Blow Up

by
Ash McFadden



A few years after moving to Green Mountain Falls, Colorado, in 1981, I returned to my parents’ home down in Colorado Springs to retrieve a considerable number of storage boxes that I had left with my folks. They wouldn't fit in my cabin, but I'd just bought the Laser Systems laboratory building in Green Mountain Falls and I finally had a place to store them. These boxes were filled with books, course notes, old homework projects, etc. that I had kept. I decided to weed through them while my parents were out of town and eliminate as much junk as I could.

Not having the heart to dump all that hard work into the garbage, I decided to grab a sixpack, settle down in front of the downstairs fireplace and ceremoniously burn five years worth of college memorabilia. I managed to get through about five of the 15-or-so boxes piled around me when I realized I could not possibly sort through each box page-by-page. In the interest of time, I decided to do a cursory scan of the contents to determine if anything "jumped out" as worth saving. Well, box number six appeared to be loaded with Psychology and Logic 101 junk so I took the shortcut and tossed the whole box onto the funeral pyre before me.

I popped open beer number four and watched the box smolder. Raising the can, I gave one last salute to those two unmemorable courses as the box erupted into a roaring inferno.

The papers were consumed rapidly.

So were the ancient contents of the dresser drawer that I had hastily dropped into the bottom of that box when packing years earlier. Dang, I had forgotten all about that stuff. The toothbrush and hairbrush went up rather well...also that packet of disposable plastic razors, dental floss, contact lens case and a bunch of junk I don't even remember. Of course, I didn't even know that stuff was going up in smoke as I sat there. I just chugged the beer and watched it burn. It burned great...right down to that full aerosol can of deodorant that was in there underneath it all.

I had gotten about half the beer down when the deodorant can finally decided it had had enough. What happened next, I can only compare to the scene from "2001" where Dave Bowman is falling through all those lights with that "Ohshit" look on his face. I heard and felt a "Boom!" so loud that my brain only registered it as overpressure, like a sonic boom, not noise. The contents of the fireplace, right down to the last ash, were propelled out with such velocity that all I could see were a multitude of bright streaks emanating from a point about three feet in front of my face (ala 2001). Big blue shock wave knocked me back on my arse. Spill my beer? You bet. Caught me off guard? Heee-- yeah! Felt like I jumped on a live grenade? Guess so. One second I was watching that inferno burn from the outside; the next second I was watching it burn from the inside.

The human brain reverts to "primordial slime mode" when thrown into a situation like this. All higher-order functions vaporize. Guess it's all those endorphins and endomorphines hitting it at once. It took a couple of seconds to get the "reasoning" capability of my brain back online. I jumped up and said, "Ohmygawd! Something's happened!"

Well, Jaysus, how astute of you to notice, Ash!

I looked at my hands and feet, touched my face and realized that I was indeed intact. Holy cow, I was completely untouched! Not even a soot mark on me. Although I might possibly qualify as a human cannon ball, there would be no Richard Pryor impersonation tonight, folks.

I looked through the thick smoke toward the fireplace. What was a 6-inch-deep accumulation of one winter's ashes was now squeaky clean. Blasted it all right out. All those burning embers were now sitting on the deep-pile carpet behind me. All over the room. I grabbed the little shovel from the fireplace set and scooped as fast as I could. As soon as I filled the shovel, I'd run to the fireplace, empty it and run back. Some embers were 30 feet down the goddamned hallway! I guess I set the Guinness World Record for "Hot ember pickup with a little shovel" in those next few minutes. I did manage to avoid setting my folks' house on fire, and the carpet only had one or two really serious melted spots in it. I did find the deodorant can, too; it had left the fireplace at some ungodly-serious velocity, hit the wall at the far end of the room and come to rest directly behind where I was sitting. Dang thing was split wide open along the weld and peeled back almost flat. Burned black, too. Looked like re-entry junk.

After I got the Fire Marshal Bill act under control, I grabbed beer number five, popped the top and thought about how I was gonna get the remaining mess cleaned up. Close examination revealed that everything was coated with a heavy layer of ash. Heck, a vacuum cleaner will get this stuff up - no problem.

Gee, how lucky could I be? I didn't get decapitated, the house was still on its foundation, I got a great story for the grandkids and the cleanup was gonna be a cinch. I grabbed my mom's upright out of the closet and started hoovering.

Now...have you ever had one of those split-seconds of consciousness when you realize you've just survived something really bad, but you sense that it's not quite over yet?

Well, I never have, but I wish to hell I had felt that way at that point. Would have clued me in as to what was about to happen.

There I was, sucking up ashes with an upright vacuum. Too bad not all of them were cold. That upright vacuum swallowed one little bitty hot ember that was sitting there on the carpet. It flew right up inside it and sat on that big ol' pile of carpet lint and dust bunnies, way up in that bag. Hey, that bag hadn't been emptied in a long time. And all that air rushing in there made that little bitty hot ember real happy. Next thing I know, the side of that vacuum is glowing red hot. By the time I figured out what was happening, there was a two-foot flame blowing out a hole in the side of the vacuum tank! It really looked and sounded sorta pretty, like a fighter jet on full zone-five afterburner. Diamond shock pattern and all!

Again, my brain reverted to primordial slime mode. All higher-order functions ceased and all I remember thinking was..."T-h-r-o-w v-a-c-u-u-m".

I pitched it as hard as I could towards the open basement door, hoping it would make it to the sunken patio area outside. The distance was about 20 feet. In slow motion, it looked like one of those old NASA films where the rocket goes psycho right off the launch pad. There it was, sailing brush-end-first with a nice slow roll...and fire belching out the side. As the umbilical pulled out of the wall, the flame settled into a long trail of sparks. The vehicle had plenty of initial velocity and it looked like a good downrange trajectory...right up to the point where it passed through the plate glass window to the right side of the door.

We have a saying in the mountains. Some days you eat the bear; some days, the bear eats you.



©McFadden,2001
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