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  • They All Do

    June 29th, 2021

    The truck rolled up in her driveway. Oil dripped on the tiny bits of grass and weeds. He checked his looks in the mirror. Slicked back his black hair with a pocket sized comb. Noticed a pimple, a blemish. Decided to let it go. Maybe she wouldn’t notice.

    He kicked some dirt on the way to the front door. His leather boots were pointed. They were worn in. Kind of dusty. Looked one last time at his reflection in the window. This would do.

    The old man came to the door. I reckon you’re here to see Janey, he said. You and a hundred other fellows, he laughed. Just kidding. The old man walked him into the living room where the sofa and love seat were covered in clear plastic. The young man took a seat on the couch facing the old man in his Lazy boy. Her father lit a cigarette and blew out the match. She’ll be down soon enough, he said. She’ll be down, he took a long drag.

    You want something to drink? Lemonade, Coke, bourbon? Maybe a Coke and whiskey? Would you like that? The young man said yes to the Coke and whiskey. Let me go get that for you, the old man said, I’ll be right back.

    He could hear ice hitting the glass. Heard the fizz of the soda. You wanna lemon with this? her grandpa shouted. The kid said no. Just plain. Good, the old man said. I like it plain too. Gets in the way of the whiskey, he said.

    This is a nice place, the boy said.

    Yeah. It’s not mine. It’s all hers. She just let’s me stay here. Taking up time and space. My room is down the hall. I lost my home awhile ago. Couldn’t make payments on it. It’s hard living on social security. No. Janey let’s me stay here. Nice of her.

    That’s nice. Very nice of her. Where do Janey’s parents live?

    God knows.

    Pardon

    Said God knows. Took off years ago with some circus or midway company. They make cotton candy last I heard. Into things I’d rather not talk about.

    Fair enough. Sorry.

    How well do you know Janey?

    We just met.

    And you asked her out on a date?

    Yessir.

    Without knowing these things?

    I guess.

    So, it was based on looks alone.

    Pardon

    That you asked her out. Based on her pretty blonde hair, her figure.

    She seemed nice.

    They all do.

    There was a silence for a while. They both stirred their drinks. The old man would smile at the young man’s awkward behavior.

    I’ll check and tell her you’re here. Yes, bout that time.

    The young man nodded, finished his drink and waited. He just waited.

  • Tornado Alley

    June 27th, 2021

    The birds were silent. They’d been chirping all day before the clouds moved in. Then there was nothing, not a peep. One was hiding under the gutter on the house next door. The old man watched as it sat in silence.

    And, he was quiet too. Nothing rattled the old man, or, made him uneasy. He stood in his sun room observing nature, drinking coffee, and listening for any kind of noise. He longed to hear something. It’d been a long afternoon of over cast skies and no movement, or song. Just this unbearable silence. He looked all around outside. Then he heard a dog barking in the distance, a car driving down the gravel road, winds started to pick up.

    It was years ago to the very day that he’d lost his wife in a tornado. He would often talk to her out loud. Her ghost was always present. But, she wasn’t there on this day. She’d left him alone.

    Out to the skies he saw a funnel cloud forming. She’s come to get me, he said. She’s come to take me with her, he picked up binoculars and looked on at the twister as a loud racket began to blow; no more silence.

    The old man got in his truck and drove towards the tornado. With his head out the window, he hooted and hollered for salvation. I’m ready honey. Take me home, he yelled. Take me home.

    He woke up in a ditch still in the old Ford outside of town. Patrol men came to see if he was OK. The old man just sat there shaking his head. She doesn’t want me. She never did.

  • Southwest

    June 26th, 2021

    He sat there looking at pictures. Old pictures. Photographs of people he knew when. A young woman now a grandmother. Some boy who grew up to be a law man. And others he’d lost track of.

    There was a rumor that this one kid was wandering around in New Mexico, or Arizona. He was trying to find himself through some Indian mysticism. Hung out with Shamans and squaws. Got this one girl pregnant. That was the end of his wanderings.

    He settled down in some trailer park out southwest, New Mexico ,or, Arizona, it’s all the same. No one was able to find him. Some gal said she saw him one night out in a bar raising hell. Drinking shots. Buying rounds. She said the Indian woman looked beat up. Like she’d been punched and pushed a few times. She said she thought it was him. Wasn’t sure.

    Another fellow said he saw him up in the mountains working as a guide. He had long gray hair and wrinkles from the sun. Said he did his work on horseback. Legs were bow.

    Again, that was New Mexico or Arizona. Couldn’t tell you. Somewhere out southwest.

  • The Sun Shined

    June 25th, 2021

    It was much easier being alone, he thought. Away from people, life in solitude, incognito, just far, far away from society.

    I used to walk around New York City everyday. The mass of people I’d encounter. One after another all over Manhattan. Going places. Carrying shopping bags, pushing strollers, brief cases in hand, book bags over the shoulder; all coming at me, he ran his weathered hand through gray hair, took out a red rag to blow his nose on.

    And, sitting in parks with hookers, junkies, the insane, wondering what my next move might be. I’d always look up at the sun. It would bounce off steel towers, shine through trees of gold and red and yellow, while people talked to themselves. Mumbling curse words. Looking at the masses going by and spitting at them, he asked for a dollar and it was given to him. The people of New York can be charitable.

    His teeth were yellow. Skin was brown. He was missing a right arm and a left leg, taken from him in a suicide attempt; jumped in front of a number 6 train heading into Brooklyn.

    I’m going to try out for the Yankees this year, he said. You think I gotta chance? Just as good as I do, I said. Just as good as I do.

    We waited there around Madison Square Garden for a while. He with his “homeless vet” sign, me with my hands in my pockets. I remember it was cold out. Yes, it was cold. But, the sun was shining.

  • Fooled

    June 23rd, 2021

    There was a fan blowing on the body laying next to him. Blonde hair was tossed just a bit. She talked in her sleep. Saying words of forgiveness. Some kind of healing was taking place. The young woman rolled over, grabbing more blanket. He was left very little. Just a bit of white sheet. The old man turned away from her, faced the alarm clock on the night stand. Red numbers read 3:30. The moon shined through his window. The cat purred on the floor next to him. He stroked it softly as she continued speaking of old days when life was less complex. Or, was she just babbling. Talking non-sense. He tried to pull more covers, but, it was of no use. She kept them all. Just like everything. She kept em all.

    The smell of coffee lingered down the hallway at the crack of morning. The old man liked watching the burning star rise above the lake. Without much sleep, he got out of bed. Ran cold water over his lined face and breathed in the smell of coffee from the kitchen. As he poured himself a cup, he noticed she was outside on the deck in her robe talking to herself. He stood by the door and listened. Said she was not happy with how her life had turned out. Said she never should’ve married the old man. Everyone told her it was a mistake. She didn’t listen. Women rarely listen. She told em all that she loved him. She loved the idea of love. The house, sharing a bed, omlettes in the morning, but she wasn’t in love with him. She fooled herself. That’s what we do in life; we fool ourselves.

    His wrinkled hand started to turn the knob. He noticed she was now laughing. She was laughing at him. She was laughing at them as a couple. Two people couldn’t be more different, she thought. As she stood up she noticed he was looking at her. The old man turned away from the door. Walked back to the bedroom and sat on the bed placing his gray hair into his hands. He was crying. And her, she remained on the deck looking at the back door. Wondering what kind of trouble she had caused this time.

  • Breathe

    June 22nd, 2021

    Trees. Green trees. The winter came and left early. There was no spring. Hills of grass mixed with tall weeds covered the ground; land that just a month or two ago was brown.Funny how things come alive.

    He left Gary heading east. Drove past liquor stores, Dollar General, barbecue joints, barber shops, and gentlemen clubs. He was wanting to see land again. Seemed like all he’d ever seen was concrete and steel. The old man was born amongst it. But, it never seemed natural to him. There’s city life and then there’s country; he longed to see country. He wanted to breathe.

    There was nothing holding him back. Put in thirty years at U.S. Steel. Only filed for workman’s comp twice. He dealt with the heat, flames, heights, climbing up and climbing down. His reward, a pension and Social Security.

    There was no one to take care of him. The old Pole never married, no kids. Had a woman he lived with for awhile. Wound up cheating on him. She made him come home to an empty house and a note; Dear Stosh. He knew it was coming. Stories by Nelson Algren told him so. There is no solace.

    He drove into Indiana. Going on 20 East. That greenness of it all. Made him want to just get out of his truck and walk through it. And, he did. Got down in the tall grass and waved his arms like an angel. He could breathe now. He could finally breathe. That’s all he wanted.

  • Delivered

    June 19th, 2021

    He kept seeing a twinkling light in the sky; like the one that led the wise men to Jesus. It glowed brilliantly, shining throughout the night. Leading him down 41 towards Tere Haute, Evansville, southern Indiana.

    This light, a star perhaps, was his traveling companion, that and the radio tuned to a old time rock and roll station. Old hits played throughout the night; Buddy Holly, Bill Hailey, Beach Boys; he sang along to em all. He knew the words. He knew the music.

    And he’d pray some too. Pray up at that shining object in the southern sky. His prayers were simple; asking God for deliverance; something he’d wanted his whole life.

    Soon the old man would be in Kentucky with the sweet smell of farmland ’round him. He’d see the sun come up, replacing that star. He knew his way now. His way home. He’d been delivered. And for that he was grateful.

  • Happy Anniversary

    June 15th, 2021

    The spell was cast long ago. He didn’t know what hit him. Amongst drunks in a crowded tavern, the two of them met. Seated side by side at the bar, the two of them made small talk while a Van Morrison song blared from the juke box. Talk like, where you from? and, whatcha drinking? oozed from the side of his crooked mouth while she just sat there stirring her drink. At times men would come between them to order a beer. But, no one tried to interfere. Folks could tell by their eyes, the way they were locked in on each other, that these kids were in for the long haul.

    You like the old songs? he asked her. The ones our moms and dads listened to? she smiled, took another drink, nodded her blonde head. I grew up on that stuff, he laughed. Still like it better than what’s out there today. What can I say? My parents brainwashed me, they both laughed, he moved in closer.

    You’re from Van Wert?

    Yes ma’am.

    What’re you doing over here in New Haven? she asked.

    Well, he adjusted his cap, I got a notion to come this way this evening. Something in the air was pulling me. It was as if I was being pushed and pulled towards you, but, I didn’t know it. It was subliminal. Maybe a ghost from the past. Our past. Kept telling me to come this way, he placed his arm around her back and held onto her hip.

    There ain’t no ghost, she whispered.

    You don’t believe that story?

    Nope, she pulled on him to come closer; face to face. She kissed him and then let go.

    What’s your name?

    Cindy.

    I’m Jimmy. That was our first kiss. Right here in this bar. Yessir. Won’t be our last.

    I spose not. I spose not.

    Happy Anniversary.

  • Old Birds

    June 14th, 2021

    Birds fluttered ’round the gutters pecking at old leaves that had been left there seasons ago. The old man could hear them, not see them, but hear them. They were talking to each other as the evening sun glowed. Maybe they were talking about how hot it was. He listened closer; still couldn’t make out a word.

    And, it was definitely talk. They weren’t singing. In the mornings they sang. Evening time they chatted. He wondered if it was two lovers out there? Two birds that had been with each other for years. He poured an iced tea, remembering his love. How they chatted in the evening and sang in the morning.

    She used to wear these dresses that fit nicely ’round her hips. He loved taking her by the hand and walking through their neighborhood on the north side of town. They’d walk barefoot on the sand down by the lake; carrying shoes and sandals. The water would wash away the sand between their old toes. In the summer it felt nice. There was comfort in the water. The same way birds brought comfort to him now.

    He lit a cigarette and took a drag. Had another sip of tea. The sun was going down and the birds were no longer heard. Perhaps he would go to the beach the next day as soon as he got up. As soon as the birds began singing.

  • Here’s To The Road

    June 11th, 2021

    The bison ran by the side of the road; penned in; running, just running. Parts of their winter coats still stuck to the sides of the animals; half skin, spots of fur. They drove along 41 looking at them. Fenced in animals. He wondered what that was like.

    There was very little conversation between them. He’d look over at her every once in a while. She still looked the same as when they’d started out on the road years ago. Still had that same smile, same sparkling green eyes. He liked to run his rough hand through her blonde hair while he was driving. Gave him hope. Hope that she would never leave him like the one did and the one before her. This was his wish.

    He worked odd jobs and they stayed in shelters while criss crossing America. Most of the shelters were of the religious kind. They had to attend service in order to have a bed that night; separate beds; they weren’t married. That didn’t stop em though. On cool autumn days they’d park the truck under leaves of gold and red. They held onto each other tightly till it was time to head off to church; didn’t want to, but, they did.

    They always left town when they had $300 saved up. Drove that Ford out West. They’d seen enough of the East. It didn’t matter. Long as they were together. That’s the way they looked at it.

    Here’s to the road.

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