tdr
08-28-2002, 09:16 AM
I am posting the final 2 chapters of the fanfic, "Summer of '59," in this forum. The first 4 chapters are in the FanFiction forum, but I never got any feedback there, so I conclude that only LITB fans here might be interested.
Chapter 5
Wally and Beaver were sitting in the living room silently. They had turned off the television from the movie they were watching because they thought it might be so scary it would make them too jumpy to proceed with their midnight dare.
“Okay, Beav,” said Wally, “Mom and Dad have been in their bedroom for thirty or forty minutes now. Let’s go ahead with the plan. You go out the back door, but be real quiet, and I’ll walk up the stairs just loud enough for ‘em to hear me in case they’re not asleep yet, then I’ll climb down and we’ll go.”
“Wally, how long will it take us to walk to the new house and look at the backyard and then walk back here?”
“I don’t know for sure—maybe close to an hour, I guess.”
Beaver opened the back door and stopped in his tracks for a few seconds. He knew there had to be something not right—that is, more than disobedience of his parents—about sneaking out of house when it was getting close to midnight. But it was the 4th of July, and he felt that a midsummer adventure was something to which he was entitled, since they had so far missed the adventure of moving, even though he still felt bad for the house he would be leaving behind. And besides, he really did want to become further convinced the backyard of the new house is really cursed, or to finally start thinking it wasn’t.
The boys met at the base of the tree Wally so nimbly scampered down, even in the darkness. He was getting to be quite a vigorous, well-coordinated athlete, was Wally. So with a few whispers they set out toward what they still hoped would be their new home. An occasional car went by, one of which was weaving quite noticeably down the street, and a few more firecrackers were heard and a couple of times a faraway sparkle of a rocket of some type. Once sirens were heard also, as if from the other side of town. “Wally,” excitedly said Beaver, “do you think that may be Gus in engine Number 5? He said he was gonna be on duty today.”
“Nah,” replied Wally, “he was talking about during the day. Anyway, we’d have to be hearin’ sirens all over if it got to where Gus had to go out to a fire. He’s just there if they have a whole bunch of fires in one day.”
There was not much other conversation as they walked along. Mayfield, as a rule, does not have a lot of late-night activity, even on a summer holiday. But the sounds they did hear were enough to remind them that it is not their normal time to be about. Besides firecrackers and sirens, there was a hotrod peeling out, a few dogs barking, and once a car came by with its radio blaring, and the boys hid behind a shrub because they didn’t know what such a midnight driver might be thinking if he saw them.
Finally they saw their new hoped-for house and it was the darkest house they had seen in their 20-minute walk. “Wally, something about the house looks kind ‘a spooky from here,” nervously confessed Beaver.
“Well,” answered Wally, “I think that’s just because there’s no streetlights close to it, and no other lights anywhere around. Maybe if we do get to buy the house, Dad can yell at the city until they put a streetlight there.”
“Yeah, maybe he can then. But I don’t know about tonight, walking to the backyard when it’s so dark we can’t see where we’re goin’.”
“Beaver—we wouldn’t even be here if you hadn’t said you wanted to come.”
“I know I said that, but it was your idea in the first place.”
“Okay—okay! I came up with the idea, but it was you who wanted to do it. But it doesn’t matter now. So if you don’t want to go the backyard, suppose you stay here while I go around one corner of the house to the other. Then, if nothing happens will you say it’s not cursed?”
“No,” timidly replied Beaver. “Maybe I’m scared, but I don’t want to have walked all the way here in the dark for nuthin. Besides, I don’t want to stay here by myself either—so I’ll go with you, Wally.”
“Okay—let’s go then. We’ll just go around the house and come back, then go back home.”
They walked rapidly until they approached the first corner into the backyard, and then they saw it would be even darker as they went around by the rear of the house. Beaver gripped Wally’s arm. Under normal circumstances Wally would have pushed Beaver away; but not this time. Wally’s knee struck something hard. “Owwww!” he said. “Wally!—what’s the matter?” cried Beaver.
“Oww—“ said Wally again, “and shhhhh! Don’t yell! I can feel it with my hand now—it’s that bunch of bricks around the patio that I hit my knee on. It smarts. But come on—let’s get this over with.”
Wally tried to feel his way around the patio, with Beaver still hold of his arm, as both boys lost their footing and fell over to their side. “Ahh!—what happened!?” cried Beaver.
“Quiet, Beaver! It was just kind of a hill; we couldn’t tell there was a slope in the ground.”
A light went went on the opposite side of the garage, which caught their attention. They could see each others’ faces in this dim light; Beaver’s expression was one of fright, and Wally’s was one of worry. “Come on, Beaver,” said the worried one, “we better hurry up and get out of here.”
As they rose to their feet, another light—this one a strong beam—really got their attention. “Hey! Whose out here?” a course voice called.
Beaver gave a little screech as they started to run. Then the beam of light pointed straight at them. “Alright, you boys—stop!” With the bright light in their eyes, they could not see the man who was yelling at them. They looked at each other and Beaver exclaimed, “Wall-y-y-y!” They turned away from the light and started to run again, but he voice repeated, “I said stop! Right now!”
Wally, almost as scared as Beaver, came to a halt and Beaver almost ran past him. But Beaver was afraid to run if Wally was not with him. The man with the high-powered flashlight spanned the area with his florescent beam. Seeing no one else besides the 2 trembling boys, he approached them cautiously. “Alright—what are you boys doing here at this time of night?”
“Well, um—“ Wally stammered.
“We’re looking for night crawlers!” blurted out Beaver.
“Why here?” asked the man they still couldn’t really see.
“Uh—I think because there might be more of ‘em here because it’s so dark--” said Beaver, “Sir,” he added, almost crying.
“You—the older one—“ continued the man, “tell me what you’re doing here.”
“Well sir,” began Wally, “I brought my little brother here so he wouldn’t think there’s a curse on this backyard any more.”
“What?!” said the man.
“Yeah, that’s really what he brung me here for,” said Beaver, nervously and rapidly. “Only now I believe it more than ever! Wally hit his knee on the bricks, then we both fell over on the ground that ain’t flat, and now we don’t know what you’re gonna do to us! Do you think this place is cursed now, Wally!?”
Wally didn’t answer, but the man, seeing that they were 2 scared boys, not delinquents or vandals, turned his flashlight toward the ground. “Boys, I don’t intend to do anything to you. I was in that house on the other side this garage, and I heard something out here, so I just thought I’d better see what’s going on. But I’ve still got to ask—why are you here? It’s after midnight and obviously you boys don’t live on this property. Where do you live?”
“Well sir,” said Wally, getting back at ease, “we live a few blocks from here, and 4 or 5 weeks ago we thought we would be living here by now, but something’s holding up all the papers and junk that make it official that we can move here.”
“Yeah,” said Beaver, “I thunk it was ‘cause of the curse on this backyard that we can’t move.”
“Boys, would you tell me your names?” asked the man.
“I’m Wally Cleaver.” “And I’m Theodore ‘Beaver’ Cleaver.”
“I thought so,” replied the man. “I had heard the Cleavers have 2 boys. But where did you get the idea there’s some kind of curse here? What is that all about?”
“From my friend, Eddie Haskell,” answered Wally. “He likes to give guys the business—you know, I mean he likes to make up crazy stuff little kids might really believe.”
“Oh, I see. He’s what we of the older generation might call a ‘windbag.’”
“Is it okay if we go now, Mister?” said Beaver. “I think we’ve done what we came here for.”
“No, I’m not sure you have,” responded the man with the face too much in darkness to be seen.. “At least not you, little one—uh, Beaver. If you came to see that there’s no curse on this property, but you still think so after tonight’s ambling, what would it take now to convince you there’s no curse?”
“I don’t know,” said Beaver. “I guess just for all the stuff to stop—I mean the stuff that happens every time we come here, and that we still can’t get moved.”
“Well, let me tell you what-- I’ll shine this light so you can see to get back to the front of the house so you won’t run into anything else, and then you wait and see what happens in the next day or two. Is that fair enough?”
“Yes, sir,” said both brothers.
“Would you like for me to drive you back to your house?” inquired the man.
Beaver started to speak, but Wally cut in, “No, that’s alright; we can make it back okay.”
Beaver held onto Wally’s arm as tightly as before until they came within the familiar confines of their own immediate neighborhood. They went around to the side of the house and Wally started to open the kitchen door. “Wally, I twisted the lock on my way out,” said Beaver. Wally tried the door anyway, and it was unlocked after all. He looked at Beaver, who looked away at first, but then was the first to step inside. He was glad to be back into the familiar night-time safety of the only house he had ever lived in.
As they started up the stairs they thought they heard a sound from upstairs, perhaps meaning that one or both of their parents were awake. But being in no frame of mind at all to go back outside and climb up to their room, they hurriedly tiptoed up the steps and did not breathe until they had closed the door behind them. Although they wanted to talk about what had happened, they knew their voices might be heard, and that would give away that they were ‘up to something’ during the night. So they lay in bed with restless eyes until sleep finally overtook them.
Chapter 5
Wally and Beaver were sitting in the living room silently. They had turned off the television from the movie they were watching because they thought it might be so scary it would make them too jumpy to proceed with their midnight dare.
“Okay, Beav,” said Wally, “Mom and Dad have been in their bedroom for thirty or forty minutes now. Let’s go ahead with the plan. You go out the back door, but be real quiet, and I’ll walk up the stairs just loud enough for ‘em to hear me in case they’re not asleep yet, then I’ll climb down and we’ll go.”
“Wally, how long will it take us to walk to the new house and look at the backyard and then walk back here?”
“I don’t know for sure—maybe close to an hour, I guess.”
Beaver opened the back door and stopped in his tracks for a few seconds. He knew there had to be something not right—that is, more than disobedience of his parents—about sneaking out of house when it was getting close to midnight. But it was the 4th of July, and he felt that a midsummer adventure was something to which he was entitled, since they had so far missed the adventure of moving, even though he still felt bad for the house he would be leaving behind. And besides, he really did want to become further convinced the backyard of the new house is really cursed, or to finally start thinking it wasn’t.
The boys met at the base of the tree Wally so nimbly scampered down, even in the darkness. He was getting to be quite a vigorous, well-coordinated athlete, was Wally. So with a few whispers they set out toward what they still hoped would be their new home. An occasional car went by, one of which was weaving quite noticeably down the street, and a few more firecrackers were heard and a couple of times a faraway sparkle of a rocket of some type. Once sirens were heard also, as if from the other side of town. “Wally,” excitedly said Beaver, “do you think that may be Gus in engine Number 5? He said he was gonna be on duty today.”
“Nah,” replied Wally, “he was talking about during the day. Anyway, we’d have to be hearin’ sirens all over if it got to where Gus had to go out to a fire. He’s just there if they have a whole bunch of fires in one day.”
There was not much other conversation as they walked along. Mayfield, as a rule, does not have a lot of late-night activity, even on a summer holiday. But the sounds they did hear were enough to remind them that it is not their normal time to be about. Besides firecrackers and sirens, there was a hotrod peeling out, a few dogs barking, and once a car came by with its radio blaring, and the boys hid behind a shrub because they didn’t know what such a midnight driver might be thinking if he saw them.
Finally they saw their new hoped-for house and it was the darkest house they had seen in their 20-minute walk. “Wally, something about the house looks kind ‘a spooky from here,” nervously confessed Beaver.
“Well,” answered Wally, “I think that’s just because there’s no streetlights close to it, and no other lights anywhere around. Maybe if we do get to buy the house, Dad can yell at the city until they put a streetlight there.”
“Yeah, maybe he can then. But I don’t know about tonight, walking to the backyard when it’s so dark we can’t see where we’re goin’.”
“Beaver—we wouldn’t even be here if you hadn’t said you wanted to come.”
“I know I said that, but it was your idea in the first place.”
“Okay—okay! I came up with the idea, but it was you who wanted to do it. But it doesn’t matter now. So if you don’t want to go the backyard, suppose you stay here while I go around one corner of the house to the other. Then, if nothing happens will you say it’s not cursed?”
“No,” timidly replied Beaver. “Maybe I’m scared, but I don’t want to have walked all the way here in the dark for nuthin. Besides, I don’t want to stay here by myself either—so I’ll go with you, Wally.”
“Okay—let’s go then. We’ll just go around the house and come back, then go back home.”
They walked rapidly until they approached the first corner into the backyard, and then they saw it would be even darker as they went around by the rear of the house. Beaver gripped Wally’s arm. Under normal circumstances Wally would have pushed Beaver away; but not this time. Wally’s knee struck something hard. “Owwww!” he said. “Wally!—what’s the matter?” cried Beaver.
“Oww—“ said Wally again, “and shhhhh! Don’t yell! I can feel it with my hand now—it’s that bunch of bricks around the patio that I hit my knee on. It smarts. But come on—let’s get this over with.”
Wally tried to feel his way around the patio, with Beaver still hold of his arm, as both boys lost their footing and fell over to their side. “Ahh!—what happened!?” cried Beaver.
“Quiet, Beaver! It was just kind of a hill; we couldn’t tell there was a slope in the ground.”
A light went went on the opposite side of the garage, which caught their attention. They could see each others’ faces in this dim light; Beaver’s expression was one of fright, and Wally’s was one of worry. “Come on, Beaver,” said the worried one, “we better hurry up and get out of here.”
As they rose to their feet, another light—this one a strong beam—really got their attention. “Hey! Whose out here?” a course voice called.
Beaver gave a little screech as they started to run. Then the beam of light pointed straight at them. “Alright, you boys—stop!” With the bright light in their eyes, they could not see the man who was yelling at them. They looked at each other and Beaver exclaimed, “Wall-y-y-y!” They turned away from the light and started to run again, but he voice repeated, “I said stop! Right now!”
Wally, almost as scared as Beaver, came to a halt and Beaver almost ran past him. But Beaver was afraid to run if Wally was not with him. The man with the high-powered flashlight spanned the area with his florescent beam. Seeing no one else besides the 2 trembling boys, he approached them cautiously. “Alright—what are you boys doing here at this time of night?”
“Well, um—“ Wally stammered.
“We’re looking for night crawlers!” blurted out Beaver.
“Why here?” asked the man they still couldn’t really see.
“Uh—I think because there might be more of ‘em here because it’s so dark--” said Beaver, “Sir,” he added, almost crying.
“You—the older one—“ continued the man, “tell me what you’re doing here.”
“Well sir,” began Wally, “I brought my little brother here so he wouldn’t think there’s a curse on this backyard any more.”
“What?!” said the man.
“Yeah, that’s really what he brung me here for,” said Beaver, nervously and rapidly. “Only now I believe it more than ever! Wally hit his knee on the bricks, then we both fell over on the ground that ain’t flat, and now we don’t know what you’re gonna do to us! Do you think this place is cursed now, Wally!?”
Wally didn’t answer, but the man, seeing that they were 2 scared boys, not delinquents or vandals, turned his flashlight toward the ground. “Boys, I don’t intend to do anything to you. I was in that house on the other side this garage, and I heard something out here, so I just thought I’d better see what’s going on. But I’ve still got to ask—why are you here? It’s after midnight and obviously you boys don’t live on this property. Where do you live?”
“Well sir,” said Wally, getting back at ease, “we live a few blocks from here, and 4 or 5 weeks ago we thought we would be living here by now, but something’s holding up all the papers and junk that make it official that we can move here.”
“Yeah,” said Beaver, “I thunk it was ‘cause of the curse on this backyard that we can’t move.”
“Boys, would you tell me your names?” asked the man.
“I’m Wally Cleaver.” “And I’m Theodore ‘Beaver’ Cleaver.”
“I thought so,” replied the man. “I had heard the Cleavers have 2 boys. But where did you get the idea there’s some kind of curse here? What is that all about?”
“From my friend, Eddie Haskell,” answered Wally. “He likes to give guys the business—you know, I mean he likes to make up crazy stuff little kids might really believe.”
“Oh, I see. He’s what we of the older generation might call a ‘windbag.’”
“Is it okay if we go now, Mister?” said Beaver. “I think we’ve done what we came here for.”
“No, I’m not sure you have,” responded the man with the face too much in darkness to be seen.. “At least not you, little one—uh, Beaver. If you came to see that there’s no curse on this property, but you still think so after tonight’s ambling, what would it take now to convince you there’s no curse?”
“I don’t know,” said Beaver. “I guess just for all the stuff to stop—I mean the stuff that happens every time we come here, and that we still can’t get moved.”
“Well, let me tell you what-- I’ll shine this light so you can see to get back to the front of the house so you won’t run into anything else, and then you wait and see what happens in the next day or two. Is that fair enough?”
“Yes, sir,” said both brothers.
“Would you like for me to drive you back to your house?” inquired the man.
Beaver started to speak, but Wally cut in, “No, that’s alright; we can make it back okay.”
Beaver held onto Wally’s arm as tightly as before until they came within the familiar confines of their own immediate neighborhood. They went around to the side of the house and Wally started to open the kitchen door. “Wally, I twisted the lock on my way out,” said Beaver. Wally tried the door anyway, and it was unlocked after all. He looked at Beaver, who looked away at first, but then was the first to step inside. He was glad to be back into the familiar night-time safety of the only house he had ever lived in.
As they started up the stairs they thought they heard a sound from upstairs, perhaps meaning that one or both of their parents were awake. But being in no frame of mind at all to go back outside and climb up to their room, they hurriedly tiptoed up the steps and did not breathe until they had closed the door behind them. Although they wanted to talk about what had happened, they knew their voices might be heard, and that would give away that they were ‘up to something’ during the night. So they lay in bed with restless eyes until sleep finally overtook them.