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Bat-Fishing With The Mule Boy
My brother and I are paddling partners. We've been through the wringer
together...having rescued each other from whitewater situations which made
our parents cringe as we described the mangling later on...and for some
reason we are still best friends. This surprises some people, but not us.
My brother is a firefighter. Although he has graduated from college and he
should know better, he remains a walking paragon of Hell-Craziness. Gin
devils have been known to flee his very presence. He is the Mule Boy.
I have seen the Mule Boy very calmly whip out his joint and take a whiz from
beside the grill on the second story deck at my house during a crowded
barbecue. I have also seen him roast a rookie over a very quick and hot fire
on the scene of an automobile crash because said rook was unable to change
out a hacksaw blade, thus impairing resuce efforts. The Mule Boy has a big
heart. He also has a big ass, which he will show you if you let him. He
will lie in the azelia bushes, sodden with drink and barking at the ants at
three o'clock in the morning. He will also bitterly curse traffic over the
medical resuce truck's PA system as he races, lights and sirens blazing, to
the home of a child who is gasping for air.
The Mule Boy used to fish for bats from the roof of our parents' house. This
was before he discovered more rewarding nighttime hobbies. He would take an
ultralight open-faced rod and reel combo, string it with hair-thin one-pound
test line, and cast trout flies out over the yard of the house at dusk.
Occasionally he would reel in some squirming rat with wings that he had
duped...the little blind varmint would screech and swoop madly into the juicy
bull moth it had just pinged, only to find that at the last slobbering moment
that dinner tonight was a gaudy barbed lintball. Bad karma. But then for
the bat to be seized by a strong pair of hands swaddled in stinking leather
gloves and to have the barb pried out of the roof of its mouth with pliers,
well...this often sent the bat into a quivering fear coma. Denied even the
satisfaction gnawing the hand that fed it, the twittering thing would curse
the Bat Goddess and give up all hope of salvation.
The Mule Boy would carry a bucket up the ladder to the roof with him, and his
terrified, twitching catch would gradually accumulate under the bucket's
tight lid. The bats came from a small cave near my parents' house, and on a
good night my brother could reel in eight or ten of the little buggers.
Eventually he would get bored with the sport and would dismount the house
with bucket and gear in hand. He'd always walk to the fence surrounding our
property and he would carefully shake the bucket out into the neighbors yard.
A half-dozen stunned bats would usually wing wobbily away, but I often
wondered about the Secret Bat Burial Ground next door...and why the neighbors
never spoke to us.
Well, time passed, and the Mule Boy occasionally avoided arrest. Sometime
later the Mule Boy and I moved into our own place two miles away from Ma and
Pa Landlord. We had both grown up, and the scales had fallen from our eyes.
We could say 'Been there...done that...' about a good many more things than
in years previous. We were world-wise and jaded, so we retreated to the
basic pleasures in life...paddling, good food, a steady stream of
girlfriends, and so forth.
One summer night I awoke to a thumping on the roof. Too early in the year
for Santa Claus, I thought. I found a ladder on the deck, and sure enough,
the Mule Boy was standing astraddle the roof's apex in his jockey shorts and
leather gloves. He was blissfully taking long and graceful casts across the
front yard with a small rod and reel combo. The styrofoam beer chest set
squarely atop the chimney would rock occasionally, and I knew he was having a
good night. I remembered the scene from 'A River Runs Through It' where the
elder brother returns to his favorite trout stream to discover that his
younger brother has become a fly-fishing artist in his absence. Well...I
thought...at least the Mule Boy isn't going out with men.
We fished for bats from the roof all night, and in the wee hours we stole
over to the local college campus and left the cooler on the front seat of the
first BMW we could find with Greek letters stuck to the bumper. Some vicious
preppie in a blue blazer is probably still getting rabies shots and babbling
incoherently to his therapist.
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