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Out of the Ordinary

Month: February 2008

  • Joshua and His Gang ; Chapter Three

    The Hermit:  Part 1.  Is It Magic?

    John leaped over the back fence at Piya’s
    house and considerably startled four of the gang who were sprawled around under
    the shady tree.

    They all spoke at once.

    "You nearly jumped on my head,"
    said Ingrid who had been sitting against the fence.

    "Idiot numbskull – don’t scare us
    like that," shouted Sam who often scared his brothers and this is what
    they said to him.

    "Yikes!" said Piya and held her
    hand against her heart.

    "Cool it, cool it," said Joshua
    who had been playing with his glasses and dropped them when John suddenly
    appeared over the fence. They did not
    break so he gave a huge sigh of relief and put them back on his head.

    "The Hermit is out and says we can
    visit," John burst out in a loud whisper. Some of their parents weren’t
    sure if the Hermit was a suitable companion for the gang – they didn’t say the
    kids couldn’t visit him, they just put on their concerned look when his name
    was mentioned. So, of course, the gang
    had learned to never mention him – just in case.

    The gang all scrambled to their feet.

    "Where are the twins," asked
    John.

    "Visiting their aunt and uncle in the
    country," Joshua told him. "Where’s Bill?"

    "I told him," John said. "He was going to the fort or the woods
    or the used car lot to look for you. I
    said I’d check here. I was right. He’ll meet us there."

    All five climbed back over the fence and
    crouched down in a run along the line of bushes at the back of Old Man
    McTaggart’s property until they got to the Jenkin’s yard. They squeezed through a hole in the fence
    and raced across the Jenkin’s, Baxter’s, Wilson’s and the Abernathy’s
    backyards. Then they zoomed through the
    empty lot and out onto the sidewalk.

    The Hermit liked you to come in by his
    front gate.

    Bill was waiting for them on the
    sidewalk. He was out of breath from
    running. "Oh good, you found
    them." he said. "Lucy and Ellen are away."

    "Yeah, we know," said Sam with
    his hand over his mouth so his words wouldn’t come out in a shout.

    The Hermit lived in a witch’s hat
    house. This was what Ingrid called it
    because it came to a point in the middle of the roof.

    Of course the Hermit had a real name. It was Raymond Earle. He had told the gang they could call him
    Raymond if they wanted. Bill sometime
    did. But mostly they all called him Mr.
    Earle.

    He liked people but not all the time. Some time he just wanted to be left to
    himself. So if he was sitting out on
    his front veranda but did not call out a hello or wave back at the gang they
    did not bother him. He had asked them
    not to. They would pass by his house
    with a mournful, shifty-eyed look, ever hopeful.

    When he felt like being sociable he would
    give a wave or call out. As he had done
    today to John and Bill. Then the gang
    couldn’t get there quickly enough.

    "Boy, Lucy and Ellen are going to be
    MAD," said Sam against his hand as they marched up the path to the
    Hermit’s house. He had lots of bushes and trees around. And the front walk was made of flat rocks that
    he said were called flagstones so it felt like a path and not a walk. Mr. Earle was on his veranda.

    "Want to sit out back?" he asked
    when they were at the steps. "It’s
    sunnier. But a nice breeze,
    right?"

    The Hermit was very fond of sun and they
    grouped around to the back of house by going around it. Sometimes they went into his house but only
    when invited and then it was special. It had occurred to Ingrid and Lucy and Joshua that eight kids in a
    two-roomed house were a bit much for anyone to take not to mention a man who
    erratically liked his fellow human beings.

    When they got out back Piya opened her
    eyes and mouth wide. She looked at
    Ingrid and nodded toward the forsythia bush in the corner by the back
    door. It had a blue shirt draped over
    it.

    Ingrid raised her eyebrows and shrugged.

    John and Sam realized what Ingrid and Piya
    were silently motioning about and then Bill and Joshua did too.

    "Where will we sit ourselves
    today?" Old Ray asked. That was
    what he called himself. Old Ray.

    It was a very small backyard but there
    were many areas.

    Bill sort of wanted to sit in the tree
    house – it was only a few boards nailed on very low branches of a sprawly beech
    tree but Old Ray said it suited him fine and made up for his never having had a
    tree house as a child. It only fit one
    person and it was finally Bill’s turn to sit in the tree house – but he agreed
    happily enough when Sam said, "The whittling stumps," in a loud
    whisper. The Hermit could not stand to
    have Sam shout and had actually once sent him home when Sam forgot and yelled
    and made Old Ray drop his part of a delicious peach down a crack in the
    veranda. So Sam was very careful not to
    shout.

    "Yeah, the stumps," the gang
    agreed and got themselves arranged and seated.

    These were a dozen or so pieces of logs
    dug partly into the dirt in the corner of the yard where nothing would grow
    because it was "too shady, too dry, too ornery," Old Ray had told
    them.

    Once the gang sat down Old Ray dug a tin
    can out from under one of the logs and passed it around. It had an assortment of knives in it. Everybody chose one.

    "I wanted that one," John told
    Joshua.

    Joshua said, "Tough."

    John chose another.

    Piya was seated near the forsythia bush
    with the blue shirt on it.

    "Did you just wash your shirt, Mr.
    Earle?" she asked.

    "Goodness sakes, no," he told
    her, testing the sharpness of his knife on his thumb. He always got the same one because he got first pick. "You can have first pick at your homes. I get first pick at mine," he had told the gang the first time he
    gave out the knives. Lucy had been
    about to tell him this was not polite since they were the guests but Ellen had
    realized what she was about to say and had shushed her with her eyes. And anyone who had nearly a dozen old knives
    just for whittling, well, he could pretty well do as he wished, was the gang’s
    general feeling.

    "I washed that shirt ages ago – it’s
    nearly dry," Old Ray said.

    "It’s going to rain," Piya said
    decisively with a significant look at the rest of the gang. "Any time."

    Old Ray looked up at the sky. "You could be right," he
    agreed. "It’s hot and heavy
    enough."

    Piya looked knowingly at the others. It had nothing to do with hot or heavy. It had to do with Mr. Earle’s shirt being
    put out to dry on the forsythia bush.

    Back in the spring Piya had noticed that
    Mr. Earle would wash the shirt he wasn’t wearing – he had two, both blue – when
    it got dirty and hang it out to dry on the forsytia bush. It looked lovely then, the light sky blue
    colour draped over the yellow flowers on the bush.

    Then one day, close to summer, Piya said,
    "Whenever Mr. Earle puts his shirt out to dry, it’s sunny. But when the shirt dries, it rains."

    The gang had various responses to
    this. Ingrid laughed. Joshua and John laughed even harder. Sam hooted. Lucy and Bill chuckled. Ellen
    looked thoughtful.

    Piya had started to go home with her
    bottom lip drooping but Joshua pulled her back – they had been in the lot by
    the railway tracks that had three wrecked cars in it so they called it the used
    car lot.

    "Sorry, Piya, but it’s a bit like a
    fairytale," Joshua told her.

    "Wait a minute," said
    Ellen. "Remember the day he
    dripped grape juice on his shirt" (it had been a most special day when the
    gang had been invited in to see some of Mr. Earle’s collections) "and he
    went and changed it and washed out the stain and it was raining but he put it
    out on the bush anyway – " She paused.

    "And it stopped raining," Sam
    shouted.

    The gang looked around at one another.

    "There’s got to be a logical
    explanation," said Bill, nervously, wondering what on earth it could be.

    "Of course," the rest agreed but
    they were not troubled, like Bill, to wonder what it was. Piya shook her head. Ellen still looked thoughtful.

    That had been weeks ago.

    Now Piya looked at the almost dry
    shirt and then at the sky. It was hot
    and hazy. Oh well, she thought, and
    shrugged and picked up her knife and a stick of wood and started to
    whittle. She liked to make sticks with
    points and she took them proudly home and her mother tsk’ed tsk’ed over the
    sharpness of them and hoped Piya was very careful but she was constantly
    finding a new use for them. One held up
    the sagging begonia in the garden. One
    was jammed under the door to the cold room in the basement to keep it open so
    it would air over the summer. One was
    beside the laundry tubs for when Mrs. Singh bleached clothes and needed a
    stirring stick.

    Some of the gang had chosen blocks of soft
    wood and were carving things in three dimension.

    John had taken all the bark off one of the
    logs and was carefully carving a face in the side. It was a strange face made of a series of patterns. He was doing it quietly on the curve facing
    him so no one really knew what he was doing. This was the fourth time he had had a chance to work on it – the last
    two visits to Mr. Earle had been tree house and comics – and now John’s carving
    was beginning to take shape.

    They talked a lot as they whittled. Old Ray sometimes talked, sometimes
    listened. At times he would tell them
    world stories. He had never traveled
    far from his home but he had pen pals all over the world and he would tell them
    their stories like his own. On one or
    two special occasions he showed them his collection, bits and pieces of
    interesting things that his pen pals had sent him.

    Bill got up to stretch his legs.

    "Oh wow!" he said when he saw
    what John was doing. Everyone got up
    and crowded around to take a look. Mr.
    Earle didn’t say anything. He just
    looked and looked. Then he looked at John. John stared back. Anyone else
    would have wriggled in nervousness or embarrassment. John did not.

    Finally Old Ray said, "John, let’s
    move that out here where you’ll have more space to work." And he did. And he touched the carving carefully. That was all he said and did but everyone thought a bit differently
    about John.

    He had
    done something that Old Ray thought was worthwhile.

    Suddenly Piya jumped up, shrieking,
    "It’s raining! It’s raining!"

    Old Ray leaped to his feet as well. "What is the matter with her?" he
    demanded. "Has she gone mental? It’s just rain, for pete’s sake."

    Everyone talked at once.

    "Oh don’t be mad, please don’t be
    mad," Ingrid pleaded, "She couldn’t help it."

    "You’re magic! You’re magic!" Piya was saying this
    over and over. "You can make it rain. Or stop raining."

    Everyone else was trying to explain.

    Old Ray looked from one to the other. And then back again. He had that rare ability of being able to
    make sense out of confusion.

    After a few minutes he realized what had
    set Piya off. He pushed his lips
    together. He was trying not to laugh.

    "Oh, jiminy cricket," he
    said. "I wish I could control the
    weather!" He rubbed his jaw with
    his index finger. "Maybe I do –
    it’s the same thing, really. I just
    work along with the weather forecaster on the radio. If he says it’s going to rain in the afternoon, I wash in the
    morning. So my shirt gets dry before it
    rains. Like now." He got his shirt off the forsythia bush as
    it started to rain harder.

    He looked at Piya’s disappointed face, at
    John’s emerging sculpture. The part of
    him that liked people wanted to give them all a hug.

    "Scatter home, gang," he advised
    as it started to rain even harder. "But come back at two tomorrow and
    we’ll have a party."

    The gang whooped. And scattered.

    "I’m awful glad he wasn’t mad at me
    for yelling like that," Piya said as they raced back along the front path.

    "He sent ME home for yelling,"
    Sam aired this past grievance.

    Joshua patted Sam’s shoulder. "Buck up, Chuck," he said. He’d heard his dad say that to his mom this
    morning when she was sad over not losing weight on her new diet.

    "Idiot numbskull," Sam shouted
    cheerfully.