Longing for disasters, for Southern California to slide into the sea, for fires the size of North Dakota, dust clouds, Krakatoas, earthquakes at 8.4, all to convince me I am still alive, I remember the spring flood the year I was fifteen. The brown beast moves down the valley of the Little Neshaminy wearing in its hair uprooted trees, lumber, pasture gates, an occasional chicken house for a hat. On the old stone bridge we gather, all the stunned neighbors, to watch it flow with a force, an inevitability we can not imagine in our lives. The Wiley boys arrive, Al and Roy, lean and maybe dangerous. They strip to their shorts, leap to the balustrade, stand poised. They wouldn’t dare, we think. Then they dive, together, into the roiling water, disappear, disappear, forever, and come up laughing, clamber out, lope back to the bridge, and do it again. My father, the fireman, says, “Those fools are crazy.” But I see something in his eyes, And I know, at that moment, that I can not be a man if that is what it takes. I will wander into an office soon, and sit, dreaming my life away, remembering the Wiley boys as they dive and disappear, over and over, into the flood.
We use cookies to improve our services and remember your choices for future visits. For more information see our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.