|


|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
World
Travel
Destinations
|
|
|
Dreamscapes
Original Fiction
|
Opinion
& Lifestyle
Politics & Living
|
|
|
|
|
Kid's
Books
Reviews & stories
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|

The
International Writers Magazine: Dreamscapes Fiction
Little
Toy Pocketknife
Floyd Frank
Gary Horton used
to have a Swiss Army knife that I enjoyed ridiculing. It had a dozen
blades all of them too small to do any useful work. A little
stainless knife, a tiny pair of scissors, a miniscule saw, (Im
running out of synonyms for LITTLE). They folded into a streamlined
red plastic and steel sheath that slid into your pants pocket. I
suppose that if you are caught outdoors without a toothbrush, you
could whittle yourself a toothpick! Gary carried it everywhere.
|
|
Anyway, Gary and
I hiked to the top of the small mountain behind his Goldfield house.
It was early summer and we both needed to get into the woods. An hours
hike through aspens got us to the summit, where pine trees predominated.
We set up camp and I gathered squawwood to get a fire going. I kicked
a branch from a dead pine, but, underestimating the toughness of the
wood, I sprained my ankle. They say that a sprained ankle is more painful
than a broken one. Its true. I spent all that night moaning a
song of misery to Gary, who tried to ignore me.
The next morning was pleasant, except for the fact that I could not
put any weight on my right foot. By the time I was out of the tent,
Gary had sawn a three-inch aspen into a crutch. I tried it out for length.
He sawed a couple inches off so it fit me comfortably. The saw blade
on his pocket knife went through the small tree like a warm knife through
butter. "Hmm", I said. "Not bad." We had no trouble
getting back to his house.
Another adventure we shared saw us heading to the Crestone Needles.
I drove my pickup truck. Garys son and my son made four of us
altogether. We drove the Hyde Park Road from Cripple Creek and finally
approached the paved highway. That was when we saw a small rattlesnake
sunning itself on the gravel road. I considered myself a fearless mountain
man, so I stopped, pinned the snake down with a stick, and caught it.
I held it tightly behind the head and went to show it to our kids. When
I was halfway back to my side of the truck, I felt a sharp little sting
on my index finger. I knew I had been bitten.
I stopped, threw the snake back into the sagebrush, and headed back
to my truck. "Sorry, guys. Were not going to the mountains
today. Were going to the hospital." I knew the way to the
Canon City hospital, so I drove. It took twenty minutes to get there.
I drove with the same philosophy that got me through college
"Pass Everything". I borrowed Garys Swiss Army knife.
With its knife blade I cut a gash or two around the fang hole. I then
sucked poison-flavored blood and spat it out my window as I drove eighty.
At the hospitals emergency room I told the receiving nurse my
problem and she got me started. By the time I was done, I had been hooked
up to antivenin, painkiller and epinephrine. Even with the intravenous
painkiller, the pain in my right hand made it feel like I was roasting
it over a campfire. The swelling was enormous all the way to my shoulder.
All this from an 18" rattler who only bit me with one fang! The
poison that I sucked from the wound caused a tingling in my gums as
it entered them through osmosis. Thank goodness for Gary and his sharp
pocketknife!
Gary was always a good partner. Easygoing and well-prepared. I dont
see him often but I think about him, especially when I am relaxed, sitting
by the campfire and chewing on the toothpick I just whittled with my
Swiss Army knife.
©
Floyd Frank April 2008
floydgfrank@msn.com
More stories
Home
©
Hackwriters 1999-2008
all rights reserved - all comments are the writers' own responsibiltiy
- no liability accepted by hackwriters.com or affiliates.
|