Monday, April 30, 2012

Sneaker on the Beach

Sneaker on the Beach
Author: Tom Sheehan


Jadon Calix was complex and complete, yet here he was with simple dawn playing him like strings on a violin, teasing him out and about in the universe, along with a godforsaken, obviously stinking, lone Adidas sneaker. In one particularly bright shaft of light, perhaps a mental shaft he later confessed, he had seen the single sneaker on the beach, harsh as an old idea left behind to ferment for itself. The toes of the sneaker faced the sea, as if the supposed late owner had been at departure, or at contemplation most sincere.

Jadon Calix loved the beach in the morning, especially when the Gulf was quiet. He’d been up much of the night, knowing that in a few days he’d have to leave Louisiana and head back north. Two months hardly seemed enough, yet he would have to leave. The generosity of the Bredens had been overwhelming. Their son Paul had been his comrade, had died in his arms right out on the Iraqi desert. He had been able to tell Paul’s parents how it all happened, down to Paul’s last words. “Find my Louisiana, Jadon, you’ll love it.”

Jadon Calix loved the endless beach because he had known terror on the desert. Though that desert was halfway around the world, it was too recent to forget. Amazement overpowered him when he realized sand was the one constant in both lonely places. Now, with the sand compact under his feet, not shifting between tides like odds in a betting parlor, or boats hooked by hawsers out on the Gulf, he fully contemplated the differences of the sandy geographies.

An inner message told him the day itself was different too. Earlier, much earlier, the sun had come on slowly, like a surprise was at hand. The rim of the sea, at the eastern horizon, bloomed the way a new orchid comes, first purple and then an orange-purple and then, in an attempt at utter beauty, a slow gracious lavender, as if evening had taken the place of dawn. It crept up on Jadon, and then, like a sudden change of mind, it banged him right between the eyes when he saw the lone sneaker practically haloed.

His handsome face erupted with intrigue. That face bore a solid chin and a happy smile, a kind of opponent of that solid chin. He had deep eyes that both sought and delivered messages in quick instances, the blond head often tilted with curiosity telegraphing its existence. Mrs. Breden, the day he came knocking at their door, saw the most attractive young man on the porch from one of her windows, telling her husband, “I swear this is Paul’s friend, Jadon Calix. He’s about the handsomest man I’ve ever seen, with all due apologies, my dear, a few years removed.” She chuckled immediately, knowing he would somehow bring some new life back into their darkened lives. They rushed him into their home with a gracious welcome and thanks.

Now, on the beach, the combers coming slowly, he wondered if the sneaker belonged to a one-legged, one-footed beachcomber. He laughed lightly at himself, dawn rosy with him, sharing its outlook and full prism. It was worth wondering, he confirmed, his mind leaping around and about, getting himself shifted here and there purposefully. Did such a one-legged man play the drums? The piano? Gamble? Tap time with one foot? Show impatience? Share shots and beers? Bull his way in bed in spite of an infirmity?

Three or four more times that morning, gulls calling, air sweet and salty at the same time as he walked up and down the beach, eyeing rounded stones, collecting glass particles worn smooth by the ocean’s play, kicking remnants and other shards of life, he passed by the sneaker, still outbound it appeared. Though it was somewhat worn, beat up in whatever game it might have been at in its days, he knew at one time it must have been one of the gaudy, outspoken types, styling at least for all it was worth and at a hundred and twenty bucks a pair. Times change, he argued.

Jadon could not call back all the nights when Paul’s words came down upon him again like a message out of the sky, from far off, the tone of his voice thin and narrow and weak, as if escaping from a star wobbling on the horizon. Much of it haunted him as a task left undone, a promise not kept. Never then could he go back to sleep, Jadon’s other messages coming back also, the way one memory sharpens another, hones it into shape, grabs on for all of dear life, not willing to let go. Often he thought it was like knowing barbed wire in the dark.

Another statement of Paul’s kept coming back; the time when they were in a reserve area, the weapons out of hand, the stars promising difference, an edge of a breeze without sand in it loose as blades. “There’s so much adventure there, Jadon. Don’t miss out on it. Between the Gulf and the bayous there’s a whole lot of crawl space. Find some of it. I did. I loved it. You will too.”

That probably started it off, a simple reaction one splendid morning when Paul wouldn’t let go. He got up early, after another sleepless but remarkable night, called his boss telling him he was not coming in to work any more, that he was going to Louisiana. In three days he knocked at the door of Paul Breden’s parents.

They had given him the run of their summer home for two months. “Down on the Gulf, son. Paul loved it there.”

Now, on his final morning, he was recounting all of it.

Something took him back to the sneaker, as if Paul was directing him. He heard him say, for the hundredth or more times, “There’s so much adventure there, Jadon. Don’t miss it.”

He picked up the sneaker. It was dry. Had not been in the water in some time, full tide had been mere inches away. Maybe an incoming wave had tossed it higher on the beach. Jadon looked for the mate, for a footprint, for a place from which it might have been tossed. All the beach was pristine for this day, as far as it had advanced.

He put his hand inside the open heel. He felt queasy, someone’s sweat, the way sneakers gather up sweat and stink, maintain it. If it had been in the water and was now dry, it might be clean enough. Clumsily he felt the shape of something inside the sneaker, jammed into the toes. The lacing was tied tightly about the object, as if to keep it contained inside the sneaker. Intrigue came upon him. Fishing inside, he felt a tube-like
structure, a small round container.

Undoing the lacing with a little difficulty, he pulled the container out. It was a much like that used by druggists to dispense pills, plastic, but there was no prescription label attached.

The little plastic bottle had a tight white cap on it and a note, clearly visible, inside. The note was dry. The printing was somewhat neat and legible.

Whoever finds this: My name is Carlton Maxwell. I was visiting in Chapacteau.

I was looking for a canoe that got loose and floated off downstream. I saw some men kill a man and carry him on their boat. They caught me and took me too.

I have no large bottle to send a message in, just this medicine container I found in the water. I am alone among these men. I’m afraid I can’t be saved. I have seen nobody for days, no boats either. I do not know what date this is.

These men stole something and carried something aboard along with the dead man. They carried me off with them and tied me up and later made me work. They said they’d kill me. I don’t remember how many days it’s been. Two or three times they locked me below the deck during daylight hours. But one night, when they thought I was sleeping after they were drinking a lot, I got my hold of a small can of paint. If you find this, my fingerprints in paint are on the underside of many surfaces on the boat. The gunnels, the bottom of a door, on the hinge side of hatch cover. I’ve hidden them there as proof of my abduction. I know they will throw me overboard when they are done with me. They tossed the dead man overboard, when we were far at sea, like he had never even been there.


I have no idea where I am or where they were headed. If I jump off I know I will drown. I would do it if I saw a boat near, but they lock me up below deck when a boat appears.
I know the sneaker will float. The medical bottle carries air. I threw both sneakers overboard. I bet the other one sank.

The gent they killed and threw over the side when we were a couple of days out was Black Martin. They talked about him and something about the Carousel Lounge and another murder they had committed there but he had gotten in the way. His fingerprints are in paint on a note I have hidden below decks under an emergency container.

If anyone finds this, the boat has a number on the side that says LA 9176 WZ but I could tell that some of the figures had been swapped in places because of the background.


If you can find them, please find me. If my friend had not died in Iraq, I bet he would be the one to find me.


That last bit crushed Jadon.

Jadon’s complexity was a simple outlook on what he wanted to do in life… but he was yet to find that one view that would lock up his energies. The note he read at least a dozen times climbed down through him and back up out of some cell or recess. If he went to the police with it, they most likely would laugh him out of the station. Of that he was sure. A note in a bottle in a sneaker! How ridiculous! Don’t bother us! He was ultimately sure that they would see no reason for the sneaker to be involved in any real situation. It was a huge joke.

But Jadon saw immediately that the small tube might float forever on the sea and not be seen; whereas the sneaker, from its inception, from its first design, was an eye-catcher and most perfectly suited for this final errand. Plus, there was the loss of its mate and it would be useless until the end of time.

He wished that Paulie was standing by. “Hey, old buddy,” he said a number of times, “wish that you were here. We had some great conversations, saw some things with the exact same eye. I know you’d believe this,” and he held the note aloft again.
A whole series of things hit him, a sequence of events that he might swear, if forced into a confrontation about their inception, had come to him from Paul Breden, late of this world. He saw the police laugh again, not at the note, but at the sneaker. So he made half a dozen copies.

The police, of course, did not laugh him out of the station, but did say it was a far-fetched joke of sorts. “A sneaker?” the sergeant at the desk said. “When’s the tap-off for the next game? We’ll get back to you, son.”

“Can you check to see if this Maxwell guy is missing?”

“Right to it, son. We’ll have it checked out. We’ll look for him, you can bet on that. That’s a promise.”

Of course, all that dropped out of context and contention. Nothing made the papers, not a word surfaced about a missing person. No face. No person. No memory. And Jadon Calix was by himself in the matter.

Of course he never saw Maxwell, who never rose up any place in the Gulf. Three months later, Jadon came back to Louisiana, Paul Breden constantly after him to “find” his Louisiana. And he kept thinking it meant to find Maxwell.

The Bredens, knowing of his plight, allowed him use of their summer home again, and another turn at the beach. He started policing boatyards, the old boat registration number and all its possibilities computerized at first and then locked into his mind. He put an ad in the newspaper about a missing person named Maxwell. There were no replies, not a single one after two more months.

One day, at a lunch counter near a boatyard, he met a girl who was working at a painter’s easel. Her black hair, dense as a jungle, hung over her eyes and he wondered how she could be making much of what she was looking at, or studying, he later admitted. She was painting a scene of a boat at a pier and the pier in a motionless harbor. It was pretty damn good, he thought. She was a pretty damn good painter and her name was Judi Pless. She had known Paul Breden in grade school. Interest was heightened in both directions when he told her Paul’s last words. She liked Jadon immediately thereafter.

The sudden intensities he found in her paintings, the “hold” put on energies that any moment might leap from a hundred sources, captivated him. It was not the colors that did it, or the mix of them by shading and whatnot, but the imprisoning of the collected sense of energy. He found that she had brought some fantastic marine life to a still picture, which would soon go back to work, but for the moments of her study of it, the intensity was in painted surfaces.

Judi was very curious about him, and more so when he explained how he felt about her capture of energy. Her intrigue grew quicker over lunch and coffee.

“Where up north do you come from?” she said, brushing hair out of her eyes, letting him see the sparkle suddenly residing there, the interest coming focal. The shape of his face pleased her, the eye of the artist making measure, finalizing in a way an acceptance.

“From a little town north of Boston about a dozen miles.” She liked how he looked at her when he talked, as though his eyes were hungry. “It’s called Saugus, but just a few miles away, on the ocean, is a place called Nahant.” She also liked his juxtaposition of interest points. “Once, long ago, I saw an exhibition of paintings there by a marine artist. All of them of huge ships and derricks and wharves and gantries and stevedore gear of all kinds, from ports all around the world, Scotland, England, India, like energy at rest in busy harbors. Your work reminds me of his work, but of all of his paintings there was one simple one with a few dories tied up loosely at the ocean’s edge, at a place in Portugal, by the mouth of the Aveiro River. Ropes were tied from the dories to branches driven into the sea bottom. It was the difference from the huge gantries and ships that haunted me at first, and then I saw what he had left out of the picture, and what he wanted me to see, I was convinced of that. So I wrote a poem about it, about what I saw that wasn’t there.
Slowly, without a bit of hesitation, sure of his own words fitting the intent of his message, he recited the poem for her, her eyes steady on him as if making him her new study, her chin beginning to soften in a tell-tale way, lips slightly ajar:

Small Boats at Aveiro (from a painting set in Portugal by Peter Rogers, Nahant marine artist/They sit at Aveiro by the river’s mouth,/Their bows scattered as compass points,/Small scoops on an interminably huge sea/Rising to the ever imagined yet illumined line/Of sight where the gallant Genovese/Fell off the known world/ They are not/Deserted, though faintly cold for oarsmen/Who walk down this beach behind me,/Stomachs piqued and perched with wine,/Salted hands still warm with women, mouths/Rich of imagery and signals.

Sons are left/Who later come down this beach/To these small boats topping the Atlantic,
Gunnels but bare inches from the Father/of Oceans, coursed to the stalked anchorage
by thin ropes and a night of tidal pull.

At Aveiro I stand/Between commotion and that other, silence;/Inhaling spills of kitchens, olla podridas /Riding the ocean air with a taut ripeness,/Early bath scents, night’s wet mountings/And varieties peeled and scattered to dawn,/And see boats move the way sea and earth/Move against a distant cloud.

I question hammer/And swift arc that drove pared raw poles/Of their moorings into the sea floor, picture/A mustachioed Latin god laughing at his day’s/Work while waving to a lone woman on the strand;/And see her, urged from kitchen or bed, in clothing/Gray and somber, near electric in her movement/And scale of mystery, eye the god eye to eye./Such is the mastery of eyes./Inland, before dawn hits,/An oarsman, tossed awake, knows an old callus where/Atlantic sends his swift messages, for up through/Toss of heel and calf, through thew of thigh/And spinal matter, radiant in a man’s miles of nerves,/These small boats, gathered at Aveiro,/Tell of their loneliness.

Judi Pless nodded her understanding, then said, “Now I see what you meant by capturing the energy in my paintings.” She, in that short moment, had been captivated herself, could feel it working through her body, making strange demands in its own right, leaving a trail her mind would follow later in the night. “You’re the first one ever to say that, how I felt about a stand-still. That’s marvelous, how you say that, how you said it. Now tell me what really brings you down here to Louisiana again, whatever it is beyond Paul Breden.”

She was expecting something entirely different from this man, a kind of intensity that enveloped him, that was broadcast from him in spite of his most handsome profile. She admitted he had taken her breath away with her first look at him. The depth acclaimed in his eyes was new to her; and she had begun to measure it. All he said in the following moments still came as a total surprise. This stranger, this Jadon Calix, was clearly invasive, had a way of inserting things, of creating interest. She almost said aloud how interesting he was, the words being tasted on her tongue, at her lips. Movement came through her loins, she was positive; it had been a long time for such a breech of faith, swearing there’d be no men so soon coming at her at an angle, designing from the outset.

Jadon Calix read Carlton Maxwell’s note to her, his voice steady, his eyes as riveting as anything she had ever seen, seeing what was driving this man.

Then, an angelic light falling on her face, her hair suddenly in place as if set forever, she made him read Carlton Maxwell’s note a second time. She kept nodding as if each scene or part of a scene was being set for her eye, for her mind, locking it up, keeping it for added contemplation. “There are things there, in that note, that grab me and then twist me. It’s like I am seeing things he did not say, like your Nahant painter friend that made a poet out of you.” He thought her to be in that trance-like attitude she called on when she was studying a subject to paint. Jadon could feel her deep resonance, as if she were searching for meaning or resolution. “The police won’t help?” she said. “They don’t care? How can that be? They should pursue all possibilities. Every damn one.”

They talked about other things that interested them, the sea, how it touched in harbors, how harbors touched her, and, lately, him here on the Gulf. They spoke about the Pacific Rim and Pacific Platelets and the California Faultline. It was like a classroom filled with interests. The Old Man and the Sea, came and went, along with South Pacific and Moby Dick. She was stunned when Jadon told her that Michigan had the longest shoreline of any of the original 48 states, where she thought it would be Florida or Maine or California. She did not doubt his knowledge.

Jadon, despite all his other interests, was smitten with her, drawn continually to her good looks, the way her hair would often seem to catch itself in a very special light, as if those shared lights were setting up her pose. And the message in the Aveiro River poem kept popping up in the conversation. She came back to it a number of times as if a new thought had struck a tangent with it. “I think Carlton Maxwell is saying the same kind of things that Peter Rogers said; find the missing boat, find the missing fingerprints. I think he’s really saying ‘find the missing men who killed that man and dropped him at sea,’ and,” she paused, brushing her hair back, staring at Jadon as if she was looking through him at another scene, “’find those men that killed me.’ I think it’s very obvious that he’s been murdered. They couldn’t and wouldn’t keep him around this long, not with the slightest chance of him getting loose. We have to find that boat. It all boils down to that.”

“There’s a lot of water out there, a lot of boats in ports, and hundreds of miles of shoreline. How do we do it?” Jadon was torn in his attention span; Judi Pless was working all the secret places in his body, all of them, and it began to unnerve him.
He was, at one moment, about to kiss her, thinking how good it would feel, how good she smelled, the way she could look at him as if he could be, would be, a subject for a new painting. And in that one moment of indecision, when he felt at a total loss for all that he felt, Judi Pless leaned over and kissed him right on the lips. “I never do that,” she said, “never. I think something might happen here. I’m hoping that it does.”

Jadon almost caved in at that kiss. He remembered Paul Breden out on the Iraqi desert, the mortars, the car bombs, and he could smell the scent of death. But this marvelous woman had cut through something a long time ignored with a simple yet not so simple kiss. “I hope so too,” he said, feeling his mouth drying up, a choke catching in his throat,
a bubble threatening to burst in his chest, his fingers gone itchy. The dawn from an earlier day came back to him in its lavender touch; he could smell the lilac bush his brother had planted some twenty years ago, how a spring evening in the backyard could almost fracture him, and he was almost overwhelmed.

But Judi Pless left that alone for one second more.

She tossed her head nonchalantly, the dark hair bouncing about her face, masking something. “Would you like to come up and see my etchings?” she said, and without waiting for an answer, took his hand and walked off toward her small studio at the head of the marina.

Jadon was amazed at what Judi had accomplished in her painting. The studio, to the walls and shelves, was full of paintings of all sizes, and all bordering in or on the sea. Boats. Shorelines. Rocks with a sea pounding at them. Silent sand under the sun. The paintings leaned on baseboards, lay piled on shelves, were hung indiscriminately on three of the walls. Three harbor scenes at dusk hung on what he presumed to be the bathroom door. When he flipped the paintings over, like others he had turned, he saw the legends. “There’s so damn much here. You‘ve recorded all data on the back, just like a newspaper caption, like a journal or a diary of every painting. Your whole life is here. You could spin your whole life right out of these paintings, flip them and make a movie. Still life to action, let the energy loose again. God, you’re ingenious. You’re thorough. You’re so beautiful at what you do. How old were you when you started painting?”

He had come so close to her his breath was held in awed silence.

“My father was painting when I was a kid, he always painted. He’d paint a scene and sometimes throw it away the next day. He was not very good at it, but he was happy mixing and slopping and making crude angles in scenes. My mother yapped at him a lot. Painting was, I think, a way to get away from her. Out in the garage he’d paint anything, whether he liked the scene or not. I wanted to tell him for years, to suggest things, changes, other ways, techniques I could see very early on but I couldn’t do it. I wanted to talk about color mix and shading and linear stuff at an angle, but I couldn’t bring myself to do it.”

Her confession went the whole route, pouring out of her, her face lit up from a mysterious halo. “When he was dying from throat cancer, he said, ‘You always knew, didn’t you? I knew it and you never said a word and I loved you for that. Now take every damn one of my paintings and burn them before your mother thinks she can sell them. I don’t want them seen by anybody. I don’t ever want them connected to you in any way. I know that you knew, even when you were a kid. You were special then. You are special now. You will become very special. Find your place in all of this and then kick the hell out of it. Promise me that, that you’ll kick the hell out of it all.’ He died holding my hand.”

In love! In love! Jadon knew he was in love with this painter with the dark lashes and the dark hair and the light leaping in her eyes. He knew incandescence, the mysterious halo burning about them. He knew what ambience was, how it was meant to be. Was this Paul Breden’s Louisiana? Was this part or all of what Paul knew he’d find in his Louisiana? He kissed her without another second’s hesitation and she trembled and nestled in his arms and then, abruptly, tried to say something, but he was holding her the same way he had held Paul at his dying breath. The end or the beginning was on top of him, around him. The heat of the desert had been overpowering, burning right down through his throat, into his guts all at turmoil. He could taste the acid of gunfire, of shrapnel almost in flight, the dust ready to bury both Paul and him. But in his arms she was struggling, whispering, “The numbers. The numbers. I remember the numbers!”

He could not let go of her. He wanted to hold the moment forever. But she kept saying, kept scratching at reality, “The numbers! The numbers!” Finally, she broke loose, then came back into his arms and kissed him again. It was a long and passionate kiss and then she struggled anew. “I know those numbers, those letters,” and with that broke free of him again and started tossing paintings aside after looking at them. “Help me, Jadon, help me!” she screamed. “I remember those numbers! I remember the numbers, the boat.”

Hundreds of paintings stored in her small studio. It was as if they were old magazines or newspapers to be discarded, the way the two of them tossed paintings aside, off the walls, off the shelves, from piles against the baseboard. And in a moment of serene triumph, her hair thrown back over her brow, her eyes full of fire and knowledge and final resolution, she held up Carlton Maxwell’s boat. The alphas and numbers were there, caught forever on the prow of the hull, even to the distorted shading of the background where the registration numbers had been switched around.

Judi Pless had listed the date, marina, the slip number, the harbor, the city. The whole scene came leaping back at her; the masts and bowsprits of other boats at the marina, a small sloop out on the bay, a boy standing in a nearby dory while holding a fishing rod, a whole ball of energy at an utter and complete standstill.

Jadon Calix could almost see the painted fingerprints on the underside of the railings that dipped down the length of the boat. “Let them duck this one,” he said, as he kissed her again.


______________________________________


Bio note: Tom Sheehan served in Korea, 1951 and lives in Saugus, MA. Books are Epic Cures; Brief Cases, Short Spans, Press 53; A Collection of Friends; From the Quickening, Pocol Press.  He has 18 Pushcart nominations, in Dzanc Best of the Web 2009, and 263 stories on Rope and Wire Magazine. His newest book, from Milspeak Publishers, is Korean Echoes, 2011. Another eBook, The Westering, will be issued shortly by them and will be followed by at least 8 more. His work is in/coming in Ocean Magazine, Nervous Breakdown, Stone Hobo, Dew on the Kudzu, Faith-Hope-Fiction, Canary, Subtle Tea, Red Dirt Review, Nontrue, Danse Macabre, Nashwaak Review, and Qarrtsiluni.

The 21 short stories crafted by Tom Sheehan in The Westering tell of the pioneering of those who came from many countries, many customs, many cultures, and brought much of that mix with them to create the American West as we now know it. Their pursuits, their dreams, and the harsh life they entered are gathered in The Westering – a search for new footholds, new visions, new adventures. They came from nations all over the globe, carrying visions that drove them onward; and in these pursuits they rose, they fell, they faulted, they were often exalted or saluted, they served, and many survived the harshest rigors. Master storyteller Tom Sheehan captures these characters and their stories with vigor, compassion, and love of craft that brings the past to life while leaving readers aching to discover their own frontiers. Read an excerpt! http://www.milspeak.org/milspeak/THE_WESTERING-MB_MARCH_2012_RELEASE.html

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Open-Air Procedure

Open-Air Procedure
Skadi meic Beorh


“Where’s the scissors, daddy?”

“Why?” (It’s never a good thing when Lorelei wants the scissors.)

“Mama Dog’s got a tick.”

I cringed, imagining the scissors as a medieval surgeon’s tool in the hands of our expressive six year old. “That’s alright,” she said as she yanked a pair of wire cutters from a cabinet drawer. “This will work.” From another drawer she grabbed a sandwich bag. She opened the back door and flung the squealing screen wide. An idyllic early June warmth blew in on a breeze smelling of fresh cut grass and jasmine. I was reminded of both Ray Bradbury and Jean Shepherd, and thought I might later take a walk down the long ally behind our happy turn-of-the-century neighborhood.

Apparently Mrs. Kiplinger’s flat-coated retriever had an unnoticed tick. I watched through the window. Mama Dog was on her back, smiling, as Lorelei had the wire cutters lain against her skin. I wanted to look away, but my morbid curiosity got the better of me.

Snip!

The tick was disconnected from its food source–possibly without its head. It was bloated with blood and purplish, looking more like a plucked grape than an insect. Lorelei then withdrew my tweezers from her dress pocket (tweezers I will never use again!) and placed the pebble-sized lump into the sandwich bag. She held it up to the sunlight, studying it, a mixture of satisfaction and horror painted across her cute freckled features. Then she dropped the helpless creature to the ground and lifted her foot. Her new white sneaker wavered there for a second or two before slamming down on the bag.

“Sissy!” squealed our youngest daughter Annabel as she ran to her big sister, suddenly disinterested in her stuffed animal tea party. “Why you steppin’ on jelly, Sissy? I want some jelly…”

Thursday, April 26, 2012

The Journey

The Journey
          The year was 1886 and the month was October. My Grandfather had been the foreman of a coal mine in Carbon Hill, Alabama now on two years.  Not a surprising occupation, but under the circumstances a very unusual position to be held by a twenty-two year old man…a twenty-two year old half Cherokee Indian man by the name of John Henry Harris.  It just so happened, my grandfather could speak, read and write the English language better than most educated white folk in the area, with most of his education coming from his Cherokee side of the family.  With the exception of the jet black mustache he wore on his upper lip, he looked the ever consummate Cherokee.  It seems the mustache had slipped in through my great grandfathers English blood.  Grandfather was very proficient in mathematics, an unusual ability for most folk of the times, especially an Indian. Combined with his mentioned abilities, he had the uncanny skill for getting a day and a halves worth of work out of his men in only one day.  The mine he had been working had produced record amounts of coal for the past two years and that was the problem...they had extracted every bit of coal that could be found in that particular mine.
          It was now time to move on, so my Grandfather packed all of his and my Grandmothers belongings into a small covered wagon and was about to make a hundred mile journey to the next mine on his agenda.
          My Grandmother, Martha Elizabeth Harris, was of pure Irish heritage, standing less than five feet in stature.  She had a massive head of red hair, blue eyes and an Irish temper to accompany it.  Grandmother was going on sixteen years of age, with a baby in her arms and another on its way.  Not unusual for that time in history!  To say the least she and my Grandfather made a strange pair to feast your eyes on.
          With the exception of my Grandfather every one working in the mine was of the Negro race.  In fact the entire community around the mine was made up of people of African descent.
          It was now six o’clock in the morning with a steady downpour of cold October rain.   To be exact it happened to be the twelfth day of October; coincidently a date when in history another journey had been made.  However, the journey being made by my grandparents was being made not only to discover a new job, but hopefully a more stable way of life.
          The journey was slow and uncomfortable for the average person, let alone a pregnant lady with a small child.  There was no horse or mule power to pull the small wagon…only a pair of very old oxen.  At times travel slowed to less than a slow walk.  This in itself caused wheels on the wagon to sink down to the axles in the mud on the road – that is when a road could be found. Although the wagon was covered with a canvas top, high winds continually blew rain through even the smallest of openings saturating everything in its way.
          As they continued their journey they passed many very old homesteads having empty barns and houses.  Signs indicating hard times were slow to die even after all the years that had passed since the war.
          Darkness was rapidly closing in on their first day of travel, and the rain had slowed but had not stopped falling.  Grandfather made a decision to stop at the next empty farm house they came to along the road. Traveling only a short distance farther, as luck would have it, they came across a large two story house with all of the doors and windows boarded up.  The house sat back a long distance from the muddy road they had been traveling, and in the mind of my young grandmother it cast a vision of fear.  She protested my Grandfathers decision to stay in the empty farm house and finally admitted she was afraid it was haunted. 
          Grandfather was more afraid of outlaws, called highwaymen, who had a reputation of robbing and killing innocent travelers on the road alone. Ghosts were the least of his worries, and he knew the greater danger would be to sleep outside in the leaky wagon. So Grandfather hurriedly unhitched the Oxen from the wagon and tied them to a tree in the back yard.  He then pried boards from one of the doors leading into the house, lit a kerosene lamp and much to my Grandmothers protesting led her and the baby into the house. 
          Finding a fireplace in what looked like a very large living room in the front section of the house Grandfather built a fire with the boards he had pulled from the door. The light given off from the fire in the fireplace lit up the entire room giving my Grandmothers imaginary ghosts no place to hide.
          Sometime in the middle of the night, my grandparents were awakened by loud noises coming from the second story of the house - noises sounding as though someone was dragging furniture across the floor.  Needless to say, my grandmother was almost frightened out of her wits.  She knew for sure it was ghosts and the house was surely haunted. 
          Grandfather tried to console her by saying it was only the wind blowing loose shingles on the roof of the house.  He even lit the lantern and walked to the foot of the stairs and yelled to the unidentified noise maker that he was armed and would shoot anyone trying to harm him and his family.  Taking his warning one step farther he fired three shot up the stairs, all along knowing in his mind that his assumption about the noise was correct.          
          His display of force was only to calm my Grandmother and it worked.  Unexplainably the noises ceased for the duration of the night and my Grandmother finally fell back to sleep.
The next morning, Grandfather examined the upper rooms of the house finding nothing unusual – just empty rooms.
          Returning downstairs he packed everything in the wagon and they were on their journey once again.  Luckily the rain had stopped which made the road much more accessible.  After traveling the better part of an hour they met a man on horseback that identified himself as a deputy sheriff from Jasper.  He seemed friendly enough, but my Grandfather kept his pistol close by on the seat next to him.
          The deputy asked my grandfather where they were from and where they were going. Grandfather explained to the deputy about his job running out and everything they had experienced since being on the road - including their stay in the empty house last night. 
          According to the deputy, the house hadn’t had an owner for over twenty years, and some had giving it a reputation of being haunted.  Both he and my grandfather just laughed. They bid their good byes and my grandparents were on their way again.
          Three days later they and their rickety wagon finally rolled into Birmingham - thankfully with the last three days being safe and uneventful.
          My Grandfather obtained a job with a coal and steel company out of Tennessee, which just happened to be headquartered in Birmingham.  My grandfather spent another fifteen years in the coal mining business before moving on.  He died at the age of seventy-nine.
          Later in life my grandmother became an assistant to one of her uncles who happened to be a medical doctor.  He taught her the skills of being a mid-wife - a skill she practiced all her life.
          Although this was a very short journey in the lives of my grandparents, it was one neither of them ever forgot, and the story of their journey lived on the lips of my Grandmother until her death in 1956, at the age of eighty-six.
  _____________________________


Author: Joe Spearman

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Letters From The Barn: First Egg Of Spring

Letters From The Barn: First Egg Of Spring

We got the first egg of spring the other day. Now, if I had the lights all hooked up in the coop, we’d get them during the winter, too. But, I plead to laziness (and a strong fear of fires) as well as an idea it might be nice to take the winter off from duty if I were a hen. There must be a reason that shorter days bring on less eggs. If nature thinks they should take a rest, why should I  interfere?

Truthfully, most of the chickens get put into the freezer in the fall. Financially, I can’t afford to feed them over the winter when they need more food. Plus, the joys of fresh eggs kinda wind down when you first have to unfreeze them before you can use them. (Not to mention trudging through the snow to get them in the first place.)

So, most of the hens overwinter in the freezer inside, rather than the frozen temperatures outside. Having a meat freezer stocked for the winter gives me a sense of safety that probably only my grandmother could understand.

This winter, though, I was feeling rich enough to keep a couple of the hens who’d been around long enough to earn names over the cold spell. I won’t tell you what those names were on the coldest, bitterest mornings. But, on other days, at other times, they were sweet names that not only fit their personalities but which they, in their amazing chicken like ways, actually answered to.

So, when the biggest one, an orange-brown color, gave me the first egg of the spring, I was tickled. She hadn’t come down for feeding time that day and at first I was worried. Had she gotten eaten by a fox? Or decided to take a vacation to a warmer area?

Later, I checked the laying box more to rule it out than because I was expecting anything. There was a large, brown egg waiting there in the hay. It was still warm in that way only a fresh egg can be. Over the next week, the other chickens came back on the job, too. But, that first egg of the season which seems like it’s never going to come but always means that winter is over with, or at least on the way out, is always the best handwarmer I know. 

Author: Meriwether O'Connor

Friday, April 20, 2012

HOMER AND LOLA


HOMER AND LOLA
by
Dietrich Kalteis
The glass eye of the Red Dog Perfume Lamp stared back at Homer. Reaching to the night stand, he fumbled until he switched it on. Eye glowing red, it stared at Homer, him staring back, waiting, sniffing for it, getting nothing but that waxy smell. Got to wait, he told himself.
     Sprawled on top of the tangled sheets in the impossibly yellowed long johns, he tweezed fuzz from his navel through the ever-widening buttonhole. Rolling what he delved between thumb and forefinger, he flicked it across the room. “Two points.”
     “What’s that, sugar.” Lola stirred. Any closer to the edge, and she would have flopped off the bed. Propping up, she caught her fingers in her matted hair.
     “Nothing,” he said, watching the eye.
     “What’s the time?” She shook her head, full of the morning fog.
     “Can’t say.” Homer dug more lint, waiting for the perfume.
     “Need to do that, huh?” She crinkled her nose, watching him dig. “Think it’s like grooming?”
     “Look who’s all Miss Highbrow.”
     Sitting on the bed’s edge, Lola fished her bodice off the floor and wriggled into it, looking around for her stockings.
     “I got the perfume lamp on,” he said, thinking he could go again.
     “Got someone waiting, sugar,” she said, reading his meaning, longing to get out of there.
     “Hell of a night.” He sniffed for the lamp again.
     “Loved it, but tick tock – gotta go.”
     “Another Johnny?”
     She didn’t answer, eyes scanning the floor.
     “Me, I got my second wind.”
     She fastened the buttons. “That your first wind you were passing all night?”
     “Funny.” The buttonhole was near big enough now for a rodent to slip through.
     “Really, got someone waiting,” she said, rolling a stocking over a foot, thinking black coffee would bring her back to life.
     Homer thought of his own appointment. The job he was pulling with Willis, would leave him set. He could have a Lola any time he wanted.
     “You got Lola’s fiver, sugar?” The wine must have made her stupid, forgetting the golden rule: getting paid up front.
     “What fiver?”
     She held the pump with the heel up.
     Getting to his feet, he grumbled, remembering the last time he crossed a hooker. “Alright, but I hardly remember a thing – over so quick.”
     Not quick enough, she thought, forcing on the shoe, looking at this man in his long johns.
     He reached past the empty bottle for his jacket draped over the chair, took out his wallet and tossed the bills on the bed. Then he headed to the bathroom, not bothering to shut the door. Planting his feet on the cold porcelain, toes curling up, he took a poor aim and murdered Singing in the rain. He sang through Lola lifting his wallet, letting herself out.
     The morning air felt sweet in her lungs, but not as sweet as the steaming shower she was heading to. Walking under the Paradise Motel sign, she rifled the wallet folds, taking the bills, tossing the ratty leather down. A snapshot fluttered out, skewered by her heel: a photo of Homer and some red-haired woman. Shaking her foot, Lola rid herself of it.
     She nearly ran into Polly coming out of the office with a poker in her hand, grey hair up tied in a bun.
     “Hey Lola, my back’s aching like a son-of-a-gun. Don’t need you making work for me, girl.”
     Looking at the trail she left, Lola took two of the bills and held them out to the old woman. “Sorry, Polly.” She stuffed them into a liver-spotted hand. “But I got to make tracks.”
     “What’s this, then?” Polly said, looking at the bills.
     “One’s for your troubles, the other’s for the fella that’s gonna come busting out of room 4 any minute.” She hurried across the parking lot. “Tell him compliments of Lola. Tell him it’s for the pocky warts.” She crossed the two lane, swaying her hips to a southbound White. The trucker threw on the brakes, pulling his rig to the shoulder, stirring up the dust and gravel, stopping thirty yards past her. The driver called back, asking how far she was going.
     “Far as you want, sugar.” She got up on his running board, all smiles, climbing in when he opened the door. Off they went, the driver doing his best to steer with Lola in his lap.
     Buttoning up, Homer stepped from the bathroom, wiping his hands on the seat of his flapping johnnies. Whiffing the scent of the perfume lamp, he thought, “What a waste,” picking up the phone – time to call Willis. The operator asked for the number, and he reached over, patting his jacket pockets.
     The door flew open and Homer stormed out, boiling mad. Spotting his wallet in the gravel, he slammed the door and crossed over to it. “Two bit floozie,” he shouted to the dawn. Balling his fists, he snatched up the wallet, looking around for Lola, thinking what he’d do to her. Breeze fingers sent the punctured photo of his ex tumbling over his foot and toward the road. Stooping, he hurried after it, cursing every step, gravel cutting his soles.
     Polly stabbed at a cigarette butt, watching Homer with his back flap open, the man cursing his head off.
     “You might wanna close up the hatch there, fella.”
     “Mind your own,” Homer called to her.
     “And you might want to watch what’s coming out of your mouth. You’re offending both ways.”
     “Who told you to look, you sour bitty?” He smoothed the edges of the photo, tucking her back into his wallet. Looking up and down the empty interstate, he kicked at the gravel and limped back to his room. He tried the knob, rattling the door.
     “Trouble?” Polly said, leaning on the poker, enjoying this.
     “Damn door’s stuck.” He rattled the knob again, huffing at it.
     “No, it ain’t stuck.” Polly stepped closer, reckoning she could handle this one.
     “What the hell do you call it then?”
     “Call it locked.”
     “But my key’s …” Homer pointed inside.
     “That’s trouble then.”
     Homer crossed his arms, controlling the rage he felt. “Could use your help, I suppose.”
     Polly smiled, in control of the situation. “Fellow runs around cussing with his drop seat down; now, he needs my help.”
     “Bet you got a key.”
     “Let me search my biddy brain; no, can’t say I do.”
     Homer held the flap with his free hand, rattled the knob with the other, thinking what to do. “Maybe I can pick it with something. Got a screwdriver, an awl, or such?”
     “Eldon wouldn’t want you messing with it.”
     “Eldon, he the manager?”
     “Yuh.”
     “This Eldon got a key?”
     “Sure he does – to all the rooms.”
     “And where do I find him, ma’am?”
     “At the office most likely.”
     Holding the flap, he started for the neon sign by the office.
     “At the other motel.” Polly poked at a taffy wrapper.
     “Other motel?”
     “Foreclosure, boy picked it up cheap. Now he’s got two.”
     “When’s he due–”
     She ignored him. “Nice plot of land in Florida besides, place called Two Egg.”
     “Two Eggs.
     “Two Egg, not eggs. Can you believe a name like that?”
     “Hard to, ma’am, but, I really got–”
     “Eldon says if a hurricane ever rips it up, they aught to change it from Two Egg to Scrambled. That boy makes me laugh,” Polly chuckled and turned away, loving this day.
     “Yeah, that’s a good one,” Homer said, watching her spear the ground.
     Polly turned back to him. “And if that ain’t breakfasty enough for you, they got another place down there called Spuds.”
     “Spuds.” Homer leaned against the door, looking through the glass at the Red Dog lamp.
     “Two Egg and Spuds. Them Florida boys was probably hungry when they named them places.”
     “Sounds like.”
     “Yeah, Eldon’s done pretty well in these times. Can’t understand why he’s never taken a wife though, good looking boy like that.”
     “This other motel …”
     “About two hour’s ride straight north, can’t miss it, the Seahorse Arms.”
     “And when do you expect him back here?”
     “Let’s see – left early, so should be back in, say, couple of hours, three, four tops.” She scanned the ground. “‘Course, if Dolly’s fixing her dumpling stew …”
     Homer rattled the doorknob with both hands, feeling the pressure rise, thinking what crazy Willis would do.
     “That boy and his dumpling stew …” Polly said, holding up two fingers, “are like this.”
     Homer looked at his fist, then at the glass, then at the Red Dog lamp inside.
     “Not much for greens – always left them on his plate.”
     “That right?” He wiped the back of the fist across the beads of sweat.
     “Could tell Eldon to eat up his greens till he turned purple when he was a youngin – a genuine meat-and-potato type, that boy.” Polly watched Homer slide down the door, his bare butt on the splintered step. Maybe she could show a little charity and fetch her ring of keys. Maybe she could give him the dollar Lola left for him, tell him about the pocky warts. And maybe that’s a pig, not Doc Lee’s Chevy whizzing by. She clucked and speared some tinfoil, loving this job, loving this day.

-----------
Author Bio:

Dietrich Kalteis is a writer living in West Vancouver, Canada. His work has appeared in Foundling Review, Tryst, Verdad, One Cool Word and others. His screenplay MILKIN' DILLARD has been optioned to Bella Fe Films, Los Angeles.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Flower Shopping


Flower Shopping

By: Tori Bailey

A dust trail followed behind the land yacht as it sped down the dirt road. Parts of the peeling vinyl roof flapped in the breeze. The sound of a gospel quartet blared through the open windows. Its driver maneuvered the road like a Saturday night at the track. Occasionally, the back end car would fish-tail throwing sand and gravel. Zolena, use to Elvina’s erratic driving, downed the last of the warm beer before tossing the empty can in the backseat.

The car’s engine gave a sigh of reprieve as it came to a stop. The Harper plantation hinted of a bygone era. Massive oak and elm trees provided shade to the front lawn. Elvina’s envy was not the stately manor. Elvina knew coveting another’s property was a sin. But, the good Lord knew how much she had wanted some of Tootsie Harper’s daylilies and irises. The old cow always shared them with everyone in the community except for her. “I bet that old biddy is turning in her grave about now.” Elvina opened the trunk and retrieved a shovel and several plastic bags.

“First you stole Harold from her in the eleventh grade. Now, you’re digging up her flowers.” Zolena knew how much Tootsie’s lack of generosity with her flowers stuck in Elvina’s craw. “You aren’t gonna dig from the bed they found her.”

“Damn right I am. Gonna put these irises right outside my sunroom.” Elvina continued working the shovel in the soil around the clump of flowers.

Zolena stopped digging and stared at the deputy car pulling up. “Wonder why he’s stopping here.”

“Not sure.” Elvina continued to dig.

The young deputy gazed into the interior of the car. Heat radiating from the hood told him the car had been recently parked. He directed his attention toward the two women. “Ladies.”

“Officer.” Zolena answered while Elvina stood from placing her treasures in a plastic bag.

“Can I see some identification please?”

“Young man, obviously you don’t know who we are.” Elvina took the tone she’d used for years as a teacher.

“Ma’am, I need to see some identification.” The deputy did not feel like receiving any flack from a blue hair.

Zolena knew Elvina was beginning to square off with this whiff of a boy. She didn’t recognize the name on his tag. “I’m sorry for my friend’s tone. Obviously, your family isn’t from here.”

He hated the ‘ain’t from around here’ small town mentality of the locals. “My not being from here don’t got nothing to do with this.”

Elvina could not believe the assault on the English language. “Young man, you must not have paid much attention to grammar in school.”

“I apologize for her. We’re retired English teachers.” Zolena tried to play peacemaker. “Our purses are in the car.”

“He’s acting like we are criminals. All we are doing is getting some flowers.” Elvina didn’t appreciate the intrusion.

“Actually, ma’am, the two of you are trespassing and stealing.” The deputy looked straight at Elvina.

“Son, we certainly are not stealing or trespassing.” Elvina was not backing down from the ludicrous accusations. “I knew Tootsie Harper long before she could wear a bra.” Elvina hated the hindrance of the deputy’s intrusion. She and Zolena had a few more old home places to scout for flowers. “Now, why don’t you get in your car and go catch some real criminals. Instead of bothering two old widow ladies out flower shopping.”

The young deputy stepped toward Elvina. “Ma’am, I’m gonna have to ask you to turn around please.”

“Turn around for what?” Elvina’s posture erected her four foot seven frame.

“Because I’m placing you under arrest.”

“For what?” Elvina was in disbelief.

“Surely, you don’t need to do that.” Zolena concerned by the seriousness of the situation. “Are you gonna arrest me too?”

“No ma’am. But I am her.” The deputy took a step toward Elvina. “I’m not gonna ask you again. Turn around.”

Zolena could not believe the scene that occurred in front of her. Elvina with all her might reared back and slapped the young deputy across the cheek. In a flash he’d put Elvina in some fancy hold and had her face down on the ground with her arms behind her back. The clicking sound of handcuffs locking around the bony wrists of her best friend mortified her.

“Don’t be so rough with her.” Zolena for a fleeting moment thought about jumping on the deputy’s back in an attempt to help her friend.

The deputy stood up and aided Elvina to her feet. He looked at Zolena, “Ma’am no one is supposed to be on this property.” The young deputy began to escort the frazzled Elvina to his car, leaving Zolena staring at his retreating back.

A smile crept across Zolena’s face at the spunk her friend displayed. It was obvious Elvina was giving that deputy his due. She was not surprised by the small display of refusal in getting into the backseat of the squad car.

Zolena gathered the shovels and grabbed the bags of flowers. It may be stealing, but it would be a shame to let the flowers die. Everything loaded into the car Zolena slid under the wheel of the land yacht and adjusted the seat to give herself more leg room. In an act of defiance, she tossed the empty beer can into the driveway.

********

“What do you mean you’re in jail?” Mimi could not believe the words coming out her seventy year old mother’s mouth. “Momma, you’re not making any sense.” Surely, her mother was having one of her moments. “I thought you and Zolena were going flower shopping today.”

“We did and now I need you to get me out of jail.” Elvina cut her daughter’s comments short with the replacing of the phone on its cradle. She turned to the young man dressed in a deputy uniform. “You Hattie Mae’s boy.” Elvina didn’t give the young man time to reply. “Taught her tenth grade English.”

Drew knew he had a legend in his midst. Many family gatherings of his aunts, uncles, and parents often found the topic of Ms. Elvina Ward’s English class being discussed. The young man silently chuckled at the arresting officer’s recounting of being struck by this local icon . “Ms. Ward, you can sit right here.”

“You not putting me in a cell?”

“No ma’am.”

“’Least your momma raised you with some manners.”

“Yes ma’am. She did.” Drew pulled a chair from the table and waited for Elvina to sit. “Ms. Francis is in the lobby. I’ll get her so you two can wait together.”

“Did you get Mimi?” Zolena entered the room relieved to see her friend did not look worse for wear.

“Yeah. She’s on her way.”

Zolena sat down next to Elvina. “Did they take your mug shot and finger print you?”

“Yeah. Told ‘em I wanted copies to use on my Christmas cards this year.”

“I’m sure Mimi will appreciate that.”

“What’d you do with the flowers?”

A sly grin slowly crawled across Zolena’s face. “They’re in the trunk of the car.”

“You old fox.” Elvina chuckled.

You know Mimi is gonna have you put in Milledgeville for this.”

“Might as well stake me in the yard like a chicken.” Elvina had already had a few skirmishes with her daughter about living alone and driving. Mimi almost took her driver’s license and keys after she disappeared to Charleston for a week with Zolena.

“After this, don’t give your daughter any ideas.”

“You’d help me break out.”

“Without a doubt.”

“Mother.” Mimi could not form all the words she wanted to say. She just stood in the doorway with her head shaking like she had palsy.

“Am I free to go now?”

“Is that all you have to say?” Mimi stared at her mother in disbelief. “When you said you were going flower shopping, I thought that involved going down to Whidby’s nursery. Not stealing a dead woman’s flowers, assaulting a deputy, and getting arrested.”

Elvina stood. “I don’t need a lecture from you young lady. Am I free to go?”

“Yes.” Mimi huffed. “Thankfully, they aren’t going to make you post bail.”

“Good. There’s still enough daylight to get my flowers in the ground.” Elvina turned to Zolena. “Come on. There’s a six pack in the car and flowers waiting to get planted.”

___________________________________

About the Author:

Tori Bailey enjoys sharing stories based from her childhood of growing up in Georgia. She is the author of the Coming Home and Ethel’s Song. She is currently working on the final installment of the Coming Home trilogy, Unexpected Places. Visit www.readtoribailey.com for retail locations and upcoming events.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Letters From The Barn: When The Rabbits Escape

Letters From The Barn: When The Rabbits Escape

The rabbits got out the other day. When I went out to the barn, the hutch door was open. There was one on top, waiting for the butler to come and push the elevator button so she could get back down into her apartment. The other was waiting just outside in the snow, munching hay near the fence. She outsized the wild rabbits probably ten to one. She didn’t run off, but nibbled hay near some wood waiting for me to pick her up. I thought about that.

Are there sometimes we want to be caught? Or, perhaps, protected? Do we run away and get lost, but want someone to come and bring us back to our senses, if not back into the house for a good cup of coffee?

Do you ever feel that way with a friend who’s taken a break for a while? You know they’re off by themselves brooding or maybe, for all you know, rejuvenating. How do you know when it’s time to barge in and bring them back into the friendship and when it’s time to let them stretch their legs for a while or maybe even just curl up and rest at home? Some hibernations are good. Others, a warning sign.

I want to learn to notice when I, myself, am the rabbit longing to be picked up and brought back inside. And, to pay attention in my friends and family for those moments when someone is turning away, but really, hopes that I’ll turn them back. Though, I’m not sure I personally could be brought round with just a handful of hay, some hot coffee might do the trick. Maybe for a friend it might be the occasional call. Not so often as to pester but just often enough to remind them they do have a barn to come back into once they’re ready. 

Author: Meriwether O' Connor