Writers Tricks of the Trade Issue 2 Volume 8 | Page 11

L IFE S TORIES BY K EITH B ETTINGER W HY I B ECAME A C OP When I was growing up back in the early 1950s, my mother and I lived with her parents, my grandparents. My uncle was my hero because he was a fireman in the volunteer fire department. L ike many a young child I too lis- tened for the sirens and clanging bells of fire trucks. I wanted to be just like my uncle; racing out of the house as the fire siren sounded,calling all the firemen to the firehouse. Once there, they boarded the fire trucks; pumpers, the hook and ladder truck and even the light truck equipped with giant flood lights. From the fire house they raced to the sce- ne of the fire with a cacophony of sirens, bells, horns and flashing lights. In order to be like my uncle, I always wanted to go to the firehouse with him. As soon as the fire siren sounded, I locked the house door with the skeleton key that secured it. My uncle would holler, “Open the door! Give me the key!” I wouldn’t take the key from its hiding place until my mother had me dressed, and ready to ride to the firehouse with him. To this day I still wonder why he didn’t reach into the china closet drawer, the same drawer where I always hid the key. Better yet; why didn’t he get a dupli- cate skeleton key of his own? I mean se- curing the door with a skeleton key wasn’t high tech. We weren’t securing Fort Knox. Back then, it was pretty much one skeleton key fit all skeleton locks. S UMMER 2018 We hurriedly drove to the firehouse and he would run to get on a fire truck and tell me “Stay out of the way!” While he was gone I waited patiently in the fire- house for his return. If the fire was a ma- jor conflagration, my grandfather eventu- ally drove to the firehouse and picked me up. Best part of that was sometimes my grandfather took me to the scene of the fire to watch the battle between heroes and flames. My uncle and my grandfather owned a furniture moving business and had a cou- ple moving vans as well as a pickup truck. The pickup truck was used for small jobs, running errands or it simply took the place of the car when the car wasn’t avail- able. The pickup truck had a green body and a red cab – it was halfway to being a fire truck. Just behind the cab on either side of the truck were running boards. The running boards offered a great place to stand just like a fireman on a hook and ladder truck. Many a day I played fireman hanging on the side of the pickup while it was parked in the driveway. My grandfather was a wonderful play- mate and co-conspirator. He did nothing to stifle my imagination or curiosity. He knew how much I wanted to be a fireman. P AGE 6 W RITERS ’ T RICKS OF THE T RADE