Archive for the ‘stories’ Category


Salute to Mediocrity

As a youngster, I lived where the rain cleaves the land. One side, all clear and sunny. Other side, it rained… and rained,

Once the rain exited, bees would shake water off their fuzzy brown and yellow-striped backs and fly. They’d do their due diligence, sipping nectar and picking pollen for their own sustenance while carelessly dropping pollen across the yard plant to plant.

flickr. creative commons licensed by feenseeschwalbe.

Plants would green; fruit trees flower; flowers bud.

But it didn’t. The rain never seemed to stop. It

Just

Kept

Raining.

I got used to it, the cloud following me around my middle class melancholic mediocrity (as one of my high school teachers put it) as the piss-poor family living across the swollen creek acted as if there were no care in the world. The woman held up her family in her threadbare gingham while the man sweated (when he was working) as part of the lunch pail brigade, carrying a butter and honey white bread sandwich with perhaps an apple. Then there was their boy. My age (not exactly as I was born a bit later during a very wet spring), cocked head thick with dark hair sporting a shit-eating, know-nothing grin as the previously mentioned wearer of translucent gingham, fell all over the place making sure that grin didn’t disappear. Sure as shit, it really didn’t for the most part. Course I don’t know all. Kid moved away to the city soon after we moved on from grade school.

I went by Ogle. Not oh-gull, like staring at someone uncomfortably, but ah-gull. Ogle Moser. I drove Chevys, period. Changed them way one of them far backwoods southerners changed underwear, perhaps less often. Just ran in my blood. I, like all Mosers, apparently came from a long line of French who decided to stay after America achieved its independence. Hatred for the British ran deep in my veins since my great-great-great-great-great-great grandfather ducked behind trees with the best of Lafayette’s men. Blindly wrapping his wrist around maples like all brothers of the Legion, he shot indiscriminately toward oncoming Redcoats. Whether he ever hit one was of no consequence to him. He got a free boat ride to the new land. One the revolution was over, the newly-formed government, as a reward for all foreign fighters, armed each of them with a secret land provision far, far away so he elected to stay.

Far, far away meant in the wooded far western United States, which at that time meant what is now Tennessee. The freshly-named Mississippi created a not-so-navigable water wall no one dared cross, so my “great-great-squared” as I had creatively shortened it, decided a few miles east off the treacherous Mississippi against a small meandering creek was fine for his few acres.

Plowhorses turned to tractors, quarterhorses to cars. Ford, while alliterate for a Frenchman, could not hold a candle to the meaning of Chevrolet. Chevrolet was incorporated by a Frenchman, Louis Chevrolet, in 1911 (his parents were born in Switzerland but we ignored that fact). The first Chevrolet was designed by Etienne Planche, another Frenchman. Just stood to reason, you know? Fate, you could call it, led the Mosers.

I worked on Chevys as had my father, grandfather and great-grandfather. My great-grandfather’s father had sold the farm to a huge dairy (a stroke of luck, the farm land was later declared eminent domain by the federal government for the TVA project). From the Chevy Series C to the original Malibu, all of us Mosers (originally Montdure, but changed for the purposes of assimilation) had changed oil and transmissions for nearly a century. Our auto shop, smartly located in the bustling city of blues and barbeque, Memphis, had changed hands from one generation to another. Other than adding expertise to a variety of auto lines of what became General Motors, us Mosers kept at it. Frankly, we gained a reputation for being fair, something not heard of in our line of work. Hell, if a battery needed a simple re-charge, we’d re-charge it, not replace it. Not hesitant to tell a customer what was wrong with their engine, we were equal at making sure they knew what was right with it as well as what we did to make it right for nothing. Contrary to popular belief of the French or descendants thereof, we were lauded in Memphis as the best auto techs in the Memphis section of the massive Mississippi Valley.

The mid ‘60s brought us Cadillac. Now to be fair to Cadillac, it had been around longer than Chevrolet, just didn’t carry the French non-subtle class we loved at that time. French stubbornness won over so us Mosers stayed away from Cadillac for nearly three generations. Once we decided to expand, we took them on. Hell, the size of the automobiles (we could barely fit the obese beasts into our bays) was far more daunting than the engines. Engines, while bigger, were exactly like the rest of the General Motors’ line-up. We got used to slowly moving the boats into our bays. Never had more than a scratch in the nearly 15 years we had been working on them.

I could hear them. Not customers, those I heard all the time. Mostly good words, but I’d have a few delusional ones rain down on me. No, these voices were different. Distant, but close. Wasn’t exactly conscious to figure it out at first, but it came to me soon enough. Besides, they’d never now until they got into my position, lying on a cold steel slab unable to feel coldness or the warmth of their breath as they lowered.

Jesus Christ, sometimes one day runs right into the next. All the same. Then comes this kind of day. Don’t this beat all. Not the best way to be found,

Still think about it being having sex?

Hell… yup.

Thinking about the goings on in…

Oh yeah. What about that? Just gets odder, huh.

Heard they’re familiar.

Familiar? More so. Grew up across from one another.

No shit.

Dead serious.

They laughed, both of them. Guess when you’re used to it, it all has to become funny or you become funny in the head. Least that’s what my thinking was and ever shall be.

No shit.

Yep. Know Tupelo?

Been there couple times.

Seems there’d been a creek. Little thing meandered like a Cottonmouth straight to the Mississip.

There’s a lot of them. It’s what makes the Mississip the Mississip.

Masks pulled up, they’d continued. Breathable spun cotton or whatever it was couldn’t deter voices from being heard.

Said was a creek?

Swallowed up by government from what I heard.

Ah, right. Like others.

Bijou I think.

French-named like all the others no doubt.

Funny how it ends up, you know? Both fathers out there. Both.

Not exactly in the Good Lord’s plan.

Nope. Generations aren’t supposed to cross over as they cross over.

I hovered. Strange as it were, I felt fine. Complete would be a good way to put it. I felt, not smug, that wouldn’t do. Satisfied? Could be. Complete was better.

As they took the tiny whining saw to my breastplate, I looked over. Poor fellow. On my right, he was. He floated too, no doubt. I could see that much, but his image was sad, curled up like he was in the womb. He looked worn, tired. I reached over to him, but there was nothing left.

Started poor, ended poor in my opinion.

I lived my whole life with that rain, actually came to look for it as it was my constant. Staying in the middle certainly meant no reward, but no risk either. Once used to the water, I had tilted my head up and drank it all in. Once the rain came down on him, he drowned in it.

Funny. In spite of our pre-teen years growing up across that creek from one another, him in that rental the size of a single wide, me in our paid-for modest ranch, we never played with one another. Ever. Later on, once I took to the family business, getting my cuticles peeled back, blood coagulating with grease, I toiled on many of his Cadillacs. Now here we were. Doesn’t this just beat all. Lying on this steel slab was the closest I ever got to the King.


Key – Chapter 1

Highway 1 stretches.  Imagination creates 127 miles-long run-on fragments woven loosely as a novice quilt.  Continual waving aqua blue backdrops resort, perfect palms, trailer park, ratty palms, keyside diner.  Rinse mind. Repeat for hours on end.
Birthdays.  Reid ran to two birthdays.  This one special, that one defiant. Mindpops blistered defiance, permanently stuck on flypaper serving as memory, as it spun back around successfully seeking exposure.  Remembering the last few miles before turning into a school parking lot situated near Mile Zero, he mused

Everybody has that kind of birthday. Everybody.

Birthdays are days.  One day in the life of those enveloped in their glorious mist of temporary celebration.  Next day, earth rotates, warms and begins anew.  Only you are older.  Maybe by only a day, but when you become an adult, the day becomes a year.  A child looks beyond to the next birthday, another milestone.  Eight.  Eight-and-a-quarter. Eight-and-seven-eighths.
A nine year-old gets the pony, returning to that one birthday where everything seemed a dream.  The pony made grandma’s store-bought cake, its icing hard as peanut brittle, taste better.  No kid bloodied a nose playing Blind Man’s Bluff or caught a Frisbee with their face.  Uncle Steve didn’t pick up the adult punch bowl and drink it down, showing off his non-swallowing mechanism and alcoholic tendencies.
At age 83, surrounded by friends, friends of friends, ex-spouses, or absolutely no one they recognize, the day wonderfully fat 74 years ago comes running back, a pony dripping with sweat from matter’s acreage.  Not one detail – the state of this cake, special decorations, or if one of the other residents of their current assisted living facility has a heart attack as three of four layers are slit with the knife – remains. The pony never dies.
Everything, as much as humanly possible given the night’s entire events, had been remembered.  Nothing gained by expanding upon it, nothing lost remembering the entire truth, Reid settled into the present.
The matchbook was tattered, worn from too much time in pockets, too much exposure to salted air, crammed into a kitchen junk drawer reserved for odd pens, recipe cards, magnets and long-forgotten striped Halloween candy no tongue desires.  Its strike plate, grayed to a light ash, would need extra effort to aggravate the sulfur on the final match in the pack.  Pre-determined destination?  A boldly colored double-wide candle.
Pie sat on the temporary table on its temporary platter generally used for holiday meat. Snowy white-topped pie, golden yellow piping with birthday wishes scripted in red waited for flame to ignite the wick.

Looks like a pie you’d find at a St. Louis Cardinals convention to celebrate Stan Musial’s batting titles, less one… or the number of monthly shots McGwire took in his flank.

Reid’s comment preceded her light laugh. Everything – decorations, folding chairs, protective plastic tablecloth – was ready way too soon.  Guests imminent arrival wouldn’t be for 90 minutes. Pie waited, protected by a slow, oscillating fan and cool air conditioning.
Time for rest.  As with any birthday dominated by games, balloons, mini-plates and plastic forks, there would come a severe spasm of activity immediately followed by sucrose sleep.  An aggressive pre-emptive strike necessary for energy retention, Reid sought the sofa.

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The Rain Fell

You run.  When there’s nowhere to go, you run.

Ran.  And ran.  And ran.  Down shingles, verticalized through the downspout, across wax bean-colored grass concrete lawns, over the stiff, brown but non-odorous poopsicles graveyarding every dog owner’s turf, beside the brittle dormant yellow, red and white cropped roseless rose bushes, riptiding the large maples and oaks exposing deep brown roots as it banged off their bark.  It continued, a subtle thin sheet unabated across the fall-paved coal black city streets, through the parking lot of the picturesque rust brick Victorian Homewood bank where locals left fleeced but happy as the bank was the physical specimen of their dreamy postcard Midwestern town.  For the grand finale, it waved down embankments dotted with hair club for men plugs of grass only to be swallowed up by an ever-increasing torrent taking over the once underwhelming river.

Buckets.  Sheets.

flickr. creative commons content courtesy of barjack.

The rain fell, hitting the ground as hard as it smacked onto the sidewalk.

Zero absorption.

In the upper Midwest rain often comes down hard.  Not monsoon hard, but hard enough at times looking across a residential lane figures stand out no better than through a shower curtain.  Afterwards, clouds intent on hanging around, the rain turns to mist, forming heavy drops on the eaves.  The drops gather together to slide away, settling into a pitter-patter drip out of downspouts, beat perfect as a high school marching band with a Turrets-tic timpani player.  In February, as it was when it ran this time, the ground stood hard and cold as Stalin, and would remain so until the sun re-appeared higher in the horizon to soften the soil.

When February flat muted grey blanket clouds rolled in, majority assumption runs to snow.  Once again, bozo red shovels are placed in prime position by the back door or right inside the garage.  Snow blowers, retuned up past October, held fast, waiting for the early morning call.  For this quartet of days, the call never came.

As it had started, most felt a certain joy, looking to the sky, wondering.  Wandering.

Perhaps the end of winter is really here, really early.

Perhaps we will have a long, languid spring normally reserved for Lubbock not Libertyville.

Perhaps this is the year our spring will really be a spring, not 4 days of 60s zeppelining to 90.

A rain in February leads some down a deluged trail of delusion.  One day of delusion is not a horrible thing.  One day allowing your mind to escape reality, push Robins forward and Daffodils up, often lends itself to land the level of its own freedom.

Not four.  Four days coming down in a barely noticeable by the busy or chaotic in-depth pattern of bucket, mist, sheet, bucket, mist, sheet, on and on and on nearly 100 hours.  Still, no matter how long it went on, the soil refused to budge, frost holding fast against the tide cascading upon it.

The river’s banks behaved no different.  Frozen, both sides tandemed to refuse the advances of the river, concretely rejecting the water’s desperate attempt to soften into its edges.

Water, as water tends to do, labored hard to horizontal, find its own level.  It was where this tale unfolded, on this particular day, day five, as the river began to swell up faster than the belly of an impregnated marathon runner.

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Hope Springs a Turtle

Mitchell smiled as he pulled a long-handled flathead shovel from out of his F-150, recently painted a deep blue emblazoned with ochre Mitchell Landscaping Incorporated on its side along with phone number and website.

The ground gave way.  Springtime in Colorado, however brief it could be, successfully softened terra firma enough to allow early planting.  His seeds were planted a few short months ago.

nothing to do with the story, but thanks Karen for the critique. :)

Cattle moving from pasture to pasture.  Sheep pen to pen.  Sheep would do it, bleating their way over a cliff if necessary.  Not horses.  Never horses.  Too much drudgery for a horse.  A horse would refuse to move, not out of stubbornness, but sanity.

Gate number 27 was gate number three.  JFK had hijacked him for nearly three extra hours than he could handle.  Mitchell, redheaded with the aid of a quick temper and sour outlook, had a tolerance level running zero extra hours. His sandy red turned auburn by blood boiling at the base of his brain, Mitchell kept quiet for fear of getting the boot out of JFK and never reaching DIA.

Out loud, enough for him and the gate attendants to overhear.

Three freakin’ hours.  Three freakin’ hours.  Mother Fu…

The plaintive stares of gate attendants, AKA the humorless trio, stopped Mitchell’s muttering cold.  Loathing though he was of false profanity, he decided to stick with “freakin’,” as no one can butt you from JFK for freakin’ for freakin’ sakes,.

Gate 9 was the Chicago substitute Cincinnati.  The single stop.

Gate 39 was the Denver substitute Dallas.  The nonstop.

Gate 27’s scrolling L.E.D. led the cattle, ordinary Herefords all of them, to believe the herd’s destiny was actually Denver.  Truly, really Denver.  Home.

Mitchell que’d with the rest, another link of a chain in a serpentine pattern borne from too many displayed airport refugees throughout this day of intermittent storms crossing the great Midwest. The velvet red ropes (how old school elegant – ran out of the modern plastic black) and the airline’s stanchions moved to those in line’s desire, nary an attendant bold enough to jump into the corral amongst the angry cattle to straighten it out military-style.

He was now – after a brief stop, half step, slide luggage, repeat again and again for only 27 minutes – next in line.  The bitching, spewing from the Barbara Bushy impersonatress currently full throttle steaming at the counter, was at least entertaining.

I’ve been in this terminal since noon!

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Sunday Papers

You from the south?

No.  Really, that’s what he’d say to me.  Never could figure that out.  Same guy.  Every Sunday.  I liked to pick up the Sunday Los Angeles Times from the man 4 blocks from my loft.  We were on Broadway, above a second run movie house known for b-westerns, art films and the homeless.  He was ensconced like a lamppost east of me where the flower district budded.  He’d engage me in conversation, but at the time I wasn’t much of a conversationalist.

Sound like you’re from the south.

Nope.  Colorado.

Sure about that?

My family was in Tennessee for a long time.  That was quite a while ago.

Knew it.

It was the 1700’s to 1800’s.

What about your girl?

She’s not my girl.

Don’t want to be linked with a girl color of dirty caramel?

He said “dirty caramel” “ditty cah-mel” wrapped it around his tongue, thrusting it out as if he had a caramel in his mouth but forgot to take off the wax paper.  Seemed to be something he’d prefer not to say.  Either he had disdain for me for not admitting Sheila was “my girl” or that she was with me at all.

Probably best to take a step back here.  Sheila was not Sheila.  I called her Sheila because Salvadora Ines Clodovea Calderon was too long and hard to truncate into anything pleasant.  She didn’t care, or if she did, never said a word about it.  A lovely woman just past the age of 22, she and I met in a spat over whose four quarters owned the green felt at Al’s Bar a long Friday night/early Saturday morning a few months before everything turned.  I laughed at her amazing method of calling shots after they went in, she laughed at my embarrassing ode to fashion.  The ’80s, so there I was donning a jacket and pants dental white, two-tone grey and white leather loafers and a bright salmon t-shirt.  I was a casual Colonel Sanders at a place where a small rainbow plane landed safely on its facade.

No sir, I told him, I love being with her.  Look at her.

Sheila did a comely twist at the hip, turning her eyes towards us.  Her gleaming white top hugged her torso as the semi-translucent ankle-length rose red and yellow printed skirt flew out to greet us. Very Marilyn without the colorful array of uppers and downers.

But she’s not your girl? He asked.

In spite of her obvious slip in mental stature culminated by a decision to be seen with me, she was her own woman.

Grizzard took another dollar from a young executive on his way to who knows where dressed in a suit on a Sunday morning.  When I think of it now, there wasn’t a church, mosque or synagogue within a five-mile radius. Suitcoat took to diving further into the flower district, but I couldn’t see him popping out with flowers for anyone, unless he was buying them for himself.  He walked against traffic.  A cab, swerved and missed him.  Suitcoat didn’t even startle.  Cabbie screamed out

Cabrón!

And kept speeding down 5th.

I called him Grizzard.  He was supposed to wear a nametag, but you could see he was not about to do so.  His Los Angeles Times-issued smock, or union-issued, I wasn’t too sure, hadn’t seen the inside of a washer for, well probably ever.  I had seen the smock enough times where every moment various details of the faded sports section that made up the graphic along with the large scripted “Los Angeles Times” emblazoned in now-faded Dodger blue were seen.  The headline, was not close to be discernable by passersby or those like Suitcoat who picked up a paper, handed over the dollar and never looked eye-to-eye.  I speculated Suitcoat didn’t buy from a coin-operated newsstand since he’d have to look the bin eye-to-slot to get the coins in and actually touch the bin to snag the paper.

I apologize.  No really I should. Digression is something I do everyday.  Keeps me from dwelling on a miserable existence, Sheila being salvation, when I allowed.  Putting this encapsulation of a serious event together does not stop digression.  Whether this digression is a sharp turn or a gentle curve before you realize you are off-track is up to you to determine.

photo by daniel agee. all rights reserved.

Grizzard would nearly always give me this look.  You know the one, where a person tilts their head and looks at you cock-eyed like a confused mutt.

I don’t know what you said, son.

Two joggers went by.  The male dropped a dollar into his hands as the female grabbed the Times.  One may find it funny joggers would pick up a Sunday paper while out for the jog, but this is Los Angeles.  Scenarios like that don’t really boggle the mind.  Takes no longer than a year to get used to such.  Both stayed in jogging mode, knees up running in place more than if they were moving forward, they waited for the light.  Ms. Jogger, I will call her Bianca,

You didn’t have to laugh, but thanks.

Bianca tucked the plastic-wrapped two-hours of Sunday reading under her right arm like she was Marcus Allen.

Once a half-block away or so, Grizzard furrowed as he looked at me again.

However, I think I catch your drift.

Lakers win Championship; Magic plays Center.  That’s what the headline said on Grizzard’s chest, once you got through the rubbed-in newspaper ink, general downtown grime and dried ketchup or barbecue sauce.  Most people, if they got through the grime, would nod their head and go on.  The Lakers had just won another NBA title with Magic and Kareem about three months ago.  However, the key word is “another.” A roundball aficionado like myself understood Magic didn’t play Center unless Kareem was ailing.  Magic played Center in one championship game, his rookie season against Philadelphia.  Being this was 1987, the smock was seven years old.

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Elijah Forgives You

Quiet autumn of despair, silent rage of solitude.  Rolling into my mid-teens, vocabulary would ride in soon, my personal cavalry of salvation.

Train came by on regular basis early in the morning in Carbon County, nicknamed by locals “Carbine County” for our plethora of hunters.  Dad, as usual, differed, doing so factually.

Ought to be re-named “Carburetor County.”  More cars kill deer and antelope around here than carbines.

Late in the afternoon, right after the bus rolled away or the school bell released teeming pre-teens and teenagers from Pronghorn Junior High and High School, depending on time of day, around the lip came the Union Pacific.  This one was the shorter coal train.  In the daylight, cars wouldn’t stretch around the bend where the road disappeared ribboning its way to Laramie.  Average, if my calculations were correct, would run 57 cars, the mode coming closer to 53.

School bus disturbed dust around 4pm.  Now, when most of the cottonwoods rid themselves of their pesky leaves, broad and multi-pointed, 4pm was coming closer to dusk than summer when 4pm arrived with a clear blue sky and dry heat.

photo by Daniel Agee. All rights reserved.

I was, so I was led to believe, christened Henry Daniel Aardamoos.  These days I considered myself a reader, lover of old literature, new humor and, being a voracious thinker, consumed with curiosity, guile and guilt by association.

Reeeeeeetard!

Dummmmmmmmmmmmb-asssssss!

Voices, barreling by at 70 miles-per-hour, never matched up with their mouths.  It was like I was living in my own Saturday afternoon Japanese nuclear disaster monster film where no audio ever synced, minus the monster.  I felt there were no monsters, no enemies of value.

Usually there were only two on the Union Pacific, right up front in the engine. My imagination always had them in standard light blue-striped overalls with the oversize hat. Friendly, like Captain Kangaroo. Never witnessed it, morning or afternoon.  These engineers had trucker’s hats, large-billed baseball caps greased and gunked over where logos deluded their shimmer.  The man I saw whip by most had a John Deere.  Yes, I could tell from this distance, watching its dingy yellow logo fighting through axle grease.

Schoooooooooooooooool loooooooooooooooserrrr!

Go screwwwwww yer sheeeeeeeeeep!

I thought, as I sat sketching, pondering and/or reading depending upon the season
Did they yell all the time?  How did they know they are, or ever were, heard?

Common phrases designed to insult and hurt never bother me.  Sticks and stones my dad would tell me on a semi-continual basis.  Most days he’d continue, elaborating with poignancy. He’d go off on an adjacent path, speechifying

Long as they weren’t plunking you with anything of a harmful nature, and at their speed it would be two-fold – a) the timing for them to actually hit you would have to be perfect and as such impressive and, b) even if you were hit by something as innocuous as a banana, the force behind it coming from a 70+ miles-per-hour locomotive, it could do some serious damage.

You have to understand about Dad.  Once his locomotive left the roundabout to start working its way through the yard, it churned until formulation found an analogy of perfect symmetry.

Imagine, Henry, just imagine something as seemingly harmless as a banana stem could catch your eyeball and

At this juncture Dad would stick his right forefinger into his mouth, tighten his cheeks, scrape the finger against his left cheek wall and “pop” it out.

Your damn eye would be completely out of the orbital bone hanging on for dear life by your optic nerve.  Dangling.  Dangling like, hell… like a liquid-filled wrecking ball.

Dad would talk a lot to the stove.  Not that he wasn’t an eye-to-eye man, just felt eye-to-eye was reserved for talks of a serious nature.  Despite the spate of insults tossed around by the train conductors as if they were clowns tossing candy to children on a parade route, this, to him, was not terribly serious.  Wasn’t even serious enough for him to reach for his Ticonderoga nestled against his left temple.  Subjects of deep thought required lead tap-tap-tapping out a soft beat on a hard surface.

Those boys, and I do mean boys for men wouldn’t resort to such infantile behavior, are, for lack of a better vocabulary, asswipes in a desperate search for a sound beating.

Nothing needed to be uttered by me.  I knew enough about dad, or Chan as he preferred most of the time even from me, never a negative comment was spat out without a positive remark following as its caboose.

Be that as it may, there has to be some intuitive talent and skill to operate a train or else no one would have tagged the occupation as “engineer.”  Most likely they get paid well. Here.

Chicken and something.  Most of the time that’s what we’d eat.  Occasionally we’d get mutton, but mutton was only from the infirm, elderly or barren culled from the herd.  Provided, of course, local coyotes or wandering cougars didn’t get them first.  Mutton dinners were few and far between.  Dad wasn’t much for killing coyotes, though they were not aware of that. Cougars? He rarely bore witness.

Les Poulet, as Dad would call our chickens, were raised by the both of us.  I was feed spreader and egg collector while Dad tended to them as veterinarian, carpenter and janitor. This night’s fowl, fried in the same vat of grease from last night’s chicken liver and heart meal Dad dubbed Country Paté, sat alongside hash browns carrying one coat of gravy, and once-frozen now-steaming green beans taken from the garden last June.

Of course, Henry, you could always put a dime on the tracks and send that train flying.

Metal feet rubbed linoleum the wrong way, providing a soundtrack of protest as dad pulled his chair out to sit.  Annoying screech temporarily bled out the Rolling Stones’ Exile on Main Street.  Actually a self-made compilation, Dad burned Exile, adding a few rare tracks for good seasoning. High Heeled Sneakers started its slow build-up as Dad continued.

Naturally, you’re too smart to know a single dime could never possibly derail a heavy coal train.  Hell, for that matter, an empty line of rail cars.  Dime is not going to do it.

Coal trains, a good 87 out of 100 carried coal in open cars.  I had spent a whole two months keeping tabs to get the exact figure.  Dragging out the Western Adirondack to our front property, carrying pencil and note pad, I spent worthwhile time sketching nature and plus-sized women in the chest arena waiting to drop another hash mark counting trains.

Where did it go?  Cheyenne.  Denver.  Split no doubt 25/75.  And it came from? A natural question needing to be answered, Dad told me

Hell, Not that difficult to figure out, right?  Let’s be Indian scouts, follow the train trail backwards.

I took dad’s interest in learning.  Someone had to do it.  Having way too much to do day-to-day, I swore if I stayed still enough and the fog came in at the right angle, I could see wasted brain waves leaking out of his skull like steam off a knit cap.  He was a learned man, most of it out of pure curiosity.

If you’re not interested in learning it, you won’t.  Doesn’t matter how many times a person can get something drilled in their head, doesn’t mean someone’s going to come around and cap the hole.

Butter and sugar sandwiches, thick slices of butter generously sprinkled with raw sugar and trapped by slices of cracked wheat bread, were packed in old Tupperware amongst seedless green grapes. Our slate blue Chevy S-10 filled with gas and remnants of floating alfalfa hay, followed the Union Pacific tracks going mostly west, slightly south.

Dad had told me often some people don’t have any appreciation for food since they have no idea where it originates.  Our butter and other dairy came straight from Clover Dairy five miles west of our place and Medicine Bow. Same ignorance could apply for anything really, including heat.  Dad had fashioned a solar heating system of sorts.  It worked well enough to reduce the reliance on “outside sources,” including coal from as far as 75 miles away.

Made me more appreciative of his efforts when we got to the source, the Jim Bridger Mine outside of Point of Rocks.  This monstrous mine bore the scars of both underground and surface mining. The Wyoming landscape looked as if someone took a three layer cake, scraped off the first two layers, topsoil and rock, tossing them away as useless fodder to get to the frosting layer cementing two cake layers together aka the coal seam. Deeper down sat more coal.  I thought of the miners.  What were the risks of a collapse?

Could they be scooped up like my army men, tossed aside like debris?

If you’re talking the miners, I expect unions have made precautions on a contractual basis so surface mining does not exist above underground work.

I stared at it wondering if a herd of Pronghorn ever loped across the prairie only to fall right into the massive pit.  Then I lost it.  Just as quick as the antelope flipped off the horizon, I lost it. Coal scraped off the Wyoming landscape suddenly reminded me of the time dad, morning dizzy no doubt from winter ammonia building up in the sheep shed, ran the strap razor across his right cheek, tearing off 5 of the 7 layers.  Took nearly six weeks for dad to heal.  The high mesa in Wyoming would take a tad longer.

What did we learn today?

Dad always wanted to know what, if anything, new I had absorbed.  The coal seam was a given.  Didn’t talk very much at all the two-hour drive back flat across the plains before doing a few dips into a few hills, settling back on the bluff above the track and highway.  Dad muttered a musical under his breath, having a duet with Willie, quietly adding background to Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain.

Unlike the rare occasion such as the coal seam field trip, he’d ask every day, including Saturdays and Sundays.  As farmers, weekends were merely known as end of the week, not time for a break.  Animals have no sense of weekends, although Dad swore when we had pigs they’d get nervous Sundays in the fall when the TV illuminated out living room with Broncos.

Well, let me see, Dad.  I took a good look at the sage.

Dad pushed a hash brown forkful past his teeth.  Chewing, he let out a small

And?

Seems the sage, while soft on the top, has a base and roots that are very rigid.

Why do you suppose that is?

Thought about that.  Then the wind came up…

Today wasn’t much for wind at all.

No, but enough to pull my hat clean off…

Right off…

I tightened my lips.  I looked at this man, Chad, really looked at him. Eyes of green, mostly kind, could harden when it became a necessity.  Nothing was a necessity now, only learning.

Don’t say “clean off.”  Makes you sound like an ignoramous.  Go on.

Hat was pulled right off.  So, I thought well hell…

Henry…

Heck, the sage has to have roots and base so hard to keep it in the ground with the winds we get. And those roots look like chicken claws.

Yep.

Then I thought, the softness of its leaves must be to catch and hold rain.

Good thought.

But wouldn’t that be attractive for an animal to eat?  I looked around and not one of our sage bushes had chewed-on leaves.  Not one.

Dad helped himself to another piece of chicken.  An expert cutter, you could tell what piece was what when he plucked and carved up a hen.  Clearly, this one was a back.

Interesting.

So I tasted one.  It was awful, and my timing was bad.

Why?  No sugar to sweeten it up?

It was right around the time for the afternoon coal roll.

Dad had thrown the moniker “coal roll” onto the train.  I liked the sound of it, so I had picked it up.  A few of my green bean strings fell into the gravy.  Dad’s gravy made pretty much everything better, except cauliflower.  Nothing helped cauliflower but a decent burial.

Freeeeeeeeaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaak!

Moooooooooooooooooooron!

Still rang in my ears like that damned train whistle those gentlemen would pull right as they got to the house, making prairie dogs dive and sheep scurry.  But, there was no use talking to dad about it.  He was right, just words.

Dad and I eke out a living sheering sheep and raising rack of lamb, but I guess you might have figured that out already.  Precisely though, organic lamb. Dad won’t feed sheep anything but pure grain, alfalfa hay he threshes off nearby rented acreage.  Pesticides are a work of the devil, so Dad says.  Not that he’s a religious man, he’s a

Man of the earth, Henry.  As you are. No point in poisoning the homestead.

Organic came to being way after Dad was doing it.  Just put a tag on it, that’s all.  As for the sheep, their wool was prized for sure.  Not so the meat. Why is it sheep are not eaten nearly as much as lamb, but cows are so much more than calves?  Personally, it’s my opinion lambs are far cuter and, given the chance, city dwellers would much rather opt for a calf than a lamb.

But I’ve been told, not that I had to be, sheep are not nearly as revered as cattle.  Even as late into this century as it is, when we venture to Medicine Bow for vitals it’s best we remember to scrub up well.  One whiff of sheep, people part like the Red Sea and don’t come back in on the next wave to help you.

Back in the wild frontier days when land grabs were as common as cattle rustling, cattle wars meant double-barreled shotguns in ranch-to-ranch showdowns.  Sheep?  Call a sheepherder a rancher you’d most likely get punched.  Historically, range and water wars sheep-to-sheep were rare. Cow-to-sheep? Short-lived… for the sheepherder.

I awoke thinking of mother.  Nothing unusual.  She wasn’t far from my mind, but not on the front of it like a dangling carrot making a mule cross-eyed. Banging pots and smells of sizzling bacon and toast said hello.

Lack of social stature was not a catalyst for mother’s decision.  While possibly a minute part of it, being a sheepherder from a family line of sheepherders was not a good enough reason.  Occasionally, her decision would come up.  As I got older, when it did, I brought it up as a gentle inquiring like I was a television trial lawyer leading on a potentially hostile witness.

Told me one day she was going into the city, that’s all Henry.

The city?  Rawlins?

Doubtful that’s what she meant.

For years, I accepted it and would move on to whatever enthralled my grey matter that particular day.  Often it was my bag of green army men, mostly gray-green from staying out in the sun too long or wintering in the front yard quilted together with Kentucky Bluegrass, clumps of crab and herds of sage.   Yucca dotted the front as well.  From my bedroom window on the second story, I could squint and see the Yucca.  While seemingly chaotic from the ground, it had grown as the Big Dipper, each plant occupying a star’s position.  Army men placed on the sill became astronauts.

Dad?

He was at the table, blading a Russet.  I knew full well concentration lead Dad into such a deep focus coming in from his back side could get you a paring knife in your midsection.  As such, I loudly approached from the front.

Was it really Rawlins?

At this time, with me rapidly approaching 15, any conversation about mother did not have to start from point A.  Point C was fine.

Henry, told you.  Don’t know.  City is all she said.

Didn’t you ever want to find her?  What if she was murdered?

This partial of topic had never been unsealed.  Could have been.  Dad could have opened it long ago.  He rose up, calmly stuck the blade into the next Russet in line for skinning and left the kitchen.

Where are you going?

The city.

Dad?

Echoing boots announced his return.

That was a joke, just not a lifelong laugher like your mother’s.  Here.

The envelope, yellowed by years of decay and what looked to be barbecue-stained fingerprints, was opened.  The flap nearly torn off, it looked to have been scanned a multitude of times.

I scooted in my Avocado green vinyl seat chair.  I chose the green.  Dad’s was Robin’s egg blue, both were picked up from a housing development 30 miles to the west where people curbed perfectly useful items.  Table, its haphazard craggy lined pattern, brown on white looking to Henry like Giraffes conducting an orgy on the Veldt, came with it.  Only thing matching for the set were metal legs and circular feet.

I read it three times, silence only broken by a Russet’s scream as dad sliced off its skin.  Reading comprehension had always been one of my strong suits, so it wasn’t necessary to triplicate my effort in order to understand.  There just wasn’t much to it.

Dearest Chan – now why if you had no intention of coming back would you start it off with “dearest” boggled the mind.  Doris, my mother’s name which I had known for a decade, went on to explain how the Wyoming prairie, despite softly rolling hills in this part, were not to her liking.  They “suffocated” her.  Must have been purely mental, for suffocation was nearly impossible in this wide-open area unless you were a stranded sheep in a blizzard.  She desperately needed culture (this instantly wiped Rawlins as her destination right out of my mind) and vibrancy. Her life was “destined to be colored with the arts” as she put it.  I ran through a few cities, but settled on San Francisco.

Lastly, she told Chan how wonderful a father he was going to be to little Elijah.

Elijah?

Wondering when that was coming up.

Is that my first name?

First as in that was the name you were named first, yes.

You changed my name?

After she left, yes.

Why?

Hated Elijah.

I leaned back into my chair.  City, vibrancy, color.  Maybe it wasn’t San Francisco. But it certainly wasn’t Cheyenne.  Denver? Possibly.  Could have just as easily been Steamboat Springs far as Dad or I knew.

Henry?

My father’s name.

Now you’re going to tell me I have a grandfather?  Where is he?

An hour drive, 35 miles straight north as the crow flies.

That close?!  Suppose he has some big old ranch too.

No. Lying on the northeast side of Casper.

Dad.  Really?

He’s not exactly welcoming guests.

We’re not guests, we’re family.

He’s six feet down.

Dead?

By now, I sure hope so.  Been there since before you were born.

The final Russet, skinned and quartered, joined his amigos on their kamikaze path, diving into the water-filled pot.  Chan grabbed the pot by its ears and walked it over to meet the stove.  Blue-flamed gas licked up the pot’s edge before Dad turned it to medium.

That’s it for questions?

I neatly folded up the letter and slid it back into its stained hold.  Getting up, my feet aimed for the side room.  Probably was supposed to be a dining room, but with only the two of us, Dad had turned it into a side room complete with TV and two rust-colored recliners picked up from another curb.  That was a gold-letter day.  I was twelve when we stumbled upon the chairs in the early morning as the fog enveloped the Whispering Pines subdivision outside Rawlins.  It was the same day we got the microwave and toaster oven.  You can’t duplicate 24-hours like that.  Didn’t attempt it, and never had.

I sort of understood the microwave and toaster oven tossing.  They didn’t match and one thing Dad had taught me was women did not like things that didn’t blend with one another like their sheep.  They liked what Dad called “flaccid consistency,” everything the same and nothing all that exciting.

I gasped when I saw the chairs.  I looked at dad.  His eyes were nearly tearing up and it was too late for the pollen season.  Once we got them into the bed of the old reliable S-10, Dad arched his back, dropped the truck into gear and said

Leather.  Only reason these precious babies were curbed.

I always sit in the recliner furthest from the kitchen where you could look out towards the road.  The road sat a good 10 feet below the level of the house, the railroad tracks another 40 feet beyond the road and no less than 5 feet further down the slope. From here I can see trains, but not the entire thing, either horizontally or vertically.

Done with it?

Guess.

Let me put it away then.

Dad fingered the envelope as he went behind me.  Grabbing a book, he opened it to the back and slipped in the envelope.  Chan walked back to the kitchen.  Making chicken and noodle with mashed potatoes, he needed to start rolling out the dough for the egg noodles.  Didn’t take much time, but labor never waited.  He raised his voice enough for me to hear.

Want to know here it is?

Nothing returned. I am fairly confident for a second Dad must’ve thought me to be as callous as mother.  Perhaps he’d flee too, find a reason to head in whatever direction.  But I am also pretty sure in Chan’s mind, soon as he thought of me taking flight, remembered being 14.  Struggling through adolescence, watching girls grow up twice as fast, dividing time between figuring out how to conquer the world yet saving time for turning two-by-fours into temporary pirate swords. I was no different and his silence spoke much more than indifference.

It’s in the Hemingway.

A tickle in my nose caused my right hand to involuntarily itch my bridge.  Behind me, over my left shoulder against the wall above the desk was our bookshelf.  Dad made it in his workshop.  Pine, stained light, three shelves high, books were lined up by author’s last name (with the exception of Ayn Rand who Dad initially thought Rand was a cool first name, so she stayed in the “A” position).  The H’s were second shelf.  Two Hawthorne’s and the Sun Also Rises.

Dad settled back down.  I guess settled is not the exact description.  He was never really unsettled talking about mother.  To him, bringing her name up was no different than talking about tomorrow’s weather.

While mother was an interesting topic, it was an exhaustive one for me.  Younger, my curiosity of a permanently absent parent got the best of me. As I grew up, my questions dove deeper, but answers tread shallow.

Nothing got my mind’s vortex swirling more than the sense of smell.  Not necessarily the best either.  My memory bore scars of some of the most God-awful smells one could whiff.  The sheep barn, dirty, was a tear-inducer.  Once cleaned, it was no different.  Ammonia.  Dad had tried once to clean it with a Lemon Zest ammonia, but it turned sour and smelled like a million lemons left out in arid Wyoming July heat to rot. Great smells are short-lived, bad ones can frozen Etch-a-Sketch in one’s memory.

Dad had made a pie, apple with raisins.  Not a lot of raisins, just a few.  While Dad and I had our share of fruit, mostly peaches off the two procreating cohabitating-in-sin trees in the back near the corral’s northern edge, we didn’t have what the government would call our recommended daily share.

The pie, again, was good.  Dad was a good cook, but this night he outdid himself.  We ate it.  The whole circumference.  About an hour later, we started up, trading flatulence back and forth as if our colons were having their own private conversation.

If the Wal-Mart crowd could smell us now.

Probably help us, Henry.  Doesn’t exactly smell sheepish.

Nothing sheepish about it.

Doesn’t exactly emit the smell of a fresh-baked apple pie either.

Why is that, Dad?

Think about it Henry.  It had raisins… and we also had broccoli.  It’s like a major military battle and our intestinal system is getting pounded from air and ground forces.

We’re sure getting it from the air.

Try to keep your sheets clean.  Good night.

The next day I started my scientific gyroscope of thinking, right after breakfast when dad was explaining to me why he set the rams where he did.

See Henry, it’s like this.  I know you are not too young to understand the importance of smell.  When the ewes start going into heat…  do I need to explain that?

Nope.

I was very observant.  Plus, it didn’t take a whole lot of cerebral action to know what a ram was doing riding a ewe, pinning her down from the back.

OK.  Well, I place them where they can smell the ewes, but not see them.  Gets their blood boiling with lust.  I do mean lust.  There’s no wooing, no love between ram and ewe.  Therefore, I make an abutment, a solid fence between them.  After a day or so, I let them out to frolic in the field.  Like a damn Roman orgy out there, if you pardon my French.

I knew French.  That was no French.  What Dad had not taught me I picked up from a textbook collecting dust in my room supposedly left behind by mother.  At least she left me Paris.

Abutment.  A good word.  Got me thinking and put me to work.

Months before, on a whim (as candy was always purchased by dad), he had picked up some Tic-Tacs, orange ones.  He liked to try new experiences, but hated this one.

Goddamn if they should ever put this stuff next to real candy.

Dad, they’re mints.

For whose breath?  A horse’s?  This stuff wouldn’t kill bad breath if all I did was drink a cup of good coffee.  Like Hell, they are.

Not one to throw anything away, Dad had set them in junk drawer II, located in the part of the kitchen were drawers were rarely opened.  Out of sight, you know.  I took the rest of the tics and tacs out of their clear package.

Thought about taping them together, but realized any tape was not going to work with the exception of duct tape and duct tape was not going to be useful for this particular project.  I needed them together, but I had to do some strategizing.  First, to go find Dad.

Found him knee deep in sheep.  Not the animals, mind you.  As typical, the barn smelled to high heaven, however I had gained certain numbness to it plus excelled at talking without breathing in through my nose.  As luck would have it, although we had more wood than luck, there was a perfectly useless piece of lumber leaning against the side split rail near the barn.  I picked it up while asking Chan

Dad, where’s the Swiss Army?

Planning on offing yourself?

With a five-inch blade?

Given the correct spot, would only take one stab.  Unless you hit breastplate.

Not today.

Desk drawer on the left.  As you face it, on the left.

Multi-tooled, the Swiss Army had everything you would need to survive in the Wyoming wilderness be it the harsh central plains or stuck on a celebrity’s ranch near Jackson Hole. Still, I couldn’t figure out what the point was having a toothpick.  Scratching my head over that one for no more than a few seconds, I grabbed the chunk of two-by-four as I heard the warning whistle.

Didn’t matter.  Whistle or not, front yard or not, they yelled.  Two syllables generally their maximum capability

Assssssssssssssssssssssssshoooooooooole!

Spppppppppppppppppppppppped!

They’d scream it as if they were town criers shouting the news of the day.  I often wondered if one day their collective vocal cords might snap off like hamstrings.  Once I realized no one would miss their useless voices and in fact may rejoice the collective detachment of both boors, I bore down and dug a mold.

Both tics and tacs took longer to de-frag than I thought.  I cooked slowly so as to not lose their ability to odorize in a pleasant manner.  Once liquefied, the concoction oozed into the desired spot.  Hinges cried, linoleum took boots’ beating as I waited.

Science experiment?

Sort of.

Aha.  Any questions?

Not right now.  If I do?

Oh, I’ll be mending fence, west side.

West side fence was downhill from the house, as was the south.  Both directions sort of sloped off with a small ridge in the middle.  I figured from the angle of a plane 30 to 45 degrees off the horizon to the south, the front of our land could resemble the corner of a square lozenge. However, it sloped so much down the west side barbed wire was in order.  Not only to poke the sheep so they knew any break-out would be met with some pain but if they lost their footing and rolled out of control down the slope, the barbed wire would catch them, gripping on as if they were worsted wool to Velcro.

An hour.  All it took for it to set.  It looked good.  Shiny as a new tic-tac, although with mottled candy shell, the newly formed mint had set solid.   I turned the board upside down and shook.  Nothing.  Thing was stuck as if I set it in cement.

Back to the drawing board.  Another carving with Swiss Army.  More melting.  This time before commencing the pour, I dabbed my pinky into cow salve, rubbed in a thin layer, no more than if I was to lightly stain the wood.

The sun in October was an anomaly.  Bigger than life, it set over the range as if someone lit a blood orange on fire. Yet, nights were cool.  Dad came ambling in, carrying needle-nose pliers, dried blood under his nostrils and a smirk.

You OK, dad?

Fine.  Slipped pinching wire, fell into the fence.  Slope you know.  Wasn’t the fence or the earth’s fault, unless you count gravity.  How’s the experiment?

We’ll see.

Aha.  Thought of dinner?

Thought of it.

Thought?

Burritos.

I don’t know if we…

We do.  I checked.  Got enough.  Cheese we can grate up.  Refrieds.  Onion.

Red?

Yep.  Got a bit of sour cream too… and tortillas.

Alright.  Go to it.

It wasn’t fancy.  Didn’t take a genius to put together, but I figured giving dad a rest was a decent idea.  Two burritos each, filled to the point of bursting through tortillas made thinner than a Chinese pancake by steaming then stretching, put both dad and I in lounge mode.

Wyoming Cowboys were playing pre-season basketball against Athletes in Action, the roving band of athletes playing competitively in the name of the Lord Almighty.  Apparently The Lord’s scouting department was far better than the University of Wyoming’s.  Halftime had AIA in front 43-27.

We put the fear of God in your squad.

What was that, Dad?

Ah, nuthin.  Thinking of a motto for the AIA.  What’s something is what’s brewing.  Know what I mean?

With you.

Out they came. A sonata in the seat.  Fragrant, dad’s ample odor brought the house down.  Mine lifted it back up.

Henry, did you buy one of those goddamn room fresheners?

Nope.

Dad took a big sniff.

Damned if I don’t smell oranges.  Rotten ones, or sort of rotten.  But oranges.  Yeah, that’s it.

It’s my science project.

Is it burning?  Smells like it’s burning.

Not really.  May need some work.

Jesus, Joseph, Mary and Moses!  Damn, Henry.  Let it go like that again, you’ll wake the sheep!

Sorry.

There’s that orangy-ish smell again.  Where is it?  I know you bought one.

Dad, it’s my science project.

Where?

Dad and I don’t have anything to hide.  If I want to talk to him about vaginas, I just out and said it.  He’s not one for vulgarity, so it’s matter-of-fact speaking, but there are no secrets.  I stood up, pulled my pants down, dug into the back of my shorts and pulled it out.

What in the sam hell…?

You got me going.

But…

Butt is right, Dad.  It’s a new invention for those inclined to have fatalistic flatuation.  It’s a butt mint.

A butt mint?

Yep.  Sits right next to your butt.

How?

With a special patent pending pocket panty.

Maybe I ought to send you to school.

Dad, listen.  I worked this out.  You see, you have someone make underwear, men’s and women’s, with a special pocket located just above the anus.  A fart, hot air, travels upward and catches the butt mint, producing a pleasant smell.

Dad laid back in his Lazy Boy, eyelids staring at the ceiling, kicking up the ottoman section.  Legs stretched, he let out an elongated crop duster, as if he was spraying nature’s pesticide on an alfalfa field size of a Ted Turner ranch.

You are mending fence tomorrow.

Fine, Dad.  But…

Butt.  How did you keep it…  I don’t really want to…

In my crevice.

Crev-ass?

I made a wedge-shaped mold designed to keep the mint in place.

Henry.  Henry.

It’s a surefire seller.

Henry… Jesus.

Sheep had to be up now.  If not for my continual gas explosion, for his laugh.  Chan’s laugh, when properly triggered, made Coyotes howl, Pronghorn leap.  Sufficiently triggered by A Butt Mint, tears were rolling.

Have you… Jesus, Henry… have you… have you thought of scents?  Oh God!

Off he went on another running chortle.  This was either going to make his night or kill him.

Orange Citrus you have been smelling, Cinnamon, umm… spearmint…

And tooty fruity?

Sheep were bleating.  Rams, smelling pheromones, began kicking at the abutment.  They wouldn’t be able to get through and if they did, no harm was to come of nature.  Dad wasn’t worried, so neither was I.  How could he be?  He was laughing so hard, he couldn’t possibly hear anything except his own wind-breaking.

Laugh any harder dad and you’ll derail a train.

Take the wedge down to the tracks and derail it yourself.  A butt mint.  Oh man!  Now that is sure one to sleep on.  Lordy!

Rays would beat any rooster, no different next morning.  This time of year, there was no slow build-up.  If Dad ever needed me to keep post, I would be up before dawn.  I swear some days if I closed my eyes for a second, it went from dark to bright.

I had decided to wedge the track.  It had to work.  No physics needed or wanted, the wedge sat on a rail, waiting patiently for my coal train.

The angle Mister Sun was sitting, a raven could mistake it for a shiny trinket, a ram could seemingly squash it like a pill bug, pheasant ran over it as if it was a hot quarter.  Trucks, semis mostly, would get it right off their chrome grills, boomeranging lasers right back toward the house.  Owls turned heads 180 avoiding temporary blindness.  Horses pawed dirt, tossing their manes over bulging eyes.  Antelope?  Pronghorn bounced along their path getting caught.

They kept bouncing, blindness be damned.  Not known for intelligence, Pronghorn Antelope had been easily killed by hunters since the Spanish left horses for Indians.  Curiosity.  Simple as that.  Indians would wave a colorful flag at them.  Eventually, curiosity got the best of them.  They had to inspect.  Now close range, one arrow was all it took.

The herd was quite large for the late stages of the 20th century.  27 in all, they sent scouts ahead to determine safe passage.  If they were true scouts they would have never received a merit badge for bravery.  Stupidity, maybe.

Both scouts slipped by me.  Can’t say why I didn’t see them, but deeper thinking later had logic stampeding over fantasy.  They hit the track a few seconds before the train, fifteen feet from the wedge.  My friend the engineer didn’t bother to honk.  You can’t when you’re half-asleep.  The train hit the scouts.  Mangled carcasses slid between the rails and the wheels.  Traction nonexistent on a single side, the engine turned out of the rail.  Coal cars, 73 of them, turned every which way.  Dad said later as he saw it on Cheyenne TV news from a bird-s eye view

Damn thing looks like a broken centipede, if in fact a centipede had a spine.  Which, as we know, it does not.

I was used to blood.  Not from lambs. Lambs, for my sake I guess, were sent to an organic slaughterhouse.  But adult sheep? I guess dad figured their lack of cuteness bode a better lesson in life, or not so shocking of one.  Can’t slaughter any animal without a lot of blood.  Sheep, fluffy as they were, seemed to bleed forever.

Goddamn.

The engineer’s assistant did not. Flipped off like a rookie on a high wire, he had rolled thirty feet or so from the track only to get ginsu’d in two by coal car number three as if he was a ripe hydroponic tomato.  Color drained from him faster than an ugly guy’s face on a first date with a beautiful woman and a missing wallet, as Dad would tell Cheyenne TV reporters.

The reporters?  They asked a lot of questions.  Guilt nearly consumed me, but Dad informed them, repeatedly, about the antelope.  Never said a word about his organic lamb.  Later he told me

Shouldn’t profit from someone else’s misery.

Not that it mattered.  We did anyway.  Reporters have a way of spreading the word without you doing much of anything.  Dad called it mindless blather to fill time and sell ads. A couple of them poked around a bit, talking up Dad and his strict adherence to organic feed.  Farm didn’t do more or get bigger, just rose lamb price-per-pound as restaurants far away as Omaha rose the demand.

Anyhow, I got to the engine faster than I have ever run only to slow to nearly nothing as Dad yelled at me not to touch anything and get the hell away from it.  Even on a cool morning, the heat was horrible.  I wanted to leave, but I saw him.  Throat torn off the front as if someone took a serrated knife and wedged it out like hollowing out a half a cantaloupe, he couldn’t speak.  Didn’t take a professional lip reader to figure out he was lipping

Help me.  Help me.

He couldn’t tell what had happened to him.  Couldn’t see one leg was neatly severed at the knee, the other torn out of the hip socket, both running with blood.  I wanted to run. I couldn’t.  He started choking, blood coming out of his ears and nose.

No insults.  Nothing disparaging uttered.  Guess that’s what you go through when dying.  I took a good look into his eyes before his light flickered off.

Elijah forgives you.


Clinic Lady

Strips of rail peeled.  Certain spots, the current curry yellow nearly provided enough cover over the salt-sprayed rust bubbles.  Rust bubbles were not something any of the drivers would notice as they fought to gain a foothold against other car-bound crossers.  She never had.

The trestles shook as her feet set upon the middle of the bridge.  Running gave one a different perspective.  The shaking, so pronounced she quaked, could make the sanest person sprint for fear of a collapse. She certainly thought about it, running to fight the world, but the papers she absentmindedly took from the car out of caring habit, would not do well in more wind. If she were to grab the yellow rail and run, she’d surely slice up her right hand, requiring a tetanus shot.  Shots were something she did not receive well, unless they were defensive.

His kitchen pine floor, denuded of dirt and salt, thrust its chest out. Shiny, newly polished, so clean Mr. Clean’s bald pate blushed.

photo by Daniel Agee.  All rights reserved.

photo by Daniel Agee. All rights reserved.

My clinic go okay?

Okay.

I go straight into toilet.

Blake nodded affirmatively.  She was more than he bargained this time. Burning bright green eyes, two Ponderosa Pine needles as they burst into flames, strode through bleach blonde hair.  A different color shirt every Wednesday, today’s a canary yellow button-down top along with the ever-present translucent white capris.  Color meant everything to him, yet nothing, as any color bounced off her fresh-scrubbed pine table tone.  She excelled at scrubbing the unseen.  She scrubbed the mantle. She scrubbed the first curious day of her arrival.

One day after he fired the last cleaning lady, his seventh in two years, he found the note

Hallo!
My name is Dorota.
I am Polish professionall cliniclady.
With exellent experience in USA.
Who already have a house to clin.
In your neighbours hood.
It would be nice as well to clin.
Beautyfull your home too.
Please – take a contact with me under:
555-555-5500 every day from: 7:00pm.

rubber-banded to the flag on his weathered oak mailbox for which he bargained with an artist in New Mexico nearly five years earlier during a mixed media show.  He wished he had taken better care of the brown Pelican, its beak the opening to its throat pouch where the mail rested every mid-afternoon.  Alexis, his daughter, picked it out and, although reluctant to give up the knotty oak bough bench he wanted with Cochise carved in the upper right, it had made her happy.

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April

Jimmy crack corn. Yep. Jimmy crack corn and I… don’t… care.

Brunette curls shook as she leaned back – elbows on a Caribbean blue beach towel bought last summer on Bermuda’s north shoreline – and laughed.

You remember that?  Remember?

Not hard to forget.  Four? Five?

I think it was five.  Think.

Toes, pedi’d to a French cut less glossy clear coat, wriggled free of their temporary prison, shooting maroon nails out of sand like a time-lapse garden of croci in April.  Bridgette brought her feet up to the towel, lightly shook off what dark Georgian sand she could, and set them on the towel.

The absolute deadpan delivery. It would have shocked me no less if she had spilled “Jimmy cracked corn and I personally could give a rat’s ass less.”

Crack his fucking corn all over town for all I care.

The laugh warmed over bounced across loudly enough she must have heard.  Had to have heard.  Hermit crabs scurried for cover, leaving their sidled prints along freshly dampened sand.

photo by Daniel Agee.  all rights reserved.

photo by Daniel Agee. all rights reserved.

I know.  It was amazing.

And a foretelling.

No damn kidding.

Sodas only today.  Sunday.  They weren’t religious by any means.  A passerby on the road of their own life, if given a slice of their time to observe, would declare them as laissez faire naturalists.  Not naturists.  Not that strolling about naked would have necessarily bothered them, they just preferred not.

They ate raw.  Feeling a need to void themselves of as much processed sugar and corn syrup as humanly possible in the United Sates of America, they consumed organic raw vegetables and fruits.  Generally they preferred to grow their own, but every climate had specific foods it grew well and those it did not.  Georgia did well for a lot of sustenance (read peaches and onions) but almonds, a family staple, were not one of them.  Neither were fair trade grapes or coffee for that matter.

Whenever neighbors would invite them over to a barbecue bash, they wouldn’t turn their noses up at any meat offered.  The occasional slaughterhouse cow or pig was tolerable (although when they got home their stomachs, not used to grease and fat, would often purge).  They would delicately express their desire for a non-sauced slice of domestic meat to avoid, again, processed sugar and corn syrup.

Bridgette shifted, swinging her left leg over her right to face Dan.  Her eyes sparkled him.

Can you see?

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Candy Croc

Reds, greens, some yellows, although yellow wasn’t the best seller.  Pastels always worked best unless it was the holiday season.  Reds and Greens, dark ones, ran roughshod over the rest as if other colors were a children’s zoo being invaded by rogue circus elephants.

Mindy loved the circus.  Not the actual circus, her circus life where performances came nightly, mental cars crammed with ass-clowns. The “come one, come all” attitude made it good enough reason as any to work here.  There was no carousal, but the taffy wheel and its varied color combinations made an acceptable substitute.  The woman of the house, Hannah, “a palindrome of fun” as her husband was sarcastically fond of calling her, had a fixation on horses.  She called her collection a hobby, but Mindy guessed that’s exactly what one of those old women, when caught with 47 cats in her house, called her kitty corps.

A collection.  The store hadn’t been exactly overrun with business, so a few months ago after the Easter semi-rush, Mindy counted.  238 various horse knick-knacks from the faux stained glass three-inch miniature stuck on the side window by the register in the back to the full-size white carousel horse sporting a golden mane, deep blue saddle with magenta highlights and still draped in chiffon pink, yellow and white signaling the resurrection of Jesus and arrival of more Cadbury cream-filled eggs.

photo by daniel agee.  all rights reserved.

photo by daniel agee. all rights reserved.

238 was now 247. Nine more had been added since post-Easter, including a 16” high frothing ceramic black stallion dubbed El Caballo Diablo by Mindy.  He was rearing up, mane asunder, front hooves flying with a discernable, yet sheathed horse penis. Whenever she wanted less customers in the store on a Saturday, she’d put him in the front window, always remembering to put it back behind her head at the counter before Hannah made her early afternoon call.  Last week’s call was close. El Caballo Diablo was still wobbling when she burst into the store.  Thankfully, Hannah remained clueless to El Caballo Diablo’s movements, bitching with a consistent pitch.

Afternoon, Mindy.

Hi Hannah.

The day’s sales are…?

Hannah peeked over her Walgreen’s sunglasses at Mindy as if it was her fault mid-September was wracked with a heat wave ninety-plus for three solid days.

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Charlie’s Whiskers

Cold oatmeal.  Charlie made it hot on the stove, taking the familiar blue-hat red box, dropping a ½ cup into the old-fashioned oats, grain dust popping a static-cling to the cup’s edge.  Indiscriminately, he dropped a cup of water into the copper-clad pot along with the oats.  A quick stir, he set blue flame to medium.

Once blue lit up, Charlie set about putting together the rest.  Fresh fruit of the season, this time of the year embracing apples, would litter oatmeal.  Slicing a Granny Smith thin, he set it aside, piling up the pieces side-by-side ground cinnamon and honey.  Almonds remained whole.

photo by Daniel Agee.  All rights reserved.

photo by Daniel Agee. All rights reserved.

Can’t stand slices or slivers.  Can’t stand processed chop.

Rosy listened to him.  Not too intently as she knew no matter what, no oatmeal was coming her way.  An occasional apple slice flew off the counter.  Charlie’s eyes couldn’t follow the tawny piece as it hit the oak.  Less a prize than a function of being the house vacuum, Rosy stealthily snatched it up before Charlie could turn.

William Penn stated two minutes, but two was a standard.  Charlie had been told many years ago the face on the box couldn’t be William Penn, but the person bloated with useless information informing him of this fact was not one Charlie ever took to heart.   Other than Grade A semen, his former father-in-law, a divorce attorney good enough to get married four times and never lose any property, was essentially useless. Partial to pomposity, the man taught Charlie one essential lesson – those who insisted on being the center of attention often corner themselves with audacious inaccuracy.

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