I spent one week every summer at Camp Tapico
for every year I was a Boy Scout
The camp felt like an entire separate country,
or as if the rest of the world had disappeared
and we were the only ones left alive
We traveled in packs
We rode our bikes everywhere
About ten or fifteen feet before we reached any destination,
I would yell, "Dismount!" and we would
swing our bodies over the frame in unison onto the left pedal
and coast to a halt
I felt like a grown up
(or how I imagined one must feel)
and I could mostly come and go as I pleased
One summer, sirens blared out over the camp P.A.
in a shrill and ugly tone with an infinite refrain
that carried for miles and miles
I had never heard that sound before
Our counselors were panicked and told us
to return to our campsites immediately
My friend Nate and I mounted our bikes and sprinted home
as branches fell all around us
It felt like we were the leads in a video game
and we were too caught up in it to understand we were in any real danger
When we got back, everyone was huddled under the mess tent,
except for Nate's brother and his friend,
who were stuck in a rowboat in the middle of Gra** Lake
during the full brunt of the storm
The adults had to hold Nate back from going out after him
as the pair raced across the water like a glacier or a hawk
We watched from the shore and didn't feel the pouring rain
until long after they safely pulled in