The little man sat in a folding chair that had been brought in from the back room. He was in his late 40s with slightly thinning, gray-brown hair, and wore a pink and white vertically striped - worn, but clean - collared shirt, brown cotton pants and a pair of high-top sneakers with the name “Voit” stitched across the tongue. The blue and red rotating lights of the police cruisers parked by the gas pumps shown through the store windows and reflected off his glasses as they spoke.
“Okay, tell me, Mr. Jenkins, what happened,” the female officer asked him.
Jenkins looked up at her, his lip began to quiver and he looked away. “The gun,” he said. “It- it didn’t go off. I watched him. I tell ya, he pointed the gun right at Burt’s face and he pulled that trigger.... I heard the click. But it didn’t go off.”
The officer stood by him taking notes. “Did you see the suspect enter the store?”
“Huh?” Jenkins stuttered. “Oh, no. I was in the back. Burt was behind the counter when he came in. I came out when I heard Burt-” He broke off and wiped his brow with the moist tissue clutched in his hand.
“Was anyone else in the store, sir?” the officer asked.
“No- no, it’s been a slow night,” he said, lowering the tissue and looked up at her. “Some kids were in a little while ago, but they’d gone.” Jenkins shook his head. “I’m glad they weren’t in here when all this happened.”
“Yes, sir. Please continue.”
“Okay. Well I was- I was in the back, like I said, and I heard Burt yell...and...uh... Hey, where is Burt?”
“Mr. Perry was taken to St. Louise,” the office said still jotting in her notepad. When Jenkins was silent for a moment, she looked over to him. “His jaw got a little banged up, but he should be fine.”
“Oh, that’s good.... Yes, I remember that now,” Jenkins said.
“Now, Mr Jenkins, can you tell me what you were doing in the back?”
Jenkins fidgeted in the chair for a moment, then looked at the officer’s belt. “Oh, I was- I was using the facilities, ma’am. I had just... I had just finished when I heard Burt shout.”
“Do you recall what Mr Perry said?”
“Uh, yes, I do. It’s a little- See Burt tends to use...colorful language.”
Once again the office stopped writing and looked down at Jenkins. “It’s quite alright, sir, if there ever was a time for colorful language this is it.”
“Oh... I suppose so. I suppose so,” Jenkins said. “Yes. Well he said, fu-. He said, ‘F you, buddy. You get outta here before I call the cops.’”
“Go on.”
“Well that’s when I came out.” He pointed behind the officer to a short hall beside the drink coolers in the back of the store. “I could see the guy’s back and Burt over his shoulder. I guess I must’ve made a sound or something, ‘cause the guy turned and saw me. That’s when he- Ahh...gosh...I tell ya... Do you have to deal with this stuff every day?”
The officer glanced out the window. The suspect was in the patrol car and she could see another officer interviewing a group of kids out in the parking lot. “Some days are better than others, sir. Please continue.”
“Ah... Well, I had made a sound and this guy noticed me. That’s when he pulled the gun on Burt. He yelled that I’d better get up there or he’d shoot. So, what else could I do? I walked up there. He told me to stand over there by the beef jerky.” Jenkins pointed to a red cardboard display near the small opening that led to the back of the counter. “I did what he said. Then he turned back to Burt. I tell ya, he had the gun right in Burt’s face. He said, ‘Open-’ He said all this really slow. I don’t know if that matters, but it was real slow. He said, ‘Open the register and give me the money.’ Just like that. And Burt... Burt just said, ‘F you,’ again. That’s when-” Jenkins swallowed and shook his head from side to side. “That’s when he pulled the trigger.”
Jenkins sat quietly as the officer wrote. After a few seconds of silence his leg began to shake. He rested his hand on his knee to still it, but was unsuccessful.
When the officer was finished writing, Jenkins continued. “Well, like I said before, the gun didn’t go off, and Burt- Burt didn’t miss a beat, I tell ya. He just reached over the counter and grabbed the guy. I thought he was about to drag him over, but he just held onto him and called for me.” Jenkins nodded his head. “You know, I tell ya, I never thought anything like this would happen. I mean, I know gas stations get robbed sometimes, but this is a pretty good neighborhood and there’s always two of us in the store. Henry - he's the owner - Henry may not be the best boss I ever had, but he’s always been set on having two people at all times. I’ll give him that.
“So when Burt called my name, I came over. I tell ya, I didn’t know quite what to do, but I could see the guy kinda squirming and it looked like Burt might be losing him. So I sorta grabbed him from behind. I reached around him and kinda locked my hands together.” Jenkins demonstrated by forming a loop with his arms and gripping his left wrist with his right hand. “So I had him like this and Burt came around and we both pulled him back up-right.
“And he was cussing and yelling at us and saying I don’t know what, but mostly he was trying to get loose from me. But I wouldn't let him go. I had a real good hold on him. I tell ya, it wasn't easy with him wiggling and moving like he was, but I kept on him. It was something. I'll tell ya, I never thought I'd be in a situation like that. No, si- No, ma'am. I never thought I would. I wasn't exactly a jock in high school, you know. I guess I can tell ya I'd never even been in a fight until tonight. I mean, I got into scuffs with my cousin, Barry. when we were kids, but nothing like a real fight... I never thought I'd be in a situation like that."
The officer had ceased writing in her notebook and was looking around the store. A few moments after Jenkins stopped talking, she looked down at him. His leg had stopped shaking. He sat there, expectantly, still, staring up at her, a slight smile on his face. "You did very well, sir," she said. "You were very brave."
"Oh, well," Jenkins said, his face turning a bright red. "I guess it wasn't much, but it sure was something. I tell ya-" Jenkins paused to cough quickly into is open hand. "Anyway, I had ahold of this guy - the robber - and he was trying to get loose. He swung his arms around and... That was when he got Burt, I think. Must've got him pretty good, too, but I guess it just made Burt mad, and he rared back and punched the guy right in the face.” Jenkins’ smile was large now. He laughed. “Yeah, I tell ya, Burt hit him so hard that his head came back and almost got me. But I dodged it just in time.”
The officer had resumed writing. "And at that point the suspect became unconscious. Is that correct, Mr. Jenkins?" she asked.
"Uhm, yeah," Jenkins said. "Yeah, he went limp and kinda fell outta my arms. You know, just occurred to me- I'm glad he wasn't faking, you know? That would've been pretty clever. Would'a worked too," he said, looking down. His smile fading. He looked out the window to the parking lot and the man in back of the police cruiser. His leg began to shake again.
“Did anyone call Henry,” he asked, suddenly jerking his head away from the window.
The officer stopped writing and flipped back a page in her notepad. “Yes, sir, Mr. Fletcher has been notified. I believe he’s on his way.”
“Good. I bet. Yeah. He’ll want to check the store.” Jenkins looked around him, biting his lower lip. Except for a few packs of gum strewn across the counter, the police woman standing over him and the others in the parking lot there was no sign of the evening’s excitement.
“Ma’am,” he said. He twisted himself around in the folding chair, gripped the backrest and pushed himself up to a standing position. "I mean, Officer. That’s pretty much all I have to say. Is there anything else you need from me?”
“No,” she said taking a last look over her notes, “I believe we have everything. We’ll be calling you downtown tomorrow for a line-up.”
“Oh, yeah, I guess- Okay. Sure. So I can go home now?” he asked. “I’m pretty tired all of a sudden.”
“Yes, sir. Would you like someone to take you?”
“Oh, no. No. I don’t live far,” he said. He stepped past the officer to the door. He stood by for a moment without opening it, then turned for another look around the store, then to the window and out into the parking lot, and, finally, back to the officer. “Ma’am, could you do something for me?”
The officer, having completed her interview, was surveying the scene. At his question, she stiffened slightly and turned toward him. “Yes, sir. What do you need?”
“When Henry gets here,” Jenkins said opening the door, “would you please tell him I quit?”
Monday, March 28, 2011
Monday, January 31, 2011
Chain of Thought
The road outside the house where I grew up was long and nearly empty of anything but woods and farmland. The only houses were ours and Stewie Anderson’s a half-mile away. The Andersons lived on the corner of our road and a larger highway. I remember when I was very young the school bus stopped at Stewie’s house then came down our road and stopped at my driveway. Since there was no good way for a bus to turn around after that, it would have to travel another 2 miles or so before the road curved back to the highway again. The was not the most efficient way to go so when I started the fifth grade, it was agreed - not by me, of course, but by my mother and Skinny Willie, the bus driver - that I’d walk up to Stewie’s house and catch the bus on the corner with him. I’m sure Skinny Willie enjoyed the extra few minutes he saved, but for us kids, it meant we spent more “quiet” time in the bus room. It also meant I had to walk that half mile.
In the winter months that walk up to Stewie’s house was pitch black. We had one light at our driveway and there was another at the intersection. The road was wooded and made a wide turn such that even with the leaves off the trees I could see neither light for much of the walk.
My mother always reminded me to be careful of cars as she sat perched on a kitchen stool in her nightgown, coffee in hand. But I don’t think I ever saw a car on the road at that time of morning. I was more afraid of what might be out there in the woods, in the dark, lurking.
I was raised in the country, but I am not, and have never been, a country boy. It’s just never been “me”, I suppose you could say. It’s true I’ve done all the chores - there was no avoiding that under my father’s roof whether it was “you” or not. It’s true that I have more of a farmer’s notion of life and death than that of the city people I surround myself with today. There’s a respect that comes from directly taking a life in order to sustain your own. It’s also true that I was raised with a farmer’s practicality and a farmer’s skepticism. I was taught the foolishness of ghost and ghoul stories and even Santa Claus. I was taught that all you can trust in is the good Lord up above, and the concrete - the substantial - that which you can see with your eyes and hold in your hand.
Still that early morning walk in the dark, that was spooky.
At the beginning of fifth grade I was 10 years old. Despite my down-to-earth upbringing I was an imaginative child. I’d lay in bed at night dreaming up stories of epic space battles between the evil slob-people of Poopion VI, and the handsome and brilliant Captain Xander Hooper of the United Earth League. These battles waged on each night and I’ve only recently realized it was a way of keeping myself awake in an attempt to postpone the next morning’s walk.
While my imagination might have been fun at night, the stories I dreamed up in the morning were much less so. Still I found myself unable to stop. Deep in the woods lived an evil old mad woodsman. He had long patchy gray hair and walked with a hunch, his weight resting on a large gnarled staff. He’d roam the woods at night looking for some kid to drag down into his cave to do...well whatever evil old mad woodsmen do. Or sometimes rustling heard off the side of the road would become the scraping claws of a demon-possessed opossum who was stalking me along my way, just waiting for the right time to pounce. On moonlit mornings, the extra light hardly soothed me. The pale moonlight cast eerie shadows turning leafless trees into gruesome skeletal hands reaching onto the road or dead logs into sleeping beasts ready to be roused by the sound of my passing. A howl in the distance was a wolf-man raging with fury and hunger.
At 10 I found myself still young enough to believe in the monsters of horror comics and late-night movies my father sometimes allowed me to watch, but too old to admit it to anyone. I know now that my mother - had she understood the utter terror I faced each morning - wouldn’t have made her deal with Skinny Willie or at least would have given me a ride up the road. But to her - and to my father if he took the time to notice - the whole thing was character building. Part of becoming a man. And, as I said, being the kind of people they were, neither of my parents would’ve considered that I might be afraid of spooks hiding in the woods. It just wouldn’t have occurred to them. Had I come to them worried about bobcats or snakes, then they likely would have understood, and we could have had a conversation about it. But old mad men and demon opossums - that's just silly talk.
Once I made the mistake of mentioning something about how creepy the road was to Stewie. He, of course, immediately pounced on this weakness. He told our fellow bus riders that I was afraid of the dark, and for the next several weeks, I received a lot of “Baby need a night light?” And, “Sissy’s scared of shadows!” Not being a country boy in the country already meant I was at the bottom of the social order, and I certainly didn’t need any more trouble. That was my last attempt to elicit any sympathy from my classmates.
So I carried the fear all alone. And I walked that road, alone, for the next seven years. Right up until I convinced my father to lend me the money for a car. I remember the first day driving to school. I zipped right past Stewie Anderson as he waited for the bus and I didn’t look back.
But before the car, I had the walk. I had the walk and the fear of that dark road. As I grew older the stories my imagination produced changed. For the most part monsters were replaced with men. Biker gangs camping in the woods looking for a plaything. Religious cults practicing human sacrifice. A band of convicts, escaped from prison, hiding out waiting for just the right victim to kick-off yet another bloody rampage. Drug-crazed lunatics, high on marijuana, jonesing for an innocent youth. I’d scan the forest for the glimmer of a camp fire. I’d listen closely for the rumble of a harley-davidson. I’d smell the air for incense or drugs.
Even at 16, while I can’t say I was actively terrified of the road any longer - I had a lot on my mind in those days, school, basketball, the soft warmth of Michelle Bonney - I can’t say I wasn’t afraid either. Maybe it was habit by then. Maybe I just wished it was. But walking that road, looking into those deep woods, I still found myself wandering to the darker places of my imagination. And, I always - from the very first walk at 10 years old - tried to tread very, very quietly.
You know, if I’m to be honest, thinking about those morning walks usually makes me feel a bit silly and embarrassed. In the two and a half decades since I got that first car I’ve driven that road more times that I can count. Driving it - even in the dark - takes maybe a minute and carries absolutely none of the terror walking did. Not even a hint of fear. I think the act of driving isolates you from the world outside the windshield. For me it makes the anxiety of those dark mornings on the road hard to remember. Until today.
This afternoon driving the road with my wife sitting beside me I was once again filled with a sense of dread, though dread of a different sort, I suppose. The time for monsters and maniacs has - mostly - passed. See after dad died we offered to let mom move in with us, but she wouldn't hear it. She wanted to stay at home. We argued but eventually her country stubbornness wore us down and we agreed. Now, though, there can be no arguments. Last night mom called me in a panic saying someone was breaking into the house through the upstairs window. This wasn’t the first call of it’s kind. She's gotten progressively more moody and paranoid over the past year. It’s a change my wife and I have noted with concern. So I had my doubts about the intruder, but still I called the sheriff's office and they sent someone to take a look. Not surprisingly they found nothing.
We spent the morning clearing out some of the clutter that had piled up in our daughter's room since she moved out on her own. I think mom will be comfortable there. It's a big room on the ground floor with a southern exposure. There are trees in the back yard and come spring there will be plenty of green outside the bedroom window. Our's is a nice neighborhood. Safe and quiet - by city standards - and there's a cozy park just down the street.
I know it will be a change for her - a big change - and I worry about that. I worry about the effect it will have on her. Actually, I worry about a lot more than just that. Worst case scenarios have been competing for my attention since I hung up with the sheriff's office last night. It kept me awake late into the night.
And now I'm here in my old bedroom squeezed into my childhood bed with my sleeping wife. It’s amazing how little this house has changed in 25 years - the changes were all saved for it’s inhabitants, I suppose - but after tomorrow this old place will have to move on too. In the morning we'll pack mom into the car and head to the city. I’ll come out in the next week or two with movers to clear out the place. Some of her favorite things will come back with me - to make our house as much like home as possible - and the rest will go to storage for the time being. We'll keep her with us for as long as we can, but I know that eventually - too soon I fear - we won’t be able to take care of her alone. I guess we'll make those arrangements when the time comes. We’ll do what has to be done.
Before all that, though, I believe I'll get up early. I’ve got a mind to take a walk. There’s a nearly-full moon that ought to be shining bright the hour before dawn, illuminating the woods that line the road. I expect the cold morning air will do me good. Might help calm my nerves and clear my head of some of these dark fantasies. Yes, I think that old familiar path is just what I need. At least, I know it won’t hurt.
In the winter months that walk up to Stewie’s house was pitch black. We had one light at our driveway and there was another at the intersection. The road was wooded and made a wide turn such that even with the leaves off the trees I could see neither light for much of the walk.
My mother always reminded me to be careful of cars as she sat perched on a kitchen stool in her nightgown, coffee in hand. But I don’t think I ever saw a car on the road at that time of morning. I was more afraid of what might be out there in the woods, in the dark, lurking.
I was raised in the country, but I am not, and have never been, a country boy. It’s just never been “me”, I suppose you could say. It’s true I’ve done all the chores - there was no avoiding that under my father’s roof whether it was “you” or not. It’s true that I have more of a farmer’s notion of life and death than that of the city people I surround myself with today. There’s a respect that comes from directly taking a life in order to sustain your own. It’s also true that I was raised with a farmer’s practicality and a farmer’s skepticism. I was taught the foolishness of ghost and ghoul stories and even Santa Claus. I was taught that all you can trust in is the good Lord up above, and the concrete - the substantial - that which you can see with your eyes and hold in your hand.
Still that early morning walk in the dark, that was spooky.
At the beginning of fifth grade I was 10 years old. Despite my down-to-earth upbringing I was an imaginative child. I’d lay in bed at night dreaming up stories of epic space battles between the evil slob-people of Poopion VI, and the handsome and brilliant Captain Xander Hooper of the United Earth League. These battles waged on each night and I’ve only recently realized it was a way of keeping myself awake in an attempt to postpone the next morning’s walk.
While my imagination might have been fun at night, the stories I dreamed up in the morning were much less so. Still I found myself unable to stop. Deep in the woods lived an evil old mad woodsman. He had long patchy gray hair and walked with a hunch, his weight resting on a large gnarled staff. He’d roam the woods at night looking for some kid to drag down into his cave to do...well whatever evil old mad woodsmen do. Or sometimes rustling heard off the side of the road would become the scraping claws of a demon-possessed opossum who was stalking me along my way, just waiting for the right time to pounce. On moonlit mornings, the extra light hardly soothed me. The pale moonlight cast eerie shadows turning leafless trees into gruesome skeletal hands reaching onto the road or dead logs into sleeping beasts ready to be roused by the sound of my passing. A howl in the distance was a wolf-man raging with fury and hunger.
At 10 I found myself still young enough to believe in the monsters of horror comics and late-night movies my father sometimes allowed me to watch, but too old to admit it to anyone. I know now that my mother - had she understood the utter terror I faced each morning - wouldn’t have made her deal with Skinny Willie or at least would have given me a ride up the road. But to her - and to my father if he took the time to notice - the whole thing was character building. Part of becoming a man. And, as I said, being the kind of people they were, neither of my parents would’ve considered that I might be afraid of spooks hiding in the woods. It just wouldn’t have occurred to them. Had I come to them worried about bobcats or snakes, then they likely would have understood, and we could have had a conversation about it. But old mad men and demon opossums - that's just silly talk.
Once I made the mistake of mentioning something about how creepy the road was to Stewie. He, of course, immediately pounced on this weakness. He told our fellow bus riders that I was afraid of the dark, and for the next several weeks, I received a lot of “Baby need a night light?” And, “Sissy’s scared of shadows!” Not being a country boy in the country already meant I was at the bottom of the social order, and I certainly didn’t need any more trouble. That was my last attempt to elicit any sympathy from my classmates.
So I carried the fear all alone. And I walked that road, alone, for the next seven years. Right up until I convinced my father to lend me the money for a car. I remember the first day driving to school. I zipped right past Stewie Anderson as he waited for the bus and I didn’t look back.
But before the car, I had the walk. I had the walk and the fear of that dark road. As I grew older the stories my imagination produced changed. For the most part monsters were replaced with men. Biker gangs camping in the woods looking for a plaything. Religious cults practicing human sacrifice. A band of convicts, escaped from prison, hiding out waiting for just the right victim to kick-off yet another bloody rampage. Drug-crazed lunatics, high on marijuana, jonesing for an innocent youth. I’d scan the forest for the glimmer of a camp fire. I’d listen closely for the rumble of a harley-davidson. I’d smell the air for incense or drugs.
Even at 16, while I can’t say I was actively terrified of the road any longer - I had a lot on my mind in those days, school, basketball, the soft warmth of Michelle Bonney - I can’t say I wasn’t afraid either. Maybe it was habit by then. Maybe I just wished it was. But walking that road, looking into those deep woods, I still found myself wandering to the darker places of my imagination. And, I always - from the very first walk at 10 years old - tried to tread very, very quietly.
You know, if I’m to be honest, thinking about those morning walks usually makes me feel a bit silly and embarrassed. In the two and a half decades since I got that first car I’ve driven that road more times that I can count. Driving it - even in the dark - takes maybe a minute and carries absolutely none of the terror walking did. Not even a hint of fear. I think the act of driving isolates you from the world outside the windshield. For me it makes the anxiety of those dark mornings on the road hard to remember. Until today.
This afternoon driving the road with my wife sitting beside me I was once again filled with a sense of dread, though dread of a different sort, I suppose. The time for monsters and maniacs has - mostly - passed. See after dad died we offered to let mom move in with us, but she wouldn't hear it. She wanted to stay at home. We argued but eventually her country stubbornness wore us down and we agreed. Now, though, there can be no arguments. Last night mom called me in a panic saying someone was breaking into the house through the upstairs window. This wasn’t the first call of it’s kind. She's gotten progressively more moody and paranoid over the past year. It’s a change my wife and I have noted with concern. So I had my doubts about the intruder, but still I called the sheriff's office and they sent someone to take a look. Not surprisingly they found nothing.
We spent the morning clearing out some of the clutter that had piled up in our daughter's room since she moved out on her own. I think mom will be comfortable there. It's a big room on the ground floor with a southern exposure. There are trees in the back yard and come spring there will be plenty of green outside the bedroom window. Our's is a nice neighborhood. Safe and quiet - by city standards - and there's a cozy park just down the street.
I know it will be a change for her - a big change - and I worry about that. I worry about the effect it will have on her. Actually, I worry about a lot more than just that. Worst case scenarios have been competing for my attention since I hung up with the sheriff's office last night. It kept me awake late into the night.
And now I'm here in my old bedroom squeezed into my childhood bed with my sleeping wife. It’s amazing how little this house has changed in 25 years - the changes were all saved for it’s inhabitants, I suppose - but after tomorrow this old place will have to move on too. In the morning we'll pack mom into the car and head to the city. I’ll come out in the next week or two with movers to clear out the place. Some of her favorite things will come back with me - to make our house as much like home as possible - and the rest will go to storage for the time being. We'll keep her with us for as long as we can, but I know that eventually - too soon I fear - we won’t be able to take care of her alone. I guess we'll make those arrangements when the time comes. We’ll do what has to be done.
Before all that, though, I believe I'll get up early. I’ve got a mind to take a walk. There’s a nearly-full moon that ought to be shining bright the hour before dawn, illuminating the woods that line the road. I expect the cold morning air will do me good. Might help calm my nerves and clear my head of some of these dark fantasies. Yes, I think that old familiar path is just what I need. At least, I know it won’t hurt.
Friday, January 28, 2011
The Squirrel Hole
He said it was a squirrel hole. I wouldn’t’ve guessed that - I’d say I’m pretty sure squirrels live in trees - but that’s what he said it was and I wasn’t about to tell him different.
He told me if I ever wanted to know the Truth - he said Truth with a capital T - I could stick my hand down into that hole and pull out the answer. He said the squirrels hid it away in there and anyone who came upon one of their holes could just reach right in and find it. Easy as that.
The first note I pulled from the hole told me that my mother was having sweet whoopie with Mr Hooper down the street. I didn’t want to believe it, but it was written out plain as day. I asked him about the writing and he told me squirrels practiced for years and years to have such good pen-man-ship. Not being men, it didn’t come easy to them.
I told mother about the squirrel hole and she told me he was crazy as a crack-house cat and I should never believe a word out of his mouth. I didn’t tell her about the note after that. After that I didn’t tell her about any of them Truth notes.
The next note said Christmas had flown the coop this year. That was another bad one, but turned out to be the Truth.
He told me that I should never check the squirrel hole without telling him about it first. He told me it was dangerous for a body to be the only one to know about some Truths. He said something like Truth with a capital T ought to be shared. It had to be carried with care and co-operation.
Later on I pulled out the note that told me to make plans for a big, joyous, most wonderful trip to a rare sort of place and just the next day he and I went to the mall for hotdogs and a cartoon movie.
Another time the squirrel note said I’d have to spin and spin around and redo the fourth grade. That, turned out, was True too.
It was just like that. The Truth kept on a-coming. Truths about me. Truths about my mother. Truths about people on the street. Truths about school. Truths about all sorts of things. Sometimes it was good. Sometimes it was bad. Sometimes it was neither one - only some no-matter kinda thing. I’d say it was fun though. For a while it got so I wanted to go by that squirrel hole all the time, but he warned me against it. He said there’s some Things that it’s best not to know and every time I stuck my hand in I was taking a risk of finding out one of those Things I wouldn’t want to know. I’d say that disappointed me some, but I remembered that first Truth about my mother and thought he might be right about that one and I’d better believe him.
So then it was only once in a great while that I went by that squirrel hole. I’m going to be truthful - with a lowercase t this time, but you can believe it - after hearing his words, I’d say it got so I was scared of going a little bit. I never told him that, of course, but it got to the point that most of the time it was him that suggested we go down there and not me.
But every time we did go it was some Truth in there just waiting to be pulled out. Them squirrels sure did have a lot of it to spread around.
I’d say all went as normal as could be until he got sick and had to go to the hospital. He went in and I just had to know. I mean I was worried about him and I thought them squirrels might have some sort of Truth that’d help in some kinda way. Well it was the only time I ever went to that squirrel hole without telling him about it. I didn’t want to worry him none since he couldn’t go with me anyway. They wouldn’t let him out of the hospital for anything at all - even for Truth-finding. So I went to that squirrel hole by myself and stuck my hand in and...
I’d say it seems like this is the time for the story to take a little break so you wonder what it was I found. Tension is what I mean. With a capital T.
Well, ok, I’ll tell you now. I found nothing. Not a thing at all was in that squirrel hole. And I didn’t know what to think about that one. I’d say it made me pretty nervous. I thought maybe the squirrels had figured out that we’d found their hole and had moved on to some other place. I thought at last the Truth had run out. But wouldn’t you know it? I was wrong about that one. Lo and behold, turned out that there’s not always a need for a piece of paper in these matters. Turned out that Nothing can be a Truth too.
And that’s just how it was.
He told me if I ever wanted to know the Truth - he said Truth with a capital T - I could stick my hand down into that hole and pull out the answer. He said the squirrels hid it away in there and anyone who came upon one of their holes could just reach right in and find it. Easy as that.
The first note I pulled from the hole told me that my mother was having sweet whoopie with Mr Hooper down the street. I didn’t want to believe it, but it was written out plain as day. I asked him about the writing and he told me squirrels practiced for years and years to have such good pen-man-ship. Not being men, it didn’t come easy to them.
I told mother about the squirrel hole and she told me he was crazy as a crack-house cat and I should never believe a word out of his mouth. I didn’t tell her about the note after that. After that I didn’t tell her about any of them Truth notes.
The next note said Christmas had flown the coop this year. That was another bad one, but turned out to be the Truth.
He told me that I should never check the squirrel hole without telling him about it first. He told me it was dangerous for a body to be the only one to know about some Truths. He said something like Truth with a capital T ought to be shared. It had to be carried with care and co-operation.
Later on I pulled out the note that told me to make plans for a big, joyous, most wonderful trip to a rare sort of place and just the next day he and I went to the mall for hotdogs and a cartoon movie.
Another time the squirrel note said I’d have to spin and spin around and redo the fourth grade. That, turned out, was True too.
It was just like that. The Truth kept on a-coming. Truths about me. Truths about my mother. Truths about people on the street. Truths about school. Truths about all sorts of things. Sometimes it was good. Sometimes it was bad. Sometimes it was neither one - only some no-matter kinda thing. I’d say it was fun though. For a while it got so I wanted to go by that squirrel hole all the time, but he warned me against it. He said there’s some Things that it’s best not to know and every time I stuck my hand in I was taking a risk of finding out one of those Things I wouldn’t want to know. I’d say that disappointed me some, but I remembered that first Truth about my mother and thought he might be right about that one and I’d better believe him.
So then it was only once in a great while that I went by that squirrel hole. I’m going to be truthful - with a lowercase t this time, but you can believe it - after hearing his words, I’d say it got so I was scared of going a little bit. I never told him that, of course, but it got to the point that most of the time it was him that suggested we go down there and not me.
But every time we did go it was some Truth in there just waiting to be pulled out. Them squirrels sure did have a lot of it to spread around.
I’d say all went as normal as could be until he got sick and had to go to the hospital. He went in and I just had to know. I mean I was worried about him and I thought them squirrels might have some sort of Truth that’d help in some kinda way. Well it was the only time I ever went to that squirrel hole without telling him about it. I didn’t want to worry him none since he couldn’t go with me anyway. They wouldn’t let him out of the hospital for anything at all - even for Truth-finding. So I went to that squirrel hole by myself and stuck my hand in and...
I’d say it seems like this is the time for the story to take a little break so you wonder what it was I found. Tension is what I mean. With a capital T.
Well, ok, I’ll tell you now. I found nothing. Not a thing at all was in that squirrel hole. And I didn’t know what to think about that one. I’d say it made me pretty nervous. I thought maybe the squirrels had figured out that we’d found their hole and had moved on to some other place. I thought at last the Truth had run out. But wouldn’t you know it? I was wrong about that one. Lo and behold, turned out that there’s not always a need for a piece of paper in these matters. Turned out that Nothing can be a Truth too.
And that’s just how it was.
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Harold and LInda
Harold and Linda were married in a church neither of them had ever attended. They held hands during the ceremony as the sunlight passing through the stained glass shown pale red on Linda’s dress and blue on Harold’s tuxedo. At the minister’s command, they kissed and the onlookers clapped.
They moved into a reasonably priced apartment two and a half miles from the university where they’d met and from which Harold had graduated. They had friends still attending the university and Linda picked the apartment with an eye to convenience.
Harold found a job fitting his field of study. Entry level with a decent starting salary. The company was large, but his team wasn’t. His coworkers were young, and he was the youngest. Half were married and three had children. Once in a while, usually on a Thursday evening, three or four of the group went out for beers. They invited Harold to join them any time.
Linda took a part time position as a receptionist at the university’s clinic. She worked afternoons three days a week and every other Saturday. Her job was to hand a clipboard to red-nosed, or sometimes red-faced, students and ask what insurance they had. She spent much of her time surfing the web until one afternoon in line at the market, she spotted a book of crossword puzzles. She took to these puzzles and soon had a stack of books and newspapers at the reception desk and another at home.
Seven months after they were married Harold and Linda began making the rounds to friends and family announcing Linda’s pregnancy. Both of their mothers were thrilled and Harold’s father vigorously shook his son’s hand and took him into the garage for a cigar. Linda’s friends screamed, and Harold’s punched his arm and kidded him about being a grown up.
Despite their intentions the apartment’s second bedroom had become storage. A place for unwanted wedding presents, childhood memorabilia and other unused items. Soon after their announcement Harold rented a storage unit and they began the process of making piles. To keep. To store. To toss. Linda started touring yard sales with her mother and aunt, and visiting the mall with her friends. By her eighth month she joked that they had brought in more than they’d taken away.
Harold and Linda were home when Linda felt the first contraction. Harold grabbed her bag and they hurried to the hospital. On the way Linda called her mother and left a message with Harold’s parents. Once at the hospital Linda was placed in bed in a small room, and Harold stood by holding her hand. He winced when she cried out. And when the pain subsided he patted her head with a damp cloth. When her head rolled to one side he spoke a word of thanks that she could rest.
Things moved quickly once the nurse spotted blood. Linda was rushed into an operating room while Harold was led into a waiting area. Linda’s mother arrived. Then Harold’s parents. They hugged, spoke softly, and waited. Harold paced and his mother watched him. Three times she started to rise, but each time Harold’s father laid a hand on her arm. Linda’s mother sat with her feet curled beneath her.
When the doctor appeared, she walked toward them slowly. The three parents rose. Harold stopped and stood. The doctor approached, scanned the waiting faces, then focused on Harold. Linda’s mother exhaled sharply. Harold’s parents held to one another. The child, the doctor said, is fine. And Harold collapsed into tears.
They moved into a reasonably priced apartment two and a half miles from the university where they’d met and from which Harold had graduated. They had friends still attending the university and Linda picked the apartment with an eye to convenience.
Harold found a job fitting his field of study. Entry level with a decent starting salary. The company was large, but his team wasn’t. His coworkers were young, and he was the youngest. Half were married and three had children. Once in a while, usually on a Thursday evening, three or four of the group went out for beers. They invited Harold to join them any time.
Linda took a part time position as a receptionist at the university’s clinic. She worked afternoons three days a week and every other Saturday. Her job was to hand a clipboard to red-nosed, or sometimes red-faced, students and ask what insurance they had. She spent much of her time surfing the web until one afternoon in line at the market, she spotted a book of crossword puzzles. She took to these puzzles and soon had a stack of books and newspapers at the reception desk and another at home.
Seven months after they were married Harold and Linda began making the rounds to friends and family announcing Linda’s pregnancy. Both of their mothers were thrilled and Harold’s father vigorously shook his son’s hand and took him into the garage for a cigar. Linda’s friends screamed, and Harold’s punched his arm and kidded him about being a grown up.
Despite their intentions the apartment’s second bedroom had become storage. A place for unwanted wedding presents, childhood memorabilia and other unused items. Soon after their announcement Harold rented a storage unit and they began the process of making piles. To keep. To store. To toss. Linda started touring yard sales with her mother and aunt, and visiting the mall with her friends. By her eighth month she joked that they had brought in more than they’d taken away.
Harold and Linda were home when Linda felt the first contraction. Harold grabbed her bag and they hurried to the hospital. On the way Linda called her mother and left a message with Harold’s parents. Once at the hospital Linda was placed in bed in a small room, and Harold stood by holding her hand. He winced when she cried out. And when the pain subsided he patted her head with a damp cloth. When her head rolled to one side he spoke a word of thanks that she could rest.
Things moved quickly once the nurse spotted blood. Linda was rushed into an operating room while Harold was led into a waiting area. Linda’s mother arrived. Then Harold’s parents. They hugged, spoke softly, and waited. Harold paced and his mother watched him. Three times she started to rise, but each time Harold’s father laid a hand on her arm. Linda’s mother sat with her feet curled beneath her.
When the doctor appeared, she walked toward them slowly. The three parents rose. Harold stopped and stood. The doctor approached, scanned the waiting faces, then focused on Harold. Linda’s mother exhaled sharply. Harold’s parents held to one another. The child, the doctor said, is fine. And Harold collapsed into tears.
Friday, November 26, 2010
Payment
co-written with C L Farrell of Good Manners and Other Lies & Haiku Inversion
Goodkid Russel shuffled slowly into the convenience store. He turned sideways to squeeze past the soft drink display and enter the first aisle. Once in the aisle, he turned to the metal shelf on his right and contemplated the snack cakes. While he considered his options, he shifted his massive weight slowly from one foot to the other. Though the home he shared with his grandmother was less than a block away, the walk had left his feet feeling quite sore.
“What’ll it be today, GK?” the thin, elderly man behind the counter asked.
“Well,” Goodkid said, still trying to catch his breath. “Today feels like a ‘K’ day. So... I think I’ll have some Kremie Kakes.” He reached into the black and white display box and pulled out 3 plastic-wrapped chocolate cakes. He looked down at them - held against his body with both hands - then looked back at the display. There was only one left. “Looks like I’m clearin' you out, Mister Mason,” he said and reached in to grab the last one.
“Oh, that’s perfectly alright, GK,” the old man said, grinning. “There’ll be more. There’s always more.”
Goodkid huffed as he walked toward the drink cooler at the back of the market. “Don’t think there’s any ‘K’ drinks. So, I guess I’ll have an orange creme soda.”
“Sure, GK, that’s a fine choice,” Mason said. “Creme has a ‘K’ sound, after all.”
“Close enough,” Goodkid said.
“Close enough,” Mason said with a wink.
Goodkid grunted as he opened the cooler door. He had to step back to give the door room to pass by him. He grunted harder when he reached for his drink.
“The ones in the back are colder,” the old man called.
“Hhhhuuuhh,” Goodkid groaned as released his hold on the bottle he’d chosen and leaned even further into the cooler. He pushed his large, soft arm over the tops of the bottles near the front and manged to get a finger around a cap in the rear. “Uugghh. Hmmmph. Errr!” He puffed as he twisted and pulled his arm - and the soda - free.
Out the window Mason saw that some of the neighborhood boys were gathering. They were all watching Goodkid. A tall boy said something, and pointed at GK. The other boys started laughing.
With orange creme soda in hand, Goodkid turned and headed up the aisle. Mason asked, “How’s your grandmama doing?”
“Oh,” Goodkid replied, lumbering his way toward Mason. “She’s not too good, I guess. Her little cart’s lost its charge and won’t go more than a little ways before it quits.”
“Well, that’s too bad. Too bad.”
“She’ll probably have me head to the Piggly Wiggly for some more cough syrup too.” Goodkid looked down in dread at the thought. The Pig was nearly half a mile away. “Mister Mason, I wish you had cough syrup around here.”
“Now, GK, you know I ain’t no pharmacy. I ain’t allowed to trade in that stuff. The government won’t let me. They got what they call regulations that say what folks like me can and can’t sell.”
“They won’t let you!” Goodkid said. “Well that’s not fair. Now I gotta walk all that way.” Goodkid exhaled in frustration. “It ain’t fair.”
Goodkid looked at Mason. He was lean and old. His prominent cheekbones rose high on his face, so much so that - from where Goodkid stood - they appeared to cover the lower halves of his eyes. His chin came to a sharp point and had the slightest strip of gray beard at its base His hair was nearly gone save for a thick V-shape in the center of his head that pointed toward his long nose. His eyebrows were thick bushy and - unlike the rest of his visible hair - perfectly black. He sat perched on a stool behind the counter. The counter stood on a raised platform. The extra height gave him a view of the entire store, and meant he spent most of his day looking down on his customers. He looked down on GK now. “No, it ain’t fair. Is it? Ain’t fair at all.”
“Oh, well,” Goodkid said, resigned. “I don’t know Mister Mason, Grandmom tells me to walk more all the time. Says it’ll get some of this weight off me.”
“She does?” Mason said, sounding concerned, then he raised a hand to his chin and smiled mischievously. “Hmm. I’ll tell you a secret, GK, when I was your age, I didn’t always do what I was told. And I’m willing to bet you don’t either, do ya?”
For a moment, Goodkid looked away shyly, but then he turned back to Mason with a mischievous smile of his own. “No, sir, I guess I don’t always.”
“Ha, I thought so,” Mason said. “Shoot, you know what? I bet your uncle will be by later, won’t he? I bet he’d run down to the store and pick up that cough medicine.”
A broad smile spread across Goodkid’s face. “Yeah, you’re right! He’d do that! Yeah. He’ll be here tonight.”
“Your grandmama can wait a little while longer, can’t she?”
“‘Course she can.” Goodkid said, happily. “And I won’t have to walk nowhere.”
While they talked, Mason kept an eye on the boys outside. They were pointing now and jabbing one another in the ribs. Urging each other on.
“Goodkid?” Mason changed the subject. “You know folks aren’t always nice, don’t you?”
Goodkid’s smile faded. “Oh, I know it, Mister Mason,” he said shaking his head. “Don't I ever know it!”.
“So, you probably know how sometimes one person or maybe a group of people will find somebody who’s different. And when they find him, they pick on him.”
“Yes, sir, I know it.”
Mason’s voice took on a grave, authoritative quality, like that of a teacher or a preacher. “Well, son, let me ask you another question. Have you ever heard of this so-called ‘natural selection’?”
“I think I heard something about that on TV, Mister Mason, but I can't remember exactly. Is that like what they used to do in that war?” Goodkid said. He half-consciously took a step backward. “World War II?”
Mason looked thoughtful for a moment and replied, “You mean the Nazis? I guess maybe the Nazis thought that's what they were doing, but not really. I knew a Jew once when I was a kid, and he was OK.” Then Mason leaned over the counter until he was on eye level with Goodkid and said, “‘Course some people are better than others, you know.” Mason paused and appeared to think for a moment. “You see, GK, I've been reading this book about natural selection and it’s got me to thinking. For one thing it got me to thinking about some of the folks around here. Natural selecting, you see, is nature’s way of keeping things nice and orderly. Not too little of any one thing. And not too much.”
Goodkid stared back at the man blankly. He pressed the cakes and soda to his body, gripping tightly.
“What happens, Goodkid, is that sometimes this world of ours gets full of.. What shall we call it? So much dead weight.” Goodkid took another step back and Mason leaned even closer, a cold smile appeared on his lips. Then, quickly he straightened. His smile immediately replaced by a stern blankness.
Mason shot a quick glance toward the window. The boys where still our there, but none of them were laughing now. They continued to stare at Goodkid. Turning back, Mason continued “What I mean to say is natural selection is the process of nature cutting the fat.”
Goodkid remained silent. Mason heard the faint sound of coins clinking in his pocket.
“Like I said that book got me to thinking. And I started to think that sometimes...not every single time, maybe, but sometimes... the pickin-on and meanness of one person to another...well maybe that’s just part of the way things are. Maybe that’s just nature doing it’s thing. Do you know what I mean, Goodkid?”
Goodkid swallowed. “Mister Mason, this is all I need. I better be getting back to my Grandmom now,” Goodkid said dropping the cakes and soda on the counter.
Mason took a quick glance out the window and smiled brightly. “Oh, sure, GK. I guess it is about time you were going. I got to talking and kept you past your time, didn’t I? Let’s see. Is this all you need? It’s a light day today, isn’t it?” Mason said. “What did you say before? It’s a ‘K’ day. That tickles me, GK.” Mason laughed. “You got a marker for every day.”
Goodkid nodded with a slight, tentative smile.
“Let’s see that’ll be four dollars and twenty-two cents,” Mason said.
Goodkid stuffed his hand into the font pocket of his jeans and came up with paper and coins. He laid it all on the counter and began counting. He counted out two paper dollars then moved on to coins. Little by little he pushed one coin at a time from the pile where he’d dropped it into a second pile closer to Mason. Mason offered no help. Instead he returned his attention to the boys outside his store. The tall boy now had a board. He was swinging it in a wide arch above his head. Some of the others were searching behind the dumpster at the corner of the parking lot.
“Mister Mason.” Goodkid drew the old man’s attention. “I don’t think I have enough. I only got three dollars and ninety-three cents.” Goodkid dropped his gaze, and said, “I’m sorry. I’ll put something back.”
“Oh, Goodkid. You know I wouldn’t let you do without,” Mason said. “What say I take everything you got, and we’ll call it even? How’s that?”
“Well...” Goodkid said, uncertainly. “I guess. I mean, thank you, Mister Mason.”
“Of course, GK. You’re one of my best customers,” Mason said.
“Thanks, again.” And with that Goodkid grabbed up his purchases and turned toward the door. Mason did not offer him a bag.
“See you next time, Goodkid.” Mason called.
“Okay,” Goodkid replied. He’d already begun breathing heavily by the time he reached the door. Mason watched as he pushed the door open with his shoulder and began to walk toward the sidewalk. He watched as the boys began to encircle him. He saw the boy with the board take the first swing. He watched the other boys jump onto Goodkid’s back and sides and drive him down onto his knees. He saw the four individually wrapped cakes fly in different directions, and the bottle of orange creme soda fall to the asphalt and bounce away. He watched one of the boys leave the mob and run around collecting these treats, then set them to the side and return to the beating. He watched until he had his fill, then he sprang open his register and added Goodkid’s payment.
Goodkid Russel shuffled slowly into the convenience store. He turned sideways to squeeze past the soft drink display and enter the first aisle. Once in the aisle, he turned to the metal shelf on his right and contemplated the snack cakes. While he considered his options, he shifted his massive weight slowly from one foot to the other. Though the home he shared with his grandmother was less than a block away, the walk had left his feet feeling quite sore.
“What’ll it be today, GK?” the thin, elderly man behind the counter asked.
“Well,” Goodkid said, still trying to catch his breath. “Today feels like a ‘K’ day. So... I think I’ll have some Kremie Kakes.” He reached into the black and white display box and pulled out 3 plastic-wrapped chocolate cakes. He looked down at them - held against his body with both hands - then looked back at the display. There was only one left. “Looks like I’m clearin' you out, Mister Mason,” he said and reached in to grab the last one.
“Oh, that’s perfectly alright, GK,” the old man said, grinning. “There’ll be more. There’s always more.”
Goodkid huffed as he walked toward the drink cooler at the back of the market. “Don’t think there’s any ‘K’ drinks. So, I guess I’ll have an orange creme soda.”
“Sure, GK, that’s a fine choice,” Mason said. “Creme has a ‘K’ sound, after all.”
“Close enough,” Goodkid said.
“Close enough,” Mason said with a wink.
Goodkid grunted as he opened the cooler door. He had to step back to give the door room to pass by him. He grunted harder when he reached for his drink.
“The ones in the back are colder,” the old man called.
“Hhhhuuuhh,” Goodkid groaned as released his hold on the bottle he’d chosen and leaned even further into the cooler. He pushed his large, soft arm over the tops of the bottles near the front and manged to get a finger around a cap in the rear. “Uugghh. Hmmmph. Errr!” He puffed as he twisted and pulled his arm - and the soda - free.
Out the window Mason saw that some of the neighborhood boys were gathering. They were all watching Goodkid. A tall boy said something, and pointed at GK. The other boys started laughing.
With orange creme soda in hand, Goodkid turned and headed up the aisle. Mason asked, “How’s your grandmama doing?”
“Oh,” Goodkid replied, lumbering his way toward Mason. “She’s not too good, I guess. Her little cart’s lost its charge and won’t go more than a little ways before it quits.”
“Well, that’s too bad. Too bad.”
“She’ll probably have me head to the Piggly Wiggly for some more cough syrup too.” Goodkid looked down in dread at the thought. The Pig was nearly half a mile away. “Mister Mason, I wish you had cough syrup around here.”
“Now, GK, you know I ain’t no pharmacy. I ain’t allowed to trade in that stuff. The government won’t let me. They got what they call regulations that say what folks like me can and can’t sell.”
“They won’t let you!” Goodkid said. “Well that’s not fair. Now I gotta walk all that way.” Goodkid exhaled in frustration. “It ain’t fair.”
Goodkid looked at Mason. He was lean and old. His prominent cheekbones rose high on his face, so much so that - from where Goodkid stood - they appeared to cover the lower halves of his eyes. His chin came to a sharp point and had the slightest strip of gray beard at its base His hair was nearly gone save for a thick V-shape in the center of his head that pointed toward his long nose. His eyebrows were thick bushy and - unlike the rest of his visible hair - perfectly black. He sat perched on a stool behind the counter. The counter stood on a raised platform. The extra height gave him a view of the entire store, and meant he spent most of his day looking down on his customers. He looked down on GK now. “No, it ain’t fair. Is it? Ain’t fair at all.”
“Oh, well,” Goodkid said, resigned. “I don’t know Mister Mason, Grandmom tells me to walk more all the time. Says it’ll get some of this weight off me.”
“She does?” Mason said, sounding concerned, then he raised a hand to his chin and smiled mischievously. “Hmm. I’ll tell you a secret, GK, when I was your age, I didn’t always do what I was told. And I’m willing to bet you don’t either, do ya?”
For a moment, Goodkid looked away shyly, but then he turned back to Mason with a mischievous smile of his own. “No, sir, I guess I don’t always.”
“Ha, I thought so,” Mason said. “Shoot, you know what? I bet your uncle will be by later, won’t he? I bet he’d run down to the store and pick up that cough medicine.”
A broad smile spread across Goodkid’s face. “Yeah, you’re right! He’d do that! Yeah. He’ll be here tonight.”
“Your grandmama can wait a little while longer, can’t she?”
“‘Course she can.” Goodkid said, happily. “And I won’t have to walk nowhere.”
While they talked, Mason kept an eye on the boys outside. They were pointing now and jabbing one another in the ribs. Urging each other on.
“Goodkid?” Mason changed the subject. “You know folks aren’t always nice, don’t you?”
Goodkid’s smile faded. “Oh, I know it, Mister Mason,” he said shaking his head. “Don't I ever know it!”.
“So, you probably know how sometimes one person or maybe a group of people will find somebody who’s different. And when they find him, they pick on him.”
“Yes, sir, I know it.”
Mason’s voice took on a grave, authoritative quality, like that of a teacher or a preacher. “Well, son, let me ask you another question. Have you ever heard of this so-called ‘natural selection’?”
“I think I heard something about that on TV, Mister Mason, but I can't remember exactly. Is that like what they used to do in that war?” Goodkid said. He half-consciously took a step backward. “World War II?”
Mason looked thoughtful for a moment and replied, “You mean the Nazis? I guess maybe the Nazis thought that's what they were doing, but not really. I knew a Jew once when I was a kid, and he was OK.” Then Mason leaned over the counter until he was on eye level with Goodkid and said, “‘Course some people are better than others, you know.” Mason paused and appeared to think for a moment. “You see, GK, I've been reading this book about natural selection and it’s got me to thinking. For one thing it got me to thinking about some of the folks around here. Natural selecting, you see, is nature’s way of keeping things nice and orderly. Not too little of any one thing. And not too much.”
Goodkid stared back at the man blankly. He pressed the cakes and soda to his body, gripping tightly.
“What happens, Goodkid, is that sometimes this world of ours gets full of.. What shall we call it? So much dead weight.” Goodkid took another step back and Mason leaned even closer, a cold smile appeared on his lips. Then, quickly he straightened. His smile immediately replaced by a stern blankness.
Mason shot a quick glance toward the window. The boys where still our there, but none of them were laughing now. They continued to stare at Goodkid. Turning back, Mason continued “What I mean to say is natural selection is the process of nature cutting the fat.”
Goodkid remained silent. Mason heard the faint sound of coins clinking in his pocket.
“Like I said that book got me to thinking. And I started to think that sometimes...not every single time, maybe, but sometimes... the pickin-on and meanness of one person to another...well maybe that’s just part of the way things are. Maybe that’s just nature doing it’s thing. Do you know what I mean, Goodkid?”
Goodkid swallowed. “Mister Mason, this is all I need. I better be getting back to my Grandmom now,” Goodkid said dropping the cakes and soda on the counter.
Mason took a quick glance out the window and smiled brightly. “Oh, sure, GK. I guess it is about time you were going. I got to talking and kept you past your time, didn’t I? Let’s see. Is this all you need? It’s a light day today, isn’t it?” Mason said. “What did you say before? It’s a ‘K’ day. That tickles me, GK.” Mason laughed. “You got a marker for every day.”
Goodkid nodded with a slight, tentative smile.
“Let’s see that’ll be four dollars and twenty-two cents,” Mason said.
Goodkid stuffed his hand into the font pocket of his jeans and came up with paper and coins. He laid it all on the counter and began counting. He counted out two paper dollars then moved on to coins. Little by little he pushed one coin at a time from the pile where he’d dropped it into a second pile closer to Mason. Mason offered no help. Instead he returned his attention to the boys outside his store. The tall boy now had a board. He was swinging it in a wide arch above his head. Some of the others were searching behind the dumpster at the corner of the parking lot.
“Mister Mason.” Goodkid drew the old man’s attention. “I don’t think I have enough. I only got three dollars and ninety-three cents.” Goodkid dropped his gaze, and said, “I’m sorry. I’ll put something back.”
“Oh, Goodkid. You know I wouldn’t let you do without,” Mason said. “What say I take everything you got, and we’ll call it even? How’s that?”
“Well...” Goodkid said, uncertainly. “I guess. I mean, thank you, Mister Mason.”
“Of course, GK. You’re one of my best customers,” Mason said.
“Thanks, again.” And with that Goodkid grabbed up his purchases and turned toward the door. Mason did not offer him a bag.
“See you next time, Goodkid.” Mason called.
“Okay,” Goodkid replied. He’d already begun breathing heavily by the time he reached the door. Mason watched as he pushed the door open with his shoulder and began to walk toward the sidewalk. He watched as the boys began to encircle him. He saw the boy with the board take the first swing. He watched the other boys jump onto Goodkid’s back and sides and drive him down onto his knees. He saw the four individually wrapped cakes fly in different directions, and the bottle of orange creme soda fall to the asphalt and bounce away. He watched one of the boys leave the mob and run around collecting these treats, then set them to the side and return to the beating. He watched until he had his fill, then he sprang open his register and added Goodkid’s payment.
Jessup, His Dog and the Back Bedroom
“That damn dog just wouldn’t stop barking.” That’s almost all he’d say there toward the end. All he thought about was that dog and how it had been in a near-constant state of panic from the time they’d moved into the house. The dog wet the floor. The dog growled at an empty corner. The dog barked. The dog barked and barked and barked.
Uncle Jessup was never the brightest bulb in the chandelier, nor was he the easiest person to get along with, nor was he likely to be the most sober person in any given group. But, he was family and we put up with him. We wouldn’t have under any other circumstances. His wife surely hadn’t and she’d taken their daughter with her. Jessup would see the girl twice a year when he and his ex would each drive three hours to meet in the middle at the Casey Jones Museum in Jackson. His ex would go off someplace and Jessup and his girl would have lunch there in the restaurant. Frankly it all seemed kinda sad to us. We figured that after a few years that girl didn’t want to be there any more than her momma likely did, but it did make Jessup happy and God bless em for being willing to keep up the tradition.
Anyway, I tell you all that just in the way of background. So you’ll understand that when Jessup started telling stories about the noises and other oddities that began happening in his new house, we simply didn’t think much of it.
“Bottle’s finally gotten to him,” Granny said. “Devil’s in that bottle and I knew it would get him one day.”
“I think he’s lonely,” Aunt Allie said. “Him and that dog up there alone. He’s just trying to get some attention.”
I thought he should just move. He was only renting after all.
But he stayed and two or three - sometimes four - times a week, he’d come by one of our houses and tell us about the banging from the attic or how the dog wouldn’t go into the back bedroom or how his keys went missing for two hours only to wind up back on the peg where he always kept them. He’d usually time these visits to coincide with supper, and, of course, we’d invite him. “See,” Aunt Allie said, “He’s just lonely. He’s looking for a little company. He don’t mean no harm.” And we all had to admit it looked like she was right.
I don’t think any of us truly paid any mind to his stories until that late winter night he came banging on the door. It was well after midnight and everyone had been in bed for hours. None of us were too happy to see him standing there on the stoop, soaking wet - for, of course, it was a stormy night - jabbering on about his dog being sucked into some kind of vortex.
That’s right, vortex.
Well we brought him into the kitchen and got some towels to dry him off and somebody made coffee. We left him there to dry off and get warm, while we went into the front room to talk things through. When our cousin, Seth, came over from next door - he’d seen the lights and then Jessup’s truck in the yard - we sent him in to see how drunk Jessup was. We really started to worry when Seth cam back swearing that Jessup was stone sober. So with nothing else left to do, we all went in and sat around the kitchen table to hear about what had happened.
Earlier that day - or really the day before - Jessup had been moving some furniture and boxes into the back bedroom of his house. Seems he’d convinced one of his drinking buddies - Travis, I believe it was - to move in with him. Well, on moving day, Travis had been called into court on a child custody matter and told Jessup that he’d have to put it off. But Jessup was so excited to have someone come live with him that he’d offered to move Travis all by himself.
Anyway, Jessup said his dog hated this back room. Had from the beginning. We all remembered hearing Jessup telling us how the dog would spend hours standing outside the door growling and baring his teeth. Now, seeing Jessup going in and out of that room really got the dog riled. Every time Jessup picked up something and went toward the room, that dog would bark his head off. Jessup said he tried yelling and even kicked it once or twice but the dog wouldn’t give in. He wouldn’t go in the room, but he stood right outside and barked into it and as Jessup went by he’d try to jump on him.
“He was tryin’ to keep me outta there,” Jessup said. “He knowed how evil that place was.”
Well Jessup didn’t let the dog stop him. He kept moving things in. After a while, he began to notice that the room had grown cold. But this was early March and what with the door open due to the move, Jessup brushed it off as a draft. He’d just managed to lug the in mattress and setup the bed when he heard the voice.
“I don’t know what it said, but it said somethin’,” he told us. “And that dog heard it too. I know that. He started barking and carrying on even more...like I’ve never seen.”
Jessup said he tried to blow it off, but he couldn’t. He became overwhelmed with a feeling of sadness and remorse, and he sat right down on the bed he’d just made. He said he thought about all the trouble he’d caused in his life. The fights and the petty crimes. He thought of his wife and his daughter and how he’d done them wrong. He thought about how even right then he was trying to fool his friend into moving into a room his dog wouldn’t even set foot in. He said he must’ve lost track of time for a while, because before he knew it, it was dark out. And, not only that, but must’ve lost track of himself for a while too for he found himself stepping into the hallway from his own bedroom - walking toward the back room. He looked down into his hand and saw his gun there. The dog hadn’t stopped barking the whole time, but he realized he hadn’t been listening.
He walked into the room and sat down on the bed again. He said he felt a kind of emptiness like he’d never felt before. A nothingness. He sat there looking at nothing, hearing nothing and feeling only the weight of the gun in his hand. And he did what seemed like the most natural thing in the world to do. He put that gun to his head.
He must’ve been only a split second from pulling the trigger when his dog ran in. Jessup saw him come from halfway down the hall. The second that dog crossed through the doorway, he heard a scream like he’d never heard coming from all around him. The room filled with a kind of electric charge. It shook him badly and woke him to what he was about to do. The dog ran past him and leaped a foot from the far wall. Jessup said he more felt than heard a screech of pain and anger and then he saw a bright light form inside the wall right before the dog. It was a vortex of swirling light. He felt the tug of it as it reached into our world. Hungry, was the word Jessup used. It was hungry.
Then, suddenly, the room was still and silent, the vortex had vanished and he could feel the chill lifting.
And the dog was gone.
Things went downhill for Jessup pretty quickly after that. The owners of the house were kind enough tear up the lease and Jessup moved into a old flop motel. He wasn’t there long before he got sick. The doctor told us that - though his liver was in pretty bad shape - the real trouble was in his mind. Somehow, the doctor - God bless him - found a room in a hospital in Nashville. His ex and his daughter came to visit and we did too. It was sad to see Jessup there in that place staring at the wall. We decided he was waiting. Waiting for his dog to come back.
“That dog ain’t coming back,” Granny said. “If he’s lucky he’s with Jesus, but I believe the devil’s done got him. Either way, he won’t walk this world no more.” We had to agree. That dog wasn’t coming back. Best we could tell neither was Jessup.
And we were right. It was a blessing when Jessup went to the Lord. We laid him out as best we could. We said our good-byes. Then, afterwards, we went to Aunt Allie’s. We told stories. We laughed. We ate. We spoke well of the dead. No one mentioned the dog.
Uncle Jessup was never the brightest bulb in the chandelier, nor was he the easiest person to get along with, nor was he likely to be the most sober person in any given group. But, he was family and we put up with him. We wouldn’t have under any other circumstances. His wife surely hadn’t and she’d taken their daughter with her. Jessup would see the girl twice a year when he and his ex would each drive three hours to meet in the middle at the Casey Jones Museum in Jackson. His ex would go off someplace and Jessup and his girl would have lunch there in the restaurant. Frankly it all seemed kinda sad to us. We figured that after a few years that girl didn’t want to be there any more than her momma likely did, but it did make Jessup happy and God bless em for being willing to keep up the tradition.
Anyway, I tell you all that just in the way of background. So you’ll understand that when Jessup started telling stories about the noises and other oddities that began happening in his new house, we simply didn’t think much of it.
“Bottle’s finally gotten to him,” Granny said. “Devil’s in that bottle and I knew it would get him one day.”
“I think he’s lonely,” Aunt Allie said. “Him and that dog up there alone. He’s just trying to get some attention.”
I thought he should just move. He was only renting after all.
But he stayed and two or three - sometimes four - times a week, he’d come by one of our houses and tell us about the banging from the attic or how the dog wouldn’t go into the back bedroom or how his keys went missing for two hours only to wind up back on the peg where he always kept them. He’d usually time these visits to coincide with supper, and, of course, we’d invite him. “See,” Aunt Allie said, “He’s just lonely. He’s looking for a little company. He don’t mean no harm.” And we all had to admit it looked like she was right.
I don’t think any of us truly paid any mind to his stories until that late winter night he came banging on the door. It was well after midnight and everyone had been in bed for hours. None of us were too happy to see him standing there on the stoop, soaking wet - for, of course, it was a stormy night - jabbering on about his dog being sucked into some kind of vortex.
That’s right, vortex.
Well we brought him into the kitchen and got some towels to dry him off and somebody made coffee. We left him there to dry off and get warm, while we went into the front room to talk things through. When our cousin, Seth, came over from next door - he’d seen the lights and then Jessup’s truck in the yard - we sent him in to see how drunk Jessup was. We really started to worry when Seth cam back swearing that Jessup was stone sober. So with nothing else left to do, we all went in and sat around the kitchen table to hear about what had happened.
Earlier that day - or really the day before - Jessup had been moving some furniture and boxes into the back bedroom of his house. Seems he’d convinced one of his drinking buddies - Travis, I believe it was - to move in with him. Well, on moving day, Travis had been called into court on a child custody matter and told Jessup that he’d have to put it off. But Jessup was so excited to have someone come live with him that he’d offered to move Travis all by himself.
Anyway, Jessup said his dog hated this back room. Had from the beginning. We all remembered hearing Jessup telling us how the dog would spend hours standing outside the door growling and baring his teeth. Now, seeing Jessup going in and out of that room really got the dog riled. Every time Jessup picked up something and went toward the room, that dog would bark his head off. Jessup said he tried yelling and even kicked it once or twice but the dog wouldn’t give in. He wouldn’t go in the room, but he stood right outside and barked into it and as Jessup went by he’d try to jump on him.
“He was tryin’ to keep me outta there,” Jessup said. “He knowed how evil that place was.”
Well Jessup didn’t let the dog stop him. He kept moving things in. After a while, he began to notice that the room had grown cold. But this was early March and what with the door open due to the move, Jessup brushed it off as a draft. He’d just managed to lug the in mattress and setup the bed when he heard the voice.
“I don’t know what it said, but it said somethin’,” he told us. “And that dog heard it too. I know that. He started barking and carrying on even more...like I’ve never seen.”
Jessup said he tried to blow it off, but he couldn’t. He became overwhelmed with a feeling of sadness and remorse, and he sat right down on the bed he’d just made. He said he thought about all the trouble he’d caused in his life. The fights and the petty crimes. He thought of his wife and his daughter and how he’d done them wrong. He thought about how even right then he was trying to fool his friend into moving into a room his dog wouldn’t even set foot in. He said he must’ve lost track of time for a while, because before he knew it, it was dark out. And, not only that, but must’ve lost track of himself for a while too for he found himself stepping into the hallway from his own bedroom - walking toward the back room. He looked down into his hand and saw his gun there. The dog hadn’t stopped barking the whole time, but he realized he hadn’t been listening.
He walked into the room and sat down on the bed again. He said he felt a kind of emptiness like he’d never felt before. A nothingness. He sat there looking at nothing, hearing nothing and feeling only the weight of the gun in his hand. And he did what seemed like the most natural thing in the world to do. He put that gun to his head.
He must’ve been only a split second from pulling the trigger when his dog ran in. Jessup saw him come from halfway down the hall. The second that dog crossed through the doorway, he heard a scream like he’d never heard coming from all around him. The room filled with a kind of electric charge. It shook him badly and woke him to what he was about to do. The dog ran past him and leaped a foot from the far wall. Jessup said he more felt than heard a screech of pain and anger and then he saw a bright light form inside the wall right before the dog. It was a vortex of swirling light. He felt the tug of it as it reached into our world. Hungry, was the word Jessup used. It was hungry.
Then, suddenly, the room was still and silent, the vortex had vanished and he could feel the chill lifting.
And the dog was gone.
Things went downhill for Jessup pretty quickly after that. The owners of the house were kind enough tear up the lease and Jessup moved into a old flop motel. He wasn’t there long before he got sick. The doctor told us that - though his liver was in pretty bad shape - the real trouble was in his mind. Somehow, the doctor - God bless him - found a room in a hospital in Nashville. His ex and his daughter came to visit and we did too. It was sad to see Jessup there in that place staring at the wall. We decided he was waiting. Waiting for his dog to come back.
“That dog ain’t coming back,” Granny said. “If he’s lucky he’s with Jesus, but I believe the devil’s done got him. Either way, he won’t walk this world no more.” We had to agree. That dog wasn’t coming back. Best we could tell neither was Jessup.
And we were right. It was a blessing when Jessup went to the Lord. We laid him out as best we could. We said our good-byes. Then, afterwards, we went to Aunt Allie’s. We told stories. We laughed. We ate. We spoke well of the dead. No one mentioned the dog.
Sunday, November 14, 2010
Oscillation
When the lights went out he knew the time was near. He could see the others moving around in the dimness with no trouble - as if the room was perfectly well lit. He noted at about the same time how the sounds around him had taken on a muffled quality. There was a cough, a sigh, perhaps the sound of Sarah crying, but it all sounded to his ears to be happening in another room.
He felt the weight of the blankets, and the coolness of his uncovered arms. He felt the pillow running along his ears and the top of his head. It seemed he was sinking more deeply into it. He appreciated these sensations. They reminded him of this place. Home. They reminded him of summer days and smiles and kisses on the porch swing. They reminded him of children playing in the yard. He thought back to his own childhood. The time his brother had nearly drowned in the creek. He’d sunk into the mud at the creek’s edge and it took a lot of pulling and praying to yank him free. He thought of his dog, Sleepy, who’d always been happiest lying the beneath the rocking chair.
And Sarah. He bought her an ice cream. When he handed it to her, her eyes opened wide. She was so proud of the treat he thought for a moment she wasn’t going to eat it, but instead try to tuck it away to take home. Then, when she did finally take a bite, he lost his heart to her happy smile. And when she offered, it wasn’t the ice cream but the intimacy of sharing a spoon that set his heart spinning.
At church he put his arm around her just as the song leader told everyone to rise. Of course, he thought, that’s always the way. He stood with the congregation and opened to the page in the hymnal. The text was hard to see clearly - but no matter, he knew the words to this one. We shall meet on that beautiful shore. By and by. By and by.
Words coming from the darkness. A hand on his. The touch of lips on the corner of his mouth.
When his brother came home from the war, they’d gone fishing. To their usual spot. He’d tried not to ask about how it had been over there, but he was young and curious. His brother spoke of one or two of his fellow soldiers. He told a story about going into a village on leave and his buddy Franklin’s misadventures with a prostitute. They caught a lot of fish that day. They’d flopped and twisted up the string.
The light around the figure in the corner was too bright to allow him to make out a face. He asked, who’s there, but got no response.
His feet were cold now. Some thought within him seemed to say they were no longer of any matter. An odd thought, but one that filled him with some reassurance. For the most part his body seemed distant. He most clearly felt his feet and the dryness of his lips and tongue. That dry feeling certainly wasn’t pleasant, but also not as uncomfortable as he might have expected. A sip of water might be nice though. Then, as if he’d asked out loud, he felt the sponge. It was moist and cool, but little water made it into his mouth. Most ran down his chin and on to - into nothingness.
There was a boy on the swing next to his. The boy had red hair and long-sleeved cotton shirt striped horizontally in yellow, red and black. His pants were brown and belled out at his feet. The boy was a good swinger. He swung higher and higher, at either end of his every lengthening arch - in a moment suspended in space - he’d giggle to himself.
After a time slowed his swinging, then dropped his feet to stop himself. He turned and asked, “What’s your name?”
My name?
“Yes, kid, your name. What’s your name? Don’tcha got one?”
My name is- My name is Henry. Can you- Can you see me?
The boy laughed. “Of course, I can see you, silly. That’s funny. Can i see you?” He laughed again.
Is that funny? I didn’t mean to be funny. Do you know where my parents are? I don’t know how to find them.
“Oh, I’m sure they’re around here someplace,” the boy said. “You’ll run into them eventually.”
I wish I could find them now. I’d like to go home.
“Yeah, that’s pretty common.”
But I don’t know where my home is.
“Listen. Henry? Is that right? Listen, Henry, it’s not quite time for all that yet. Why don’t ya just swing for a while. It’s fun. Here, watch me.” With that the boy pushed off and began kicking his legs. Swinging higher and higher.
He wondered if it were night, but supposed it didn’t matter very much. Time was different now. It had taken on a new texture - somehow thinner, nearly transparent.
Dimly he heard a coarse sort of clicking sound - like a fan who’s motor was on it’s last legs. It had an in and an out quality to it. Winding down. Things were winding down. He felt Sarah near him and knew she was holding his hand. He felt others around him too, but wasn’t quite sure who. If he could look more clearly - but the effort was too great. Then from the darkness above him came a light. Soft, but bright, it grew larger and larger around him. Sleepy was there with him - in the bed with him - or maybe he wasn’t in the bed any longer.
The dog licked his face, and the light surrounded the both of them.
He felt the weight of the blankets, and the coolness of his uncovered arms. He felt the pillow running along his ears and the top of his head. It seemed he was sinking more deeply into it. He appreciated these sensations. They reminded him of this place. Home. They reminded him of summer days and smiles and kisses on the porch swing. They reminded him of children playing in the yard. He thought back to his own childhood. The time his brother had nearly drowned in the creek. He’d sunk into the mud at the creek’s edge and it took a lot of pulling and praying to yank him free. He thought of his dog, Sleepy, who’d always been happiest lying the beneath the rocking chair.
And Sarah. He bought her an ice cream. When he handed it to her, her eyes opened wide. She was so proud of the treat he thought for a moment she wasn’t going to eat it, but instead try to tuck it away to take home. Then, when she did finally take a bite, he lost his heart to her happy smile. And when she offered, it wasn’t the ice cream but the intimacy of sharing a spoon that set his heart spinning.
At church he put his arm around her just as the song leader told everyone to rise. Of course, he thought, that’s always the way. He stood with the congregation and opened to the page in the hymnal. The text was hard to see clearly - but no matter, he knew the words to this one. We shall meet on that beautiful shore. By and by. By and by.
Words coming from the darkness. A hand on his. The touch of lips on the corner of his mouth.
When his brother came home from the war, they’d gone fishing. To their usual spot. He’d tried not to ask about how it had been over there, but he was young and curious. His brother spoke of one or two of his fellow soldiers. He told a story about going into a village on leave and his buddy Franklin’s misadventures with a prostitute. They caught a lot of fish that day. They’d flopped and twisted up the string.
The light around the figure in the corner was too bright to allow him to make out a face. He asked, who’s there, but got no response.
His feet were cold now. Some thought within him seemed to say they were no longer of any matter. An odd thought, but one that filled him with some reassurance. For the most part his body seemed distant. He most clearly felt his feet and the dryness of his lips and tongue. That dry feeling certainly wasn’t pleasant, but also not as uncomfortable as he might have expected. A sip of water might be nice though. Then, as if he’d asked out loud, he felt the sponge. It was moist and cool, but little water made it into his mouth. Most ran down his chin and on to - into nothingness.
There was a boy on the swing next to his. The boy had red hair and long-sleeved cotton shirt striped horizontally in yellow, red and black. His pants were brown and belled out at his feet. The boy was a good swinger. He swung higher and higher, at either end of his every lengthening arch - in a moment suspended in space - he’d giggle to himself.
After a time slowed his swinging, then dropped his feet to stop himself. He turned and asked, “What’s your name?”
My name?
“Yes, kid, your name. What’s your name? Don’tcha got one?”
My name is- My name is Henry. Can you- Can you see me?
The boy laughed. “Of course, I can see you, silly. That’s funny. Can i see you?” He laughed again.
Is that funny? I didn’t mean to be funny. Do you know where my parents are? I don’t know how to find them.
“Oh, I’m sure they’re around here someplace,” the boy said. “You’ll run into them eventually.”
I wish I could find them now. I’d like to go home.
“Yeah, that’s pretty common.”
But I don’t know where my home is.
“Listen. Henry? Is that right? Listen, Henry, it’s not quite time for all that yet. Why don’t ya just swing for a while. It’s fun. Here, watch me.” With that the boy pushed off and began kicking his legs. Swinging higher and higher.
He wondered if it were night, but supposed it didn’t matter very much. Time was different now. It had taken on a new texture - somehow thinner, nearly transparent.
Dimly he heard a coarse sort of clicking sound - like a fan who’s motor was on it’s last legs. It had an in and an out quality to it. Winding down. Things were winding down. He felt Sarah near him and knew she was holding his hand. He felt others around him too, but wasn’t quite sure who. If he could look more clearly - but the effort was too great. Then from the darkness above him came a light. Soft, but bright, it grew larger and larger around him. Sleepy was there with him - in the bed with him - or maybe he wasn’t in the bed any longer.
The dog licked his face, and the light surrounded the both of them.
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