A Summer's Enterprise
They spent the day in the low places where the creek forgot its name, where mud held the shape of bare feet and the air smelled green and alive. The boys moved slowly, crouched and intent, hands quick as thoughts. Frogs burst from the reeds like small, startled prayers, green, brown, spotted, leaping with the wild confidence of things that believed they could still get away. Each one went into a glass jar, lids punched with nail holes, the boys counting softly as if the numbers themselves might frighten the money into being. Fifty cents each, they said. Enough for comic books. Enough for candy. Enough to make the day worth keeping. By afternoon the jars were warm from the sun and noisy with complaint. The frogs thumped against the glass, slick bellies flashing, throats pulsing as if they were practicing arguments. The boys sat on the back porch steps and imagined a man somewhere, anywhere, who would hand over coins in exchange for living things that jumped. They did the math again and ...