SwimA Story by ShannonA rural Saskatchewan summerReality has set in. We were really spending the summer in this place. The kind of place I thought only existed in movies. A place where things to entertain a 14-year-old are limited. Where the local store owner has never seen a drive though window. Where the only radio station plays old fashioned country music. Where my friends in the city can send letters to me - general delivery. Staying in a trailer that should have burned down years ago when it was abandoned. It is a true testament to 1970s nylon carpeting that the abandoned cigarettes simply burned themselves out, rather than taking this carpet and wall paper covered monstrosity with them. The gas leaks, so we cannot use the stove. The yard is overgrown. But this is my summer and I will make the most of it. We walk to the beach to swim or read in the shade. Mom sometimes takes us to the big lake, where there are some boys to flirt with. We collect large rocks from a road construction area and build our own fire pit (is this stealing or helping?). We learn to cook everything on a grill or in an electric frying pan or an old coffee warmer. And the store owner, Pearl, is a funny old woman with a kind heart and a brash attitude, who gives us candy when we sit and visit. As we are talking one day, Pearl notes that I am a very good swimmer. I brag that I can swim the 1500m in tournaments. She tells me that a girl a bit younger than me tried to swim across one of the local lakes and got about half way. Fowler Lake is just under 3 km. She issues a challenge: Can I do it? Of course I can! Years of swimming and the confidence of youth make me certain of it. So it is decided; the following evening, when my dad returns from work, my sister and I will swim the lake. My dad borrows my uncle’s little aluminum boat; with the kind of outboard motor you drive from a handle attached directly to the motor. It is fully equipped with all necessary safety equipment, including some ancient looking life preservers. We launch the boat and my dad drives us to the far end of the lake. My mom is with us, not so sure about this endeavor; they will stay with us the whole time. The thing about any distance sport is that you have to get in that space. That space where the world shrinks down to a single thing: keep moving. It is the closest I ever get to mediation. The problem that became clear to my parents early on, takes me a bit longer to notice: my sister is struggling. She is falling behind, forcing my parents to use the boat to move back and forth between us. This becomes more challenging, as the sun is starting to set. I have reached my meditative state and can’t change my pace. So mom and dad keep going between us (I will find out later that they eventually give my sister a life jacket, as they don’t want to leave her to check on me). The swim takes on an out of body quality. A beaver joins me at one point, swimming beside me for some time, before disappearing under the water. I have a moment of concern, searching my brain for what beavers eat and wondering if my toes look like little fish in the water, before remembering they eat young tree and branches. I alternate between a front stroke and swimming on my back. I notice the stars start to come out and how startlingly quick it is getting dark. My parents continue to check in, asking if I want to stop. I am confused; I can do this forever. As the dark shadows of trees draw nearer, I realize there is a small problem. The lake is surrounded by steep shores populated by thick pine trees. The only place to climb out is the boat launch. Which I can no longer see. Pretty soon lights begin to appear, not too far ahead, first two, then four, six. People are waiting for me and they are turning their truck lights on so I can see. I adjust my course and head for the boat launch. I arrive before my parents, who are still with my sister. As I am getting closer, I feel something hit my hand. I realize the water is shallow enough that I am scraping the bottom of the lake bed with my hand. I do not know, until I try to stand, how incredibly tired and weak I am. I can swim forever, but walking proves to be a challenge. I am also now aware that the air got much colder when the sun went down. My uncle wades into the water, carrying a blanket, which he wraps around me. The locals are laughing and congratulating me. They’re drinking tea and coffee from thermoses and offer me some, which I accept. I am quickly bundled into a truck, with the heat on full. As I look around, I see that a few dozen people are standing around and talking, watching the goings on, sharing hot drinks. Some have brought lawn chairs and are busy visiting. Pearl is in the truck with me, laughing heartily, telling me the only reason we were allowed to try this in the evening, was because everyone assumed we would give up in the first hour. I have been swimming for two hours! Eventually, my sister gives up and gets into the boat with mom and dad. We all go back to the nasty old trailer and enjoy a large supper. The summer moves on and the story of my lake swim becomes part of my family lore: just another crazy thing part of a ridiculous summer. I return to this place, to stay in another scary old trailer 24 years later. My cousin is getting married. Pearl died a few years ago and the store is closed. There seem to be fewer people living around it. Like many other rural communities, it appears to be dying. We take part in all the usual wedding festivities: a ceremony by the lake, a pig roast, a dance at the hall. People from the community are friendly and I ask me how I am related. When I explain I am related to my cousin, through her dad’s family, one of the women instantly asks “Are you the little girl who swam Fowler Lake?”. The story has become part of the lore of this community as well; perhaps it is not dying as quickly as I first thought. © 2016 ShannonAuthor's Note
Featured Review
Reviews
|
Stats
943 Views
24 Reviews Added on March 18, 2016 Last Updated on July 8, 2016 AuthorShannonCanadaAboutI like to explore the world through the human experience, at once both varied and singular. Reading, writing and meeting people makes one's world larger. I enjoy connecting with people, learning.. more..Writing
|