The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.2004, Síða 36

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.2004, Síða 36
34 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Vol. 59 #1 forgive each other, forget about the pranks, and stop trying to get revenge on one another. I think the main reason that she succeeded in getting us to agree to this was that by that point everyone was tired of arguing. Late that night, after my father had dri- ven me around the neighbourhood to deliver my papers, I lay awake in the room 1 shared with Tammi. My sister was a sound sleeper, and unfortunately in her case it meant that when she slept she sounded like a chainsaw. I sat up in my bed, looking out the window as the stars twinkled in the deep, dark sky. I was star- tled out of my reverie when something flew up against the glass. I jumped back against my pillow, then hid under my quilt and tried to disguise myself as an empty bed. When I at last dared to peep out from underneath the covers, I saw that it was only a raven, which flew away as soon as I poked my head out. I went to the window to see whether it had built a nest under our eavestrough, but once at the sill, my atten- tion was diverted by a black shape approaching our house over the snow. Someone was coming to pay us a visit. I knew that we were not expecting anyone; we had only ever had one visitor in the middle of the night (and anyway, that is another story). Whoever it was walked over to the the telephone pole which our icicle-covered phone line was connected to. I immediately went to wake my parents up. They were somewhat less than overjoyed to be disturbed after such a stressful evening, but when I told them that we were possibly in danger of being burgled (a verb I had never had the opportunity to use before), they quickly woke up. My father had barely slipped into his housecoat when we heard the back door quietly unlock and then creak open. My mother quickly grabbed the phone to call the police, grip- ping my arm so that I would be unable to follow my father, who was already creep- ing downstairs with a baseball bat. The phone was dead. A few tense moments later, we heard the sounds of a scuffle, a yell, and an odd clang as if something had been dropped on our kitchen floor. This woke the rest of the family up (even Tammi) and we rushed downstairs to help my father, Brian rush- ing past us, eager to prove something to someone. What we found shocked us all. It was Mr. Larson. My father had put his years on the wrestling team in university to good use and had our neighbour pinned on our kitchen floor. There was an odd smell in the room, and we saw an open gasoline can lying prone in the corner. Next to it was a lighter. Brian helped my father keep Mr. Larson where he was as my father ques- tioned him as to what exactly he had been intending to do, and our neighbour-cum- arsonist began a particularly eloquent story which he assured us would explain every- thing. He was cut short however, by the sound of hoofbeats on our driveway. I noticed that Mr. Larson's face turned pale at that. There was a polite knock at the door and Lisa ushered in a Mounted Police offi- cer, who explained as he doffed his wide- brimmed hat that he had been out for a late night ride from the ranch when he noticed someone tampering with our phone line, so he had ridden cross-country to see if we needed any assistance. I was bit disappoint- ed that the officer was wearing a dull- coloured uniform rather than the bright red ones I had seen in pictures, but nevertheless there he was a real Mountie in our kitchen. (My mother told me later that they only wear red for special occasions.) He hand- cuffed Mr. Larson, asked us a few ques- tions, and thanked us for helping him do his job. He said that he had actually been looking for this man for some time, who, it turned out, had been living in our neigh- bourhood under a false name. I supposed that there were a number of warrants out for his arrest. The officer apologized for having disturbed us and escorted Mr. Larson, who now looked very unhappy indeed, out the door. When we heard the hoofbeats again as the officer left, I went to the door to wave goodbye; however, he was already gone. I noticed then that the officer couldn't have been alone, as there seemed to be two sets of hoofprints on our driveway in single file. That had certainly been enough excite-

x

The Icelandic Canadian

Beinleiðis leinki

Hvis du vil linke til denne avis/magasin, skal du bruge disse links:

Link til denne avis/magasin: The Icelandic Canadian
https://timarit.is/publication/1976

Link til dette eksemplar:

Link til denne side:

Link til denne artikel:

Venligst ikke link direkte til billeder eller PDfs på Timarit.is, da sådanne webadresser kan ændres uden advarsel. Brug venligst de angivne webadresser for at linke til sitet.