The Boy Who Could Fly Without a Motor
Luckily, he had de-levitated before his parents came running into the room, to find him sprawled on top of the dresser.
"What in the world is going on?" his father shouted, eyes heavy with sleep.
"I must have had a bad dream," said Jon. Another white lie.
"You certainly did," said his mother. "Are you hurt?"
"No," Jon said, but his head throbbed.
"How did you get on top of the dresser?" she asked.
"I don't know," Jon replied, telling his fourth He in two days.
NINE
THE NEXT DAY, AFTER HIS LESSONS, JON stretched out on the cove sand and practiced levitating. Sometimes he rose several inches above the ground, but he didn't dare try to move around. Mostly he did a lot of thinking. He knew he'd have to learn to time himself and to turn at the proper minute or else he'd crash into things.
Once, his father came halfway down the path and shouted, "What are you doing, Jon?"
"Oh, nothing," Jon answered. Another time his mother came down and almost caught him afloat. He was two inches off the sand when she called, "Lunch!"
He descended in a hurry, thinking it was a good thing she hadn't sneaked up on him. How would he explain without telling his parents about Ling Wu and risking having his toes nailed to a shark's back?
The trouble with Clementine was that there was no place to experiment with body flying aside from in his room. Most every square foot of the cove could be seen from the bluff, and the top of the dock was as open as a prairie.
That night Jon listened to the radio with his parents, but his mind wasn't on the Grand Ole Opry. He could think only of getting to his room and on top of his bed. Or on the floor, or anywhere. Maybe he didn't even have to lie down. Maybe he could levitate while he was on his feet. Jon couldn't wait to try. Finally, at eight-thirty, he said good night to his parents, put on his pajamas, said his prayers, and got into bed.
He tossed restlessly for an hour, until he heard his Ether's snores. His mother usually fell asleep first, so Jon figured they were both settled for the night.
Jon concentrated and slowly rose. Timing his turns, he carefully moved himself out from over the bed, having learned a severe lesson the night before. Soon he was floating around the room, corner to corner—turning, rolling, and moving up and down. He flew with his hands out in front of him, and down by his sides. He clasped them behind his neck. He put them under his chin, laughing at himself. Ling Wu was right. He'd never be lonely again. He could go anywhere.
Humming softly, Jon flew around his room for almost an hour and then guided himself back over the bed and gently lowered his body to the mattress. His brain did feel a bit tired from all the lifting, but not overly so. In feet, Jon felt quite good.
Smacks had given up watching the performances. As long as his master didn't crash, he was content to sleep.
Resting, Jon looked out the window and asked himself)Do I dare? There didn't seem to be much wind outside. Nothing like the nights when it attacked Clementine with howling force. It wasn't too chilly, either. He looked at the window for a long, long time and then nodded to himself.
Rise, Jon, he commanded silently, and came off the bed, taking a flight line for the open window. There were no mosquitoes or flies on Clementine, so none of the windows were screened. He went through as easily as a pigeon winging under an arch.
The night breeze flapped the legs of his pajamas and ruffled his hair as he circled over the grassy top of Clementine, keeping low at first, about four feet off the ground, then gaining altitude to ten. Jon couldn't help but grin wildly. He'd never felt so happy. He rolled over on his back to look at the stars and then looked out across Three Fathom Shoal and Persiphone Reef, where white water broke over the rocks.I'm the luckiest boy in the world, he thought, and wished he could thank Ling Wu for this best of all gifts.
Clementine's light beam, sweeping around as usual, was too high to capture the pajama-clad figure as it did patterns over the grass and skimmed along the edges of the cliffs that plummeted to the jagged rocks and sea foam below.
Then Jon had an idea.One brief flight around the top of the light. He rose and rose and rose, and finally circled the lighthouse at 160 feet. The beam passed beneath him, then he went through it in a swan dive. He couldn't stop a laugh. If only his father and mother could see him. And Eunice Jones. They'd be speechless.
"When he felt himself getting tired and cold, he glided down, slipping through the window as if all windows were made for small levitating boys.
Exhausted but happy, Jon Jeffers went to sleep, thinking about the next night, and the night after that, and the night after that. There was no reason at all not to put on warm clothing and take a float out over the ocean, see what was happening on old Persiphone, maybe even go the other direction, toward the lights of San Francisco.
TEN
OVER BREAKFAST THE NEXT MORNING, Jon's father asked, "No bad dreams last night, huh?"
Jon shook his head but found it difficult to look into his father's eyes. He felt guilty. He couldn't tell his parents about flying all over Clementine last night. He would never ever be able to tell them or anyone else. Keeping the secret was almost more than he could bear. Of course, dragon's bile and flaming straw in his nose would result if he didn't keep his word. It was time to polish the lighthouse's windows and lenses. Even as high as the light tower was, salt spray, blown by the wind, coated the windows that protected the lenses in the old lantern room, so they had to be cleaned every second day. Using white toweling, Jon would rub the lower halves, his Ether the uppers.
About nine o'clock, they started up the winding ladder that ran through the lighthouse's interior for the first 140 feet, then around the exterior of the tower for the last twenty. It was on the exterior part that Jon first floated a few steps.
Bosun Jeffers, directly behind Jon, stopped. His laugh was puzzled. "I must be seeing things, Jon, but it looked like you just floated." Jon felt panic. He hadn't intended to levitate. He hadn't directed his body to levitate.
"I kind of skipped," he replied. What had happened?
"On these steps, that's very dangerous."
"I won't do it again." Could his levitation get out of control? Ling Wu hadn't mentioned that possibility. And he certainly would have warned him.
Though maybe not.
Jon's father nodded, but his frown didn't go away. He shook his head. "That didn't look like a skip to me."
They went on up, and Jon reminded himself to be more careful in the future. But he hadn't been daydreaming as they climbed. The floating had surprised him as much as it had surprised his father. He was certain he hadn't told himself to float. Maybe his brain was having so much fun with levitation that it was taking control. That was a scary thought. He remembered Ling Wu cautioning him about something. "What was it?
Perhaps he should try to contact Ling "Wu and ask him what to do. He had no intention of stopping this wonderful, miraculous, sensational, extraordinary, supernatural use of his brain cells. But at the same time, he had to be able to control them.
THAT NIGHT, AT about ten-thirty, when the Jeffers were sleeping peacefully, Jon pulled on his jeans, a heavy wool shirt, and shoes. Then he put on his warmest jacket and his red wool cap. He said good-bye to Smacks and levitated several feet, straightened out, and passed through the window, crossing over the cove, heading for Persiphone Reef and Three Fathom Shoal.
Staying about thirty feet above the wave tops, he gazed about him and wondered how fist he was moving. Maybe ten miles an hour, maybe fifteen. The ocean was a mass of dark waves, broken here and there by patches of yellow silver as rollers crested. Now and then Jon could see trails of phosphorus as fish darted beneath the surface.
Most of his brain, almost all of it, was committed to levitation, but a few million stubborn cells lingered to worry about flight control. Was he his own pilot? His own navigator? But he soon pushed aside those uncomfortable questions and let the excitement of body flying, the pure joy of it, of be
ing an eagle or a hawk, express itself with a shout: "Wow!"
It took just a few minutes to reach Persiphone, which was a long narrow shelf of coral a few thousand yards from Clementine, washed almost constantly by the ocean. He hovered a moment but saw nothing of interest. No ghosts down there.
Onward to Three Fathom Shoal, a quarter-mile north. Water boiled over the hidden, dangerous ledges capable of slicing a ship's bottom. Then he spotted a bobbing light farther out.
Positive it was a ship, Jon could not resist the temptation to investigate. It didn't seem too far away. But distances at sea, particularly at night, are often tricky, and the bobbing light was probably another mile west of the shoal.
Pressing on, watching as fish knifed below him, Jon was not aware that behind him the friendly light of Clementine was growing fainter. Nor was he aware that he was moving with a strong breeze.
Once, he almost collided with a gull that was beating its way south. Screeching angrily, the gull swerved off, a look of wide surprise in its eyes. Jon reminded himself to be more careful while navigating the night skies.
Closer, the bobbing light revealed a fishing boat with its nets out. Men were working on the lighted deck. Jon had never had an aerial view of a trawler and found it very interesting. In feet, it was so interesting that before he knew it, the strong breeze had carried him to within a few inches of the mast and, as he passed over the boat, had blown off his red cap.
"Good lord, what was that?" came a shout from the deck.
There were more shouts, and Jon knew he'd made a terrible mistake. Suddenly, a spotlight caught him. He saw the feces of a half dozen openmouthed fishermen as he skimmed into the dark on the opposite side of the boat. Ling Wu had said that people weren't accustomed to seeing other people levitate.
Isn't that the truth, Jon thought.
ELEVEN
JON MADE A WIDE CIRCLE AWAY FROM the boat and then headed back for Clementine, having learned that you just don't go about startling fishermen by floating across their mast in blue-black darkness.
Clementine Light was still strong but much farther away than Jon had thought. Suddenly, he realized the offshore wind that had helped push him to Persiphone and Three Fathom was now strong in his face, holding him back. He kept his nose straight into it and pushed on, knowing he'd be very weary by the time he reached the red cottage.
After an hour Clementine was still a half mile away, and Jon was nearly exhausted. He told his brain to add another two million cells to the job. As he gradually slipped from thirty feet down to ten, spray from the wave tops peppered his face. His hands felt almost frozen and his feet were numb. Every muscle and bone ached. He was wishing he'd never even thought about body flying.
Why, oh why, had he gone out so far? He thought of his warm, dry bed and his parents. If his brain cells suddenly failed, Jon would splash into the cold ocean and never be seen again. The breeze caught his tears and flung them behind him. With no one to hear, it wouldn't do any good to yell for help.
Near midnight Jon used his last ounce of energy to lift himself to the top of Clementine and glide down into the grass. He lay still for a moment, panting, but then finally got up and staggered toward the red cottage. He barely had the strength to climb into the window and crawl onto his bed.
Smacks almost wagged his tail off at the sight of his friend.
In the morning Jon's mother found him sprawled fully dressed on the yellow pelican spread, sleeping soundly. She left shaking her head.
TWELVE
JON WAS IN DEEP TROUBLE. OVER THE past three days, he'd levitated several times without calling on a single cell. There was no pattern to it, and he'd had to quickly anchor himself before his parents noticed. The only long-range solution to his problem was to again use telepathy to contact Ling Wu and beg for help.
The immediate problem was to stop his brain cells from acting on their own. He spent almost an hour thinking about it and then remembered reading an article in Popular Science about deep-sea diving. Lead weights were used to pull divers down into the depths. So why not substitute small rocks for weights? Jon decided to try it.
Just before lunch Jon's father tapped him on the shoulder, and Jon suddenly came off the floor about two inches, the stones in his pants pockets rattling.
Perplexed once more, Bosun Jeffers asked, "How did you do that?"
"I just jumped," Jon said nervously, realizing he'd have to add a few more rocks as soon as possible. But people did jump when startled.
"That was a funny jump. I could swear you just went up into the air. Please do it again."
Jon's mother was looking on, frowning.
Hoping he wouldn't go up all the way to the ceiling and bump his head, Jon gave his toes a slight tap and rose six or seven inches.
"That's amazing!" his father exclaimed. "How did you learn to do that? I've never seen such a thing."
His mother said, "Jon, do you have gas in your stomach?"
Jon's face was as red as Ling Wu's gown. "It's easy. I just jump."
As they all sat down, Jon noticed that his parents were staring suspiciously at him. Worse, every time he moved, the stones rattled. Finally, his father looked all around the room for the source of the noise, and Jon confessed, "I picked up some rocks at the cove."
"Oh," his father said, clearing his throat and glancing at Jon's mother, a troubled look on his face. His mother's face mirrored the look. Did their nine-year-old son have a sudden physical problem of some kind? Jon was acting like he had a balloon inside him. Was it muscular? Something in his nervous system? Had a spirit invaded his body?
After lunch Jon got up very carefully. One thing was certain: He needed more anchoring weight. A few steps away from the door, probably because of all the bobbing stress and strain in the kitchen, Jon got the hiccoughs. Every time he went, "Eeglup," he rose several inches into the air.
Mrs. Jeffers called Bosun Jeffers over, and they watched in despair as their small son went across the green grass like a frog.
"Ee-glup." And hop.
"Ee-glup." And hop.
"Ee-glup." And hop.
Mrs. Jeffers said with determination, "Just as soon as that supply boat comes in, I'm taking him to the mainland and the hospital."
"Absolutely." Bosun Jeffers nodded.
Jon went back down to the cove and added three more stones to each pocket, then returned to the red cottage at the foot of the lighthouse and said he was going to take a nap. A long afternoon of emergency telepathy was ahead, to try to reach Ling Wu, a ghost Jon now wished he'd never met.
"That does it," Jon's mother said to Bosun Jeffers. "Jon hasn't volunteered to take a nap in five years." As Jon walked out of the kitchen, a final massive hiccough grabbed him. He went, "Eeglup," and his heels rose three inches despite the added stones.
Mrs. Jeffers began to weep.
Later that same day, there was some unusual excitement. A squadron of Army Air Corps fighter planes flew back and forth to the west of Clementine, about two miles out.
Rocks in his pockets, Jon went up the ladders to the top of the lighthouse and used his father's telescope to watch. The planes were Curtiss-Wright P-36s with Pratt and Whitney Twin Wasp engines. He wondered what they were doing.
THIRTEEN
THE NEXT DAY, WHILE UP ON THE TOWER platform, looking through the telescope at a tanker headed south, Jon spotted a small white boat moving toward Clementine. He focused in on it, and saw that it was Coast Guard, with three or four people aboard. Aside from when the steam supply-tug came,the only time an official boat visited the rock was for the annual lighthouse inspection.
There was chop, and the boat bounced through the whitecaps. Jon and Smacks quickly descended the ladders and steps. Jon's father was in the kitchen, busily making his monthly nonfood, maintenance needs list, which included oil for the diesel and other items.
"Dad, there's a Coast Guard boat approaching," said Jon. His father put down his pencil.
They went down to the cove, Sma
cks romping ahead, wagging his tail furiously. Visitors were always welcome.
The boat held three officers as well as a civilian and a two-sailor crew. The officers and civilian climbed out as the sailors tied the boat to the dock.
The Coast Guard lieutenant introduced himself and then the other two officers and the civilian. The major was from Army Intelligence, the lieutenant commander was from Naval Intelligence, and the civilian was an agent with the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Jon had never seen an agent, but he'd often listened to the FBI show on the radio. Now here was a real one.
Jon saw the frown and puzzled look on his dad's face. What in the world did these intelligence folks want on remote Clementine Rock? Jon felt the same way.
The lieutenant said, "Boats, could we have a chat?"
Jon's father said, "Sure. Let's go up to the kitchen. We'll have some coffee." He led the way, with Jon and Smacks following the group.
Jon wished he could talk to the FBI agent and ask him if he'd ever been in a gun battle with bootleggers.
They all sat down around the old oak table while Mrs. Jeffers made coffee and asked if they wanted a piece of the apple pie she'd just baked. If the men turned it down, Jon thought, they were fools. Just breathing the smell of his mother's pies was a treat.
The lieutenant commander smiled at her and said, "Certainly. Thank you." He then said, "Tuesday night there was a trawler fishing about three quarters of a mile, perhaps a mile, off Three Fathom Shoal at approximately eleven o'clock. What I'm going to tell you now must remain top secret..."
Jon's mouth hung open and his heart did cartwheels.
"A flying object passed over this boat, circled it, and then disappeared into the darkness. Six of the eight crew members saw it, so it was not a figment of their imaginations. And it was not a big bird. You may laugh at what I will tell you next: The flying object was human and did not have wings or a motor."