When I was six years old, my father gave up farming on our little sharecropper's farm and got a factory job. We moved a few miles down the road to an old frame house with a tin roof, with the new luxury of running water. The house had a dirt front yard and an outhouse in back. It was a white house, sorely in need of paint, with a crumbling gray-colored front porch, a house quite close to the paved country road but surrounded by forest on three sides. Although small by today’s standards, it was a mansion compared to the three-room shack where I spent my first six years.
The back of the house was on a slope that took the forest down the hill to a creek. Don't tell anybody, but one day, shortly after we moved there, and contrary to Mama's instructions to stay close to the house, I followed that creek all the way to Saluda Lake, about a mile's hike.
It was quite an adventure, a leisurely pleasure; young, innocent eyes excitedly observing deep pools in the creek, with mysterious and dark undercut banks; minnows, tadpoles, and crawfish, in and near the cold water that flowed across my naked toes; a tight-fitting, well-worn shoe dangling from each hand.
Squirrels and birds were everywhere. A couple of snakes slithered along the creek bank before disappearing into the water; they were so big and scary that I almost cut short my journey.
But when I saw the lake, I knew it was time to head back. The forest opened up to that blue expanse, and the unfamiliarity of it disturbed me. It focused my young brain on how far I had gone beyond my mother's stay-close-to-the-house instructions. It forced me to wonder if I knew the way back home.
Was I lost?
My return was at a faster pace, with my mind concentrated on seeing one thing: the back of our new house. My gaze constantly shifted from what was in front of me to what I wanted to see at the top of the hill, far less than certain I would ever see it.
Maybe an hour went by, probably less; seemed like an eternity. Then … there it was, though still distant and small in my view, I recognized it high above me: my back porch, jutting out from the little house, as if on stilts.
I wasn’t lost.
I could not understand why I had to fight the urge to cry, the journey from anxiety to relief being quite foreign to me.
Walking back up the hill to the house, I passed a bent tree that looked much like the one in today’s photo. It reminded me of the curved back of a horse; I had often fantasized about riding a great white stallion like my hero, the Lone Ranger.
I was tired from my long walk. Home was in sight. I climbed on my horse to rest awhile. (Subsequent visits to my tree horse would lead to adventures conjured up in my mind; I never walked to the lake again.)
I was startled by the sound of my mother, calling out my name from the back porch. I had leaned forward, put my crossed arms on the tree trunk and put my head down on my arms. I guess I fell asleep.
Mama could not see me from the porch. I climbed off my tree horse and yelled back to her that I was coming. I ran up the hill, crunching through the layers of dead leaves on the forest floor.
As I climbed up the back-porch steps, Mama wanted to know where I had been. She was mad, I guess, but still glad to see me. She had hollered for me a few times. I was too far away to hear.
Didn’t tell her that part.
I left the house shortly after breakfast; it was almost lunchtime. I told her I was playing on a horse-shaped tree and fell asleep, pointing down the hill toward Silver. I left out the rest of the story.
She didn’t ask; I didn’t tell.
She didn’t have to know about my little unauthorized adventure; no need to put Mama through all the trouble of having to go out and find a hickory stick to tan my hide, a hide which, if memory serves, stayed quite tan throughout my early adventurous years.