Sunday, November 20, 2022

The Guardian


            Clouds of steam atop the mountain hinted at a change. Esilda shivered when a gust of hot air from the volcanic peak rushed like a warm river, breaking the chill of the cloud forest and surprising her. She anticipated challenges ahead. Eruptions and earthquakes were not among them.

            Deep red and yellow leaves rustled as she trudged along the path into the darker reaches of the jungle. A canopy of green, a thousand shades, shielded her and provoked an ominous feeling in her gut as she hiked. The colorful vegetation seemed ready to consume her, but the map indicated otherwise. Legions of curious hummingbirds guided her into the dense mist and greenery.

 

            She was on course after a strange series of delays that were beyond coincidence. Was she being warned? Or summoned? Questions outnumbered answers, but she felt born to this quest as if it was her destiny.



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Sunday, November 13, 2022

The View From Mars


            A cascading waterfall was a highlight of the campground that had been thoughtfully designed and meticulously constructed at the periphery of Base Five. The red soil was reminiscent of Georgia clay, and gurgling river water was in fact Martian, but circulated endlessly through a meandering stream by pumps powered by nuclear fusion. Camping rated high on the list of desired amenities for homesick colonists. Eileen sat with the kids around a simulated campfire eating s’mores, gazing skyward and searching the blackness for Greg’s incoming ship.

            There were other reminders of home. The base was named Cook County, a tribute to the first Martian governor, a Chicagoan. It sounded less sterile than “Base Five.” Other bases had followed suit: Los Angeles, Maricopa, Queens and Milwaukee. Pathways between structures had been given street names, and unnecessary mailboxes adorned living quarters, brightly painted and decorated. This explained the manatee that stood watch over Tamiami Trail.

            “I wouldn’t want that commute on a regular basis,” Greg stated as he cleared the Cook County airlock.

            “It once took seven months Captain,” reported the AI gate attendant. “Welcome to your new home.”

            “Yeah, new home. Old home may not…” he choked back emotion at the thought.


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Saturday, November 5, 2022

Father's Way

     

            Chest-deep snow and ice cling to Ricky’s coat, making movement difficult and penetrating him with a most unwelcome chill.

“You keep watch. I’ll be back soon,” his father orders, anticipating a repeat of some previous lapse in judgment Ricky can’t recall. It is his father’s way. 

            Earlier they cleared one path down the driveway for the car and another for foot traffic leading to the backyard. Beyond that, mounded snow prevents access to the garage, the woodpile, and the corridors of pine trees at the rear of their property. Dusk lends the forested area a sinister demeanor, identical aisles of frosted limbs that lead into a blackened understory. Ricky thinks it’s a scary place.

“Keep an eye on Momma and Sissy,” says Father, then pulls the front door hard. Ice on the jamb prevents tight closure and necessitates a second, harder slam. Pictures on the wall rattle from the force of his departure.

            Ricky is saddened at his leaving. Father forgot it’s his birthday. Smoky bacon grease and a scented candle tinge the air with pungent odors that cause his nose to run and eyes to burn a bit as if they had been bathed in the bitter winter air.

            He collapses on the couch, melting and dripping, and knows what Momma will say, but comforts himself briefly in a quilt, wiping his runny nose on the filthy fabric.

            “How many times have I told you not to do that Ricky?” asks Momma. “Why don’t you make yourself useful and go get a log for the fire. Go on, git!”



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Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Table for Two


Kenny Savory waited tables when business was slow. He paid special attention to the town constables, never allowing their coffee to cool, especially on the coldest of winter nights. Officer Margaret Stenfield nursed her second steaming cup. Too much caffeine made her jittery, but ordering decaf sounded lame for someone paid to serve and protect.

            “Nothing like a jittery cop,” she laughed, waving Kenny off his latest attempt to refill.

The Savory Café was a favorite local spot. It sat at the intersection of two roads that converged in Le Sueur’s small downtown shopping district. One road entered from nearby farmland, then went uphill, across the river and on toward Henderson. The more heavily trafficked cross street was the primary access road up to Route 169 and onward to Minneapolis. Residents joked that the only way into town was downhill. That was a problem in an ice storm.

            “How many so far, Marge?” asked Kenny, looking out the window of the café.

            “Four,” she said, then looked up with a start past a glittering string of white Christmas lights, wind-whipped almost to the point of breaking against the café window. The sickening thud and crunch of bumper on sheet metal had become far too familiar. She nervously fondled the badge under her coat, as if to engage her police persona in time of need.

            “Make that five,” Marge sighed. She stacked her pile of documents and slid out of the booth. The bell on the café door jangled as she stepped out into the bitter January wind and lowered the ear flaps on her hat.



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Monday, October 17, 2022

Paradise Lost

    

            Residents of the Sunshine State frequently refer to Florida as “paradise.” Let’s dispel this myth. I reserve that designation for Hawaii, Fiji and other legitimately tropical wonderlands. I’ve been to a few. I know the difference. While trading skin-splitting cold winters for flesh-searing relentless summers makes some sense, there are downsides. Like constant traffic, legions of the elderly, revolting political ideologies, and hurricanes.

 

            We are developing a post-traumatic response to the mention of names starting with “I” and the month of September. We have been assaulted twice in five years by that disturbing combination. I wrote about our encounter with Hurricane Irma in 2017, hoping never to repeat the experience. And for the most part, we did not. The generator and portable air conditioner we bought immediately after that sweltering early September event went unused, and ironically, we sold the AC unit six months ago. Having chosen to become “snowbirds” earlier last year, we were able to watch from afar as Hurricane Ian approach day by day with almost purposeful malevolence.

 

            But our first concern was the path of the storm as it headed toward Cuba. Our son Eric was stationed near the U.S. Embassy in Havana. He was instructed to shelter in place in his house while the eye of the storm passed overhead at Category 2 strength. He did fine, but the island lost power and protests erupted to the west. Thank God for cell phones. We were able to receive updates before, during and after the storm.

 

            The turn Ian took in order to pass over Cuba sent it into the energizing hot Gulf water beyond. That’s when things really intensified and “spaghetti” computer models tried to pin down a landfall location. Over-reliance on the “cone of uncertainty” by local and federal officials began to factor into delayed or inappropriate evacuation orders for the coming debacle. The eventual wanderings of the developing system fell well within the cone. Forecasts of storm surge and wind speeds were also reasonably accurate. To watch the graphics on the Weather Channel or those displayed by other meteorologists, a little red weed-whacker icon deceptively led the public to believe that the hurricane would hit or miss with the precision of a bowling ball on a well-oiled alley. In reality, the growing storm was a monstrous three hundred and fifty miles across, with an intense eye-wall that spun with the cutting power of a Cuisinart and passed directly over our house. But just outside of the eye is where the real destructive power dwells.

 

            The period leading up to landfall was anxiety-provoking to the maximum. The storm crawled along at eight miles per hour for a week or more, changing course periodically and gaining strength to a Category 5 with winds in excess of 155mph. The plus side of that situation is that it granted residents time to prepare, stock up on supplies, board up windows…or leave. But in our increasingly “no one tells me what to do” society, people fought for supplies, ignored the warnings and suffered for it.

 

            Multiple storms over the years with the potential to strike the southern Florida peninsula have strayed into the Gulf or up to the Panhandle. These “cry wolf” scenarios now result in procrastination or complacency. Even finely tuned projections resulted, as in the case of 2004’s Hurricane Charley, in mass evacuations from the predicted area of landfall to the location where the storm unexpectedly turned and struck. Ian was predicted to make landfall in Tampa. It eventually behaved more like the 2004 storm, coming ashore at Cayo Costa, a little barrier island we’ve taken our boat to a couple of times. Sustained winds were in excess of 150mph.

 

            I’ve spoken to people who rode out the storm. As they describe the experience, their faces pale and elongate, a look similar to having eaten spoiled food. They describe the sound, “You know, the freight train sound they say tornadoes make? It was nine hours of that.” Terrifying. And as the front of the eye-wall passed, winds reversed and pummeled weakened objects from the opposite direction.

 

            We watched in Illinois from four angles on remote web cams until the power went out on September 28th at 2:40pm. The electricity always seems to go out before things are all that bad. Perhaps they cut power to avoid transformer explosions and downed live wires. But from that point forward we watched on the news, reliant on idiots like The Weather Channel’s Jim Cantore, who has made a name for himself and inspired others to stand outside in the worst available wind and rain. He was located in Punta Gorda, the town next to ours, where a strong sheltering building abutted a street suitable for a wide angle shot of him briefly exposing himself to the elements. One of these days a weather personality is going to take a stop sign to the head.

 

            About the wind. I’ve written this before, but imagine, if you’re familiar with batting cages, the speed at which a “major league” throw is shot out of a pitching machine. The ball hisses and is hard to follow. Now almost double that. This is why you stay inside, put up storm shutters, and also why there is so much damage from wind-borne projectiles.

 

            We returned to Florida more than a week after the storm to the ubiquitous sound of generators and chain saws. We live on a canal about thirteen feet above sea level. The predicted storm surge of 7-18 feet never materialized, but it is doubtful that the water would have reached levels anywhere near that by the time it reached us. The neighbor across the canal lost a section of sea wall perhaps thirty feet long. When water retreated due to the approaching storm (the tsunami effect) sixteen inches of rain came overland behind the wall, quickly eroded the supporting soil and undermined the concrete, collapsing it outward at the bottom. Their yard looks like a sinkhole.

 

            Our new boat lift cover, a large blue vinyl canopy, was shredded and blown into and around the canal. People ask how our boat survived. It was fine, unlike the one submerged upside down a few houses away. The entire aluminum frame supporting the cover across the way detached and was wound like a twist tie around the wooden pilings at the base of our lift.

 

            Unlike the Irma devastation I caused when I cut the screens from our pool cage to save the supporting metal frame, Ian took care of it for me. About half of the screens were blown out or shredded. As a result, the pool had a large brown stain where the uncirculated water allowed submerged leaves and branches to decompose. The fact that power was restored in ten days is a testament to the fleets of utility service trucks that swept the state. It was an organizational triumph.

 

            We went without Internet and TV for about three weeks. Oh the horror! We were reduced to watching DVD sets of Combat and Gilligan’s Island. The former was a gift Jeanne bought her dad when he was sick. The latter I can’t justify. You never want to watch TV so badly as when you’re not able to. I realize these are first-world problems, but it’s pretty eye opening how reliant on web access we’ve become. Open enrollment for health insurance was happening, a simple process if you can complete it online. Ditto, paying bills. This is a sudden return to the 1980s. If you’ve ever endured a lengthy power outage, you likely found yourself entering a room and flipping on a light switch. Oh yeah, no power. We reflexively picked up our phones to research, “How tall was Vic Morrow?” But without Google, I proclaimed, “I don’t know ANYTHING!”

 

            The next week was a series of Groundhog Days, cleaning up layers of debris on our property until the near-90-degree heat reduced us to staggering, drenched noodles. Four large pine trees along our southern border were stripped of almost all branches. Trees have a surprising number of branches as it turns out. They mostly fell on our yard, mixed with three colors of shingle fragments from roofs unknown, and had to be dragged to a growing brush pile the size of two minivans, near the street. Similarly, our large prickly pear cactus was just begging to be taken down by a hurricane. It tended to grow along a single plane, like a sail. I cut it down to a creature we now call “Stumpy McStumperton.” More vegetative matter for the pile.

 

            Two trees were uprooted, and two of Jeanne’s favorite Queen Palms were pushed to a 45-degree angle. We attempted to upright, support and save them, losing one. God save the Queen!

 

            We were blessed with a mostly dry house inside, though sections of soffit and a number of shingles were torn away and something heavy struck the roof, cracking the underlying plywood. The roof had to be replaced. Insurance claims mounted like blocks in a game of Jenga, an exercise that teaches patience…and disappointment. Hemorrhaging money flowed faster than our canal.

 

            All of the above is for the benefit of those who have been asking how we fared. Incredibly well is the honest answer. A neighbor’s aged father got frightened and drove away from the relative safety of their house and died in flood water. Pool cages are destroyed, roofs ripped off and ceilings collapsed. If you watch the news, the people of Fort Myers Beach, Pine Island and other areas suffered death, isolation and catastrophic destruction resulting in total loss of property and homelessness that will take many years to recover from, if ever. An art-inspired little town called Matlacha (Matt La Shay) that was once featured on Beachfront Bargain Hunt is gone, just swept away.

 

            So back to that paradise delusion. Why do we live here, rebuild and continue to sleep on train tracks that have an unpredictable schedule? I frequently cite the day after I came down to close on our house. The wind chill in Chicago was 25 below zero. I sat outside with a cup of coffee at a perfect 75 degrees, looking out over the sparkling blue pool at a flock of white migratory tropical birds winging down the canal. Jimmy Buffet played in the background. I nearly cried when it was time to go home. So, this isn’t paradise, but it’s only occasionally Hell.


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Wednesday, September 28, 2022

In The Early Evening Pain

 


Author's Note: This turned out to be the last time we enjoyed an evening with Gordon. I'm so glad he traveled to Peoria while we were in town.


           What a lucky happenstance, my favorite performer making a stop just minutes from our summer home near Peoria, Illinois. How could I pass it up? I pleaded for it to be a birthday gift and was granted the company of my wife and old-soul daughter to the September 27th Gordon Lightfoot show at the Civic Center.

            We waited through a very capable opening act, something new to us as a Lightfoot audience. Nashville’s Jack Schneider sang a handful of original songs, demonstrated his guitar chops and even strapped on a harmonica a few times. I wondered if perhaps Gordon found him slightly reminiscent of his old friend Bob Dylan. It was quite enjoyable.

            Finally, the frail looking legend himself strolled confidently out on stage, settled quickly in behind the mic and began to strum and sing Sweet Guinevere. After the initial shock at the raspy remnants of his once beautiful voice, our expectations were adjusted for the evening. 

            At age sixty-eight, my knees complained after we walked up to the second balcony. But I don’t have to perform with my knees. Gord’s voice seems to be going into retirement against his will. After all, Paul McCartney is eighty years old, and Tony Bennett released an album at ninety-five.

            But literally “with an achin’ in his heart” – a triple aortic aneurysm nearly took his life in 2002, leaving him to recover from a six-week coma and a tracheotomy that would have sidelined most mortals. That he is alive is amazing, touring twenty years later, astounding. He subsequently suffered a stroke, and most recently a broken arm. The man is no stranger to pain.

            His faithful fans are in love with this troubadour, a songwriter with no equal, and a band that could perform with a cardboard cutout of the Canadian national treasure and still hold a crowd’s interest in tribute to their hero. 

            And then it happened. Just as some random drunk at another show started shouting at the top of his lungs, one dimwit felt the need to yell “GORDON” during every song. Dude, he knows his name, and no matter how many times you yell, “RAINY DAY PEOPLE,” he is not taking requests. The raucous idiot should have been thrown out like the one at the Pabst Theater in 2013. If you’re reading this, you embarrassing asshat, you’re not a fan, stop pretending. Fans don’t do that.

            As the show proceeded, Gord’s voice warmed up a bit. At one point he paused to use a nasal spray, then got a laugh when he offered it to lead guitarist Carter Lancaster. It made a noticeable difference, but by that time we were used to his limits and I was openly crying during If You Could Read My Mind. I looked over at the face of my thirty-year-old daughter, a Speech Language Pathologist sitting in rapt attention to the haunting melody written in 1970. We danced to Inspiration Lady at her wedding. Sadly, that song wasn’t included in the evening’s set list, but perhaps more crying would have just been excessive.

            She commented that Gordon had difficulty clearing saliva from his vocal-chords and lacked the necessary lung power to propel sounds without difficulty. But far from having pockets full of sand, he continued to pull out hit after hit, some shortened a bit to “tighten up the show.” He spoke of the band performing nine shows in twelve days and the desire to sleep in their own beds. Perhaps after the show he jumped a jet plane, and to thunderous applause was eventually on his way – in the early evening pain.


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Sunday, September 18, 2022

Family Feud

 

            There are few houses on Cook Road, but the two at Numbers 23 and 25 are unusually close to each other and oddly situated. Relations between neighbors at these two homes have varied depending on the occupants. The shared boundary tests the better natures of those who dwell on either side.

            A fence might seem to be in order. But a wall of any design along the dovetailed property line would be a mutually detrimental eyesore to both owners, and has thus been avoided.

            Sarah and Jerry’s dog Rusty at Number 23 is a former farmyard mongrel adopted out of sympathy for its plight, and relentless requests by eight-year-old Bekka. Rusty routinely loitered by the back door, awaiting a breach in security by the normally vigilant family. The shaggy little opportunist was an escape artist who seemed to love being chased.

            In remote or less populated areas, sewage is often disposed of by septic systems that must be regularly pumped out. One late April day several years earlier, the septic tank cover was removed for pumping at Number 25 and remained open while the tanker truck went to unload its contents. The back yard was perfumed with the yearly crop of blue perennials that only partially masked the stench emanating from the open system.

            This was one of the days Rusty got away from Jerry. Not an athletic man, he nevertheless took off like Hermes after the bounding dog. Around the side of the house they ran, leaping the flowering blue boundary without regard for a minor trespass. Relations had been good since Susan and Frank had moved in. In fact, Susan was outside, her face toward the sun until a somewhat surreal event turned her attention.



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Sunday, September 11, 2022

Days of Our Lives

           They pulled into a choice spot at the drive-in, central but with easy egress for when the movie ended and a mad dash began to empty the lot.

            “Let them wait in line to go home,” said Ray. “What’s the hurry, baby?”

            It was summer, they were twenty and it was the weekend. She couldn’t disagree. There was no hurry. How could she know about time at an age when life stretches ahead like an endless highway, when wasted moments are always replaced by a new supply of moments to be wasted?

            Momma dragged her to the nursing home a week ago to visit great Uncle Otto.

            “Vicky, you never know when it might be the last time. He’s 93, honey. I know he must be awful lonely.”

            “I know, I know, he’s so sweet, it’s just,”

            “Just what?”

            “It smells kinda bad Momma. And it makes me sad.”



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Friday, September 9, 2022

Bad Behavior

            Folks in Brimfield, Massachusetts talk much of the year about little other than their legendary summer flea markets. When a quarter of a million people leave the area, returning the local population to under 4000, the general state of exhaustion and silence is akin to that following the end of Woodstock, only more so.

            And then winter sets in and Emma Walther goes ice fishing. She becomes the subject of frequent conversations as she walks by the local diner. Imagine, a girl.

            Emma works on weekends in nearby Sturbridge Village as an actress in a living history museum. It is generally frowned upon to express frustration with tourists and their occasionally bad behavior, but bumper stickers that state, “We’re not on your vacation” can be seen on the outskirts of town. Eyes secretly roll at the sound of a Chicagoan asking how to get to Wore-Chester. Emma has been told not to make corrections, but finds it difficult to let it go. “Oh, Woostah, here, let me get you a map.”

            “Dad, I’m goin’ fishing!” Emma yells on her way out the back door.

            The garage stores too much stuff to also fit a car, and she struggles around collections of treasures for next summer’s flea, trying not to upset anything breakable. A bucket, makeshift pole and small tackle box are wedged between tables and trinkets, lanterns and pewter milk jugs. Tourists just love milk jugs.

            Emma slides down the icy driveway with her gear, turns toward town and then down Brookfield Road to the Lake Sherman conservation area. The small lake is one of several in the area, stocked with trout and bass in the spring, and fishable during the short, frigid ice fishing season. She passes the police department, the cemetery and her old elementary school.

            “Hey, school,” she says, her frosty breath trailing behind her, and then yells “Hey Stube!” to a friend across the street.

            “McKay!” shouts Doug Stuben. Eliza McKay is the fictional character Emma plays in Sturbridge, churning imaginary butter and sweeping floors in the refurbished “original” home of the town pastor. The hourly rate is decent, but the work is pure drudgery. Sitting on a frozen lake with a line in the water is more to her liking.


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Monday, August 8, 2022

Ocean View


Mary Lindwahl put her husband Kurt in charge of researching their summer vacation. This abandonment of logic reflected her desperation to be anywhere but “here.” In the days before the Internet, this meant phone calls to resorts featured in glossy magazines, or queries to addresses on matchbook covers.

            “The Ocean Vista Resort,” said Kurt. “That sounds lovely.”

 

            “Yes it does Kurt, but you should request a brochure.”

 

            “I already did, Mary. It should come in about a week.”

 

            When the much-anticipated trifold piece arrived, Kurt spread it out on the kitchen table.

 

            “Look, honey, there’s the ocean! Palm trees, sand and waves, right out in back. Let’s go there!”

 

            “I don’t know Kurt, that looks kind of like a drawing,” said Mary

 

            “It’s what they call an artist’s rendering, Mary,” said Kurt with the expert tone of a travel agent.

 

            The Ocean Vista Resort was in California, home to movie stars and perfect “beachy” weather. Mary dreamed of lounging on the sand.

 

            “There’s a swimming pool too, Mary!”

 

            “We’ll go to the beach,” she said.

 

            A taxi dropped them in the secluded driveway of the Ocean Vista. More of an alley really. Kurt breathed in the moist, warm Los Angeles air.

 

            “You smell that, Mary?” asked Kurt. I can almost hear the waves.

 

            “Mary glanced at the hotel dumpster and out at the street. The odor and noise she perceived were decidedly less magical.



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Tuesday, February 1, 2022

Carved in Stone

A recent visit to the Louvre got me thinking about my own attempts at stone sculpture in an adult education class long ago. The plethora of statuary in France and Rome gives one the impression that marble is like clay, easily shaped by artists with a talent for sculpture.

It is not.

 

Unless you’ve lived your life under a rock (haha) and without a television, you’ve no doubt heard of names like Michelangelo, Raphael, Donatello and Leonardo da Vinci. And if you were a kid growing up in the 1990s, you at least know these fellows as Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, named after a handful of the greatest Renaissance artists. There are so many more. The mostly forgotten fifth turtle was named Venus de Milo, the only character in the franchise named for a work of art rather than an artist, and the only female until much later.

 

A comedian once quipped, “How long is it polite to stand and stare at the Grand Canyon? It looks just like every postcard I’ve ever seen.” My experience in the Louvre, and later the Vatican Museum was similarly mind-numbing. Museums can be like that. As impressive as I found the armless Venus de Milo, prominently displayed by herself at the Louvre Museum, I was more amazed that I had traveled eight miles up in the sky at 600 miles per hour, reaching my destination in France in about seven hours. And there I stood, reading that not only is it unsure if the statue is a representation of Venus or Aphrodite, but that it is uncertain who sculpted her. But still, at night, when the lights in the Louvre are turned off, she stands alone in the dark, her marble likeness cold, hard, unable to speak and unappreciated for hours, every day for the foreseeable future. It was kind of sad. But that attributes human feelings to a lump of rock. That’s how good the sculpture is, and it was undoubtedly better when she had arms.

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