Winterset, Iowa is a small town thirty seven miles southwest of Des Moines. Mary Ann McCree was born and grew up there. After graduating from high school she took a secretarial course so that she could learn shorthand. Her typing was excellent, and she felt with the addition of shorthand she could find a job easily.
The soldiers had returned from the war and businesses were expanding rapidly. Mary Ann had an older sister named Beatrice who had married Silas Greenfield, a soldier stationed at Fort Des Moines, just before Japan had surrendered. He’d been reassigned to Fort Bragg in North Carolina and Beatriz had followed him and set up housekeeping for them in Fayetteville.
Living at home meant Mary Ann could contribute to the household budget, making things easier for her father. She got a job in a real-estate firm and was happy with her life. She went out with a boy she’d known since ninth grade and who had bought a 1942 Ford Coupe, but the romance wasn’t a serious one.
In late spring of 1947, she began to have what her mother called “ladies’ problems”. They didn’t talk about it when her father was around, but her mother decided she should go to Des Moines to see a doctor there. Mrs. McCree called their family doctor and discretely told him a female relative who had recently moved to Des Moines from Chicago needed to see a doctor and asked if he could recommend one.
Mary Ann took off work on a Thursday and bordered a Greyhound bus early that morning. She saw the doctor and he assured her that she had only a minor problem and gave her a prescription for a new medicine developed during the war.
Relieved, she left the doctor’s office at noon and went to J. J. Newberry’s five-and-dime store to have lunch. She found an empty stool at the lunch counter and sat down. She ordered a grilled cheese sandwich and a Hires root beer.
Before finishing her sandwich a nice-looking man named Alvin Mitchell took the stool next to hers. Young Mr. Mitchell had just gotten his law degree and was pleased with the world. He ordered a hamburger and a strawberry milkshake. While waiting he pulled his newspaper from his coat pocket and folded it so he could lay it on the counter and read it without annoying his neighbor,
Mary Ann finished her sandwich and opened her purse to retrieve her billfold from its interior. She didn’t notice that the curved bamboo handle of her purse had dropped so that it surrounded her unfinished glass of root beer.
When she snapped her purse closed the handle upset the glass spilling the root beer onto Alvin Mitchell’s Des Moines Register, soaking it through. Fortunately, the newspaper prevented the soda from running off the counter and onto Alvin Mitchell’s lap.
Mary Ann apologized over and over with the words tumbling out in a jumbled rush. Her embarrassment turned her complexion a bright pink, highlighting her pale blue eyes. Alvin kept trying to interrupt her to assure her it was no problem. He said he’d read almost all the paper: at least the important news of the day. He pointed out that neither of them had gotten splattered.
He offered to buy her a fresh glass of root beer. At that, she stopped talking and looked at him as if she was seeing him for the first time. Then she burst out laughing at the ridiculous offer.
Then she began saying she’d pay for his lunch, but he shushed her. They went to the cash register together and each paid for their own lunch. He walked with her to the Greyhound station and sat with her while waiting for her bus. He asked if he could see her again. He said he'd happily come to Winterset if she would go out to dinner with him, or maybe to a movie, or perhaps both.
She gave him her telephone number and her address but made no commitments. A week later he rang her and asked if he could come to see her on Saturday. She’d told her Mom and Dad the whole story about the spilled drink and the nice young man she’d almost dunked. Mom said she could invite him to dinner on Saturday so that they could meet him.
On the Saturday following their dinner with her folks, he returned to Winterset and took her to see Winterset’s hometown hero John Wayne’s latest movie, “The Wake of the Red Witch.”
No more than two weeks would pass before he made another trek to Winterset, and that became the norm. On Thanksgiving, after dinner had been eaten and the table cleared, they sat on the porch swing, bundled against the chill, and he proposed to her. She accepted and rushed into the kitchen to tell her mom. Dad came in from listening to the football game on the radio to find out what all the yelling was about and said he wasn’t sure at all that this was a good idea.
Yes, Alvin was a nice, stable young man, but he didn’t yet have a steady income. He couldn’t support a wife. And if she moved so far away to Des Moines how could they keep in touch? All were arguments which took the luster away from the exciting news.
Alvin assured Mr. McCree he’d be more than glad to move to Winterset and open a law office there. He was sure that there was enough business with the fast-growing economy that he would have no trouble getting a toehold.
He pointed out they weren’t planning to marry at once, and so everyone agreed that if he was doing well by maybe April or May they would make final plans for the wedding. Mrs. McCree wistfully said that perhaps Mary Ann could be a traditional June bride.
And that is what came to pass. And true to his predictions, Alvin’s law business prospered. A little less than two years after the wedding, in April of 1951, Travis Mitchell was born.
He was a bright, inquisitive child with an active imagination. He began reading before he entered the first grade. The only concern Alvin and Mary Ann had was that he was content to spend a great deal of time alone. He would disappear for hours and if they went looking for him he might be found under a table or behind the sofa or up in the Johnathan apple tree, deep into a favorite book.
He would spend long hours looking out a window or lying in bed watching the shadowy patterns the lace curtains cast on the ceiling as the breeze coming through the window lazily moved them.
They found that their worrying if he was getting into mischief was needless and eventually stopped trying to find him. He would usually respond if called several times, or when he grew hungry enough that he couldn’t ignore it.
At some point when he approached his teenage years, he began writing in spiral notebooks. His mom assumed he was keeping a diary, and bought him a proper one with the word Diary scrawled across the front in cursive script.
But he didn’t use it. What he’d done for years was take characters from the books he read and invent his own stories for them, taking them on adventures far beyond what their creators had imagined for them. The authors often would never have recognized them as their own creations.
The stories took Travis out of his small, confined world. By the time he was fifteen he’d never been to Des Moines, let alone Cedar Rapids or Dubuque or Sioux City. He knew of these cities, but he wasn’t curious about them. They were no challenge to his imagination.
In two months before his sixteenth birthday, they received a phone call from his uncle Silas letting them know that his aunt Beatrice, whom he’d never met, had contracted a liver disease called hepatitis but was getting better. She needed bed rest and it would be a slow process but he was hopeful she would fully recover with time. He said he’d keep them informed of her progress.
Every couple of weeks, if she hadn’t heard from Silas, Mary Ann would call him. By the end of May, it appeared that Beatrice wasn’t improving as quickly as they hoped, and Silas was having trouble paying for someone to watch over her. His business was faltering because his attention was elsewhere and he didn’t see how he could take time off to care for her.
Mary Ann fretted over the bad news and each day her concern grew. Alvin decided something had to be done. He sat his wife down and told her his ideas. A week later he’d made all the arrangements and early one morning he loaded suitcases and a box of Travis’ favorite books into the trunk of their new Mercury Montego. Mary Ann locked up the house and they stopped to leave the keys with her mom and kiss her goodbye.
It was a long drive to Davenport, but that was only their first stop. They continued on to Indianapolis stopping there for the night. Travis had dozed off, but the next morning, when he learned the name of this town, ideas swirled through his head.
The trip continued and missed roads and confusing directions caused them to spend another night on the road. They pulled up in front of the Greenfield’s house late in the afternoon on the third day. Silas came out to greet them and help carry the suitcases into the house.
Beatrice had insisted on getting up and putting on a robe, but she couldn’t come down the stairs, so she greeted them in her room. Travis was shy but the adults were quickly deep in conversation centering around Beatrice’s health and their trip.
Mary Ann took command of the kitchen and Alvin and Silas carried a couple of small tables and several chairs up the stairs so they could dine with Beatrice. The companionship gave her a right to smile and she seemed to improve remarkably.
The next morning Alvin went downtown to talk with a real estate agent he’d contacted the week before. He finalized the rental of a house on one of the barrier islands called Bald Head.
They spent one more night in Fayetteville. The next day was Sunday and Silas’ store was closed. They all got in the car and drove south to Southport where they boarded the short ferry ride to the island marina. There they took a tram which carried them to their summer rental.
It was a small, white, three-bedroom house with a porch that wrapped around two sides. The backyard was surrounded by a tall privacy fence. There were two red maple trees which provided deep shade. A hammock had been strung up between the maples.
They decided to set the formal dining room up as a bedroom for Beatrice so that she would be a part of the daily activities instead of being isolated on the second floor.
Travis was anxious to go to the beach. His dad and uncle walked with him, or rather they walked while he ran. They wended their way through the sand dunes topped with sea oats swaying in the breeze. They came out onto the beach and Travis stopped, stunned. The sky was a silvery blue and went on forever until it became one with the sea. The beach was wide and sparkled under the brilliant sun.
Travis pulled off his shoes and ran to the water, his father and uncle calling out to him to be careful. He stopped when the water swirled up onto the beach and covered his feet. He turned and looked at his dad and laughed.
“Listen,” his dad said. “I know you’ll want to, but you must promise me you won’t go into the water unless there is someone here with you.”
Travis simply said, “Okay.”
“No, listen to me. I’m serious.”
Travis looked at his dad.
“We’re not going to be here. The ocean can be dangerous. You’ll want to go swimming, and you should, but only when there’s another person with you. That means there will be many days when you can’t.”
Silas spoke. “Listen to your dad, Travis. He knows what he’s talking about.”
Travis walked back to where he’d left his shoes, but his feet were covered with sand, so the carried them in his hand. They returned to the house. Alvin and Silas checked with their wives that everything was okay and then returned to the ferry. Alvin had a long drive ahead of him.
Travis soon settled into the routine for each day of that summer. An early breakfast gave way to going to the beach. He was fascinated with the sand dunes and how when he lay down between him he felt hidden from the world.
The sea oats waving overhead added to the sense of seclusion.
He returned to the house for lunch and then spent the hot afternoons in the hammock writing in his notebooks. When the sun sank lower in the sky he returned to the beach and watched the shadows grow longer and the spaces between the dunes darker.
Each day became indistinguishable from the others. The notebooks became full of new stories. Glasses of lemonade were drunk. The lightning from thunderstorms lit up the sky at night. Downpours kept Travis confined to his room some afternoons.
Aunt Beatrice grew stronger and picnics were held on the living room floor with the ceiling fans whirling overhead. June became July. The Fourth of July was celebrated with fried chicken and a parade of decorated golf carts and sparklers after dark.
One more day passed and late in the afternoon Travis walked down to the beach and lay down between the sea-oat covered dunes. He lay on his back looking at the white clouds streaming across the sky. After a while, he sat up and was going to lie back down on his stomach when a movement caught his eye.
He looked toward the ocean and saw the figure of a tall slim boy his own age throwing something into the surf. He was wearing only a pair of jeans which had been ripped off just below his knees. His shirtless body was a dark brown. The sun had burnished his brown color until it had a golden sheen and the light glinted off his skin. His hair was black and tightly curled.
Travis had seen colored people in Winterset, but very few and they were just in the background. He never thought about them. This young man was somehow different. His body was muscular and his skin was smooth.
His movements were graceful. Travis realized the boy was throwing a cord that had a small weight attached to one end into the sea and then pulling it back in order to throw it in again. While watching him it dawned on Travis the boy was fishing in a way he’d never seen done before.
He stood up and walked in the boy’s direction. As he drew near the boy sensed he was there and turned in his direction. Travis thought he’d never seen anyone so handsome in such a different way.
“Hi,” he said.
The boy smiled and replied, “Hi.”
“Are you fishing?” Travis asked although he knew the answer.
“Yeah, tryin’ to,” the boy said.
“Not catching anything?” Travis continued questioning.
“Not today.” The boy smiled again.
“Do you live around here?” Travis inquired.
With his chin, the boy pointed away from the beach. “Over that-a-way.”
Travis had never been to that part of the island.
“You?” the brown boy asked.
“Yeah. Just over there,” Travis said, lifting his hand to show the direction.
The boy nodded as if that was the answer he’d expected. Neither of them said more and the boy gathered his cord and threw it in the surf again.
“I’m Travis,” Travis volunteered.
“Hi,” the boy said.
“What your name?” Travis asked.
“Apollo,” the boy answered.
“Hi,” Travis said.
They both smiled. Travis sat down on the sand just out of reach of the broken waves.
"Where you from?” Apollo asked knowing Travis wasn’t a permanent resident of Bald Head Island. He didn’t associate with them, but Apollo knew who everybody that lived on the island was.
“Iowa,” Travis said.
“Where’s dat?” Apollo asked.
“A long way from here. You don’t know where Iowa is?” Travis was surprised.
“I ain’t never heard of it. What is it?” Apollo threw the weighted cord into the ocean again.
“It’s a state. You know, one of the United States’ states, like North Carolina.” He was squinting up at Apollo, wondering if he was being serious or kidding him.
“Oh,” Apollo said.
Travis was curious. “Don’t you study geography in school?”
“I ain’t never been to school,” Apollo said. “Ain’t no school here for colored people.”
Travis thought about this for a minute. “Can’t you go to school over there?”
He pointed in the direction of the opposite shore.
“Ain’t never been off this here island,” Apollo said.
Travis thought that strange, without thinking about the fact he’d never been outside Winterset before this summer.
Another question came into Travis’ head. “How old are you?”
Apollo tossed the line back in. “Seventeen or eighteen.”
“Don’t you know which?” Travis asked.
“My mamma says I’s seventeen but my gran’ma always says mamma ain’t right and I was born a year ‘fore,” Apollo answered, pulling his cord back in.
Travis thought for a moment. “What about your dad, what’s he say?”
Apollo threw the line out again. “Ain’t got no daddy. Ne’er did.”
Suddenly the cord jerked and jumped around in the water.
“Got one,” Apollo shouted.
Travis lept up onto his feet. Apollo used both hands to pull the line in. The caught fish appeared and flopped as Apollo brought it in. It was at least a foot long and gleamed silver in the late afternoon sun.
He grabbed the cord just above the fish’s mouth and held it up.
“Well, now I got somethin’ to eat tonight. Mamma’s gonna be happy,” he crowed.
He turned and looked at Travis. “You gonna be here tomorrow?” he asked.
Travis nodded. “I come here every afternoon.”
Apollo began walking up the beach and said over his shoulder, “I see you then.”
That night as he lay in bed Travis remembered Apollo saying, “Now I got something to eat tonight.” He wondered if Apollo hadn’t caught the fish would he have gone to bed hungry?
The next afternoon he went into the kitchen while his mom was upstairs. He got an orange and two cupcakes and put them in a paper bag. He mixed walking and running to the beach. Apollo was nowhere to be seen.
Travis pushed a clump of sea oats aside and sat on top of one of the dunes anxiously waiting. When he spied Apollo coming down the beach he jumped up and waved his arms over his head, tearing the paper bag.
He suddenly felt foolish and let his arms drop to his sides but when Apollo drew near he couldn’t suppress the smile that spread across his face.
“Hi,” Apollo said.
Travis didn’t say anything. The smile conveyed his greeting.
“Are you going to fish today?” he asked.
“Didn’t bring my line and hook. I wasn’t home. I was workin’.”
“Where do you work?” Travis wanted to know.
“Everwhere. I jus’ finds work where I can,” he said, smiling for no reason. “Wacha got in that there bag?”
Travis pulled out the orange. “An orange. You want it?”
Apollo looked at it for a moment. “Nah. It’s youren.”
Travis held it out to him. “You can have it. I already ate one. I don’t want this one.”
Apollo took the orange and hurridly peeled it. He bit into it and the juice ran down his chin. He looked up at Travis and laughed.
They walked down toward the water’s edge and sat down on the packed sand. Apollo finished the orange and licked the juice from his fingers. He looked at Travis and then at the bag Travis was still holding. Travis knew from his expression that he was wondering what else was in the bag.
Travis pulled out one of the cupcakes and offered it to Apollo. Apollo looked at it but hesitated.
“I got another one,” Travis said.
He pulled the second cupcake out with his other hand, letting the empty bag fall onto the sand. The wind picked it up and blew it into the water.
“Here.” He moved his hand closer to Apollo. Apollo took the cupcake and sank his teeth into it. With the cupcake still pressed against his lips, he cut his eyes up at Travis again. His lips spread in a smile. Travis started to bite into his cupcake and then stopped. He waited for Apollo to finish eating.