Welcome
to The Spot Writers. This month’s prompt is to write about something “summery.”
Today’s post is written by Phil Yeats.
In December, 2019, Phil (using his Alan Kemister pen name) published his most
recent novel. Tilting at Windmills, the second in
the Barrettsport Mysteries series
of soft-boiled police detective stories set in an imaginary Nova Scotia coastal
community is available on Amazon. https://www.amazon.com/Tilting-Windmills-Barrettsport-Mysteries-Book-ebook/dp/B07L5WR948/
He’s
currently working on a Cli-Fi novel. Information on that project is available
on his website (https://alankemisterauthor.wordpress.com).
Warm
Summer Evenings
by Phil
Yeats
Years ago, we lived at the end of a
cul-de-sac next to a small section of urban forest. On warm summer evenings, bimmers
and other fancy sedans would arrive. They’d disgorge teenagers burdened with
boomboxes, twofers, and packages of snack food. The drivers would depart,
presumably to return their parents’ cars, and reappear on foot with others
joining the party in the woods.
From early
evening, the raucous music punctuated by occasional noisy outbursts from the
participants overwhelmed the usual nighttime forest sounds. Near midnight, the
teens, with boomboxes blaring, would emerge from the forest and disperse into
suburban city streets.
Screeching owls,
and cats expressing differences of opinion, would reassert ownership of their
forest. In the morning, scavengers with their grocery store carts would collect
the empty beer cans.
We lived in
that house for twenty years and observed many teenage gatherings. They consumed
prodigious amounts of beer, but we only witnessed one altercation. On that
occasion, a sidewalk fight erupted as they left. A neighbour called the cops,
and the men in blue defused the situation.
Altercations we
didn’t witness presumably occurred in the woods. And pot—illegal in those less-enlightened days—must have been consumed.
Our neighbours
complained about immoral behaviour and environmental damage. I refused to get
involved in discussions of the morality of teenage behaviour but noted they left
their trash in a city-maintained garbage bin near the entry path. And the
scavengers appreciated the beer cans they left behind.
They were being
teens on warm summer evenings, and I envied them as they trooped into the
woods. Perhaps if I’d had opportunities for similar teenage social interaction
when I was their age, I would have grown into a more sociable adult. Or perhaps
not.
More years than I care to remember have
passed, and I’m sitting outside another house enjoying another warm summery
evening. Our province is recovering from its initial response to the recent
coronavirus pandemic. The authorities recently eased lockdown conditions.
Limited social gatherings are once again possible. Several members of our
writing group organized an in-person meeting, our first in four months.
The risks were
minor. Nova Scotia is nearly virus-free, and we’d be outside following the
social distancing rules, but I didn’t participate. I fear my reluctance to take
part was less about avoiding risk than about avoiding social interactions.
Teenage lessons in sociability wouldn’t have altered this lifelong tendency.
The Spot Writers—Our Members:
Val Muller: http://www.valmuller.com/blog/
Catherine A. MacKenzie:
https://writingwicket.wordpress.com/wicker-chitter/
Phil Yeats: https://alankemisterauthor.wordpress.com/
Chiara De Giorgi:
https://chiaradegiorgi.blogspot.com/
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