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A YOUNG MAN REACHING THE AGE OF EIGHTEEN PROVES TO EVERYONE THAT HE KNOWS WHAT HE WANTS. |
The Bicyclist By Frederick J. Morales Charlie was young then, when all that was wrong with the world was being ignored by the prettiest girl he had ever seen. He could not explain how his heart just went pitter-patter every time she said hello in the high school lunchroom. How was he ever to get her off his mind to do his homework and pay attention in class, pass the final exams and graduate in June with the rest of the class of 1966? He was to turn seventeen in December and it was only the last week in October, which presented another problem, Lorraine was only interested in seventeen year-old high school seniors that could drive a car. They had already passed drivers education and could keep her interested by driving her home after school. That was exactly what was wrong with the world. Charlie had no choice but to be sixteen and train for the New York State Bicycling Championship, no choice at all! Charlie loved bicycling, that is what he has always talked about since we were ten. One day shortly after his sixteenth birthday he was in the garage cleaning his ten speed when all of the sudden he dashed out of the garage and came over to my house. He said he could not get Lori off his mind so he had come up with a master plan to get her to ome to her window so he could apologize for wetting her with the hose as she walked her dog when we were thirteen and tell her he has always been in love with her and to please feel the same way about him. My girl friend Cathy and I were watching TV when she heard the plan. She reached for the telephone and called Lori and told her as Charlie and I got on our bikes and went to Lori's house. It was about ten o'clock at night and Lori was waiting outside. Lori told Charlie she loved living just a block away and that she could not stop thinking of Charlie. Lori had finally faced it and was going over Charlie's house. I fell off my bike standing still and laughing very hard. Lori and Charlie hugged for the very first time as I just got on my bike and went home. Those last few months of high school went by very slowly. Lori and Charlie and Cathy and I just stayed home a lot and studied very hard to pass the final exams and graduate from Douglaston High. We had a lot of fun at the prom but Charlie was upset about something. We had a little argument until he told me the reason he has to deliver the Long Island Press is to save money on what he made on tips at Saturday collections after throwing papers at doors from his bike, the same thing he has done since he was fourteen. "I still have not made enough to beat my dad. He and I made a bet, If I can save or win twenty-five thousand dollars he would let me go to college and become a mechanical engineer and not a medical doctor like him." The first prize from the annual 100 mile bicycle race from Central Park to Albany, New York is fifty thousand dollars and I have been getting ready for it all my life!" Charlie said. I had plans to study journalism and become a great writer of books and short stories. I thought "what a story this would make." I told Charlie since we were best friends I would do what ever I could to help him win fifty thousand dollars, two months later we were ready. Charlie had drawn a picture of a new kind of sprocket in drafting class before we graduated and his dad sent it off and had it made. The back wheel of his ten-speed now had six sprockets instead of five like normal bikes. Charlie explained that the biggest problem he had was hill climbing and according to mechanical engineering the number six sprocket, the largest one of all would make pedaling up the hill easier. The day of the big race had finally come, at two in the morning I drove Charlie, Lori and his customized bike to Central Park in my van for the start of the race, then to Albany. Lori and I planned to help Charlie on a few pit stops then drive to the New York State University parking lot near the main gate to pick up Charlie. Lori and I were well on our way to Albany at eight o'clock when the race started. Charlie qualified to start in the tenth place. We had no idea what was going on in the race until we got to Albany. We parked the spare parts van where all the others were and went to the side-lines to get a good view of all the bicyclists to speed by sometime this evening. At eight o'clock that night someone yelled, "Here they come!" It was already dark and I could barely see the one rider ahead of everyone and he had the number ten on his shirt, it was Charlie! The End. |