Thursday, November 8, 2012

Early and strange

Looking back on my childhood, the first memory of significance that is applicable to give insight to how differently thoughts circulate through my mind, would have to be the first time I broke into someone’s home. I was 11 years old, living in a secluded subdivision of a little town called Welfare. There were only about 10 homes in the entire neighborhood which spanned across about 300 acres.
Next door was the Hinajosa family about a quarter-mile down the road. They had a son named Martin who I became close friends with, considering he was the only child my age that lived anywhere near me. Martin was what you would call different. To give an objective perspective on him I should say that he has since been institutionalized since the age of 18. We would do things like build forts and pretend to be soldiers, then ninjas, then . . . the sneakiness began. Leading to the inevitable breaking and entering. First at our own homes while family was home because then if we got caught, well, it was family and we were just kids messing around. During the infant stages we would tweak our methods, and then it got boring working so hard to be quiet and sneaky only to end up back in your own room. Next came other people’s homes, the first home was a nice 2 story home about 2 miles up the road.
The family was having a barbeque on the side of their house right outside the garage. So we snuck around to the opposite side of the house and determined that the front door was the best point of entry considering the fact that the door in the rear opened into the dining room/kitchen. I stayed on the opposite side of the house and waited for martin to swing around towards the family to make sure that they were all outside. Once he gave the signal I proceeded through the front door, pulse pounding at the thought that someone would be right inside the door to catch me. But none such person was seen, once in I went straight for the stairs located about 10 feet ahead and to the right. Quietly moving upstairs I felt as if I were entering another world. A world where people lived a completely different lifestyle than I had ever seen. Not that I had much of a frame of reference of how other people lived since I was raised homeschooled and had very few friends. Walking through the halls of the second floor I absorbed all that I could, so different, strange photographs of people I had never met and hopefully would never see in real life. As I explored my way through the second bedroom I heard the door from what I guessed was from the garage open and shut. I froze for a moment, and then quickly made my way into the closet. The closet wasn’t a walk in but left just enough space for a small body to stand between the doors and the hanging clothes. Footsteps came up the stairs, first thought, Im caught, then, reason. How could they know I was here? Unless Martin told them, no, he wouldn’t, I mean, he’s crazy but not in that way. The steps reached the hallway of the second floor where I was no less than 60 seconds prior. Knowing that sent adrenaline pounding through my veins, I could have sworn they could hear my heartbeat. The steps came into the room heart pounding even louder, my mind, frantically calm. The person walked right past the closet and to the nightstand, picked something off of it then retreated down the steps and out the same door heard just minutes before. At the sound of the door shutting I exited the closet and quickly made my way down the steps as a snake would if it had legs. Passing back through without looking back to see if anyone was there only from sheer terror to what I might see. If it were something terrible, I would know shortly, no noise no yelling just the sound of my footsteps though the grass and back to the side of the house. Then out into the woods to circle around to the street where I knew Martin would be waiting. He was there, then we walked down the road and passed the house I was just in. waving to that family as we passed I felt victory. This was just the beginning of a very strange sequence of event that I claim as my life.