Monday, July 8, 2013

Fire Bug and Approaching the Truth

I write fiction. I write persuasive (I hope) letters. I write design specs and analysis. I write descriptions and quotations for products and engineering services.

What I haven't written much of, until now, is memoir or personal reminiscence. It's a dangerous highway for at least a couple of reasons. The first is, "Who the hell cares?" The second is that veracity is always suspect. No matter how well-intentioned the writer, the shades of truth can span vast gradients. Some say you can't get there from here. Mebbe so.

I'm reminded of mathematical asymptotes, like those used to help define the curve of a hyperbola. As you travel far enough along the curve, it drifts closer and closer to a straight line of the asymptotes, but it never quite makes contact. The curve only approaches the straight line. The story only approaches the truth.

Nevertheless, I've started down the craggy, ankle-twisting road. I have several pieces written, with more to follow. My writing group and my family have read them. I'm encouraged. Someday if anyone cares enough, I might publish a collection. I have the title "Approaching the Truth" in mind.

I won't be putting more than a couple on this blog for various reasons. Still, I haven't started this post without the intent of publishing something now. It is, to nearly my best ability, the truth as I genuinely remember it. If there are any factual errors, they're not deliberate.

Fire Bug 
(copyright 2013 by Spencer Luster)

When I was eight years old, I set our living room couch on fire while my thirteen-year old sister Robin was sleeping on it. Hilarity ensued.
Well, it might have ensued had I been older and better able to squeeze humor from the jagged stones of experience.
The truth--the absolute truth, I swear--is that it was an accident. This despite the fact that I loved playing with fire. I built model cars for the express purpose of crashing them and seeing the engine compartments erupt into infernos. (Tiny investigators usually suspected an accelerant was involved.) Entire battalions of green plastic army men feared me, although they would often take vengeance from the grave by dripping hotly on my little pink fingers. I'd heard that paper did have purposes other than as tinder, such as for writing on, but those foreign customs didn't belong in south Chicago, at least not in my part of it.
I blame my fascination in part on the boyfriends that my sister Lyn and my cousin Eddy had. (Actually named Edna, later changed to Sherry, and can you blame her?) I was a bright, likeable kid, and these fellows often played with me no doubt to ingratiate themselves with my sister and cousin. One in particular, whose name I wish I could recall, dazzled me with magic when I was a mere six-year old. He taught me how to make matchstick rockets, bottle cap bombs, and the conjuration of glowing smoke from the properly prepared striker of a matchbook. From such seeds what else could have grown but a fire bug?
Recently my brother Allan, twelve years my senior, revealed to me that when he was a rambunctious lad he very nearly burned down the family's apartment building. Twice. Apparently my penchant is also partly genetic. I wonder whether my Filipino or Finnish side carries greater responsibility?
And then there's my boyhood city itself, Chicago, home of the Great Fire of 1871. Although our clan of Lusters didn't arrive in the city until well into the twentieth century, perhaps Mrs. O'Leary's fictional cow was also half Filipino.
Altogether, my background and environment had somehow catalyzed to become--dare I say it?--a hotbed for pyromania.
And yet.
The couch fire was truly, honestly, and in all other factual ways an accident. It happened this way:
Mom was at work as a second shift nurse's aid at Billings Hospital. Lyn and Eddy were elsewhere, and my brother had already moved away by that time. This left Robin and I home alone, a common situation.
Robin lay asleep on the couch. I had been playing behind it, rolling a nickel along the windowsill just above the multi-colored steam radiator. The radiator, by the way, was multi-colored because of the many crayons I'd melted on it during the previous winter. Yes, I'd cleaned up the long, lovely drips, but faint stains remained. At any rate, the rolling nickel dropped to the floor and continued rolling directly, almost deliberately, under the couch.
If you're of a certain age you'll recall, I'm sure, what five cents could buy back in 1968. A bubble gum cigar or a set of wax lips, two golden-foil-wrapped Ice Cubes chocolates with a penny left over, or five rolls of Smarties. That nickel also represented five twelfths of a comic book. There was no way I'd let Mr. Jefferson escape my sticky hands.
I pushed aside the little fuzzy dingle balls hanging from the back of the cheap couch cover and peered deeply into the yawning black abyss. I could detect no glint of my treasure. I briefly thought about reaching into the darkness anyway, but who knew what lurked there? We already had roaches, and maybe there was something worse. I definitely needed some light. Being a clever and determined chap, I retrieved a book of matches from the kitchen. This was my automatic solution to many problems.
I struck one of the magic phosphors. I held it low to cast its Luciferian light under the couch. Aha! There lay my nickel.
And there went one of the fuzzy dingle balls on fire. It was quite pretty, a dancing little bluish glow that reminded me of the flame from our gas stove. I watched slightly mesmerized as the fire gently enveloped the little ball, transforming it into a tiny Christmas ornament. It took a moment, but it occurred to me that this development was probably not good.
I thought quickly, and ran to get something to put an end to the flaming dance routine. My logic, if it can be called such, followed a short path. A glass of water would make a mess and I'd get in trouble. Besides, the flame was small.
When I came back from the bathroom with my firefighting equipment--a wet washcloth--I was shocked to find actual gouts of fire leaping from the back of the couch.
I recognized that even a whole gallon of milk had no hope of extinguishing my mistake.
Robin still lay sleeping. Again I thought quickly and said, tentatively and quietly in my embarrassment, "Uh, Robin?"
No response. Maybe she won't notice.
Finally some weird, illogical instinct kicked in and with no conscious thought on my part my mouth opened to yell, "The couch is on fire!"
I must have been traumatized by the ordeal because I honestly don't remember much of anything that followed. I know screams resounded, some from me, many from Robin. I recall a lot of smoke, and singing heat. I know that firemen showed up. I had to have been punished, but I truly don't recall any bit of it. I've remained in ignorance about the aftermath for nearly forty-five years. Emotional stress and trauma can do that to a person, I've heard. At least it makes sense to me.

After all, I never recovered that nickel.