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Miss Are-You-Really-Sure-You-Want-That-Book
by Don Drewniak

I scurried home from a morning session with my fifth grade teacher, Miss Keefe, on one of the first warm days of spring in 1954. Although it was her first year of teaching, she was good. Unlike my fourth grade teacher, she rarely sat at her desk and she spent most of the day teaching and working with kids who needed help.

Back at our house, I pulled my Schwinn out of the cellar and headed out on a mission — a 1.8-mile bike ride to the Fall River Public Library (also known as The Peoples University). Dangling from the handlebar was a small cloth bag with two straps that I borrowed from my mother.

Upon arrival, I chained and locked my bike to an iron railing leading to the downstairs kid’s section. I dashed up a series of twisting steps and entered the main section of the library. Catching my breath, and somewhat nervous, I walked up to the main desk.

At that stage in my life, I had no idea what “officious” meant. However, the woman who greeted me was the personification of officiousness.

“May I help you, young man?”

“Yes, thank you, I’m looking for a book but I don’t have much time because I have to get back to school.”

“I am here to assist you. What is the book?”

The Flying Saucers Are Real by Donald Keyhoe.”

Her eyes widened. She looked at me as if I had two antennae sticking out of my head, green skin and an “I am from Mars” t-shirt.

“Are you sure you want that book?”

No, I asked for it because I don’t want it.

“Yes, I'm sure.”

“Well, if you really want it, please follow me.”

Of course I really want it, you knucklehead.

If I had known what blithering meant back then, I would have used it to further define knucklehead.

“Thank you.”

Miss Are-You-Really-Sure-You-Want-That-Book led us to a section that contained a limited number of science fiction books.

Science fiction? Didn’t you hear me? Flying saucers are real!

She removed a thin book from a shelf that was about a foot above my head and quickly handed it to me. I imagined that she was afraid it might give her some terrible disease. Maybe the same one that gave me my antennae and green skin.

It was back to the main desk where I handed her my library card and the book. She stamped everything in sight except her forehead which seemed to be getting a green tinge.

“It’s due back in two weeks. That’s two weeks.” She then handed me the disease-carrying book and my card.

I bet she’s going to wash her hands ten times as soon as I leave.

Out I went. After I put the book in the bag, I headed out for my second stop, Nick's Coney Island Hot Dogs located about halfway between the library and my house. I slapped (gently) a quarter on the counter, and received in return a hot dog with mustard and ketchup, and a Coke. (Nick’s is still in business today and is one of Fall River’s iconic businesses.)

I put the hot dog and Coke in the bag, biked a short distance to South Park where I demolished both in about two minutes.

Beats Mom’s fried baloney sandwiches.

It also easily topped her other specialty, Saltines in a bowl of milk. She called it something that sounded like pobby, which I theorized was Ukrainian for white poop.

Resuming my ride, I returned the bike to the cellar and made it back to the Slade School with time to spare.

Until a few days before my quest to secure a copy of The Flying Saucers Are Real, my only knowledge of UFOs came from the science fiction films I watched at the Park Theater. Those alone were enough to make me a believer.

I have no remembrance of how I came to know of the existence of The Flying Saucers Are Real. What I do remember is that whoever or whatever it was convinced me that the book proved that aliens from space were indeed buzzing through our atmosphere. What could be more exciting than that?

The number of sightings of UFOs referenced in the 1950 book was a minute fraction of those that have been subsequently reported. Nevertheless, by the time I finished reading it, I was transformed from a totally ill-informed believer to a somewhat less ill-informed true believer.

I was disappointed two weeks later when I returned the book and Miss Are-You-Really-Sure-You-Want-That-Book was not there.

The saga continued fifteen or sixteen months later on a hot summer day. I played hit-the-bat with four friends at Abbott Field which was located across the street from our home.

For those not familiar with the game, it requires a baseball, a bat and baseball gloves. There are no teams, just one person at bat and everyone else in the outfield. The person with the bat tosses the ball up and hits it. He or she then drops the bat on the ground in front of them so that it is parallel to the outfielders. The kid (or adult) who gets the ball rolls it at the bat from the place where the ball is picked up. If the ball hits the bat, the person who rolled it is then up to bat. If someone in the field catches the ball on the fly, they are automatically up to bat. There are variations, but this is the way I remember playing it.

As noon approached and the temperature soared, we called it quits and I headed back to our house. Mom, who didn’t work (like most women back then) wasn’t home, so I made a baloney sandwich and did something I had never previously done. I downed three bottles of AJ Stephans Sarsaparilla.

AJ’s was without question the best sarsaparilla in the Milky Way and was Fall River’s own, having been produced in the city starting in 1926. It was packed with 43 grams of pure cane sugar and “natural ingredients.” I have no doubt that the combination of the sugar and whatever the natural ingredients were caused me to always want a second bottle. Three bottles was uncharted territory.

Given that I played hit-the-bat for a good chunk of the morning in high temperatures under a hot sun, I probably should have taken a break. Instead, I grabbed a science fiction book that I had finished reading and decided to return it to library and get another one. Off I went on my bike.

Surprise! As I walked up to main desk, there was Miss Are-You-Really-Sure-You-Want-That-Book. Despite having gone to the library multiple times since the The Flying Saucers Are Real episode, this was the first time I had encountered her. She didn’t say a word as I placed the book on the desk, but I seem to remember that she stared at me for a few seconds.

I found the book I wanted and returned to the main desk. She once again gave me the Evil Eye. I gave her one in return. As it by some unfathomable magic bestowed by upon me by Merlin, her clothes vanished for an instant. She nodded and smiled. I dashed out of the library as fast as I could.

I headed homeward after unchaining my bike. Riding through South Park, I slammed on my brakes and came close to barreling over the handlebars as I skidded to a stop.

She’s a witch and she saw through my clothes!

I have to admit that I may have tried the Evil Eye on a girl or two during the balance of the summer. No clothes disappeared. Also, I never again saw Miss Are-You-Really-Sure-You-Want-That-Book despite dozens of visits to the library through my senior year at Durfee High.

While I am all but positive my encounters with her were as I have described them, my memory of what happened may have been colored by the high heat and the three bottles of AJ Stephans Sarsaparilla.