By James B. Mielke
boneyardhound@hotmail.com
Edzelian was bored and
wandered away from the beach crowd. He meandered across the picnic lawn and
idly explored the bottom of a ravine on the lawn’s uphill side, scouting out
the best cover for the next hide-and-seek match.
With a shout Luvin
leaped from behind a shrub: “Hey, Edzy!”
The
younger boy jumped in surprise and he backed up against a tree trunk. His eyes
darted over the ground, looking for the best escape route. “Leave me alone.”
“I’m
sorry,” Luvin said, turning aside and smiling. He had the brightest grin in the
colony, backed by sparkling eyes, deceptively happy; it was an irresistible
smile. “I shouldn’t be mean to you guys. Here, I’ve got something for you.” He
held out an old fashioned dagger shaped letter opener; the unpolished brass was
brown.
Edzelian
took it, turning it over in his hands and looking closely at the floral pattern
stamped into the grip. “Wow, that’s neat—where’d you get it?”
It
was stolen: “I found it.”
All
boys like toys: “You’re giving it to me?”
“Sure—if
you be my friend.”
Edzelian
frowned, “No one wants to be your friend.”
“It’s
not fair! I’m just another kid.”
The
younger boy gave Luvin a long silent looking at. The infectious grin was on
half display, downcast bashful eyes mellowing its tone—he sure passed for ‘just
another kid’. Looking down to his hand, Edzelian toyed with the letter opener
and felt the need to possess it. He fingered the point, “Mom has some knives
shaped like this—they’re really sharp.”
“I
like knives. They’re just like that, you say?”
“Yeah—they’re
balanced, for throwing.”
“That
sounds neat. I’d like to try it—can you bring me one?”
“I
don’t know—I’m not supposed to take things.”
“Ah,
that’s just grown-ups. They always boss kids around.”
“Yeah,
I know.”
“So
get that knife.”
“I
don’t wanna be blamed.”
Luvin
was so frustrated he almost let loose with his fist, but that would spoil his
plan. He threw the loaded smile again. “You can do it—your Mom’s got so many
knives… I know! Take me up there, sneak me in—I’ll get the knife and you can’t
get blamed. It’ll be our secret plan, just us.”
“Secret?”
“Yeah.
Like spies.”
Edzelian
had wide wicked playful eyes. “Spies—that’s fun—I like playing spies.”
“Can
we do it?”
He
was lost in fantasy. “Spies… Yeah, let’s be spies.”
“When
is your Mom out of the cabin?”
“Right
now, I think. We can go up there. I know a way she doesn’t—she’s too big.”
Luvin
clapped his new ally on the back. “Cool.”