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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Is That Her?

Dedicated to my mother- Anna Sue Ward Tollman

The soothing music like salve on my heart
It melts over the open spaces
Fills them in
So I can cry for a little while

It’s just a little mother bird chirping
To let her babies know she’s is flying away
But will return with food
When they hear her voice
They know everything will be okay

Last night I longed to hear the mama bird
But she has flown away
To a higher tree
So distant that I can’t hear her voice
I strain and turn my head sideways
Cup my hand around my right ear
To pick up a faint note that might be hers

Someone’s singing and strumming a sweet sound
The rhythm and tone cover my heartache
I feel my being swell, nearly burst
There it is, hear it?
Shh, listen
She’s singing to me
I lay my head on the pillow
And fall asleep

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Today

Today I am content to drink my coffee, listen to Pandora Music, and write.
Today I am enjoying the fact that I have a pile of wood on my garage and that I can make a huge fire in my wood stove that will keep me warm all day.
Today, I am grateful that all my children are in good health.
Today I am appreciating that I can think about my life, review the good and the bad, and realize that it all brought me to right here, which is exactly where I am supposed to be.
Today I am glad that I can tell people about things that I used to be ashamed of, and I understand that some things are not my fault.
Today I see why I love Rhianna so much. Although she is from a different world, we are sisters in a club that I didn't ask to be a member of.
Today I am realizing that it is my job to keep talking, keep walking, keep writing, keep sharing because God gave me a voice and a passion.
Today I write because I need to and want to and because I want to heal. Writing is the salve that closes my wounds.
When the words hit the page, the knitting begins.
Today new skin begins to grow and I feel like taking a walk outside because the soft wind won't hurt anymore.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

What He Said

We sat in the doctor's office, in a small room, waiting to find out what the pain meant. My son rolled around on the small round stool, pushing off the counter and sliding back to the far wall. I read quotes, outloud, from a wordsearch book titled, "Chicken Soup for the Soul". The first one spoke about going outside, if you are ever really sad, to let the beauty of nature comfort you. The next one, written by Hellen Keller, talked of life being one big adventure, and embracing the challenges wholeheartedly. We discussed these thoughts, and decided we agreed with them both. Next, was one about discovering your own spirit, by looking for the spirit in another person. My son didn't quite get this, and questioned me about this concept. I explained it like this,"Your spirit is kind of like a fiddler crab, it will come out, when it is looking for the spirit in someone else, then when it does come out--you'll get to see what it looks like." He responded, "Well, sometimes my spirit is bad, and sometimes it's good. So what does it look like?" I paused, knowing that I had to answer this one clearly. "Well, your spirit is  pure and beautiful because you love God, and he knows that. Your spirit is completely clean in God's eyes. Jesus washed it clean. Forever. When you decided that you believed in Him, He took you in.Now, no matter what you do, God will only see the goodness in your heart, the goodness He put in there."
"Wow. That's like getting paid before doing the job." My son responded. "I wanna do good things for God."
I held up my hand and gave him a high 5. "You got the big picture. That is awesome!"
I felt like he'd actually explained it to me. 

Chapter 14 The Basement


Chapter 14

At the bottom of a long, carpet-covered staircase was a storage room for brooms, mops and paper towels. The right hand wall of the closet was covered with a peg-board and hooks. Behind one of the peg holes was a camera which scanned your cornea for a finger print. If you had the right credentials, the wall slid to the right.  This put you in the basement. It was a rectangular room, dimly lit, damp and cool, with low ceilings. It would have been pitch dark if not for the light emanating from two desktop computers. Their backsides greeted you as soon as you took three steps into the room. The computers sat atop basic, simple desks, much like the kind at the display areas at Office Supply stores. Not a single personal item was visible. If you walked around the clinical desks, you would see that each  monitor sported  it’s own screen-saver. One had a slide show of nighttime city images that changed after 3 seconds.  Paris, Rome, Heidelberg, Helsinki. Madrid. The other one had multi-colored bubbles that bounced around on top of a black background- it looked like someone was taking a bubble-bath in the dark.

At  the far end of the room hung four flat screen monitors. The extra-large kind. 55 inches wide.  In the back corner was an old, white porcelain faucet, attached directly to the cinder-brick wall. The sink leaned towards the floor giving the illusion that the floor was not straight. In the very corner, beside the old sink was a broken school desk. The top laid next to it on the floor waiting for someone to come along with a screw-driver and put it back together, which was never going to happen. Facing the sink, on the opposite wall, was a  tired-looking green loveseat with a small blanket and pillow rolled up on one end. In the middle of the room there was a low black counter that looked like it had been discarded from a high school science lab about twenty years ago. The chrome hardware on a single sink in the middle of the counter was out-dated and slightly rusted. Hanging overhead, suspended by a black cord, was a single 60 watt light bulb.

A 40-something woman was perched on a bar-stool at the old counter. She sipped a MacDonald’s iced-coffee out of a straw. The counter was scattered with fast-food bags, napkins and cups. (It looked as if the past 4 or 5 meals had been consumed from those bags.) The woman held a cell phone, touched the screen, sighed, and pushed her blue-rimmed glasses up the bridge of her nose till they tapped her dark eye-brows. Her loose hanging, droopy blonde, pony-tail told the world she’d been at work too long.

Behind her a young man with short, jet black, curly hair and light brown skin, sat in front of a lap-top computer at a small office cubicle. He mumbled something that sounded like a mixed up alphabet. Then he grunted and rubbed his chin.

“Hey, would you pass me those fries?” He said, without diverting his eyes from the screen.
“Sure.” The woman passed the bag without looking up from her cell phone. The bag grazed the top of his head before he grabbed it.
“Watch the hair! I’ve got a date later on.”
          “Sorry 58.” She continued tapping into her cell phone with her index finger. “Who’s the lucky lady?”
          “That Russian beauty. She keeps texting me.”
          “The rough one?”
          “Uh huh.” He said, while patting the top of his head. The curls didn’t change positions, but it made him feel better. “She says she’s scared. Having nightmares again like last year, and just wants someone to sleep on her sofa.”
          “So, make sure you hide the duct-tape this time.”
          “I know, right?” He rocked back in his chair and then leaned closer to the screen.”She still says she was sleepwalking.” He paused for a second. “Dang it!”
          “Did you get shot?”
          “Yep. I can’t figure out how to get past these guys.” He slung the mouse to the side, clasped his fingers over the top of his head, closed his eyes, and leaned back in the worn out office chair. His demeanor seemed to sink into a dark place, as if he really had been defeated by a very large enemy.
          “Well, with the Russian’s history, I would sleep with my briefcase right next to me. That is, if you plan to go play ‘security’ for her. It could be just a game she’s playing.” The lady said, while crossing and re-crossing her legs, then using her toes to pull off her pumps where they fell to the floor. “Some people really like duct-tape. A girl at last year’s prom made her entire dress out of camo duct tape.”

          A red light, in the middle of the four monitors hanging on the wall, just a few feet from them, flashed 3 times in unison with a high-pitched repeating signal.

58 spun in his chair, hopped up and stood next to the lower right monitor. A female face appeared on the screen. She looked down at some papers and adjusted her blue jacket by unbuttoning it. Her nearly white hair was pulled tightly away from her face and a single blue and gold pin decorated her white collar. Her pink lips looked like they belonged to another woman, a younger woman. “Good evening agents. We have some new information. Wesley’s sister is missing. The local police are headed to the scene.”

          “Oh my god.” The woman said in a whisper as she spun around and hopped off her stool. She leapt towards the monitor and stood beside 58. She stuck her hands in her pockets and turned her phone over and over inside her right pocket as she rocked from side to side.
          “Does Wesley know?” 38 asked.
          “Yes, his mother just sent him a text.” The monitor woman said.
          “Where do you need us?”  58 stated, with no emotion.
          “Just sit tight. We’ll let you know if we need you.” The screen went black.
58 turned away rubbing his head. “Oh, this is bad. This is real bad.” He walked around the counter shaking his head and wiping his hands on his thighs. “It’s my fault. What have I done, 38?”
          “No, this is not your fault. Why do you say that?” 38 walked over to him, put her hand on his shoulder and patted it a few times.
          “I recruited him.” His head hung down and he rubbed his eyes. He felt a shrinking feeling come over him, like he was completely inadequate to do anything in this life. He reached inside his pocket, pulled a worn out handkerchief and wiped his nose on it.
          “Yes, you did recruit him. But he made the choice to do this. He understood the risks, just like you did when you signed up. Do NOT blame yourself.”
          “But I was 24. He’s only 16.”
          “But he’s already lived through things that some people never survive. Remember his maturity level. He scored a 99% on the eval. He can handle this.”
          “But I don’t know if I can handle it!” 58 said, walking around the old lab table, while keeping his hand on it, like he was playing musical chairs and didn’t want to be caught without a place to sit down.
          “You can. Let’s look at the facts. This agency has the best stats on missing children. They find them all.”
          58 walked over to the counter and grabbed one of the 5 cups that sat amongst the collection. He took a sip. His face twisted as he swallowed. “What is this?” He asked as he pulled off the lid to peer inside.
          Agent 38 chuckled. “That’s last week’s milkshake.”
          “I hope its not toxic.”
          “Here’s some water.” She walked over to a half-sized refrigerator underneath the counter and grabbed a bottle of Evian. “Why don’t you text Wesley and reassure him?” She handed 58 the bottle and climbed up on her stool.
          “How am I supposed to do that? What could I say? ‘We know your dear 4 year-old sister is missing and we hope we catch the son’s of bitches that have her. And we hope she’s alive when we find her?’” 58 began looking inside the fast food bags, one at a time, then crumpling them into a very tight ball and tossing them over the lab table into the small trash can beside the sliding panel wall.
          “Keep it simple and positive. You know. Just think about it. What would you want to hear if you were in his shoes?” She crossed her legs and sipped on her iced-coffee.
          “Okay. How about this, ‘Don’t panic, we have a team working on this. It’s gonna be okay. We’ll find her.’” He tossed the final wadded up fastfood bag into the air and it landed inside the can.
          “That’s perfect!” 38 said.
          “Yea, that was a good shot.”
          “No, I meant the message you suggested. It sounds comforting, and certain. That’s what a young man needs to hear.” She said, while grabbing a brown paper towel, wetting it with the water from the old faucet barely holding on to the wall, and wiping off the counter.

          58 sat down in his chair and typed in the message.
          38 climbed back into her stool, reached inside her purse, pulled out a small notepad and began scribbling.

“What are you doing 38?”
“Writing a note to The Big Guy.”
“Our boss?”
“Yea. The Big Big boss.” She said, while pointing up to the ceiling.
You really think he hears you?”
“I know He does.” She continued writing then handed him the pad. “Here. why don’t you read it? It’s not a secret.”
“Please cover Eve with an army of angels. Wrap the bad guys in duct tape. Now, please.
“Hmmm. So, you are telling The Big Guy what to do? That just seems a bit arrogant.”
“No, I am telling him what I want.  Kids are supposed to tell their parents what they want. Doesn’t mean they’ll get it, but it shows the parent what’s really inside their kid’s heart.”
He shook his head, handed her back the notebook and sat back down in his spot, and tried to re-focused on his war game.

The small clean up of the counter inspired 38 to clean out her purse. She lined up old receipts, a used tissue, a stray tube of lipstick, a pair of socks, a calculator, several purple pens and two blue marbles. She could not remember why she had a pair of socks in her purse, but felt certain that the reason would surface and she’d give herself permission to act very smug when that moment arrived.

The red light on the wall lit up but no alarm sounded. They both stood in front of the wall monitor waiting to hear the news. 38’s palms were sweating and her heart raced. She felt a wave of nausea come blasting through her and she covered her mouth with her hand. Although she was standing in her stocking feet on a cold cement floor, her whole body felt hot, especially her feet. 58 put both hands in his pockets and stood like a Greek statue. The only muscles moving were in his jaw as he clenched his teeth.

Friday, September 30, 2011

I Stand

I stand
I stand up, with a straight back
And strong arms

My knees, tired of kneeling
My hands, tired of wringing
My eyes, tired of crying

Instead of giving up
I decide to give in
And fall down flat
So I can meet myself
Face to face

I stand
I stand up now, with a straight back
My arms, strong
Strength that came
From deep in space
Pulled into me from
a pleading place

No one can stop me now
I stand
I stand now for myself, for my children
For my friends, for my family
I stand

Thursday, September 29, 2011

The Wall

A pile of bricks lay scattered
around me
Some broken in half
Others with straight, smooth sides
A few just slightly cracked

I look for the one that
looks as if it will
withstand hurricane-sized winds
And set it down in front of me.

To my left is a very small bucket full
of muddy liquid.
To my right, a brush, exactly the right size for
my small hand.
I cover the top of the brick with the wet sludge
while I look for the next brick.
I press them together and wait.
When I am sure they are joined,
I find two more, and repeat my actions.

Four small bricks now lay at my feet.
But somehow, they turn into forty, then four hundred.

I blink, and I find myself surrounded by a
structure so sturdy that I am certain
no army can get through it.

Then, I lay down on my soft sheets.
And sigh with relief.

I had to build a wall for myself.
The bricks were provided.
All I had to do was glue them together.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Sounds

How can sounds reach
inside of me
And change  me?
They can strum my sadness away
by pushing it out of me.
Sounds can lift me into a new place
where the sun is shining
while the storm surrounds me.

I sing when I feel like
crying.
My throat loosens
like the guitar strings
under the fretboard.
Could it be that the sadness
mixed with the joy
creates a perfect harmony
That otherwise would seem
bland, tasteless, without appeal?

I listen to the sounds
and a comfort pours out over me.
The predictability of repeating rhythms,
slows the cadence of my own heartbeat.
Like a lullaby for a baby,
My interior trembling settles down
and I finally am able to breath
as if I am on a quiet, calm lake.

The sounds carried me
there.

The Pressure

The pressure grows, externally.
while internally, I begin to shrink into a corner of myself.
As I crouch on my knees, my face pressing
into my skin
I beg for divine wisdom. And I breathe.
And cry.
I ask all the questions that I know are pointless to ask.
But I ask anyway.
Why? How much longer? When will it end?

The flow doesn't stop pressing down. Like a flood,
my own fears consume me, and I nearly drown.
My heart races, beating so fiercily that I think my chest will
explode.
My hands get hot. A pounding in my head, similar to
that of the blades of a helicopter hitting the side of a building, won't let up.
Am I standing too close? Is it that simple?
I stand up and take a few steps backwards.
Only slightly tripping on my own feet.

Down to my knees I fall again.
I must release it. The search for an answer.
Sometimes there isn't one.
That is when I must just trust the outcome
to God.

I tell myself that He is watching all of this.
I tell myself that He will work it all out.
But part of me doubts this.
So I say it to myself again, and again, and again.
Till six am.

Sleep finally overtakes me. At last.
I can rest.
I don't have to have all the answers.
And I know its okay to keep asking questions.


Friday, August 26, 2011

It's All Okay

The fight is over.
I accept it all.
Everything.
I sigh and my eyelids feel like weights are pulling them down.
Down, down, down.
I melt into the truth
That I wanted it to be different.
I wanted him to be different.
Different from what he was, or what I thought he was.
I let go of the dream.
And what remains is a few solid
moments of joy.
The pain floats down the stream.
I wave good-bye to the anger,
the bitterness.
We did the best we could.
And now I must hold on to the truth.
The truth of who we both are.
Just human beings, living
on this planet.
Born with little more than a
few instincts to preserve ourselves.
To run, and eat and sleep
and occassionally laugh and weep.
I've wept and slept.
Now it's time to laugh.
and open the door to a new life.
I run through the door, with arms stretched
out wide towards the sun and the big oak tree
because it's all okay.

Monday, August 22, 2011

New Car

The sun was setting, but I knew I needed to get a new part for my car before it was dark. My children and I piled into our 15 year old, worn out,  compact Chevy. We drove along winding roads before climbing a final hill to arrive at the auto parts store. There were only a few cars in the parking lot, and I sighed with relief when I saw the store lights were still on. Just before I got out of the car, I realized I wasn't in my parking space; I was straddling the line.  So, I re-started the car, and as I slid the gear into reverse there was an awful grinding sound, like sandpaper and bricks rubbing together. Although it felt futile, I tapped the gas pedal hoping the car would move. It didn't. I put it in drive, inhaled deeply, and tapped the pedal again, hoping that the only problem was the 'reverse' gear. The engine revved but my car sat frozen, like a forgotten piece of furniture in and old shed. My shoulders dropped as I exhaled.

"This is not good. I'm going to need a new transmission. Oh my God, how am I going to afford that?" I said to no one in particular. I got out of the car, feeling defeated and overwhelmed.

I headed into the auto parts store, glad I wasn't alone.There was a woman at the counter and I explained that my car had just 'died' in her parking lot. "I'm going to need to call a wrecker and a friend. I'll be in the market for a new transmission, too." She nodded and walked away.

"Ill be right back. I need to check on my children." I said. I went back outside where the dark blue sky had changed to a deep purple on one side, and black on the other. My children sat in the car with someone parked right beside the store. I saw that they were safe. Just then, an old pick up truck pulled up beside me and two long-haired men got out. They appeared old and weathered, yet they moved with ease like younger men. They reached into their back seat and  pulled out what looked to be guitar cases and amplifiers. It was now pitch dark, the only light was coming from inside the parts store. The men then walked to another truck, that was parked alongside the one they just got out of, and began loading their equipment into the backseat of this truck.

I said, "Excuse me, could you help me with my car? It's not working. Let me show you what it's doing."
One of the men nodded and said, "Okay."
I walked back to my car, opened the door and got in. I put the key in and it started very smoothly. I put it in reverse, and the car moved. As my eyes adjusted to the darkness, I looked around and saw that I was not in my car. Everything was new and clean. It smelled wonderful. I put the car in park, turned it off and hopped out.

I walked back over to the two men, "Hey, My car is gone. Someone must have taken it. Weird. My key fit that car, and it is parked where my car was."

The man looked at me and said, "That's your car." very matter-of-factly.
"No, that's not mine. Mine is old and broken."
"Ma'am, if the key fit, then it's your car."
"What are you talking about?"
"Just get in your car and drive, I will explain it to you." I assumed he was going to get in the car with me, on the passenger side. I never looked to see if he was there, I was that certain he would be there. I continued talking to him as I pulled out of the parking lot and began driving home.
"This does not make any sense. I don't understand why you are saying this is my car. Mine is old and broken."
"Someone gave you a new car a long time ago. But you gave it back." The man said. I looked beside me, but he was not there. I didn't have any sense of fear, just curiosity.
"Hey, where are you?"
"I'm in the truck behind you." I glanced at my rear view mirror and saw him and his friend driving the old pick-up.
"How can I hear you, then?"
"It's a special connection. Don't freak out. Just keep talking to me. I hear every word you are saying. And see, you can hear me just fine. It's a clear connection, huh?"
"Yes. Very clear." I paused and then added. " This is awfully strange. So, where did this car come from?"
"It's yours. It is your car. Someone gave it to you a long time ago, don't you remember? But you gave it back to them. They are giving it to you again. It's yours. Keep it this time."
I smiled, remembering the new car from years ago. I tried to remember why I gave it back, but nothing clear came to mind.
I drove on for a few miles, looking in my rear view mirror, every now and then, at the long-haired musician and his buddy in the pick-up truck. A strong feeling of security descended over me knowing that he was right behind me. I studied my new car, relaxed into the new leather seat, and appreciated the strong high beam lights that lit up the dark, curvy mountain road.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Moving On

Letting go of 'what could have been'
by accepting that it was supposed to be
exactly the way it was
Created a space in me
for something new

Instead of fighting a battle with my memories
and grieving over
lost wishes and dreams,
Ones that I thought were dead forever,
I place myself in a new world
finding a purpose in the pain.

Letting go of people, no longer wishing they
were different than they are,
and seeing that my purpose is
to simply embrace the unembraceable.
Because when I wrap my arms around it,
I begin to see how this was meant to be.

I see my own imperfections.
And feel a sense of relief in knowing
that I don't have to have all the answers.
I just have to do what is right.
Even if no one else agrees with me.
Sleeping, all night, without a moment of
worry, is about the most precious gift
I have been given.

My children are not my own.
They are simply on loan, for a little while.
I pour all I can into them, then I must let go.

My ship is going somewhere new. I stop at
different ports.
What I thought was a ghosttown is lively
and rich with people and food and culture
I immerse myself in the life and bathe in the
wonderful springs, instead of wasting time
wishing it had all happened sooner.

Now is good enough for me.

Friday, July 22, 2011

Where I stand


Feeling whole, feeling small
And free and capable
All the big jobs in front of me
Seem small
How can it be?
With God at the center of it all
Relying on His power, and strength
Which I have confidence in
All that I must do…seems like a simple
Spoonful
The mountain in the distance
Well, I don’t even see it when I am holding God’s hand
I only see the green valley, and the butterflies
And crickets and the sun’s rays filtering through
The leaves on the giant oak by the creek.
I am able to stay in the moment, not look behind me
Or try to stretch my neck to see what’s on the
Other side.
I can stand, survey my surroundings, and see the beauty
Right where I am.
Listen to the sounds of the brook
Look into the water at the animal and plant life
That is so abundant
No longer obsessed with ‘getting’ up and over
The big gray rock.
I can even sit on the grass
And admire the little caterpillar that is so colorful
That is nearly under my feet.
My desire to actually stay where I am, increases, to admire
All the blessings in my vicinity, so abundant.
I am in awe and shocked that I was trying to get away
From what I thought was a ‘bad’ place.
It is actually a beautiful place,
A serene place.
But fear created clouds and shutters
that blocked out my ability to see all of this.
When I cling to man, and expect him to give me this peace,
Then it slips away.
When I hold on to eternal truths: God promises for a good life
God’s amazing power and grace, God’s desire to bless me
God’s unfailing love, God’s mercy, God’s perfect plan for me
God’s infinite wisdom, God’s bridge to mankind-making himself a man
In the name of Jesus, so that he could come to earth, that same man that
Created the whole universe, the earth and everything from the very beginning
When I can dwell on these truths---then abundant peace flows through my veins.
And the view from where I stand is beautiful.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Rest

The white room splashed with colors
Aqua blue, brilliant yellow, neon green
Images, bursting with life, splatter in my home.

I find myself cherishing the very tiny things that
Used to slip by. Unnoticed.


Voices creating a symphony with their simple sounds
Light snoring, gently sleeping beside me, an angel
At my feet, another angel, not ready to be alone
In his new ‘all boy’ room.
“Yes, you can lay here till you fall asleep.”
I promise to take him to his bed after he has fully embraced
‘dream world’
His long lean body, relaxed at my feet, head on pillow, chest rising and falling
With the quilt rolled up beside him.

Beside me, my little girl, curled up with her book.
Her warm back pressed on mine. I close my eyes, hear the pages turn.
Listen to her little sniffle and soft breathing.
The ceiling fan keeps the cool air moving. I try to stay awake, to be aware of the love God sent me, at my feet, and at my back.
But the lush surroundings take me to a green meadow, with a clear brook, small deer lapping up the crystal water. Birds chirruping to welcome the morning.
I lay in the green valley, sheltered by majestic gray mountains. Wind blows over my body, keeping it cool and refreshed.

Before I begin my walk beside the brook, I wake up. My son, slumbering at my feet, sighs heavily. I wake him with a whisper. “Come on. Let’s go get in your bed.”
He stands up, keeps his eyes closed, trusts me to walk him to his room.

I tuck him in, he rolls over and slides back to sleep.
I return to my room, my daughter is asleep with a book. The lamp is on.
I climb in bed, leave the lamp on, and rest.
The storm is over.
Rest.

Friday, July 15, 2011

What I Live For


What I Live For

Till they went away.
I thought I knew what got me up in the morning
And what helped me sleep at night.
Voices, talking, singing, arguing
“She won’t leave me alone!”
“What’s for dinner?”
Quiet moments that were a moment too short.
Now the quiet goes on and on and on.

Love, pouring it out on another
Gives me life,
More than I ever really knew or understood.
Spontaneous hugs
Bedtime prayers
Brushing hair
Shared meals

“Time to do your chores.”
“Can we play the Wii?”
I haven’t heard those in two weeks
And I’m afraid I’ve forgotten how.

All I want to do is hug them,
Pull them close and not let go,
Kiss their faces till they turn red,
Fall down into my bed tired…so tired that I don’t even
Realize that I”ve fallen asleep.

Tomorrow they’ll be home
For two short days.
Then I’ll say good-bye for another week
Of quiet.
Then it will be over for a while
Because they will come home
Vacation over, start back to life.
And I can rest in the chaos once again.

It's what I live for.
It's what I love for.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Shhh!

The highway noise
Blasting like dynamite
From all directions
Trucks crashing
Sirens blaring
Jack hammers pounding cement
Cover the cries
Of a small whisper

“Shhh!
Listen,
What’s that?”

The big lady
With cotton in her ears
Keeps talking

The unassuming woman
Waiting on a subway
Puts down the book she’s reading
And walks towards the staircase.

With certainty
She climbs towards the raging traffic.
 In the drainage ditch
A wet, shaking kitten
Mouths a voiceless meow.
She picks it up
Holds next to her heart and
 strokes its shivering body
With gentle hands.
“I heard you. It’s going to be okay.”

Monday, July 4, 2011

Pain and Peace


Peace and Pain

How can the pain bring me peace?
I lay on the sofa, in a ball
Holding on to the truth
That pulls me into the place of peace

I twist and turn
And try to press the pillow into
My soul

I see her face, twisted like my heart
She doesn’t understand
Can’t understand
That I passed my pain to her

Instead of walking away
I tried to stop the train with my hands
It crushed me
The metal flew around
I tried to hold my hands up
To make a shield with my weak arms

The pieces rained down
I grabbed her, ran
Hid under the trees till the
Clanging metal became a disturbing silence

As I slip into a sleep
She sneaks away
Begins rummaging through the wreckage
She finds detached limbs
Rotting carcasses
Frozen screaming faces

A baby cries in its dead
Mother’s arms
She walks towards it
Picks it up
And brings it back to me

She asks me to hold it
Nurture it, protect it, love it
I give it all I have
But it’s not enough
My milk dries up

The baby cries at night
The howls are never-ending
She wraps the baby
And slips away

I scream, telling her not to leave
She doesn’t hear me
Because the old wreck has started
To fall in on itself
Sink holes appear
Behind her as she runs towards a shack

I see a small stream of smoke
From a chimney in the distance
I know she’s there
Seeking refuge and comfort

I leave my place in the woods
And walk to a waterfall
Place my feet in the clear cool water
And watch the tadpoles swim
In a little pool

I am refreshed
I have pain
And I have peace

Friday, July 1, 2011

It Rained Today


It Rained

Today it rained inside
Of my heart.
Drops of water trickled down my chest
And landed on my heels.
I looked down and saw a puddle
Had formed around my feet.
The reflection showed a blue sky
Instead of dark scary clouds.
“How can rain fall from a blue sky?”
I wondered.
But now I see the answer.
If I need water, it will rain,
Even if the sky is blue.
Things can’t grow without water.
And I must need the nourishment
Or I wouldn’t have streams of
Silver wetness covering me
As if I had been standing in a waterfall.

Saturday, May 14, 2011

I Jumped


I Jumped
May 2011

I jumped.
Fell off the edge of myself
Into the flowing air of life.
It swirled around me like a slow moving tornado of feathers
Your eyes, in the distance, steady gazing into me
The blueness carrying me out of my worries
Into the betterworld, our world
Not free from pain, but free from loneliness

I jumped into something better
A future with fields of blooming yellow daisies
And honeysuckle kisses
And clear creeks with tadpoles skitting about on slippery rocks
Moss on the trees, beneath our barefeet
The soft green pillows inviting us to a forever picnic

Climbing rocks to see what’s on the top
Of the ledge of life
I am certain white clouds will carry us to the new place
Holding hands, we will jump together

And we will free fall towards our destiny
And land on a hill, and roll together, tumbling down the green grass,
The folds of my dress wrapping around us
Binding us together, forever.


Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Family Reunion

Thick granite walls
Rough, gray, walls
I touched them and
They took me to another world

The faces, black and white photos only
in my mind
swirled around in the wind
The leaves crunched under my feet
As I knelt on the soft green moss
to see the dates more clearly
Zillah Ward. My cousin the school teacher
Caroline. Dies at 19.
Hugh. I never knew.

Then Sidney, who's house
has a wrap around porch
And is now occupied by a lazy man
Who says he's just about to
mow the grass.
But sits in a lazy boy with a remote control
comfortable in his hand.

Walking around the home, we find pieces
of broken china, stuck in the gravel driveway
A triangle shape with blue print, could have
been a tea cup or saucer

Sidney Reese may have sipped from that cup, after a long day
plowing the field.

I touch the tall granite monument
And thank these people
For passing their lives to me.

A family reunion.




Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Glass Door-Knobs


Glass Door-Knobs
by Kathy T. Camp

Glass door-knobs
Crystal clear
Diamond-shaped handles
Turning and squeaking
Opening the ancient door
Covered in cobwebs and
Dark stained wood
Wavy glass in the top panel
Specks of bubbles in the glass

Peering through
At the outside world
Tall pines and
Briars twisting around dead fallen limbs
And dormant trees
Waiting for the winter to pass
Glass door knobs
From another home
Another life

Removed and now
Sit waiting for their new home
A new door

That has not yet arrived
But is sure to come
Because a new door
Full of hope is already in my mind
And heart.










Thursday, March 10, 2011

Tears


Tears

Knowing in my heart
Wanting something
That I cannot have
But not giving up hope

I see you when I can
Then I suffer when you go
I curl up, sometimes
I think it’s just not worth it

But then I think of your soft cheek
And my hand in yours
The little grin that covers your face
And brightens my world

And I just can’t seem to let go
Of the dream

Am I just a dreamer?
Someone who will hang on
When it seems pointless
To everyone else around me?

“I was only 18”
I tell myself
That I really wasn’t able to
Know or understand
The meaning of the word
Compatibility

I spent twenty years
Telling myself that the love I felt
Was just something I created
To cover up the emptiness.

Then, late one night
When my kids were asleep,
You called me and asked if you could see me.
I didn’t understand what you wanted
Or what you expected.

When I asked you why you wanted to come
Your answer surprised me.
"I wanna hold your hand
And look in your eyes,
And tell you something
Ask you something,
If you’ll let me."

Two hours later
I saw your black truck pull into my driveway.
My heart, so full of love, ready to spill out
On my kitchen floor,
That I just stood at the door,
Not knowing what to say
Or do,
Or believe,
Or think.

You came walking towards me
And I started to shake.
Tears couldn’t be pressed in.
I had waited for this moment
My whole life.
And now it was here.
And I didn’t know what to say
To the man, the love of my life.

“Welcome home” I heard myself say.
It just came out of me
Without thought.
You embraced me at the door.
My soul soared.
You picked me up,
Carried me across the threshold
Across my green seventies
Linoleum floor,
That suddenly looked like the kitchen
I was supposed to have
When you walked in my home.

It showed you who I am
And where I’d been.
I’m not a fancy lady
I’m just a simple woman
With simple dreams
And wishing that a simple man
Would walk into my life.

We sat on my blue worn out sofa.
You held my  hand between both of yours.
Then your eyes filled with tears even before you
Spoke.
“Kathy, I want you to be with me when I am
Dying.
If I get sick, I want to ask my oldest son to come for you,
To find you, so that you can be beside me
When I cross over.”

I felt my soul moving to that place
Holding his hand, smoothing his forehead
With my hand, comforting him,
As he sailed out of his body.

“would you come, if I called you?”

The earth, in that moment,
Seemed so very small, and I felt
Even smaller, maybe because
I sensed
The magnitude of what he was asking me.
“Of course I’d come. I’d come as quickly as I could.”

Now, three months later, I realized what he was asking me.
In fact, as I am writing this, Just two paragraphs ago,
I realized, that this question was the one I had been waiting to hear my whole life.

I used to think that a man getting on his knee, and opening a box
Was the way a woman was going to be asked to join her soul with another.

But that is only half of the question, that is the easy part.
Will you love me when it is not easy?
Will you hold my arm, to keep me steady
As I shuffle to the bathroom?
Will you blend my food when I am too weak to chew it?
Will you help me get to the porch so I can look at the flowers
That I planted years ago?
Will you lift the wheelchair into the car
And take me for a drive to see the beautiful leaves
In the fall?

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Chapter 5

Chapter 5

The Bonfire

Wesley’s mom drove him and Eve to the center of town. There were already thirty or forty people gathered next to the library. She pulled in beside the Piggly Wiggly. which served as the community parking for just about everything. There were a few spaces on the curb, but those were now obstructed by a bulldozer, a dump-truck and a caterpillar. As Wesley began to unbuckle Eve from her seatbelt his mother started with instructions.

“Be careful of that heavy equipment, Wes. Don’t let Eve near it. I can just see her trying to drive off in one of those things.”

“We get to ride in that bulldozer?! Yea!” Eve cheered.

“No honey. No one gets to ride on one of those.” Mary spoke firmly.

“Why did they park beside the party then ?

“My thoughts exactly, sweetie. All the kids will want to get inside those trucks. But they are dangerous.”

“I see men driving them all the time and they don’t look dangerous to me.”

Wesley stepped in. “What she means is it is dangerous for four year old girls to try to drive caterpillars. And before you get any ideas. It’s not a caterpillar, it’s an earth moving machine. It’s just smaller than the others. See it over there. It looks like a baby compared to the dump truck.”

“Yea, I see it. That’s the one I want to drive!”

“You can’t. Eve, Promise me you won’t try to get in any of those. Okay?” Mary pointed her finger at the trucks lined up like elephants waiting their turn at a drinking hole.

Eve waved her hand towards her mother’s face, but said nothing.

“Eve, I need to hear you say ‘Yes ma’am’”

“Crossed Fingers means YES!” Eve had her fingers crossed. All of them.

Eve had a language system, one she’d started using when she was two years old. She expected the world to just know it. For a while Eve’s mom thought she’d picked this up from the babysitter, an elderly woman with a great imagination, but soon realized that Eve was creating this all on her own.

“ I don’t believe you’ve showed us that one before.” She patted Eve’s head and smiled. “I’ll see you at 7:30. Right here.” She looked at Wesley with a serious face and he knew it meant he’d better keep Eve away from the big trucks.

“Yep. We’ll be here.”

Wesley scooped Eve up from the backseat and shut the door. He carried her about fifty yards before his shoulder started aching.

“Sorry I can’t carry you, Eve.” he said, with a slight moan, as sat her down on the uneven parking lot. A gentle wind arrived, sweeping a coolness over them and counteracting the heat radiating off the brick buildings. As they approached the sidewalk, he could see kids and adults in costumes mulling around under the ancient oaks. Little witches, ghosts, a grim reaper and several skeletons ran around the building. Some hid behind the trees, popping out when an adult walked by.

Wesley looked around for Brian, who would certainly be on the sidewalk, on his skateboard. But he didn’t see him. He felt a chill run up his back but shook it off.





“Are you cold? I’ve got your jacket here.” He pulled it out from under his arm.

“I’m not cold Wesley. You’re crazy!”

He squatted down in front of her. “Eve, do you see anybody here you know?” He watched her eyes looking around, “Yes! I see a wizard from Waverly Place. And Harry Potter is over there next to Tinkerbelle.”

“Eve, we have to hold hands tonight. All night. Since we can’t see people’s faces, we don’t know who’s behind the masks. You have to hold on to me. Tight. No matter what. O.K?”

“You mean, like I do when we go to Walmart?”

“Exactly.” He reached out and held one of her hands while brushing aside her hair with his other hand. “I don’t want anyone to get my Princess Sapphire.”

“I thought the mean man only went to Walmart?” Wesley didn’t know what to say to this. He wanted to say, “There are mean men EVERYWHERE!” But he didn’t want to scare little Eve into staying indoors forever. He was searching for a response when a voice over a loudspeaker interjected. “Everyone in the costume contest, line up next to the wall to my right!” Mrs. Loftin, the librarian, dressed as the witch from the Wizard of Oz, stood in front of a simple podium and spoke into a microphone.

“Let’s go, Wes!”

“Don’t let go of my hand. Okay?”

“Okay.”



The crowd moved around, parents walking their kids to the designated area. A cluster of children, including a pirate, dead ballerina, three Disney Princesses, a ninja turtle, witches and ghosts, along with a wizard, Harry Potter and Tinkerbell stood against the wall. Less than a minute later, five teenagers dressed head to toe in black, wearing long trench coats, scarves and assorted wigs and sunglasses, wandered up and attached themselves to the end of the line.

“Children ages birth to twelve, only, please,” came over the speaker. Four tall kids and one short one slinked off the sidewalk. A pumpkin toddler, being held by his mother, took their place.

Wesley walked Eve to the end of the line and stood motionless. She looked up at the baby pumpkin, waved, and smiled.

“Are there any more here for the costume judging?” Mrs. Loftin asked, with a tone indicating she knew there were no more contestants. She paused long enough for Wesley to inhale and exhale. “Alright. Judges, you may begin.”

Mr. and Mrs. XXXX sat behind a card table, making marks on a legal pad, as they had for the past 19 years. Eve took a step away from Wesley, held her robe and twisted her hips back and forth. She tried to pull her hand free of Wesley’s, but Wesley held tight, bent down and reminded her, “Don’t let go of me.”

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Chapter 4

Chapter 4-A
Revised March 6, 2011
The Clown
Before Wesley had both feet inside the front door, Eve’s hands reached out towards him.  He grabbed her under the arms and spun around the living room three times, before tossing her onto the faded green sofa.
 “Hey princess, you wanna go to the bonfire tonight?  If it’s O.K. with mama.”
            “Yeeeeah!” she sang out.
            “Wesley, is that you?” his mother shouted from her bedroom.
            “Yep. Did you get Eve’s costume yet?”
            “Yes, It’s laying on her bed, next to the sword.”
            “You gonna go with us?”
            His mom came out of the bedroom, with a basket of dirty clothes.
 “No, I really do need to make a trip to the laundry mat. How ‘bout I drop you and Eve off at the library and then come back in a couple of hours. Around eight o’clock.”
            “I gotta go to work with Brian at eight, can you come back around 7:30?”
            “Sure. That’s fine.” She didn’t even ask him what he was going to do with Brian. Deep inside, she felt certain that whatever he was doing was something she didn’t want to know. He was doing  well in school, and brought home steady money, and for her, those two facts meant one thing- Wesley was on the right track in life. A kid making ‘bad’ money would not be talking about going to college. Just last week he asked her to  help him fill out the scholarship forms that were offered to veteran’s children.  
“Wes, can you grab your laundry bag out of your room and bring it to the car?” she asked, just before she went out the back door.
“Yea. I’ll get it.”  He said, as the back door shut. “Hey Eve, go get your costume on. The judging starts in about an hour. I’m gonna put mine on.”
            “You have a costume? Are you gonna be the prince?” Eve tilted her head and twirled one of her pigtails around her index finger.
            “Yes, the Prince of Darkness.”
            “That’s not a real prince.”
“Yes it is. But he isn’t bad or scary like most people think. This prince shows up when you are in the dark and really scared. And, he always has a flashlight.”
“Have you met him?”
“Yea, when I was fourteen.”
“What does he look like?”
            “I’ll tell you about him later. Now, go put on your costume.”
Eve spun around twice in the hallway before heading to her bedroom.
            Wesley went to his room, closed the door and grabbed Huck Finn off his nightstand. He lifted out a small key that was pressed into the back cover. He slid under his bed and pulled out a small metal box, big enough for a pair of kid shoes. He knelt on the faded-yellow shag carpet, feeling rather heavy all over, wondering if unlocking this box was something he was really supposed to do or not.

It seemed, recently, like he really didn’t have a choice at all, that it was something like his destiny. Only he wasn’t even sure he believed in destiny. That just seemed to put everything in a box. No one had choices if it was all just a part of some big map that was already drawn out.  Since he started his job, he’d begun to think that he was sort of drawing his own map, and that some of the roads were more important to travel than others. The road he was on felt a lot like the river Huck felt drawn to explore. He wasn’t really sure if the end of the road was so important, it was the people he was connecting with right now, that seemed to hold a place in his life. Not unlike the three or four books among the thirty or forty he’d read and re-read since he was eight. There was just something in them that he was trying to absorb, like the last rays of sunshine when he was fishing by the lake. Once the sun was down, he couldn’t see the hooks well enough to bait them. He felt pretty sure that this road he was on was about to come to an end. He couldn’t imagine staying in this place of limbo for much longer. Worrying about Eve, his mom, his own future. It had to end.

He carefully lifted out a top shelf, which had photos of him and his dad, two match box cars and a sea-blue marble. He picked up the blue car and spun the wheels in the palm of his hand. Right now, that world of match box cars seemed like a lifetime ago. Almost like it wasn’t even his life anymore. It belonged to someone else in another galaxy. He was there with his dad, racing the cars on the dual orange track, in the middle of the living room. He could see his own chin, laying on top of his folded hands, as he watched the cars leave the track and tumble onto the yellow carpet.
He put the car back while picking up the marble. He tucked it into his right pocket, not really sure why. He knew it didn’t make any sense. But he felt like he wanted to stay connected to the past, and the marble seemed to be the cord between the two worlds.
He rolled it between his index finger and thumb for a few minutes while looking out his window at the reddish orange sky. He saw the moon peeping through the feather-like clouds. He wondered if his dad had looked at the sky the night before he died. He told Wesley to look at the moon every night at eight p.m., and that he'd be looking at it four a.m., as he got out of bed.
"We'll see it together. And neither one of us will wonder what the other is doing in that moment. We'll know for certain."  
He heard the back door shut and was jolted back to his room.

He took out three black shapes. The first, a pair of black spandex pants. Over those, he slipped on a pair of black sweat pants that were draped over his foot board. The next black wad was a long-sleeved Nike dri-fit black shirt. In the skin-tight fabric, his upper body showed the results of his exercises. When he started the basic training routine six months ago, he’d only half-heartedly completed the 50-50-50 program. Fifty each of push-ups, sit-ups pull-ups. Now, he was easily doing one hundred of each.
The last object was smaller than the other two, but contained 3 separate items: gloves, a ski-mask, and shoe covers. He pulled the elbow-length gloves on, but stuck the ski-mask and shoe covers into the Spiderman back-pack hanging on his door knob. He slide the box back under the bed. After he was dressed,   he opened his bottom dresser drawer and pulled out something that looked like a camera-case and dropped it into the back-pack before zipping it shut. He checked himself in the mirror hung on the back of his bedroom door. He pulled his sleeves down over his wrists, flexed his shoulder muscles, and patted his stomach before grabbing his backpack. He put the key back in Huck Finn, grabbed his dirty laundry, and closed his door.
            Eve met him in the hallway, barefoot, with her red karate-style robe and white leggings.
            “Where are your shoes, Eve?”
            “I can’t find them.”
            “Did you check under your bed? Or the couch?”
            “No. Will you help me?” She tilted her chin down, opened her wide-eyes giving her the look of Bambi on his first excursion out of the forest.
            “Sure.” They went into Eve’s room and Wesley laid face down on the floor right next to her bed. Why was he finding himself face down on the floor so often these days? He lifted the edge of her lavender comforter,   reached into the darkness and pulled out a one-legged Barbie. “What’s this? A special Olympic’s Barbie?” Let’s see if she can fly.” He flipped his wrist and she flew over his head landing sideways on top of Eve’s dresser.
            “Nice shot!” cheered Eve.
            Next, he pulled out a Clifford bedroom slipper and handed it to Eve. “You been lookin’ for this?”
            “Nope.  Don’t like Clifford anymore.”
            “Why not?”
            “He’s too big.  He can’t sit in anyone’s lap now.” Eve took it straight to the trash can and dropped him in. “Bye bye Clifford.”
            “Okay. Have you looked in your closet, Eve?” He said as he slung out several legos and a jump-rope.
“No.”
“Well, go look.”
She walked over to the closet while Wesley pushed himself up off the floor in one quick jump.
“Here they are! Oh! Look at this!” She added. “A clown!”
Wesley turned to see Eve hugging a soft, stuffed clown about the same height as her/she.
“Let me see that.” Wesley had a sinking feeling come over him. He hated smiling clowns, always had. Faces with fake smiles. He never understood why someone would need to paint on a smile.  The frowning clowns didn’t bother him. They seemed honest. Somehow, a person with a painted frown was telling the world that there was a deep sadness, so deep that you couldn’t talk about it. Wesley knew what that felt like. He smiled even when he didn’t want to. He felt guilty sometimes, when he’d have good laugh. Like he was betraying his dad and his mother. He thought he would be a sad clown one day.
Wesley took the clown, sat down on her bed, and inspected it head to toe. It was soft, made out of sock material. Looked hand-made. There was no tag, and it smelled like fresh paint.
“Eve, can I have this?” He knew she’d say yes. She liked it when he wanted her toys. That usually meant he was going to play with her, be with her, in her world.
“Sure. Will you help me tie my shoes?” She said, tossing them on the bed beside him.
“Yea. Where’s your head-band?”
“Right here!” She grabbed a shiny gold piece of fabric hanging off her door-knob, hopped on the bed, stood up, and wrapped it around his eyes, blind-folding him. “Now, come find me.” He heard her feet run towards her closet. He didn’t really feel like playing hide-n-seek, but he remembered being four years old, and his dad playing this game with him. It was probably the clearest of all his memories. His favorite place to hide was the second shelf of the deep linen closet. One time his dad had actually climbed onto the third shelf, just above him, and reached down and grabbed him. Even though he knew it was his dad, something about the large hand creeping down through all the blankets made his blood run.
He counted out loud to ten and then said, “Ready or not, here I come!”
He pulled off the blind fold and looked under her bed. Then he went to her drawers, which were obviously too small to hold her, and pulled them out one at a time. “No, not in here,” he uttered, following the unwritten rules of hide-n-seek, which said you had to first look in unrealistic places, while announcing to the hidden, your failed attempt and discovering them. Finally, he went to the closet and moved around her toys. He expected a squeal, but heard nothing. He pushed her coats aside and stuck his hand in the pile of stuffed animals at the back.
“Eve, found you!” He announced, again, following the rules. But she wasn’t there. Although he knew she was probably standing very close by, his heart began to race and he felt like running, screaming her name through the house. He decided to check the hall closet before allowing real panic to set in. On his way out, he noticed the curtains move in an unnatural motion. Pink toes wiggled on the wood floor, like they were dancing. He sighed and felt his frozen blood begin to thaw and course through his veins. His impulse was to run to her, pick her up and squeeze her little body next to his chest, as if she had come back from the brink of death. Instead, he tugged on her big toes and waited for her to giggle, which she did.
“Now get your shoes on little princess! Before I call the guards and have you thrown in the dungeon!” He snatched up the clown as he walked out of her room. He stopped at his bedroom door and tossed the creepy clown on his bed before walking into the kitchen.  As he opened the fridge and reached for the milk, his leg vibrated. He thought it was just an inner muscle twitch, before remembering that he had put his phone in the pocket of his spandex.
                 It was a text from Brian, “What’s up?”
                  “Goin 2 bonfire wit Eve. U stil @ wk?”
                  “It’s slow. I’m off at 6:30. What time you goin’?”
                  “7. Gunna eat first.”
                  “Okay. See you there.”
                  “J” He closed his phone and headed back to the fridge to scan for some leftovers. The clown’s silent face covered his hunger pains. Without any delay, he concluded The Post-It Note People delivered the gift. As he walked down the hall, he fake-punched the wall trying to diffuse the rage that was quickly building up. He wanted to bash someone’s face, and hoped that he’d get the chance in the next few hours.
                  “Hey Wes, there’s mac-n-cheese in the fridge. And some leftover cornbread and green beans. Would you heat that up?” His mom asked, as she came back in the house.
                  “Yeah, got it.” Wesley pulled out a container of black-eyed peas. He’d brought them home from Trevor’s grandmother’s house from last Saturday.  She’d fed them like kings for cleaning out the gutters. For some reason, she thought cleaning gutters was a bigger job than mowing her three acres. He and Trevor had finished in less than two hours. Compared to the four and half hours her yard took, in the sweltering summer sun, the gutter job seemed like a picnic. He sat on a roof, with a view of the Appalachians, on a cool fall day and tossed leaves and pine straw into the wind. He almost felt like he should pay her.
Wesley was just glad she hadn’t seen him fall off the roof or she probably would have kept him at her house for a week, bringing him endless cups of hot tea and honey. That and bowls of mashed potatoes and gravy.  She didn’t hear him though, thanks to the soft pillow-like blooms he landed on. The Confederate rose garden was having a late-fall blooming extravaganza, which created a perfect landing zone. When he hopped up, he stood face to face with thorny stems eager to wrap around his throat.  If they’d been for sale, the sign would have read: Heirloom Roses- Ready to Kill.
 As he brushed himself off, and tried to rehabilitate the bush he’d squashed, he got the feeling that the whole event was a sign that he was close to something dangerous. He'd somehow incorporated this belief from his grandmother, who uttered her own beliefs throughout the day. "Nothing that redirects you is an accident."  His favorite, which seemed to fit with his near-scratched experience today, "Your father will show up in the things that you love. Watch for him."
When Wesley was falling off the roof, directly over the  roses, he felt a warm hand on his back. It wasn’t a light touch, it was a firm push. He just couldn’t figure out how Trevor had managed to get down without him notcing.
“Hey man, how did you get down off the roof? Did you jump?”
            "I didn't move, Wes. I just watched you fall."
            "But I felt your hand on my back."
            "When I saw you slipping, I wanted to get to you, but I couldn't. I felt like shit just sitting there, watching you dangle off the gutter."
Trevor said it must have been the heat. But that was crazy, because it was only about 63 degrees. Wesley knew that Trevor didn't believe in anything except women, whiskey and guns. "If I can't see it, it ain't happened," was his standard reply to anything the least bit suspicious.
*************************************************************
            Wes pulled out the black-eyed peas and headed to the microwave.
                  “Can we use the special cups tonight?” Eve asked, as she pointed to the corner cabinet that contained some finer dinnerware; silver goblets from Spain, English plates from London, and a tea set from Japan.
            “Hey mom, you gonna eat with us?”
            “Yes, be there in a minute. Pour me some tea, please.”
            Wes got down the dishes and Eve carefully placed all the fine dinner ware on the table. While she meticulously set each place, Wesley went back to his room to examine the clown. He sat on the bed, pulled the head off and sifted through the stuffing. He then pressed down on the stomach and all the extremities but felt nothing stiff. When he was certain that he’d left no part untouched, he picked up the cotton stuffing, the decapitated body, and the deflated head and tossed them into the trash can. As the head hit the wall and bounce to the floor, he noticed that one eye reflected the light, while the other one didn’t. It looked dead. He pulled both eyes off. It wasn’t hard, they were loosely glued, and compared them. The right eye had a piece of black rubber over it. He peeled it back and revealed a shiny, gold disk.
            “Nice job. Microphone.”
 He went to the kitchen, grabbed a baggie, and headed to the bathroom. He put the baggie in the inner pocket, pulled out his cell phone and sent a text to Brian.’      
            “Trubl. Big time.”
            “Stay calm. Talk to you soon.” Brian’s message created a measure of easiness in the midst of the heart pounding dilemma.
            Wes wanted to find the person who was sending this crap and choke him. He wanted to shake his head and scream, “You leave us the hell alone!” before shoving a knee into his chest. He envisioned standing next to a moving train, tossing the guy into the air, after knocking him out, and watching a limp body fall onto a pile of coal stacked in a moving train car. Why a train? Why coal? Trains took things places. Took them away. Whenever Wesley didn’t like someone, he envisioned putting that person on a train, after beating them up. He wanted to imagine killing them, but he just couldn’t bring himself to take a life. He knew what it felt like to lose one, so he couldn’t get that far in his imagination. He tried a couple of times, and it always brought him back to his own dad. Death. Dad. It was the equation he couldn’t re-work no matter how many times he tried.