Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Dead End Kid


Dead End Kid
            I grew up on a dead end street.  At the end of the block, detached garages with cloudy windows flanked an alley that took off to the south.  North of the street, the alley became back yards.  We had two lots.  One abutted those back yard lawns, and the other contained our house.  It was a pre-war attached garage home with a steep wood-shingled roof.  There were several stairs between the driveway and porch.  Our neighbors’ chain link fences ran from the northeast corner of our property to the cross street a block away to the west.  A small church and parsonage graced the northwest end of our street, across from two houses on the southwest corner.  The rest of the south side held a huge garden.  Its perimeter was a Mulberry grove that rose about ten feet above the street.  One corner of the garden held a weathered two-story house a block away on the low hill beside the alley.  The house faced south onto the main street.   
            My brother and I used to sit at our door watching the mulberry trees in the green light of storms and smell the fresh rain mingled with the dust on the screen.  We harvested lilacs in our back yard and made leaf roses by pinching our thumbs and fingers around spirea stems and dragging them outward.  As older kids, we played football in the church yard and kick-the-can under the street light.  It was pretty cool around there.

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