A fifteen minute walk. A
less than five minute bike ride. That's what separated Bryce's house
from mine. That's nothing. It's not even considered across town in
Bonham whose population at the time was about seven thousand strong.
This was where Schlumberger, the VA and General Cable were the big
employers. Before Bonham got a big Super Walmart and not one but two
prisons. Hell, before Bonham even had a McDonalds. Those places
would help swell the population to the over ten thousand folks that
reside there today. Bryce and I were practically neighbors.
We both loved Ninja Turtles,
Legos, basketball, rap music and most importantly, Nintendo. Yeah.
Our friendship was solid. He was an only child raised by a single mom. Connie was like an awesome aunt to me. And I loved Bryce like
a brother. His grandmother lived with him a few years. She basically served as
his adult supervision when his mom was at work in an assisted living
facility as a nurse. His grandmother liked me. I always made the
honor roll. She felt I would make a good example for him, that I
would tutor Bryce. Ha! I hated homework! No way in hell was I
helping him with work if I didn't do my own work outside of school.
Neither of us was great at
basketball. We were above average though. He was probably a little
better than me. I was tall and pretty much a center or power
forward. I cleared the boards. Bryce was short and handled the
rock. We'd play horse, I guess we were equal shooters. We'd come up
with plays to run. These were junk because it was just the two of
use. We'd pretend we were on the Charlotte Hornets or the Orlando
Magic. We loved NBA Jam. When we played we'd be Shaq & Penny or
Larry “Grandmama” Johnson & Alonzo Mourning and
pretend to be them on the court. I loved the Dallas Mavericks but
they were awful. Nobody ever pretended to be Jim Jackson & Terry
Davis.
Bryce's mom made more money
than my parents, and she just had one kid. I had two siblings. Him
and his mom were by no means rich but he had more things than me. I
had often thought of him as spoiled but he didn't have an obscene
amount of things. He was down to earth. We never had a lot of
classes together for some reason. I really only remember us being in
band together in the sixth grade. He gave trumpet a shot but it
didn't stick. We both had Mrs. Crossland in the 8th grade
and freshman year we had Mrs. Youree in theater class. We hung out
after school a few times a week for several years though. Friday and
Saturday would feature one of us staying the night at the other's
house. We would have Lego contests usually at his house because he
had more Legos. We would stay up super late playing video games. We
would usually rent games from Hayes House of Video on the square or
we'd go to TNT Video, also on the square. This was a unique place
that also sold furniture. This was one of those mom and pop places
that had a separate room for adult videos. Sneaking a peak in there
was a rite of passage. It was just so cool because they had posters
hanging up that no young boy should see. Yeah, boobs.
Bryce got a Sega Genesis and
a Super Nintendo before I ever got one. We rented so many games.
Super Ghouls N' Ghosts was crazy hard. We rented Mega Man games all
the time. I sucked at those games but Bryce was a beast. We played
Turtles in Time a lot and Final Fight. Super Contra was also a huge draw for us. Those games were amazing.
They don't make them like that anymore. We mastered a game called
WWF Royal Rumble. You and the other player pick a wrestler. Every
few moments another wrestler would come to the ring. The object is to
throw another guy over the ropes to the floor. My favorite wrestler
was Bret the Hitman Hart. Bryce's was Razor Ramon. Our technique was
brilliant. I would grab a wrestler as he entered and whipped him to
the other side of the ring where Bryce waited and hip tossed him over
the top. We did this over and over until the entire roster was
exhausted and there were only two left. Free for all baby. Bryce
went from being my partner to my sworn enemy.
Without question the top
two games for us were Mortal Kombat and the aforementioned NBA Jam.
He was so much better than me at MK. Subzero and Scorpion were
without a doubt the best fighters. We would beat Shang Tsung and Goro
over and over and over. Years later we watched the Mortal Kombat
movie. While the music was cool it was a shitty movie.
Goro went down like a bitch.
Goro went down like a bitch.
NBA Jam and all its
versions and sequels were a fixture for us for years. We typically
played on the same team. Of course we loved the Magic and Hornets
best, but the Super Sonics were also good, they had Gary Payton and
Shawn Kemp (though Detlef Schrempf was always a favorite of mine, him
being German and all). We didn't really watch very much basketball
on TV but we sure loved our NBA Jam, and collecting basketball cards.
Bryce and I had a system
for acquiring basketball cards. We bought packs, sure, but getting
your favorite players was often a daunting task. I didn't just
collect basketball cards, I also collected baseball cards,
particularly those of my all time favorite player Barry Bonds. At
one point before selling 99% of my cards, I had over 2,000 Barry
Bonds cards. Anyway, our system was simple. It worked with Pogs as well.
I'm not saying I'm proud
of it, but hell, it happened and I'm not gonna say I lost sleep over it. My
house was near the fair grounds. Every weekend after the first
Monday of the month the fairgrounds hosted a flea market
affectionately know as Trade Days. For a town
like Bonham, this was a big event. Tons of vendors. Food trucks.
Lots of junk available for procurement. The process of obtaining the
object of our desire was rather simple. The seller typically sat or
stood behind a table. The cards were displayed on the table. One of us
would pick up a handful of cards and look through them. Oops. We
dropped the cards. No problem. Pick up the cards. Put the card
you want in one hand, put the rest in the other and return the rest
to the table. No harm no foul. It was simple. It was stupid. But we
were never caught and confronted about it.
One time at Walmart,
before Bonham was blessed with a super center, we took part in a free
throw shooting contest. This was back in the day with Walmarts had food trucks in the front that sold corn dogs and popcorn. Next to that they had a basketball goal
set up. I was first. They asked my age and raised the goal to ten
feet. I did well enough to get third place at the time. Third place
won a free basketball or something. I never got a call back, so some
asshole knocked me out of contention.
Bryce was next. He is
actually younger than me by about nine months, and yet he lied and
said he was even younger. Being short has its perks I guess. They
lowered the goal for him to eight feet. That sucker got first place
and a free basketball goal. He ended up getting his neighbor to let
him put it up in his driveway because he didn't have a great place
for a goal at his house. Now we had something else we could do
without having to ride all the way to the parks by LH Rather to shoot
hoops.
Around the corner of the
church down the street from Bryce's house was a creek directly North
of a government housing complex. It was a decent sized creek that
ran under the road. We called this our sewer. It was a drainage
outlet or something. We would crawl in there like the Ninja Turtles
and we could go through tunnels under the road across the street.
Probably not safe. Definitely disgusting. To this day I'm rarely
sick. I credit hanging out in the sewers with strengthening my immune
system. One time, I swear, there was a dead catfish in mint
condition in one of the pipes. It was so weird. At the time though
it was like, “Cool, so what?” We didn't really do that much in
there, it was just something to do. So much of my life at this time
was filled with the quest to fill my time.
Beavis and Butthead was a
cultural phenomenon.
Boys aged 8 to 25 loved that shit. Bryce would be Butthead and I was Beavis. Not that I was his sidekick, it was our haircolor mainly that dictated our roles when we were messing around. He had dark hair and I was blonde. On at least one occasion we actually played frog baseball. Frogs weren't abundant, but not exactly hard to find in a damp field by his house. He found a frog and I was the batter. He threw a strike and I missed. Again and I missed. It was his turn to try and I tossed that poor bastard underhanded and boom. Bryce whacked that son-of-a-bitch so hard. It was like a ball of flesh flying in slow motion with a single twitching leg, destination anywhere but here (lyrics stolen from a Rise Against song). Yeah, this was cruel and probably more than a little evil. We were influenced by a controversial juvenile show and were unsupervised. This made for a horrible combination. We truly were Beavis and Butthead.
Boys aged 8 to 25 loved that shit. Bryce would be Butthead and I was Beavis. Not that I was his sidekick, it was our haircolor mainly that dictated our roles when we were messing around. He had dark hair and I was blonde. On at least one occasion we actually played frog baseball. Frogs weren't abundant, but not exactly hard to find in a damp field by his house. He found a frog and I was the batter. He threw a strike and I missed. Again and I missed. It was his turn to try and I tossed that poor bastard underhanded and boom. Bryce whacked that son-of-a-bitch so hard. It was like a ball of flesh flying in slow motion with a single twitching leg, destination anywhere but here (lyrics stolen from a Rise Against song). Yeah, this was cruel and probably more than a little evil. We were influenced by a controversial juvenile show and were unsupervised. This made for a horrible combination. We truly were Beavis and Butthead.
There was one summer
where we literally slept at one another's house like five nights a
week. Loneliness and boredom were afflictions we were constantly
vigilant of. We avoided these symptoms like the plague. During one
of our long stretches of inseparability we didn't exactly practice
healthy consumption habits. It felt like two weeks but probably was
just four or five days. For this period of time all we drank was
mountain dew. Which is funny because today Mountain Dew disgusts me.
We drank this liquid cocaine and stayed up until 1 or 2 AM. We played games or watched TV and whatever was on USA Up All Night if it was Friday or Saturday. We'd try to go all night but always crashed before 3 AM. And then we'd sleep until noon. What we ate wasn't any better than the Dew. We had gotten a huge pack of Rolos. Rolos are individually wrapped chocolate covered caramel ecstasy. We popped those things as snacks all day. They made perfect compliments to our primary source of sustenance—microwave burritos. That's right. Bryce and I nourished our bodies nearly a week with nothing but Mountain Dew, chocolate candy and meat and beans wrapped in a flour tortilla zapped on high for 90 seconds. Strictly a carb diet for us. Back before anybody knew what the hell a carb was. We had plenty of energy to run across town and make trouble. This trouble usually manifested at the fair grounds.
We drank this liquid cocaine and stayed up until 1 or 2 AM. We played games or watched TV and whatever was on USA Up All Night if it was Friday or Saturday. We'd try to go all night but always crashed before 3 AM. And then we'd sleep until noon. What we ate wasn't any better than the Dew. We had gotten a huge pack of Rolos. Rolos are individually wrapped chocolate covered caramel ecstasy. We popped those things as snacks all day. They made perfect compliments to our primary source of sustenance—microwave burritos. That's right. Bryce and I nourished our bodies nearly a week with nothing but Mountain Dew, chocolate candy and meat and beans wrapped in a flour tortilla zapped on high for 90 seconds. Strictly a carb diet for us. Back before anybody knew what the hell a carb was. We had plenty of energy to run across town and make trouble. This trouble usually manifested at the fair grounds.
Bryce and I had at least
two and a half near run ins with police at the fairgrounds. On the
south end of the fairgrounds where Billy cut his foot there is a creek that runs under highway
56. We went under the highway and ended up in what felt like a
cavernous ten foot ditch. In there there were fresh water clams. I
had never seen these before. We kept grabbing them and just throwing
them hard at stuff. Trees, rocks, the ground, whatever. We were
destructive rascals. This creek was heavily wooded and felt so
secluded. Then a youngish man called on us. He claimed to be a cop.
We didn't believe him and he offered to show his badge. I said,
“Nah, that's OK,” but Bryce was bold and called his bluff. The
guy was so high up and flashed his badge so fast we didn't really see
it. I doubt he was a cop but we played it safe and climbed out and
headed to my house.
One night it was really
late and we snuck out of my bedroom window. We walked to the
fairgrounds because why the hell not? There are recreated cabins, a
replica life sized fort, a tiny-assed lame amphitheater. When we got
bored we decided to head back home. We took a different route that
went by the Sam Rayburn Library which is right next to the
fairgrounds. We saw a cop car round the corner and panicked. Oh
shit! It's past city curfew! We dove and hid behind some tall cedar
trees on the side of the road. The police car drove by and it was
really nothing but it was so fun and scary. What a rush. We were
fugitives! Only nobody was chasing us.
There is a pavilion on
the fairgrounds. We were there one time and as usual nobody else was
there. This place was cool, why was it always abandoned? We grabbed
some rocks and busted out some light bulbs in the pavilion. It was
surprisingly easy to do. Again we were bored and made our way to the
pay phone. We joked around and called 911 thinking nothing would
happen. After all, we didn't put any quarters in it. Only something
did happen. Dispatch answered and we hung up the phone and decided
to get the hell out of Dodge. We didn't run or anything, just made
our way out gingerly. Until a cop approached us.
The officer asked if we
called 911. We lied and said “no.” He said, “Well somebody
did,” again we lied. He asked if we knew anything about the busted
bulbs. Shit. “No officer” He asked if we were sure and we
feigned ignorance. He knew we were lying but what was he gonna do?
We were a couple of kids
up to no good. We weren't bad kids. We never did anything really
bad. We were just consumed with the quest of always having something
to do. After Bryce moved to the other side of town, our devilish
misconduct would continue...
###
If I had to pick a single song to be the soundtrack of this post it would be...
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My brother Johnathan and me. 1992 |
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