The Boy With The Spike In His Head

Removing it would severely test both him and his doctors

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Removing it would severely test both him and his doctors

Xavier Cunningham was having great fun that warm Saturday afternoon in September 2018 with his buddies Silas and Gavon. Bubbly and energetic, the slim, sandy-haired 10-year-old with blue eyes was a big fan of the video game Fortnite, but nothing beat running around outside, playing Nerf gun wars in the yard behind his house in Harrisonville, Missouri, in the US.

It was almost as much fun as playing football; this was his first season on the youth league’s Wildcats. He’d feared being tackled at first but had improved with extra coaching and drills. Coach Jeremy Cornell loved Xavier’s sparkling personality, and the boy was a great team leader, but he needed a little more grit. He told Xavier, “Be strong, always know what your job is and do it. Be the hammer, not the nail.”

For a while, Xavier and his two friends played with a stainless steel meat skewer they’d found, chucking it into the ground like a spear. At 43 centimetres long and more than a half-centimetre thick, the square-edged skewer was used to cook chicken or other meat on a rotisserie; one end had four sharp prongs attached.

They ditched the metal skewer near a neighbour’s tree house, sticking it in the ground with the four prongs anchoring it. After getting the neighbour’s permission, they climbed the three-metre ladder. Up top, a few yellow jacket wasps buzzed around. “If we don’t bother them, they won’t bother us,” said Xavier. They took shelter in the tree house’s small hut.

But the boys hadn’t seen the large wasp nest wrapped around part of the tree house. Soon the yellow jackets were coming at the panicked boys thick and fast, like a dense black cloud. Silas was so scared he knelt in the corner and started praying.

“I’ll get my mom!” Xavier said, but now he stared, frightened, at the tree house ladder, which was covered in a seething mass of angry wasps. Thi...

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