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With respect to accidental bloodshed, it is my modest boast that I became the neighborhood's most memorable contributor one tranquil September afternoon in my 10th year while playing football in Leo Collingwood's backyard. As always, the game involved about 150 kids, so normally when you were tackled you fell into a soft, marshmallowy mass of bodies. If you were really lucky you landed on Mary O'Leary and got to rest on her for a moment while waiting for the others to get off. She smelled of vanilla—vanilla and fresh grass—and was soft and clean and painfully pretty. It was a lovely moment. But on this occasion I fell outside the pack and hit my head on a stone retaining wall. I remember feeling a sharp pain at the top of my head toward the back.
When I stood up, I saw that everyone was staring at me with a single rapt expression. Lonny Brankovich looked over and instantly melted in a faint. In a candid tone his brother said: "You're gonna die." Naturally, I couldn't see what absorbed them, but I gather from later descriptions that it looked as if I had a lawn sprinkler plugged into the top of my head, spraying blood in all directions in a rather festive manner. I reached up and found a mass of wetness. To the touch, it felt more like the kind of outflow you get when a truck crashes into a fire hydrant or oil is struck in Oklahoma. This felt like a job for Red Adair.
"I think I'd better go get this seen to," I said soberly, and with a 50-foot stride left the yard. I bounded home in three steps and stepped into the kitchen, fountaining lavishly, where I found my father standing by the window with a cup of coffee dreamily admiring Mrs. Bukowski, the young housewife from next door. Mrs. Bukowski had the first bikini in Iowa and wore it while hanging out her wash. My father looked at my spouting head, allowed himself a moment's mindless adjustment, then leapt instantly and adroitly into panic and disorder, moving in as many as six directions at once, and calling in a strained voice to my mother to come at once and bring lots of towels—"old ones!"—because Billy was bleeding to death in the kitchen.
Everything after that went by in a blur. I remember being seated with my head pressed to the kitchen table by my father as he endeavored to staunch the flow of blood and at the same time get through on the phone to Dr. Alzheimer, the family physician. Meanwhile, my mother, ever imperturbable, searched methodically for old rags and pieces of cloth that could be safely sacrificed (or were red already) and dealt with the parade of children who were turning up at the backdoor with bone chips and bits of gray tissue that they had carefully lifted from the rock and thought might be part of my brain.
I couldn't see much, of course, with my head pressed to the table, but I did catch reflected glimpses in the toaster and my father seemed to be into my cranial cavity up to his elbows. At the same time he was speaking to Dr. Alzheimer in words that failed to soothe. "Jesus Christ, Doc," he was saying. "You wouldn't believe the amount of blood. We're swimming in it."
On the other end I could hear Dr. Alzheimer's dementedly laid-back voice. "Well, I could come over, I suppose," he was saying. "It's just that I'm watching an awfully good golf tournament. Ben Hogan is having a most marvelous round. Isn't it wonderful to see him doing well at his time of life? Now then, have you managed to stop the bleeding?"
"Well, I'm sure trying."
"Good, good. That's excellent—that's excellent. Because he's probably lost quite a lot of blood already. Tell me, is the little fellow still breathing?"
"I think so," my father replied.
I nodded helpfully.



Comments
Dear Sir: I was born in 1941 and lived in West Des Moines until I was 13. I share many of your thoughts and remember in great detail the kids, the dogs, the Lyric Theatre and main street. It was a wonderful time and place to grow up. Thank you for your article. Best to you, Jerry
Posted by Gerald E. Martin on May 15,2008 | 06:49PM
Dear Mr. Bryson,
Born in 1939 at IA Methodist - downtown DM - grew up on the east side - left in '57 to go to school. Mom (93) still lives there.
I was going through some old clippings and the last two pages of you story had disappeared. So, I brought the web site up and recovered the rest of your article.
Unsupervised, unregulated and robustly physical - you got it exactly right - especially our unprotected, anything goes, full-tilt tackle football games. We were always allowed to play outside at night, too. This "dark play" provides some of the best memories for me. So many made up games and contests, too. My Des Moines childhood was a lot of fun to say the least. Shoveling snow off walks, mowing lawns, shining shoes at the IA fair, paper route - we made our own spending money from an early age since the folks had little to spare.
Thank you so much,
Larry Rollstin
Albuquerque, NM, USA
Posted by Larry Rollstin on November 3,2009 | 05:08PM