My twelfth summer was
notable for many reasons. I participated
in my first accordion festival at a big hotel down near LAX and won several
trophies that became the kind of junk you can never get rid of. I mean, what secondhand shop wants a marble
and gold-plated monument to achievement topped with a metal accordion? Old bowling trophies, yes, but old accordion
awards, not so much. However, when I
wasn’t pumping the squeezebox, I was plowing my way through Edgar Rice Burroughs’ Tarzan novels. And that is
where our story begins.
Tarzan has become a
cultural icon in America, as famous as Superman and the Lone Ranger, although
occasionally he is portrayed as having the speech pattern of the Masked Man’s
faithful Indian companion Tonto. That is
not true to Burroughs’ vision. In the
original, Tarzan was highly gifted both athletically and intellectually. He knew multiple languages, many of them
learned on the fly, and he could also communicate across the animal
kingdom. He was the most famous “noble
savage,” raised by Great Apes after he was orphaned, and upon being
reintroduced into human society, found he preferred the jungle and all its
creatures over homo-sapiens. He loved
swinging through the trees wearing his loincloth and large hunting knife and he
loved his Jane, the only human woman who could tame the savage breast wherein
the savage heart beat.
Tarzan’s creator wrote
for pulp magazines in the early part of the twentieth century. At one point before fame came calling,
Burroughs sold pencil sharpeners, but after Tarzan was published for the first
time as a novel in 1914, he became wealthy and could afford to live the celebrity
life. He bought a ranch out in the San
Fernando Valley sometime between 1915 and 1919, and named it Tarzana. The name stuck, and the community remains at
the western end of Ventura Boulevard.
Burroughs died in 1950 of a heart attack.
So there I was that
summer of 1975, reading my way through Tarzan’s adventures mostly at night
after my parents and siblings were asleep.
The small house was just too hot.
My parents had an old refrigerated air conditioner in their window, so
they cranked that on and closed the bedroom door to keep the cold air in while
the rest of us sweltered. I lay up in my
top bunk bed reading away and sweating off the pounds while Tarzan swung through
the trees in my head.
It was on one such hot
night that I had enough of reading about Tarzan and wanted to become
Tarzan. I waited until everyone was asleep,
and then I dressed in my corduroy shorts and strapped on my Dad’s hunting
knife. I thought about going barefoot in
true Tarzan fashion, but I’d seen the Ron Ely Tarzan on television reruns wearing
sandals, so I modified my Tarzan footwear to tennis shoes without socks. I stealthily crept through the hot house and
eased the deadbolt open on the backdoor.
Suddenly, I was out in the night as Tarzan.
I climbed up on our cinder block wall to stare at the nearly full moon. The Great Dane next door leaped out of the
darkness and I was forced to jump backward off the wall into nothingness, but I
landed on my feet. Tarzan had faced his
first lion. The Dane slunk back into the
night. I ran down the side of the house
and out onto the quiet residential street.
Nothing stirred, but mockingbirds sang in the trees, a regular southern
California chorus at night. I ran with
speed and agility across the shadowy lawns of suburbia, ducking around cars and
trucks parked on the still steaming asphalt, feeling the heat rise up in my
face. I slid between two houses farther
down the block and ventured into their backyards. A leopard launched itself over the wall, deciding
not to challenge me. I heard his meow
plaintively calling under the house. I
leapt over into the next block and crouched stock-still in the owner’s vegetable
garden. I had moved toward the house
when suddenly, I was bathed in light: motion-activated
floodlights. I ran like quicksilver and
vaulted the next wall and landed in some thick shrubbery. My chest was heaving as I clutched the hilt
of the knife on my belt. I was about to
move when a light snapped on in the house.
I sprinted down the side of the house and out onto the much busier
street in the next block. Here there
were cars and people, and I considered them big game hunters who must be
avoided at all costs.
I ran down three
houses and cut through another backyard to jump over a wall and land in rose
bushes that cut and scratched my legs. I
untangled myself and crept out onto my street again, although now I was a good
block away from my house. I had enough
of a taste of the life of Tarzan to know what it was like, so I decided to walk
home and go back to my reading. I had
walked about half the distance when a car turned onto my street up ahead of me,
right near my own driveway. I jetted
into the bushes and huddled down, waiting.
The car came to a stop about four houses away, and I saw a spotlight
illuminate the bushes in the front yards on the opposite side of the
street. The car was slowly rolling
toward me, and the occupants were methodically shining the spotlight first on
one side of the street and then on the other.
I frantically looked for a way to escape. The car was close enough now that I could see
the distinctive light bar on the roof and the black and white color scheme. The cops were also now close enough that if I
ran, they would easily spot the movement in their headlights or with the roving
spotlight.
I threw myself down
under the shrubbery on the cool earth and tried to make my body as flat as
possible. I could hear the hum of the
car’s engine and the crackling of the police radio. They were almost on me. The radio crackled, and I heard someone say, “Let’s
go,” and the police car accelerated down the street and squealed around the
corner. I jumped up and sprinted down
the sidewalk, through my gate to the unlocked door of my house. But something seized me, and a surge of
Tarzan-like courage flooded my veins. I
turned to the moon, cupped my hands around my mouth, and gave my best Tarzan
yodel-yell into the night. Smiling, I
crept into the house and bolted the door.
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