Friday, May 19, 2006

Quick Draw

Quick Draw
 Mr. Completely's post on the National Fast Draw Championships just took me for a ride on the nostalgia coaster.

One day on the way home from school I stopped by the Towson Shopping Center (now Towsontowne Mall) where the national quick draw champion was giving a demonstration.  At that moment I knew what I wanted to be in life (I had similar epiphanies about once a month). Running  straight home, I grabbed my birthday money and headed back to Towson.  There was then a little hardware store on York Road, about two doors down from the Towson Theater.  They sold Crosman Pellet guns there, including a replica Colt single action six-shooter.  It cost, as I remember, around $30, including a can of .22 pellets, and some gas cartridges.

One of the reasons the movie Christmas Story has developed a cult following, is its accurate portrayal of life as we knew it.  "You'll shoot your eye out,'' was something every boy in America heard at least once.  My mom was no different.  Even though I started hunting at around age 7, that was in Indiana, on Grampaw's farm, and she wasn't there to see it.  Naturally I had to keep my acquisition a secret. 

I didn't have money for the holster, which I think cost almost as much as the gun, so I fashioned one out of cardboard and electrical tape.  I nearly creamed my jeans when, without reading any of the directions, I was able to get my first shot off.  That would be in my bedroom, shooting into my closet.  But the sumbitch was much louder than I anticipated.  Mom hollered from outside the door, ''What was that?''  I made something up, and  knew to dampen the sound. Knew to be more careful.  I waited until she went back upstairs, and with the door crack packed with a towel, and  my radio volume turned up, I squeezed out another shot.  Bam   Nothing.  Bam Bam Bam Bam.   Still nothing. Bam Bam Bam Bam Bam Bam.  I was shooting the hell out of a shoe box stuffed with socks ... sometimes.  Mostly I missed, and my backstop was the drywall.  Bam Bam Bam Bam Bam. Bam Load  Bam Bam Bam Bam.Bam.

Before too long I heard my locked door knob being tried.  "Open this door!''

Shit.

I  ditched the evidence under my pillow, and let my mother in.  ''What are you doing in here?  Do you have a gun?!?''  Of course I lied, but I'm a lousy liar, and she saw through it.  In my best Eddie Haskell impersonation, I pulled the gun out and boasted, ''Look what I got with my birthday money!  Doesn't it look real?  Here, try it.'' 

Pretend your mom opened your door when you were 15, and found you humping your cousin.  It was like that. I begged her not to tell my dad.  I mean really, really begged.  She snitched.

It's hard to know what he really thought, because his reaction to stuff us kids did was proportionate to how upset she was in the telling.  He was very very pissed just then.  He's a lawyer, so the first thing he asked was, ''Who sold you this?''  I told him.  ''It's against the law to sell guns to a minor!  Did you know that?'' I knew that, because I had to swear to the salesman  that I was 18.  ''No. I didn't. It's not a real gun anyway - it's a pellet gun.  Do you want to try it?" 

Now came the worst part.  He drove me straight to that hardware store, and in we marched.  Dad slammed the box with the gun in it on the counter, and said - "You sold this to my son, and I want his money back!'' Did I tell you that I had  dropped the gun several times while practicing my draw?   And  that there were several scratches on it, and a cracked plastic grip?  The owner began to protest, but pop used the ''L'' word.  Law.  He forked the refund over, including for the pellets and gas cartridges that were no more.  I was freaking mortified, and of course hated dad's guts more than anything in the world.  For at least 12 hours.

Here's the odd thing.  Even today I want that gun back.  It was great. 

6 comments:

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Anonymous said...

This little story explains so much about you; poor repressed bastard.
We were building muzzleloaders in shop class and all had our own .22s and shotguns by that age.

Jake said...

Well-written and entertaining story.

Practicing shooting in your closet? It was obvious that you were not destined to a life a crime. A more devious person such as I would have went to a vacant lot to practice.

Anonymous said...

"Of course I lied, but I'm a lousy liar,...

This must be why you aren't a Dem.

TFV

Rodger the Real King of France said...

I learned my lesson early ... that it was harder keeping track of the lie trail than to just tell the truth up front.

Anonymous said...

Hell, no. It's not odd at all. Every boy remembers his first gun. Mine, a .22 rifle, was purchased in 1954 (with parental permission) from Sears, Roebuck & Co. for $9.33, including shipping, when I was 10 years old, with my paper route money (right out of Jean Shepherd, huh?). Last year my brother wanted to teach his boys how to shoot, and I loaned it to him. But I miss it. It's the most normal thing in the world, and burned into the genes. As G.K.Chesterton said, "Every boy should know the use of arms." I would only alter it to read "-and girl-."

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