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    Kaleidoscope Eyes

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      Maybe Gramps was planning a last

      solo trip

      in his little sailboat down our own lazy

      river,

      just like Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn did

      with their raft

      on the Mississippi. This also makes me want

      to cry, but I

      try not to so I don’t smudge the blueprint.

      I fold over

      Number Two and when I open Number Three,

      I see there’s

      some sort of letter stapled to the upper

      left-hand corner.

      The letter says:

      April 25, 1968

      Dear Mr. Bradley:

      I received your letter and the maps in question on March 15. Thank you for sending them to my attention. Since then, I have checked your documents against several reliable sources in our company’s possession, as well as with the archives of the State Geological Survey.

      The result, I am pleased to inform you, is that I find your calculations on the shift in course of the Mullica River, and in particular as it pertains to the section that now runs west of the town of Willowbank, to be entirely correct. I hope I have been of some good assistance.

      Fee for research and calculations = $75—payable by check, due in thirty days.

      Sincerely,

      John McGraw

      John McGraw, civil engineer

      Everhardt, McGraw, and Weibner Associates

      This one puzzles me.

      It’s also a map—but more like a picture,

      drawn by hand and stamped

      with the initials L.B.

      in one of the lower corners.

      At the top, it says “Mullica River—

      approximation of its location in 1699.”

      In the other lower corner is the signature

      of the engineer, John McGraw,

      who wrote the letter

      back to Gramps

      about checking his maps and facts.

      I look at the date again: 1699.

      Why would Gramps be interested

      in where the Mullica River ran

      way back then—which was even way before

      Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn?

      I hear Denise’s big bare feet slapping up the stairs.

      I quick stack the maps back together,

      stuff them inside the envelope,

      which I turn

      over this time. I see then that I’ve missed

      one thing that is noted on the flip

      side, in Gramps’ precise handwriting:

      Brigantine Historical Society:

      File 276, drawer 11, document 7

      and below that is a brass key

      taped to the paper.

      I place the envelope

      and all of its contents in the box

      beneath the photo of Grandma and Gramps,

      the plates, and the rosebud vase,

      where I know it will be safe from Denise’s prying eyes,

      since she has no interest in anything

      she can’t smoke, wear, or sing.

      Part 3

      Many’s the time I’ve been mistaken

      And many times confused.

      —from “American Tune”

      by Paul Simon

      Now I’m just plain frustrated. Our visit to Tuckahoe

      was two whole weeks ago and every night since,

      when Dad and Denise are at work and Carolann

      has to entertain the twins so her mother can clean up

      after dinner, I climb the stairs, empty the brown

      envelope, spread out everything on my desk

      and all across my bedroom floor, and try to

      make sense of it. So far, here’s what I’ve got:

      As a Navy navigator, my grandfather

      planned routes for ships to travel across the seas

      and open oceans. OK, I get that. But then, for some

      strange reason, he got very interested in the Mullica—

      not an ocean, but our very own South Jersey river,

      the one that flows just west of town,

      the one his gravestone looks over.

      Try as I might, I can’t reason it out. Maybe Gramps

      was getting senile. Maybe he just made up

      some wild plan for a solo voyage along the river

      as a way to escape, kind of like we used to do

      together when I’d visit. But then—what about his

      hand-drawn map of the Mullica in 1699?

      I did figure out one thing: “L.B.” is most probably

      himself, Lewis Bradley. Anyway, that map is drawn

      on thin paper—almost like onionskin, almost like

      it was supposed to be see-through. (Ha! Maybe Denise

      can use it for a shirt.) So, OK … I lay it on top of

      the map of the river labeled 1968, and I see

      right away it shows that how the river flows now

      is not the same as how the river flowed back then.

      I look through my kaleidoscope awhile

      to clear my mind. Then I read over again that one

      part of the engineer’s letter: “I find your calculations

      on the shift in course of the Mullica River, and in particular

      as it pertains to the section that now runs west of the town

      of Willowbank, to be entirely correct.” I didn’t know

      a river could shift; I wonder, is this guy McGraw for real?

      Or is he simply trying to get some fast cash from a

      tired old sailor? I lie on my back and stare at the

      cracks in the ceiling, branching off in a dozen

      separate directions like little streams flowing from

      a larger body of water. “Tributaries” is what

      Mr. Bellamy called them last week when he

      reviewed some terms for our Earth Science test,

      (which I barely passed, even though I actually

      studied this time). Only six days of eighth grade left.

      Too bad—just when I’m finding a use for geology.

      “Can a river shift?”

      I blurt out at the end of science class,

      after the bell has rung,

      after everyone else has left.

      Mr. Bellamy looks at me like I have

      two heads. I don’t blame him.

      All year, I’ve only asked two other questions

      in his class: “Can I please use the bathroom pass?”

      and “Can I do some extra credit

      to raise my D-minus?”

      When he’s shaken off his shock, he says:

      “Well, yes … if you mean, Lyza,

      can a river change its course over time—

      then yes, absolutely, it most certainly can!”

      He seems pleased to see that I’m at last

      showing an interest in his class,

      even if it is a little late.

      He looks at me curiously. “Why do you ask?”

      I hesitate. “Well…

      I was reading something at my gramps’ place …”

      (which is true)

      “and it made me wonder …”

      I don’t say it was a hand-drawn map

      of the Mullica River in 1699. He might get

      curious

      and I’m not ready yet to let

      anyone else know about this, especially a teacher.

      So … I just let him think it was an atlas,

      something normal like that.

      Mr. Bellamy buys it.

      He shifts into full-throttle teacher mode:

      “The earth, Lyza, is in a constant state of change….”

      (waves hands excitedly)

      “The atmosphere, bodies of water, and tectonic plates

      are constantly interacting

      (weaves fingers together to demonstrate)

      to re-create the geography we see around us…”

      (spreads arms out wide as if those plates

      and bodies were right ins
    ide his classroom)

      He has other things to say about

      the earth, and he says most of them in the next

      twenty minutes.

      I try to listen, but I already have what I need:

      a second opinion on the question

      of shifting rivers,

      which seems now to be a lot more

      fact than fiction.

      I “X” through another box on the calendar.

      Another whole week has passed, school’s out,

      and I’m still no further along in the mystery of Gramps’ maps

      than I was before.

      Except… I know a river can

      shift,

      and that my former-navigator grandfather

      felt he needed to draw a map

      of how the Mullica River flowed in 1699,

      and to pay some engineer guy to verify

      that he drew it right.

      But I don’t know why I need to know that.

      So what’s the use?

      Then there’s the key—

      which doesn’t seem to belong to anything

      either here or back in Tuckahoe

      (I checked before we left; it didn’t fit any

      of Gramps’ doors or kitchen cabinets,

      the garden shed, or the garage).

      Then there’s that note on the back of the envelope

      about some document and file

      at the Brigantine Historical Society.

      But I don’t have a license or a car … so how can I

      get there and still keep this a secret

      from Denise and Dad, which I assume is what Gramps

      wanted me to do, or why else

      would he have addressed the envelope

      just to me?

      “FOR LYZA ONLY” is the part that bothers me,

      the part I’ve been thinking a lot more about lately

      because his letter also said:

      If there’s a right time to share it, I’m sure you’ll know.

      So … is tonight the right time?

      “Adventures are better together,” Gramps used to say

      whenever we planned a journey in the attic.

      “Plus if you get into trouble, there’s always

      someone near

      to lend a hand, save you from going under

      when the current’s too strong, when the seas get rough.”

      I take my kaleidoscope off the shelf,

      where I’ve kept it ever since Mom left.

      Funny—coming from her, it was the perfect gift:

      colorful, like she always was;

      slim, which is how I remember her;

      and mostly … unpredictable.

      I turn the cylinders

      around and

      around and

      around until I find a brand-new pattern,

      in hopes that my brain

      might catch on and do the same.

      I put the kaleidoscope

      aside, look at the maps again.

      Well, that doesn’t work.

      OK, I need to face it: I am either too dumb or too chicken

      to figure out this map thing

      alone.

      I roll off my bed, slide down the banister,

      pick up the hallway phone.

      I dial Malcolm’s number. He’s home.

      “Be over in ten,” he says loud enough

      to be heard over

      his dad’s Louis Armstrong records.

      I go into the living room, lift

      the front window, yell across to Carolann,

      who’s teaching the twins

      how to play Mother, may I?

      She waves when she hears me, picks them up—

      one twin under each arm—

      and carries them inside. She reappears on the porch steps

      with three bottles of soda

      and a big bag of Wise potato chips.

      You know, I may not be able

      to count on my family,

      but my friends, at least, are as steady as they come.

      They sit, leaning back, against the foot of my bed.

      I sit across from them and explain

      everything:

      —how I discovered the envelope in the attic

      —how I found the note from Gramps

      —how I unfolded each of the maps

      —how I read the letter from the engineer

      —how I asked Mr. Bellamy about shifting rivers

      —how I’d been racking my tired brain for answers

      I tell them about the key and about

      the note Gramps wrote on the back of the envelope,

      the one about the drawer, file, and document

      over in Brigantine.

      I tell them I’ve been wanting to go

      to check it out

      but have no way of doing so

      without giving away Gramps’ secret.

      I tell them all of it…. Then I ask: “So … what do you think?”

      Malcolm nods slowly, continuously, like he’s

      one of those little dogs in the

      back window of someone’s Chevy.

      He stays quiet.

      Carolann stuffs a bunch of potato chips

      into her mouth.

      She chews, swallows, takes a swig

      of her soda, swipes the back of her wrist

      across her lips.

      “Far out!” she says.

      I thought for sure

      that three brains

      would be better

      than one.

      I had assumed that

      as soon as I told

      Carolann and Malcolm

      about Gramps’ notes

      and his maps,

      I’d immediately

      feel relieved,

      that we’d immediately,

      all three, together,

      see something obvious

      that I, by myself,

      had missed.

      I

      was

      so

      wrong.

      Before they leave

      to go back home,

      I make them both

      swear on my

      father’s Bible

      that they will

      not tell a soul

      about Gramps’

      project, that they

      will not say one

      single word to

      their parents

      or their friends

      or their brothers

      or any future

      boyfriends or

      girlfriends they

      might someday

      have. I am not

      worried about

      Malcolm, who is

      shy and quiet

      by nature.

      I am worried more

      about Carolann

      but not because

      she would ever

      mean to say

      anything about

      our secret

      but it’s just that

      she’s always

      flitting here

      and there

      and it’s in her

      nature to share—

      and so I make her,

      even though her

      parents raised her

      as a Quaker

      (and they don’t

      believe in taking

      oaths), I make her

      swear twice

      on the Bible

      just to be sure.

      Malcolm and I go shopping for

      a couple of 45s at Bassline,

      the record store

      where Hairy Harry works part-time.

      We buy “I Was Made to Love Her” by Stevie Wonder

      and “Respect” by Aretha Franklin.

      Then we walk next door to the five-and-dime

      and buy ourselves two orange Creamsicles

      and a copy of today’s local news,

      which we take the comics out of and use

      to wrap up the records

      for his brother’s nineteenth
    birthday.

      Dixon Dupree is the kind of brother

      every kid should have:

      he plays guitar, works at the lumberyard,

      and last year as a senior at Willowbank High

      he had fifteen home runs, thirty-five RBIs,

      and was the team’s MVP for the second time.

      Plus Dixon’s nice … a kind of anti-Denise.

      Whenever I see him in town

      or walking past our house after work,

      Dixon always asks

      how I am,

      what I’m doing,

      how’s it going with my summer … stuff like that,

      questions that most older kids

      don’t ask me.

      Anyway, a few hours later,

      when I arrive at the Duprees’

      at half past seven

      to watch the Phillies play the Mets on CBS,

      Dixon is sitting on the top step of the porch,

      reading a letter.

      He does not

      look up when I walk by.

      He does not

      say “Hey there, Lyza …,” like he always does.

      He does not

      ask how I am or if everything is cool with my summer.

      Instead,

      he keeps staring, staring, staring at the letter.

      When Malcolm opens the door,

      I can see over his shoulder into the kitchen,

      where Mrs. Dupree is crying into her apron

      with Mr. Dupree trying to comfort her,

      and before I can turn and leave them

      to whatever bad news it is,

      Malcolm grips my wrist and pulls me

      behind him upstairs to the den, directly

      opposite his room.

      When he turns around, I can clearly see

      that he looks close to crying, too.

      Now I am feeling really weird, ’cause I have not

      seen Malcolm cry since kindergarten,

      when the older white kids

      teased and bullied him

      through the playground fence.

      “Dixon’s got drafted,” he says, sitting

      down on the top of the desk, still looking like

      he might explode into sadness any minute.

      I don’t know what to do.

     

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