, waving before their panic-stricken eyes.
They scrambled from Scout Peak, scraping themselves
on the raspy stone. Pete stamped on the fire, already
bigger than a bathtub, scattering sparks further off
into the grass. Toad ripped off his shirt, beating at
the growing flames, sending smoke billows into a sky
already rancid with its smell.
Squadrons of sparks swirled about, scattering down
the hill, where the wind puffed at them just enough
to kindle a few into fresh foxholes of flame, which
burrowed beneath the dry grass before erupting into
new red patches, advancing steadily, closing ranks,
chewing up the grass along a growing front, surrounding
their position.
The boys heard the fire bell in the town below. That
meant someone had seen the smoke. That men were frantic,
running, jumping into the old water truck. Then the
siren. Coming to attack the fire. Here, where nothing
could hide.
The boys retreated down the far
side of the hill, choking on smoke. Dodging the
brush patches, they maneuvered their bikes over the
rough ground, some places pushing or carrying them.
Their grit-swollen eyes wept. Toad threw his burnt shirt
in the dry creek bed. They stopped to smear themselves
with dirt, and to roll in a pile of moldy leaves, trying
to shed their sootiness. As they fled, frantically calculating
the chance of escaping undetected, the deeper rock-scrapes
dried to savage streaks of muddy blood.
But the town below the hill was quiet when they reached
it. Old ladies stood out on porches, gawking at the
distant fire truck’s light, a gob of redness pulsing
in the murk.
The few cars that passed them gave them wide berth.
The drivers’ eyes roamed anxiously, scanning the
spark-filled sky, as the fire found fresh fuel. Searching
the huge smoke column for a tattle-tale of white to
signal that the fire was in control. Not clawing over
the grass, into the hills and trees beyond.
Even the dogs, exhausted from whining at the siren,
ignored them.
Pete and Toad came in from the back field, their bikes
jolting across the furrows. They moved past the barn,
past the manure pile where they dug for fishing worms.
The patch of asparagus at the corner of the barn looked
different. Wasted. The dark green spears an army of
dead matches.
As they crawled up in the
gnarled apple tree in the front yard, the column of
dark smoke continued twisting up out of the haze into
the clouds. It was over an hour before any white broke
through. Only then did the boys dare surrender looks
at each other.
Pete showed Toad his thumb, the warped nail, the large
blood blister forming at its sides.
“Does it hurt?” Toad asked.
“Not much,” Pete lied.
Toad picked several streaks of clotted mud from his
deeper scrapes, where bloody sweat had caked the dust.
They turned their pockets inside out, shaking cinders
onto the rough bark. Each boy untangled leaves from
the other’s hair.
As they crept from their hiding place, a single match
tumbled from somewhere. Pete handed it to Toad, who
put it solemnly into his front pocket.
Next morning the sky was
clear again.
The brothers took the lone surviving match behind the
barn.
They buried it, unburned, wrapped in an old teabag.
They chose a spot in the asparagus, near two thin new
spears. Spears barely rising from the ground and struggling
toward the light.
“Will it give them red heads?” Toad asked.
Pete gave no response.
But Toad knew. They both had white crowns.
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