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1769 lines
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InterText Vol. 10, No. 2 / Summer 2000
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Contents
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The Astral Prisoner.................................Corey Wicks
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Cat's Pause....................................Faith L. Justice
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Millie's Antiques....................................Will Payne
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This Great Divide................................Eric Prochaska
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On a Clear Day......................................Brian Quinn
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....................................................................
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Editor Assistant Editor
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Jason Snell Geoff Duncan
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<jsnell@intertext.com> <geoff@intertext.com>
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....................................................................
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Submissions Panelists:
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John Coon, Pat D'Amico, Darby M. Dixon, Joe Dudley,
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Diane Filkorn, Morten Lauritsen, Bruce Ligget, Rachel Mathis,
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Heather Timer, Lee Anne Smith, Jason Snell, Jake Swearingen
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....................................................................
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Send correspondence to <editors@intertext.com>
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....................................................................
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InterText Vol. 10, No. 2. InterText (ISSN 1071-7676) is
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published electronically on a quarterly basis. Reproduction of
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this magazine is permitted as long as the magazine is not sold
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(either by itself or as part of a collection) and the entire
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text of the issue remains unchanged. Copyright 2000 Jason Snell.
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All stories Copyright 2000 by their respective authors. For more
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information about InterText, send a message to
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<info@intertext.com>. For submission guidelines, send a message
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to <guidelines@intertext.com>.
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....................................................................
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The Astral Prisoner by Corey Wicks
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======================================
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....................................................................
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Sometimes freedom is a prison. And vice versa.
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....................................................................
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Now, your honor, let me draw your attention to Exhibit F. I
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would like to ask the Court to read this document into the
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record, for I believe it will prove beyond a reasonable doubt
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that my client is emphatically not guilty of the charge of
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first-degree murder.
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10 September 1997
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Journal entry of Wallace E. King
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Idaho State Penitentiary
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I am a prisoner. My crimes are a matter of public record, as
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anyone who has recently read The Idaho Statesman knows. What the
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public does not know, however, is that I have escaped... and yet
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I am still a prisoner. For the past few months I have escaped on
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a regular basis, you see. I exit my cell, walk past the guards
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on my block, scale the razor-wire fence, and I am free.
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Sometimes I visited my ex-wife and children in Nampa. I have
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stopped going there -- it has become too painful. Often I follow
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the wardens home after their shifts end. Warden McGovern, for
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instance, lives in a big white house at the end of Del Sol Lane.
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He owns a golden retriever, drinks Corona beer, and his wife
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prefers to be on top while making love. I know this because I
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have accidentally entered their house on several occasions while
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they were in the act. I didn't stay and watch because, contrary
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to what the prosecuting attorney stated at my trial, I am not a
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pervert.
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It came out during my trial, you see, that I owned a large
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personal library that included works on the occult, metaphysics,
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and the paranormal. They used this as evidence to suggest that
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the killings were satanically inspired -- which, of course, is
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bullshit. Now all those precious works are gathering dust in
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some police vault as evidence in the famous case of Idaho v.
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King. How I could use those books at this moment! Perhaps if I
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had them with me in my cell I wouldn't have made this final
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mistake.
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It was only here in prison that I started practicing the art of
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astral projection, you see. And entirely from memory. Back when
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I was still married, I had started studying ceremonial magick
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and psychic phenomena primarily out of curiosity. I delved into
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the rituals of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn and I read
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all about Carlos Castaneda's psychedelic adventures. That was
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when I had no intention of actually practicing any "out-of-body"
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experiments of my own. If I had known that I would wind up in a
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maximum-security prison, I would have paid closer attention to
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the methodology of astral projection.
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The first time I actually left my body, I noticed myself
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floating off my bunk toward the ceiling. The moment I realized
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what happened, however, I immediately snapped back. Eventually I
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taught myself how to rise above, turn around, and look at my
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sleeping body while my astral body was wide awake. Gradually I
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learned to walk down the cell block and to exit the prison
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grounds entirely.
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You will never know the elation of rediscovering your freedom
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after it has been taken from you. I kept a journal beside my
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bunk and mastered the technique of "sleep writing" while within
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the dreamlike state. As a dream quickly fades away upon
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awakening, the memory of the astral journeys would quickly
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dissipate if I didn't immediately write them down. Yet, once I
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had written an entry, I committed the contents of my astral
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prison escapes to memory. Then I destroyed the item. The guards
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and wardens might not look favorably upon such "other life"
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activities beyond the prison walls, should they discover any of
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my entries -- especially if they contained details of their
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private lives!
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When I first started exiting my physical body, the world outside
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appeared exactly as it was in the physical world at that moment
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in time. If I left my body at, say, 7 p.m. and I entered into a
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house, they probably would be watching The Simpsons. It would
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appear very much like the real world. Yet, often the images were
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fleeting and somewhat blurred because I did not fully know how
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to control my astral body nor how to concentrate my thoughts.
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Therefore my travels often became a kaleidoscope of psychedelic
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real-world images combined in a disjointed fashion. It was very
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much like ordinary dreaming, only more vivid.
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However, once I built up a kind of astral stamina and
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strengthened my powers of concentration, I learned how to
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stabilize the images. Thus, if I wanted to visit the pyramids of
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Egypt and the Sphinx, I merely concentrated on that desire for a
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moment and suddenly I was _there_ standing before the Sphinx's
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paws. I used this method to travel to Shanghai, Bangkok, Bombay,
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Moscow, Berlin, Vienna, Paris. Anywhere I wanted to vacation, I
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merely packed my astral baggage and off I went. And yet, my body
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remained confined in the Idaho State Penitentiary.
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After several months of out-of-body adventures, I made the most
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frightening discovery of my life. I learned that there are
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living creatures who inhabit our dreams, just as fish live in
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the sea or birds live in the air. I had read about these beings
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before, but it was an enormous shock to realize that I was
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actually encountering living beings in a surrealistic world. I
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believe Carlos Castaneda called them inorganic beings or
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_scouts_ from other worlds or dimensions.
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Usually the scouts appeared as incongruous elements in dreams,
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such as an object out of place. The trick was to focus your
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attention on the out-of-place element. Usually it would
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transform into an intelligent being of some sort. Often one
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would have to bargain with the scout in order to learn the
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wisdom of that being's particular dimension. Most of the time
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this involved sharing energy with the scout. I don't know why,
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but it seems that the energy from our particular dimension is a
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highly priced commodity in the interdimensional marketplace.
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The first time I encountered a scout I was in a department store
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examining a set of finely decorated Chinese porcelain jars when
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suddenly I noticed a rodeo clown standing next to me. For some
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reason I instinctively reached out and grasped his hand. At that
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moment all the images of the department store started to swirl
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in a giant vortex. It seemed as if the clown and I were
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traveling through a giant funnel of light. Then suddenly the
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swirling stopped... and there I stood in another world.
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This particular world was especially bright with neon colors.
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There seemed to be geometrically shaped glass houses that
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diffracted light the way a prism separates light into the
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rainbow spectrum. There was a pungent fruity odor in the air and
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I caught a glimpse of a dazzling forest of violet and crimson
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trees.
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All this took place in a split second before I was jolted awake
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in my bed. The shock of knowing absolutely that other worlds
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exist simultaneously and parallel to our world caused me to
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immediately awaken.
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The world of the rodeo clown scout was the most pleasant I have
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encountered. Others, such as the one I am currently in, are far
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more dark and sinister. I believe Castaneda himself had visited
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this world. Here the beings appear merely as murky gray clouds
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of energy and the world is essentially a darkened labyrinth of
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tunnels -- much like a honeycomb.
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Unfortunately, I had forgotten that one must never speak a
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desire to stay in an inorganic being's world. That is why the
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prison guards shall find my body, bruised from my thrashing
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around as my astral self journeys from place to place, next to
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this undestroyed journal entry. My final journal entry.
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I'm sure the guards will be falsely accused and sentenced for my
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death. Believe me, I know exactly what they will go through. For
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I myself am but a prisoner.
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Corey Wicks (coreyw@cyberhighway.net)
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----------------------------------------
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Corey Wicks is a local government reporter for The Star-News, a
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weekly newspaper in McCall, Idaho. Recently he was honored by
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the Idaho Press Club for his crime reporting. He is a voracious
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reader of esoteric literature, and is a member of several
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esoteric organizations, including the local Masonic lodge, the
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Rosicrucian Order, AMORC, and the Traditional Martinist Order.
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Cat's Pause by Faith L. Justice
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===================================
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....................................................................
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There's an animal inside each of us.
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But what's inside the animals?
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....................................................................
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Kefira woke up feeling warm and satisfied. She stretched,
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extruding her claws and plucking at the rumpled blanket with
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alternating paws as she arched her back and flicked her ears and
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whiskers forward. A deep rumble started in her chest and erupted
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as a satisfied purr.
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Her round yellow eyes snapped wide. Whiskers? Claws? Lord
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Androff's bells! She glanced around the room, feeling
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disoriented by the faded colors and distorted depth perception
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that flooded her brain. An overpowering smell of human sex came
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from the narrow bed she shared with the young guardsman snoring
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next to her.
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Thinking furiously, she started licking her paw and wiping at
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her red-gold face. Snout wrinkled in disgust, Kefira realized
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what she was doing and stopped in mid-stroke. Panic gripped her.
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What happened? How had she acquired this feline form? Her ears
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flattened, hackles rose, and she bared her teeth in a frightened
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hiss. Kefira harshly suppressed an almost overwhelming urge to
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go racing through the room in a blind panic. After a few tense
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moments, her natural curiosity wrestled down the fear.
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How had she changed overnight from a reasonably successful
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street acrobat into a cat? Had she crossed a powerful sorcerer?
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Insulted a rich merchant? Her thoughts fixed on Almon. The kind
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older man wanted to be her patron, but Kefira wouldn't give up
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her vagabond life to settle down.
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She had tried to explain her need for freedom the last time they
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coupled, but he still didn't understand why a female wouldn't
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jump at the opportunity for safe and comfortable surroundings.
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She pictured the hurt in his eyes and the resignation in the
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slump of his shoulders. No, Almon would never do this to her. He
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was too honorable.
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"'Fira?" Cahil mumbled sleepily as he rolled over reaching for
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her. A sudden fit of sneezing convulsed his body. Cahil's brown
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eyes widened as they spied Kefira watching him curiously from
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her side of the bed. He reached for a neckerchief from the
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hastily discarded pile of clothes on the floor. His normally
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bronze skin colored to a bright red as he tried to quell the
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sneezing.
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"Damned cat! How'd you get in here?"
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Kefira dodged a backhanded swipe and leaped for the nightstand,
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knocking over a guttered candle. She skidded with a surprised
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yowl over the edge and onto the polished wood floor. Candle,
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holder, and assorted bright cheap jewelry cascaded around her as
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she scrambled to reverse directions and escape under the bed.
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Cahil pulled the blanket off the floor and peeked under the bed.
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The watery eyes and runny nose spoiled his good looks. "Here,
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kitty, kitty, kitty. Nice kitty. Come out from there." He lunged
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for her. Kefira avoided his reaching grasp by cowering in the
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dusty corner.
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"Gods-blasted cat!" His stubbled face disappeared. Kefira
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listened to the curses called down on cats and changeable women
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mumbled between sneezes. He quickly pulled on his tights and
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officer tunic, buckled on his sword and searched the floor for
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his boots. She poked her bewhiskered nose from under the bed
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watching for her chance to escape.
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Now. He was heading for the door. Kefira dashed between his
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legs, sending the unfortunate young man crashing to the floor
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with a surprised yelp. She sprinted down the stairs with a sense
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of regret mixed with her greater sense of urgency.
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Having a cat body offered a different perspective on the world.
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She was a small, relatively frail animal in a world of giants.
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But her feline form had some advantages. As an acrobat, she
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appreciated the quick reflexes and flexibility. That move off
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the night stand was a pretty good recovery. Kefira took
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advantage of her naturally low profile by following the shadowed
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wall behind the bar to the open kitchen door. She slunk into a
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noisy crowd of cooks and servants getting their breakfast before
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starting work. _Food._ Her stomach clenched.
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She had come to the tavern with one purpose last night, and it
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wasn't dinner. Kefira purred contentedly, one paw raised. She
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had laughed and flirted with several men until Cahil had entered
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the room. The musky scent of the well-built young guardsman had
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attracted her immediately. He had responded to her with poorly
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concealed lust. They barely waited to get to their room before
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tearing off their clothes for intense, frequent and sometimes
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violent lovemaking.
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The sharp scent of another cat brought Kefira back to the
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present. She had forgotten about the scarred old tabby who was
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unofficial mascot of the inn. His scent marked his territory
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throughout the kitchen. Kefira rubbed her head and tail over the
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markings, masking them with her own scent as she stealthily
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tread through the room. That would give the old tom fits!
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She reached the open alley with no sign of the tabby, then made
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a dash for a pile of litter strewn against a gap-filled fence.
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Kefira hid behind several smashed wooden boxes and a tattered
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pallet that leaked straw. She settled on all fours to think
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about her situation, tail curled forward, the end twitching. She
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needed help for her strange affliction.
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Matrika. The witchwoman had helped her when Kefira first arrived
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in the city, penniless and with a mysterious gap in her memory.
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She mused on the cause for her predicament. Maybe Cahil was
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cursed, and every woman he loved turned into a cat to which he
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was violently allergic. It's too bad cats can't chuckle, she
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thought as she flicked her whiskers half in amusement and half
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in frustration. She shrugged. Fruitless speculation wouldn't
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help. She needed to get to Matrika.
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Kefira stretched herself briefly and checked out the alley.
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Matrika lived on the other side of the Bazaar. Her large,
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rambling house sheltered an odd and ever-changing assortment of
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human and animal occupants. At this time of day, she should be
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at home studying her books on magic or conducting her
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experiments. Matrika supported herself and the others who
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occasionally turned to her for help by doing a brisk business in
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small white magics, such as love potions, fertility charms, and
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traveler's protections.
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A streak of movement tracked across Kefira's vision. Her feline
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body bunched and leaped. The small rodent gave one squeak before
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she bit through its spine at the base of its skull. Ugh! Hungry
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as she was, Kefira pulled her lips back in disgust as she
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realized what she contemplated for a meal. As a woman, she had a
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lively appetite and eagerly tried exotic foods. Raw fish, maybe,
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but fresh mouse pushed the limits of her curiosity.
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A low growl caught her attention. The inn tabby emerged from the
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dark crowded space between two buildings. They stared at each
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other for several seconds, then the tabby made a brief cautious
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move towards her, stretching one paw forward.
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No! My kill! Kefira started a growl deep in her throat as she
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arched her back and fluffed her fur to make herself look larger
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and more imposing. The other cat sniffed briefly and lowered
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himself to the ground, staring unblinkingly.
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Kefira watched cautiously as the tabby's muscles bunched and his
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hindquarters dug in in anticipation. In a flurry of movement the
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tabby leaped. She dropped her meal and reared to meet him,
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rolling onto her back. Kefira raked his soft belly with her
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sharp hind claws and bit at his neck. Pain lanced through her as
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the tabby snapped at her face and tore an ear.
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It was over in a few furious seconds. Kefira wriggled out from
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under the larger cat and backed down the alley, hissing and
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growling. The tabby picked up her dinner as she turned tail and
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raced away, her fear and pain replaced by a growing sense of
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unease. What was that all about? Why had she fought the tabby
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over a disgusting rodent? She had a more important goal... if
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only she could remember what it was.
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An overwhelming sense of loss boiled up from her empty belly,
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clutched her wildly beating heart, and constricted her throat.
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The panicked animal let loose one prolonged scream that sounded
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like a baby being tortured. She set off at a ground-eating lope,
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charting a straight course through the thicket of human
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dwellings. Home. Something awful would happen to her if she
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didn't get there.
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A small tawny cat jumped through her study window from the ash
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tree, startling Matrika. The graceful animal immediately leaped
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to her desk. It daintily picked its way through the clutter of
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jars, books and charms and plopped itself down with a rumbling
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purr in the middle of the book Matrika was reading. The rumpled
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woman removed her reading spectacles from faded blue eyes and
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pushed small curling tendrils of gray-streaked hair behind her
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ears.
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"Well, kitten, you sure know how to get a body's attention." She
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ran a gentle hand over the animal looking for injuries. Matrika
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examined the torn ear and sighed. "Got into a scrape, have you?"
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The cat continued to purr contentedly then rolled over and
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exposed a lean stomach to be scratched.
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"Come, kitten, let's get you some food." The witchwoman picked
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up the trusting animal and carried it down the hall. She stopped
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at a small room at the top of the stairs, rapped on the door and
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asked the occupant to join her in the kitchen. Matrika cradled
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the cat like a baby, petting and talking to it in a soothing
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murmur.
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The kitchen was cool and dark with wooden shutters blocking the
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intense afternoon light. She put the cat down near the empty
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hearth and reached into the cold closet for a pitcher of cream.
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She poured the cream into a chipped saucer while the hungry
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animal mewed and paced. Matrika placed the saucer on the
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flagstone floor and turned as a tall, awkward-looking girl
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entered the room. The teenager had wild red hair corkscrewing in
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an untamable jumble down her back. Freckles dusted her long
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nose.
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"You wanted me, 'Trika?"
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"Kefira's home, Gemina." She gestured toward the cat daintily
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washing its face in the corner.
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"What?" The girl looked startled and raced across the room.
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Gemina picked up the small feline and scratched under its chin.
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"She just came in. I saw her performing a few days ago, so the
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reversion must be recent. Your spell lasted for nearly three
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full moons." The sorceress frowned at her star pupil and her
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favorite pet for a few moments, then turned to put away the
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pitcher.
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"I'm sorry, 'Trika," Gemina mumbled. "I didn't mean to cause
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trouble. I just wanted to try that new changer spell you taught
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me. She's all right, isn't she?" The girl anxiously inspected
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the injured ear.
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Matrika reached out to tousle the unruly red hair. "I'm sure you
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meant no harm, Gemina. But next time, try to think about the
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consequences. All magic has a price, you know. Sometimes you
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pay, sometimes another. We're here to protect, not abuse weaker
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creatures."
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Kefira started to make a bed in the girl's lap, kneading a bony
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thigh with both paws. She circled twice and settled in a
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comfortable heap, tail tip over her nose. This was good. Food.
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Home. A nest for the kittens to be born in nine weeks. The human
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voices faded to a low murmur as the contented animal drifted
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toward sleep, the vague uneasiness plaguing her only a distant
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echo of regret.
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Faith L. Justice (fljustice@prodigy.net)
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-------------------------------------------
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Faith L. Justice is a science geek and history junkie. She has
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worked as a lifeguard, paralegal, college professor and business
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consultant to support her writing habit. She's published
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numerous short stories, poems, and reviews in the small press,
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has completed a fact-based historical novel, and is working on
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the sequel. She lives with her husband, daughter, and cat in New
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York City.
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Millie's Antiques by Will Payne
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===================================
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....................................................................
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Who knew that looking at antiques would stir up old memories?
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....................................................................
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The shades are down, but the sign says _Open,_ so I twist the
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knob and go right in. A bell hooked to the top of the door
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clinks loudly, giving me a little start. The shopkeeper is
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sitting at her desk a few feet inside, pretty well concealed by
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bulky old furniture and some department store mannequins
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standing at attention between me and her, like bodyguards. Even
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before her cheery `hello' I know she is there, because her
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cigarette smoke hits my nose, mixing unpleasantly with the
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acetone smell from her nail polish remover.
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I wish she wouldn't smoke. I suffered nightmares of withdrawal
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symptoms before I could quit smoking. After taking the Five Day
|
|
Plan three times, I still get a nervous tightening of my throat
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when I'm in a smoky room. At the hospital, I saw one guy who had
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lost both feet to a land mine, and now he lay there dying from
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lung cancer. That oncology ward was real Marlboro country.
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There are worse things than being a Section Eight.
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"How are you today, sir?" Almost no accent, but I'm sure she is
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Vietnamese.
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"Just fine," I say. "How about you?" I squeeze through the
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barricade of cupboards and dressers to see her better. She is
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slim, with long, straight black hair and dark, lustrous eyes.
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She is very good-looking. As with so many women of her race, her
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body is like a child's, though she is surely forty years or
|
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more. Why is she hiding back here, anyway? Of course, there is
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good cover all through this big, one-room shop, and it is dimly
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lit. Apparently no one else is here, except the lifelike but
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grotesque mannequins. In this light, they could be taken for
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real... if they had on any clothes, that is. I don't see any
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indication that the lady is packing a gun, unless -- what the
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hell! She's only an antiques dealer, so why should I even think
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|
about that? Actually, a woman alone in a shop like this one
|
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probably should have a pistol at hand.
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She continues working on her nails, like an untrained gift-shop
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clerk, but asks me the inevitable question all dealers like to
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ask: "Are you looking for anything special I could help you
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with? I am Millie Tran. I know everything in the shop."
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Was that meant to be just a helpful bit of information, or was
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it really a tactful warning against shoplifting?
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"I'm not looking for anything in particular," I tell her. "Will
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it be O.K. if I just browse around a few minutes?"
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"Certainly, sir. It is so warm this afternoon that I closed the
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shades to keep out some of the sunlight. If it is too dark for
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you to see things, I will open them again."
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"No problem," I tell her, as I move away. I wonder if she will
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really let me off the hook this easily, or if she'll tailgate me
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through the place, trying to sell me something. If you tell them
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the kind of things you like, they'll hound you about it.
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Jimmy is in the little shopping plaza across the street, and I
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won't have long to look before he comes for me. I was careful to
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tell him where I would be, as a good little kid should.
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Actually, Jimmy is my brother, three years younger than me,
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|
which is what kept the lucky son of a gun from going to 'Nam
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along with me. So what does he do instead? He joins a busload of
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war protesters to block the Pentagon entrance.
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At the time, I thought he was nuts. Now who's nuts?
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As I meander toward the back of the room, Millie appears again,
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wraithlike, to tell me about an inlaid mahogany sideboard I am
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trying to navigate around. Why can't she just let me look? I
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don't give a damn about furniture.
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"This sideboard," she announces with an air of importance, "came
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out of one of the oldest houses in Washington County, and I just
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marked the price down this morning. It is a very good buy."
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"Thanks, but I don't have space for any more furniture right
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|
now." It's none of her business that my temporary home has been
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an attic room in Jimmy's house since I was released from the
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Martinsburg Veterans' Hospital last month. My third stint there
|
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since I was discharged. Recidivist, you might say. I wonder how
|
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many chances they'll give me before I have to stay there
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permanently?
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A little voice in the margin of my consciousness is saying,
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parrotlike, "Maybe it would really be for the best, Don. Maybe
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it would really be for the best. Maybe it would really be...."
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Hell. At least I didn't get Agent Orange.
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For a while after I left the service I dabbled in collectors'
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items, mainly from the Fifties. Not real antiques, but stuff
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like old juke boxes, Coke machines, almost anything
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coin-operated. I don't have room for that sort of thing now, but
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I still enjoy looking. Long time since I browsed in a place like
|
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this. I can move through every square foot of the store that's
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big enough for a man, and all without making a sound. If I do
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|
just that, maybe she'll lose track of me for a while. So far,
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the old floorboards haven't squeaked at all. In the jungle, any
|
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step could go _crunch_ or _squish_ or send some other creature
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scurrying away. Then all hell might break loose.
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Other than furniture, a lot of Millie's inventory is scruffy,
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damaged yard-sale items. A push-type lawn mower with corrugated
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metal wheels, like some tracked vehicle from the First World
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War. A white wicker rocking chair with a hole in the seat. Had
|
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been a potty chair, of all things. Imagine rocking while you go.
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Good for a planter now, says a tag tied to its arm. As I turn
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into the other aisle, heading back toward Millie's desk, I see a
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baby carriage with two wheels missing, looking more like a
|
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covered wheelbarrow or maybe the R2-D2 in "Star Wars." An old
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farm scythe, which my touch finds to be still sharp enough to
|
|
cut through heavy jungle brush. No jungle here around
|
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Hagerstown, but my imagination grows it instantly, so the scythe
|
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can once more enjoy its purpose in life. It must be nice to have
|
|
a purpose. To hold a job again.
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I bend down to examine a large, brass shell case. But I see it's
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not, really -- it's actually an umbrella stand. For fun, I start
|
|
seeing other things around me as something different, but
|
|
similar to what is really there. The way, as a boy, I used to
|
|
look into hot coals in the fireplace and imagine that I could
|
|
see glowing people and animals moving around. The same with
|
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clouds skimming along overhead, changing shape to act out their
|
|
roles. Now Millie's furniture begins transforming into caissons
|
|
and howitzers. The smaller things are grenades and spent shells
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and helmets and whatnot. It's like a game now, to identify these
|
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things.
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As soon as it hits me that I'm playing a game, I try to stop
|
|
myself. Dr. Moscowitz warned me against this sort of
|
|
daydreaming. He said it could induce a relapse. Hell, I don't
|
|
need that again, after being out just a few weeks. The pills I
|
|
take help some, but I have to do my part, too. It's just that
|
|
antique shops are supposed to induce nostalgia, and I've always
|
|
been an easy mark for that sort of thing.
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Unexpectedly, Millie is beside me again, interrupting my
|
|
reverie. "Do you like cigarette cases or pipes? Many men collect
|
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smokers' items, even when they do not smoke." She is leaning
|
|
over a table, slender as a bamboo, with dark hair swinging
|
|
loosely over her shoulder. Her low-cut neckline permitting me to
|
|
glimpse her small breasts. Is she doing that deliberately, to
|
|
distract me?
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With an effort, I focus on her voice. Now I know that this lady
|
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can be pretty stealthy. "I quit smoking a few years ago," I tell
|
|
her, "and so far I don't collect smoking or tobacco items."
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"I have a showcase of such objects over there next to that old
|
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blue pie safe. Some very fine examples. I do hope you will just
|
|
take a look at them. Not to buy, you know, but just to see."
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|
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"Thanks, I'll look when I get over that way." I wonder why she
|
|
is so eager for me to see the smoking paraphernalia?
|
|
|
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I don't think it shows on the outside that I'm in recovery --
|
|
drugs and alcohol, among other problems, according to those
|
|
well-adjusted, well-degreed healers at the hospital. They think
|
|
they know who's sane and who isn't. But the maze of rooms there
|
|
offers many corners for lies to hide, unspoken, unnoticed.
|
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|
|
Now she seems unwilling to let me go. Looking me up and down,
|
|
she asks, more like a statement, "You are military?"
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|
|
"Not any more, but I was in the Army, years ago. How did you
|
|
guess?"
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|
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"I would also guess you were in Vietnam, in combat. It is not
|
|
difficult to see the signs when one knows what to look for. You
|
|
still have the erect carriage, the short haircut, the right age,
|
|
the depressed, haunted look."
|
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|
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"What do you mean, `haunted look?' What does that have to do
|
|
with anything?"
|
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|
|
"Sir, there is a gentle child in each of us, who may not be
|
|
ready for the fast maturation demanded by war. People like that,
|
|
the healthy type, often continue to suffer damages from war long
|
|
after peace has come. Then there are those of the unhealthy
|
|
type, whose violent nature is nourished by battle, who remain
|
|
forever immature. I think you are of the healthy type. So I know
|
|
that you could never become a general." Her small, solemn laugh.
|
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|
|
She is really beginning to bug me, but I am also curious. "You
|
|
seem to be a philosopher as well as an antiques dealer."
|
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|
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"Actually, a psychologist." She smiles, appearing friendlier
|
|
than she has up to now. "The Americans pulled out of Vietnam
|
|
shortly before I received my doctorate in Paris. I came to this
|
|
country, since I could not return home."
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|
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So she must be close to my age, but doesn't have a single gray
|
|
hair. While my hair is mostly gray. Makes me look older than I
|
|
really am. "How did you happen to come to Hagerstown?" I ask.
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|
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"I married an architect, also a Vietnamese refugee, who
|
|
practices in Hagerstown. But I soon found there is not much need
|
|
in this town for a female Vietnamese psychologist. So I started
|
|
this little business. My parents once had an antiques shop in
|
|
Saigon, and I learned from them. I import a few things, you
|
|
see." She waves toward a display of Oriental porcelains.
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|
|
|
It's possible I had visited her parents' shop back in the
|
|
seventies. I had days off in Saigon, and sometimes browsed the
|
|
antique shops. Some had porcelains just like these. "You have a
|
|
very diversified stock," I said. "Just about anything a
|
|
collector might be interested in, I suppose."
|
|
|
|
She gestures to encompass the room. "But you will see that I
|
|
have no military artifacts of any sort in my shop. To me, in a
|
|
broad sense, there is no justifiable war, and I make no
|
|
concession to that kind of collecting."
|
|
|
|
"So you could never become a general, either?" I ask, seeing now
|
|
that she was trying to make me swallow some kind of chickenshit
|
|
propaganda. I'm not a hawk anymore, but she's now an American
|
|
dove. Hawks, doves... chicken bones make good missiles to launch
|
|
at weaklings. I start to remind her about the box of grenades
|
|
under a nearby walnut dining table, but then I remember they are
|
|
really pewter ice cream molds.
|
|
|
|
I've always disliked talking about the part of my life spent in
|
|
Southeast Asia, but this woman knows a few things already. So I
|
|
tell her, "When I first went to Vietnam, I thought it was
|
|
justifiable from our point of view: we were going to help South
|
|
Vietnam fight the Communists. Since I got back home and learned
|
|
more of the truth, I've had to reconsider the whole business."
|
|
|
|
She smiles faintly, wearily. "The truth is not an absolute. The
|
|
French believed they were helping us, too. Then, later, the
|
|
Americans. After more than a million Vietnamese died, and sixty
|
|
thousand Americans, many others also reconsidered the war. They
|
|
are the ones who are now drowning in guilt and who keep the
|
|
psychiatrists busy."
|
|
|
|
My head is beginning to feel a little woozy now. Maybe Robert
|
|
McNamara is seeing a shrink, too. I read something about him
|
|
recently.... Maybe he does, but just won't tell us. Only your
|
|
warmonger knows for sure.
|
|
|
|
"I don't have long to look today," I tell Millie. "Do you have
|
|
anything coin-operated? That's one of my interests."
|
|
|
|
"Oooh, my one-armed bandit," she says, her manner instantly
|
|
changed. "Look over here. They are hard to find, and this one is
|
|
dated 1938. It works perfectly, but the jackpot has only a few
|
|
nickels, now. I bought it at an estate sale just this week. You
|
|
are welcome to put a nickel in to test it, if you wish."
|
|
|
|
"Maybe I will." I touch the embossed decoration on the slot
|
|
machine and stroke the lever affectionately. "I don't see a
|
|
price tag. How much is it?"
|
|
|
|
"I haven't really decided on a price yet. Most of the ones I
|
|
have seen run over a thousand dollars, but this one is pretty
|
|
scratched up.... Would you like to make an offer?"
|
|
|
|
"No, thanks," I say. "I can't buy it, but I'd like to look
|
|
around a little more"
|
|
|
|
"O.K., sure, but please let me know if I can help," she says,
|
|
and turns back toward the front of the shop.
|
|
|
|
I've never liked making offers. I'm not a gambler, either, but I
|
|
do like the old slots. I continue admiring it for a couple of
|
|
minutes, then look at my pocket change. Yes, there are three
|
|
nickels. I put the first one in and pull the lever. A lemon, a
|
|
cherry and an orange. I push in the second and third nickels. No
|
|
better luck.
|
|
|
|
It's a little like feeding ammunition into some bizarre model
|
|
weapon. The lever works like a trigger. Probably meant to be
|
|
man-portable, but it is a little too heavy. Maybe a prototype.
|
|
The R&D people back home are always sending us something for
|
|
field-testing. I lift it, my finger at the ready on the trigger.
|
|
It's unwieldy, not like any weapon I've ever handled before.
|
|
Must have some pretty complex mechanism inside. But they'll have
|
|
to make it lighter if they expect it to be standard issue.
|
|
Holding the thing in front of me, I move cautiously around a
|
|
shipping case. Such good cover, but I'm sure one of them is
|
|
here, pretty close....
|
|
|
|
"Oh, you startled me!" Now Millie is in an alcove near the front
|
|
window, trying to straighten a large painting. "Do you want to
|
|
reconsider the slot machine?"
|
|
|
|
She turns around, so her back is to the wall. Her eyes widen now
|
|
-- she is suddenly aware of being cornered. I fix her in my gaze
|
|
and squeeze the trigger gently, just as she screams out.
|
|
|
|
But something else has happened, too. A door has opened, and I
|
|
am surprised to see my brother walking in.
|
|
|
|
I don't know what he's doing here.
|
|
|
|
He could get himself hurt, standing in the open like that....
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Will Payne (wehp@cvn.net)
|
|
---------------------------
|
|
Will Payne lives in south-central Pennsylvania, where he has
|
|
been an environmental activist and a columnist for several
|
|
newspapers. His poetry, fiction and nonfiction have appeared in
|
|
several literary magazines, including Potpourri, Warm Welcomes,
|
|
Potomac Review, and Bohemian Bridge. He is currently working on
|
|
his first novel. "Millie's Antiques" is his first publication in
|
|
an online magazine.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
This Great Divide by Eric Prochaska
|
|
=======================================
|
|
....................................................................
|
|
Our lives aren't just built by who we are.
|
|
They're also created by the events around us.
|
|
....................................................................
|
|
|
|
So you have a little Christmas wish and you walk out to the back
|
|
end of the rail fence with the crisp but snowless ground
|
|
crackling under your boots. You've come here countless times,
|
|
and though it's your "secret place," your private place to sort
|
|
through your thoughts, anyone who knows you knows where to find
|
|
you and when it's all right to approach -- maybe by the way you
|
|
prop your right foot solidly on the bottom rail, and lean
|
|
against your forearms on the top rail. It's well behind the
|
|
house, but just shy of being occluded by the edge of the barn.
|
|
You never really had to hide from anyone, anyway -- except maybe
|
|
when you experimented with smoking when you were nine -- and you
|
|
figured out that it's easier to be left alone when you're in the
|
|
open than when you seek shelter. If you try to be alone, that's
|
|
when everyone suddenly thinks you need them around. This is
|
|
where you stood on summer days as the crop duster swooped
|
|
overhead, having raced toward you dangerously low and fast,
|
|
wobbling and rocking from one wing-tip to the other, somehow
|
|
graceful in its perilous way. Then, right at the fence where you
|
|
stood, often with your friends, bicycles discarded on the
|
|
sparsely weeded rough dirt behind, the unsteady plane would cut
|
|
its spray and swan dive toward the clouds. Even if you didn't
|
|
exactly shower in it, the cloud did mist over you in the wash of
|
|
the wings. You didn't know a thing about cancer back then, and
|
|
you don't pay it much concern now, figuring what's done is done,
|
|
anyway, and there's bigger thoughts to take up your time.
|
|
|
|
After years of practice, you can recognize any make of car
|
|
solely by the shape of its headlights at night, except for a few
|
|
of the newer imports, since you haven't had much of a chance to
|
|
inspect too many of them, and they all seem the same. But you
|
|
can pick a Ford from a Chevy or a Jeep as soon as it comes over
|
|
the rise almost a mile off. You can give the model year, most of
|
|
the time, because of the amber lights bordering the headlights.
|
|
Still, it's not a skill you bother trying to impress people
|
|
with. It's just something you picked up while waiting for your
|
|
father to come home. His will be the one with the driver's side
|
|
light much brighter than the passenger side one, which you
|
|
figure is due to burn out any time now, so you watch the
|
|
"pop-eye" trucks coming at you, too. With the sun practically
|
|
gone and the red glow washed along that western ridge, many of
|
|
the cars still don't have their lights on. But you don't expect
|
|
to see him this early, anyway.
|
|
|
|
You're not a rancher or a farmer, though you're pretty much
|
|
surrounded by the both of them out here. The fence is your
|
|
family's, and so is the land, but the crop belongs to a man who
|
|
drives here earlier than you've ever woken on purpose, every
|
|
morning for months. He has his own land, and rents a few acres
|
|
here and there all the way between Cliffside and the junction.
|
|
You don't see him this time of year except maybe at the store,
|
|
but more often you see his wife. Still, you see more of him than
|
|
of your father, and you don't want to be helpless like that
|
|
little child you remember out here at this slowly rotting fence,
|
|
but if there's a single wish you could have, you'd leave the
|
|
gold and the dead in the ground and just have more time with him
|
|
before it's too late.
|
|
|
|
Behind you, from the kitchen window, smatterings of sound are
|
|
spilled into the lingering twilight as someone washes dishes at
|
|
the sink, and someone else calls from deeper in the house with a
|
|
request. Your aunt and her family arrived late this morning,
|
|
always a few days early in these years since Mom left. It's all
|
|
the family you have in the world, and for a moment the world
|
|
seems like a very expansive place with no family in it. By now
|
|
her eyes -- because of course it's your aunt at the sink -- have
|
|
found you. She's probably been pausing at each window around the
|
|
house, pulling the sheers aside inconspicuously for a cursory
|
|
glance outside, making the maternal rounds, if you will. And
|
|
maybe she stopped in the kitchen when she caught sight of you,
|
|
and the dishes just seemed like a worthwhile way to occupy the
|
|
time as she waited to see if you are all right. It must be hard
|
|
being suspended between being a mother and being a stranger.
|
|
|
|
You can almost feel the warmth from the small window, where, if
|
|
you turn, you will almost certainly see her figure. She's wiped
|
|
the fog from the pane with a dry towel and her eyes are fixed on
|
|
you, you imagine unpretentiously. And you expect that she's not
|
|
concerned you might know. In fact, she'd probably welcome your
|
|
coming to her and confiding everything. Or maybe not. You can't
|
|
know for sure, so you don't risk burdening her. Besides, you're
|
|
not sure you want to. You're well aware that your problems are
|
|
probably just that: your problems. They're probably inflated to
|
|
immensely awful proportions in your mind, you figure, and when
|
|
you're so close to being considered something of an adult it
|
|
sure wouldn't do any good to go whining about such trivial
|
|
worries.
|
|
|
|
You'd like to just stay out there longer, but realize it won't
|
|
do anything more than fuel her anxiety. The chill is starting to
|
|
work its way beyond your skin, through your body. Those
|
|
headlights won't be coming, you know. Not until after dark. But
|
|
even if you're almost an adult, maybe there's no harm in wishful
|
|
thinking, as long as no one else knows. So, before someone feels
|
|
obligated to fetch you, you voluntarily stroll back to the
|
|
house, careful to wear a light smile as you enter so no one
|
|
thinks you're being moody. No need to drag down the rest of
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
"Oh! Hi there!" she chirps in surprise as you go in the kitchen
|
|
door. It's hard to tell if the surprise is real, or if she's
|
|
just acting to not have been watching you. "I thought you were
|
|
in the living room with the boys."
|
|
|
|
"Nah," you say. "I was just taking care of a few things
|
|
outside."
|
|
|
|
"Well, Don and the boys are in watching TV, if you want to join
|
|
them."
|
|
|
|
She doesn't even realize she speaks as if it's her house.
|
|
Doesn't matter, though. She is the mother here.
|
|
|
|
Your Uncle Don is in your father's secondhand recliner, the one
|
|
you practically had to twist his arm to buy at the garage sale
|
|
after your mother took off with all your furniture. Again, you
|
|
know it doesn't matter, but it's a territorial thing. This is
|
|
where you father sits when he gets home. He takes off his
|
|
cumbersome work boots and jut relaxes for a few minutes as you
|
|
heat up dinner. Sometimes, often, he falls asleep during the
|
|
news. You've learned not to wake him before it gets late,
|
|
because if you do he insists he's not tired, and that it's too
|
|
early to go to bed, anyway.
|
|
|
|
You sit on the floor near the couch, where your two cousins
|
|
share a comic book.
|
|
|
|
"Boys," your uncle says. "Scoot over. Make room for your cousin
|
|
up there."
|
|
|
|
"Nah, it's all right," you say, though they're already
|
|
obediently huddling toward one end of the couch.
|
|
|
|
"Don't be silly," he says. "We don't want to make you sit on the
|
|
floor in your own house."
|
|
|
|
You get up on the couch mostly because he's made such a
|
|
production out of it, and you are genuinely appreciative for the
|
|
effort, though you often sit on the floor, anyway.
|
|
|
|
"What do you want to watch tonight?" Uncle Don asks, extending
|
|
part of the newspaper toward you. The arm of the vinyl couch
|
|
moans as you lean across it to accept the paper, but you realize
|
|
looking at the weekly TV programming guide from the Sunday paper
|
|
that your life is merely a compilation of second rate
|
|
made-for-TV holiday specials. So you break into a grin that you
|
|
decide not to try to explain to your uncle, who is trying to
|
|
seem disinterested, though you are aware he's practically
|
|
studying you. He's not a bad guy, but you've never been able to
|
|
talk to him about something you are interested in. It's always
|
|
his topics, his memories. Anyone can learn to appease him by
|
|
listening with an attentive appearance, but it takes a lot out
|
|
of you, and you're not up to it tonight.
|
|
|
|
"I don't much care," you say. "Whatever you want."
|
|
|
|
Your father has dreams. He has dreams of you going to the
|
|
university and becoming whatever you want. "Whatever it takes,"
|
|
he sometimes says enthusiastically. But you watch him working
|
|
himself to death to give you a better life and if you had just
|
|
one wish, this wouldn't be it. You've tried to get a job in
|
|
town, but everything from the supermarket to the hardware store
|
|
to the gas station is always fully staffed, with waiting lists
|
|
longer than your family's history in these parts. Everybody's
|
|
hurting some, and they take care of their own first. You can't
|
|
really hold that against them, but you wish there were more of
|
|
"your own" here, too.
|
|
|
|
And you wonder if part of what drives your father is that he
|
|
wants to give you everything. You think maybe he still wants
|
|
your mom to come back, and maybe that he thinks if he could have
|
|
given her more that she would have stayed. But you don't want
|
|
more things: you want more of him. Still, you're afraid. Afraid
|
|
that maybe this drive to please you is all he's got left in his
|
|
fuel tank, and if you take that away from him, too, he might
|
|
just wear down altogether.
|
|
|
|
"You're a senior this year, right?" your uncle asks during the
|
|
commercials.
|
|
|
|
"Yeah."
|
|
|
|
"Thought about where you're going to college?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, you know how it is these days. I'm guess I might go up
|
|
the road to the community college for a year or two."
|
|
|
|
"Got any idea what you want to major in?" he asks.
|
|
|
|
"Wildlife management, maybe. We'll see."
|
|
|
|
"Any jobs in that? Wildlife management? What would you be, a
|
|
park ranger?"
|
|
|
|
"Would you fight forest fires?" your younger cousin, Danny,
|
|
asks.
|
|
|
|
"Nah, I wouldn't be fightin' fires. I'd be keeping track of the
|
|
animals, mostly, I suppose. I'm not exactly sure."
|
|
|
|
"You wanna work in Yellowstone, or something?" Uncle Don asks.
|
|
|
|
"Yeah, or maybe Glacier," you say, cutting yourself short,
|
|
because the program is back on, and your uncle's head has turned
|
|
toward the television.
|
|
|
|
Next to the sofa that used to rest along the wall beneath the
|
|
window, there was an end table that had a door, like a cabinet.
|
|
Inside there was a picture album. The first page was of your
|
|
parents' wedding. You never recognized many of the people,
|
|
anyway, but it looked like a pretty happy time. A few pages
|
|
later, there were some shots of your mother still young, with a
|
|
glowing face, posing for a profile shot. She was pregnant with
|
|
you. Then you were born, and captured on film, too. From that
|
|
point on, most of the pictures were of you, or you and your
|
|
father, or you and your mother, but hardly ever everyone in the
|
|
same frame. You'd flip through that album on occasional rainy
|
|
Sunday afternoons when you were young, and your mother would
|
|
narrate. Even though there's nothing that you absolutely long
|
|
for or miss, it would be nice to browse through that album right
|
|
now.
|
|
|
|
Soon there would come pages of this house when your family
|
|
bought it. You remember that. It was exciting. The mill was
|
|
booming, so lots of folks were buying up land outside of town.
|
|
It was like living in the suburbs. Now it's life in the boonies.
|
|
Your mother had a lot to do with getting the place, you
|
|
remember. It was her initiative, her idea, her dream. You were
|
|
all of six, but these are things that stay polished in your
|
|
memory. The houses were spaced out, as everyone wanted their
|
|
land, so nights were always quiet, except for the invariable rig
|
|
passing by on the highway. Cars only made sleek sounds like
|
|
skimming the surface of still water; but sometimes the rigs
|
|
would use their brakes suddenly, and make that noise like the
|
|
whole thing was crashing in on itself. "Another antelope on the
|
|
road," your dad might say.
|
|
|
|
By bus, it took nearly thirty minutes to get home from school,
|
|
because they had to let off the kids who lived closest first. No
|
|
one your age lived anywhere near you, though, so your mother
|
|
sometimes let you go home with a friend after school to play.
|
|
She would come get you in time to make dinner before your father
|
|
got home. Or sometimes a friend would come home with you. Seven
|
|
miles from town. Times were pretty good.
|
|
|
|
The mill stands about five miles on the other side of town. It
|
|
had its boom during the first years of your elementary school
|
|
education. But by middle school, they were talking layoffs. And
|
|
when you were in the eighth grade your father no longer came
|
|
home for dinner. There had been a strike, a walkout, layoffs.
|
|
You name it. When the dust settled, about forty percent of the
|
|
workers were still employed, and they were quite obligated to
|
|
work twelve-hour days, and felt grateful for the opportunity to
|
|
do it, too. Your father was one of the lucky few.
|
|
|
|
More and more, the twelve-mile drive to the mill became just
|
|
more thankless overtime. And life here became quieter, lonelier
|
|
than the moon. Your mother was detached already. So you really
|
|
weren't as shocked as you should have been when she packed up
|
|
and left.
|
|
|
|
"Boys! Get washed up for dinner!" your aunt calls from the
|
|
kitchen doorway.
|
|
|
|
"All right!" they answer, instantly, though not hurriedly,
|
|
moving for the bathroom.
|
|
|
|
"Aren't we waiting on Dad?" you ask, instinctively, before you
|
|
realize it might sound snappy.
|
|
|
|
"Of course," she says. "He gave me strict instructions to have
|
|
dinner on the table at eight, sharp, though. And I do need to
|
|
feed the boys before they starve to death, Honey."
|
|
|
|
"This boy, too!" your uncle calls over the back of the recliner.
|
|
|
|
You go to the front window to check the highway, but you can't
|
|
see much of it from that side of the house. "I'll be out front!"
|
|
you call to your aunt.
|
|
|
|
"Well, dinner's just about ready," she says.
|
|
|
|
"I know. I'll just be right outside."
|
|
|
|
"All right. I'll call you."
|
|
|
|
You shut the warmth and talk and television inside and passively
|
|
wish you had worn a jacket. Nights are deceptively chilly.
|
|
Keeping an eye on the road, you fetch an armful of firewood at a
|
|
time and fill up the rack near the kitchen door. Then you switch
|
|
on the barn light and splinter off some kindling on the old
|
|
stump. No sign of him yet.
|
|
|
|
What are your dreams? More than dreams you have fears. You fear
|
|
being stranded with no job, no way to keep going, but having to
|
|
keep going all the same. A while back, you had a dream that was
|
|
almost like a fantastically vivid painting because you can't
|
|
really remember any movement -- though there must have been --
|
|
but just the sensations of being caught on that canvas. You
|
|
stood beside your father, who stood beside his car, which rested
|
|
alongside the highway that runs along your field. Only it wasn't
|
|
your field. It had unimaginable flowers, like that giant meadow
|
|
of poppies in "The Wizard of Oz." It was your highway, though.
|
|
You remember the network of tar lines, like a magnified
|
|
alligator's back, running across and along every few feet for
|
|
the miles of straight miles that the highway extended. In that
|
|
direction your mother walked. It seemed they had fought -- she
|
|
had fought, he had complacently responded -- that it was time to
|
|
be going, but he wanted to look some more at all those flowers
|
|
and the mountains beyond them and the sun and sky beyond those.
|
|
You can't remember there being anything spoken, but you remember
|
|
she meant, "You're wasting your life." And he meant, "This is my
|
|
life."
|
|
|
|
You remember the magnetism of watching your mother leave you,
|
|
and sensing that it was all right, after all. For here there was
|
|
another attraction. She walked east, and east could always be
|
|
held. But further, over that low but visually insurmountable
|
|
rise, lay the west. The west was where you would go. But now you
|
|
would wait with your father. It was, after all, as beautiful as
|
|
Heaven.
|
|
|
|
Yet the dream was only a trite community theater production of
|
|
the truth. It hadn't really been like that. Your father's mother
|
|
was going under for surgery, and he was heading home to be with
|
|
her, since the rest of the family couldn't make it. Your mother
|
|
said that they couldn't afford for them both to go, and she
|
|
hoped he'd be fine going alone. He should have known something
|
|
was wrong when she talked about money as if it were finite.
|
|
|
|
He drove out of sight down the east stretch of the highway. You
|
|
waved from the fence. The next day, your mother was up early,
|
|
and somehow had a moving van which two stocky men were loading
|
|
with what you had thought was your furniture. She didn't answer
|
|
when you asked her, "What's going on, Mom?"
|
|
|
|
She kept herself busy, packing and even helping the men load,
|
|
but it only took less than two hours, and as the furnishings and
|
|
boxes spilled out of your home and into the back of that truck
|
|
like the sand from an hourglass, you realized that there was no
|
|
more reason on this earth to treat your mother like a mother,
|
|
and you grabbed her by the arm as she once again tried to slip
|
|
by you.
|
|
|
|
"Tell me what's going on!" you shouted at her.
|
|
|
|
"We're... listen," she said. "Listen... we need to... just let
|
|
me put this box in the truck, and we'll talk."
|
|
|
|
You looked at her and realized that your anger had already
|
|
peaked, and that frustration was losing the bout to desperation
|
|
and anxiety, so you let her go and followed her to the doorway,
|
|
watching as she gingerly set the box inside the truck, then came
|
|
back inside. She sat on a kitchen chair, you leaned against the
|
|
counter. The room held only the two of you, two chairs, and a
|
|
few wads of newspaper leftover from wrapping the dishes you had
|
|
naively planned to continue eating off of.
|
|
|
|
"Well, kiddo," she said, "I guess you can see...." Then she
|
|
started to break down. "You can see... I'm going."
|
|
|
|
"Why? Where are you going?" You asked, leading her like a child.
|
|
|
|
"I'm... Oh, honey, you just don't understand! I can't... What's
|
|
going on is just... Oh, honey!" Then she really started to cry.
|
|
"Just, you know I love you. You know that. So, just tell your
|
|
father I'm so sorry."
|
|
|
|
You watched her cry for a moment, but maybe knew in that one
|
|
morning you had already stopped loving her. You looked at her
|
|
like she was an actress, and she wasn't about to convince you of
|
|
how much she was hurting when you were the one who would still
|
|
be standing there when everyone else pulled away, and you were
|
|
the one who would have to be brave enough to break your own
|
|
father's heart.
|
|
|
|
You watched her go, without being offered a hug. That evening...
|
|
well, that evening was hard for you. Except for your room, which
|
|
she had left alone, and your father's things, which were now
|
|
stacked in neat little piles on the floor of his so vacant
|
|
bedroom, you didn't have but an end table and a roll of toilet
|
|
paper in the whole damned house. In the sun's hazy golden wake,
|
|
you set up a few old cans on the fence and knocked em down again
|
|
with a pellet gun from thirty yards. But that was just to keep
|
|
you from thinking. You realized that, if you ever started, you
|
|
had already stopped hating your mother, even resenting her. But
|
|
you couldn't say that you loved her again. That truly had all
|
|
come to an end that morning. Still, you had wanted her to come
|
|
home, just so that you wouldn't have to see the look on your
|
|
father's face.
|
|
|
|
After four days of waiting for your mother to come home, of
|
|
hoping she'd at least call, but mostly hoping she'd come home
|
|
before Dad knew she was gone, and before she was gone so long it
|
|
meant she was gone for good, a little bird told you she wasn't
|
|
coming home. You hated that bird enough to finally cry. The next
|
|
day, your father pulled up the drive.
|
|
|
|
Your mother called a few days after he arrived. He had been in a
|
|
minor state of shock, though not panic, until then. After that
|
|
single phone call, he seemed all right. Really. He got the
|
|
answers he needed, apparently. The most shocking thing about
|
|
your mother's departure was that your father remained strong,
|
|
focused. But he had to be. Mom had taken everything solid from
|
|
you, and your father had to start over the very next day by
|
|
buying anything to start filling the house up again. You ate
|
|
caned food off of paper plates for about ten days. Meanwhile,
|
|
you learned to cook, fast, and learned how to shop, too.
|
|
|
|
The UPS truck delivered new dishes another week later, and
|
|
periodically brought other items ordered from the JCPenney or
|
|
Sears catalogs. But your father needed to be frugal. See, your
|
|
mother had racked up some sizable numbers on their credit cards.
|
|
Even the things she took from under you weren't paid for. So
|
|
your father worked diligently to pay off things he didn't even
|
|
own, and tried to put together some sort of life for himself
|
|
with the leftovers. "I guess she deserved something after so
|
|
many years," he said once, as if he were admitting life had been
|
|
punishment for her. But you were alive and aware all that time,
|
|
and you knew full well that only the end had been hard. You knew
|
|
how well he treated her, and you started to resent her again
|
|
because she was breaking a man who was carrying all the world
|
|
that you could see on his back.
|
|
|
|
Not long after she left, mandatory overtime was lifted and a
|
|
voluntary system began. Your father, burdened as he was, kept
|
|
working the long shifts. He still does. He's got those old
|
|
credit card bills just about whacked, and everything in this
|
|
house is paid for. But the house is a burden all its own. No one
|
|
could afford to buy it after the mill's troubles, and he
|
|
certainly can't afford to buy a second home simultaneously, so
|
|
he's stuck out here in the home his wife wanted. You're thinking
|
|
of telling him, maybe even tonight, that you want to go into the
|
|
military for a few years before college, even though he knows it
|
|
isn't true. But you think you can convince him. You think that
|
|
maybe the relief that he'll feel when he hears that will be
|
|
enough to make him accept it. And, honestly, though you've never
|
|
considered yourself a soldier, you figure it won't be all that
|
|
bad, and that it's worth it to see him come home in the daylight
|
|
again. No matter what happens, whether you spend a year or two
|
|
at the community college nearby, or enlist, you'll be leaving
|
|
soon, and you'll be more worried about him then. You need that
|
|
time, that time you've been missing. You need it everyday for
|
|
the rest of the days you have together, and you need it to start
|
|
now. So you drop the kindling in the box by the firewood, and
|
|
though you can hear your aunt calling you from the front door,
|
|
you just respond "OK," then wander off and assume your normal
|
|
position at that fence, and consider maybe going in to get a
|
|
jacket. But, no, he'll be coming home real soon.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Eric Prochaska (efp@chollian.net)
|
|
-----------------------------------
|
|
Eric Prochaska currently teaches English at the University of
|
|
Seoul, in South Korea. His recent publications include "My
|
|
Garden Which Never Grows" in the e-zine Moondance (Spring 2000).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
On a Clear Day by Brian Quinn
|
|
=================================
|
|
....................................................................
|
|
Some momentous experiences can seem much less impressive with
|
|
the passing of time. Others, not so much.
|
|
....................................................................
|
|
|
|
We were flying across Ohio from east to west, heading for
|
|
Oshkosh. It was a hot, bright day in late summer. Airspeed, 220
|
|
knots. Moderate headwind. We were at 5,100 feet. I was at the
|
|
controls, and Sam Cross sat in the co-pilot's seat, telling
|
|
stories. Below us was I-90, like a black ribbon across the green
|
|
of Ohio. I was using the highway as a convenient directional. My
|
|
flight plan: follow the interstate to Chicago and make a right.
|
|
I had just passed a friendly word with the tower at Akron
|
|
Airport when Sam spoke up.
|
|
|
|
"I hitchhiked on that road once -- did I ever tell you?"
|
|
|
|
"No," I said.
|
|
|
|
"It was Thanksgiving, years ago. God, it was cold, so cold. We
|
|
were going the other way. We stood under one of those bridges
|
|
down there, with Akron just a few miles away and New York City
|
|
500 miles ahead. On the east side of the bridge the sun was
|
|
shining, casting hard-edged black shadows; and on the west side
|
|
it was snowing. It was like we were on some sort of
|
|
meteorological margin. I was with a friend of mine, Rob. We were
|
|
having a great time, even though we were frozen and tired and
|
|
grungy. We were just 18, freshmen up at college. I had just
|
|
fallen in love for the first time, just gone away from home for
|
|
the first time, just started thinking for myself for the first
|
|
time, taking care of myself for the first time..."
|
|
|
|
"Tell me about the falling in love part," I said. "I love those
|
|
stories. Was she pretty?"
|
|
|
|
"I thought so. She was the first girl I ever..."
|
|
|
|
I interrupted. "Do I have to hear this part?"
|
|
|
|
"...the first girl I had ever kissed, I was going to say," said
|
|
Sam. "I know, that's hard to believe in these days, but it was
|
|
true nonetheless. Her name was Kristen Daily, and I swear I
|
|
thought I'd marry her."
|
|
|
|
"What happened to her?"
|
|
|
|
Sam shrugged. "I was madly in love with her then, but I was such
|
|
a baby. The tortures that woman inflicted on me -- or rather,
|
|
that I suffered for her. Almost from the very first. We met at
|
|
dinner one night, when she sat down with Rob. She was so blond,
|
|
so slender, so blue-eyed, and I was just so shy, so removed, and
|
|
so, so jealous of Rob. I suffered immediately."
|
|
|
|
"You stole your friend's girlfriend? You're a louse!"
|
|
|
|
"I did not. It became obvious pretty quick that they were only
|
|
friends. Rob had a girl back home in New Haven. No, I never
|
|
stole her from anyone. She was unattached, but somehow we got
|
|
attached. I walked her back to her dorm. We talked. You know...
|
|
how does someone fall in love, anyhow?"
|
|
|
|
"Don't ask me," I answered, scanning over the controls.
|
|
|
|
"Anyhow, we were soon in love, or at least I thought we were,
|
|
and everything was perfect."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, really? Perfect?"
|
|
|
|
Sam smiled. "No, you're right. Kristen was not perfect. I found
|
|
that out later. She was capricious, at times cruel, a flirt, and
|
|
very middle class. But that was a good lesson, because I'm not
|
|
perfect. My faults are different from hers -- no better, no
|
|
worse -- and I can be cruel, too. But learning that perfection
|
|
and love have nothing to do with each other were lessons I
|
|
needed."
|
|
|
|
Cross stopped suddenly. "Is all this boring you? I'm just
|
|
remembering a lot of it for the first time in years. My wayward
|
|
youth. Stop me if I bore you -- I'm just blathering on like
|
|
Marlowe in a Joseph Conrad story."
|
|
|
|
"I like Conrad," I answered, and told him to continue.
|
|
|
|
"Anyway, I was telling you about my hitchhiking adventure. That
|
|
happened about a month after Kristen and I met. By then we were
|
|
a campus fixture, Kristen and I. We'd sit anywhere, everywhere,
|
|
the science building (she was a geology major, for God's sakes),
|
|
the library, the lakefront, the dining hall, wherever. And we'd
|
|
talk. That's all I really remember doing in college was talking.
|
|
I have no idea where all those words came from, and, now,
|
|
honestly, I hardly remember any of the words themselves.
|
|
|
|
"One night we all took the train down into Chicago to see some
|
|
show or concert, and on the way back we talked about
|
|
hitchhiking. I remember that Rags Wheeler was there. He told how
|
|
he ran away from his home in Macon, Georgia, and hitchhiked to
|
|
New Orleans when he was 15. Chad Tower told how he hitchhiked
|
|
from New York to Washington. Judy Ng said she used to hitchhike
|
|
in Taiwan all the time -- it was accepted. It became a general
|
|
bull session about hitching and bumming around. Remember, I had
|
|
been nowhere and seen nothing then. Even when I had traveled at
|
|
all, I went with my family or with a group. I felt like I had
|
|
never done anything."
|
|
|
|
"Well, that's changed, yes?"
|
|
|
|
He smiled. "Some, sure. The one thing that I remember clearest
|
|
in that talk was that nobody had hitched anywhere during the
|
|
winter. Only the summer. Winter was somehow too dangerous, too
|
|
forbidding."
|
|
|
|
"So, of course, you had to, right?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, I'm a sucker for a dare, especially a dare I dare to
|
|
myself. And Rob, I discovered, felt the same. After we got back
|
|
to Lake Forest, Rob and I wound up in the laundry room with a
|
|
road map of the eastern United States."
|
|
|
|
"The laundry room?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
"It was two in the morning. We didn't want to disturb roommates
|
|
and all."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, of course. So you made a laundry room pact, eh?"
|
|
|
|
Sam smiled again. "Yep. We decided to hitchhike to New York over
|
|
Thanksgiving week. You understand," Sam said, "there was
|
|
absolutely no reason to do this. Our parents were definitely
|
|
sending us airfare. We just wanted to. And to make sure we
|
|
would, we very quickly told everybody we were going to do it.
|
|
|
|
"Naturally, Kristen didn't think much of our planned adventure.
|
|
She knew Rob and liked him, but she worried about us. That was
|
|
great, to have a woman who wasn't my mother worrying about me!
|
|
That was fine with me. To leave a young woman with a kiss and go
|
|
off to face some unknown, some darkness, maybe some danger. That
|
|
was very fine indeed, and Kristen, though worried, was good
|
|
enough not to try to dissuade us.
|
|
|
|
"So Kristen and I talked constantly, and Rob and I looked at
|
|
maps and made our plans, and our friends bet each other that we
|
|
wouldn't do it, and the days went by. The week of Thanksgiving
|
|
was midterms week. It was cold and blustery, not snowing yet,
|
|
but the north wind was sharp. On Monday I breezed through my
|
|
chem exam and struggled through philosophy. I had a paper to
|
|
finish for my sociology class instead of an exam.
|
|
|
|
"Kristen's exams were all completed on Monday and that night she
|
|
took the six o'clock train down to Chicago, where she would
|
|
switch to a train for St. Paul, Minnesota, where her family
|
|
lived. I went to the station with her. I carried her bags to the
|
|
platform while she bought herself a ticket. Down the tracks I
|
|
could see the bright light of the train approaching. Kristen
|
|
came over to me and we kissed and I said goodbye. She knew how I
|
|
felt. I didn't really want to see her get onto the train, didn't
|
|
want to watch her pull away north. So we kissed and I walked
|
|
away. I could feel her eyes burning the back of my head, boring
|
|
into my back. The bells of the train crossing were ringing, and
|
|
the red lights were flashing as the barrier came down, and
|
|
suddenly I turned around and called her name."
|
|
|
|
Sam laughed at himself. "Kristen looked at me with such
|
|
surprise. I had told her when we first started going together
|
|
that I believed in clean goodbyes, that once I had said goodbye
|
|
-- for the evening, for the weekend, or for whatever -- I would
|
|
never turn back to wave or anything. Clean goodbyes. And yet,
|
|
there I was, turning. Kristen was stunned. She looked
|
|
pathetically happy that I had broken my rule for her. I called
|
|
to her and she ran up to me. The train was screeching to a halt,
|
|
already the big double doors in the center of each car were
|
|
opening and the conductors were swinging gracefully down onto
|
|
the platform like dancers.
|
|
|
|
" `Give me something of yours,' I said, `something I can take
|
|
with me to New York.' She unwrapped this long blue-and-white
|
|
scarf and threw it around my neck. `Here, I hope you'll stay
|
|
warm,' she said. Almost everyone was on the train by then. We
|
|
scooted over to the doors and I tossed her bags up after her and
|
|
then the doors closed and she was gone. I yelled `I love you!'
|
|
but she could not hear me over the clatter and crash of the
|
|
train gathering speed, and then she was gone. I walked back to
|
|
the dorm feeling like a tremendous hypocrite, but a very happy
|
|
one. It was all just crap that I'd read in a book somewhere,
|
|
about clean goodbyes and not looking back."
|
|
|
|
"Hemingway, probably," I said. "The man has a lot to answer
|
|
for."
|
|
|
|
Sam laughed. "Too true. Anyway, the next day was Tuesday and we
|
|
were getting a ride out to the interstate to begin our
|
|
adventure."
|
|
|
|
"About time," I said.
|
|
|
|
Sam laughed again. "Well, maybe. But all that preface is
|
|
necessary, I think. Everything has a context, even just getting
|
|
from Chicago to New York to celebrate Turkey Day. And that was
|
|
the context. Kristen, college, youth. And the weather, I
|
|
suppose. It was cold. We didn't get out to the interstate until
|
|
late in the afternoon, about three. The sky was obscured without
|
|
any rain or snow falling, but the threat was there. I had
|
|
Kristen's scarf wrapped around my neck. It was getting dark
|
|
already. Rob carried a small bag, like a gym bag. I took nothing
|
|
with me. Rob had made a sign that said NEW YORK printed in
|
|
bright red capital letters.
|
|
|
|
"We each had some money. I think I had $30. We were let off onto
|
|
the side of the interstate out near O'Hare. The wind whistled
|
|
across the wide roadway and we jumped up and down with
|
|
excitement, two stupid 18-year-old kids out on a lark on a cold
|
|
November afternoon. Neither of us wore gloves. I don't think
|
|
either of us owned gloves. We took turns holding the sign up to
|
|
oncoming traffic and finally an old man in an orange Pontiac
|
|
stopped and picked us up and we were off. He was heading into
|
|
Indiana, he told us.
|
|
|
|
"This was great. We were on our way. The old guy stopped at the
|
|
tollbooth and the toll collector leaned out and told us it was
|
|
illegal to solicit rides on the United States interstates. He
|
|
sounded so disapproving. Rob and I looked at each other and
|
|
laughed inside. This was better and better. We were on our own,
|
|
between our two homes, with school and our futures behind us,
|
|
and our parents and our pasts in front of us in a great
|
|
inversion... And a woman was sitting in a stone house in
|
|
Minnesota worrying about me and the authorities already
|
|
disapproved. Rob and I were very happy where we were.
|
|
|
|
"We drove past Gary with that old man and it was dark then. I
|
|
saw the small flames atop the smokestacks for the first time
|
|
from that old man's car. He was a sour, grumpy old guy, a
|
|
salesman, who talked incessantly, but he only had one topic."
|
|
|
|
"Sex?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
"Absolutely, but sex with a twist, with a twisted anger to it.
|
|
He talked about the waitresses who would put out in the diners
|
|
along the roadway, about hitchhiking girls he had propositioned
|
|
and how he'd made it with some of them, about farmer's daughters
|
|
and college girls and women of all colors, weights, and levels
|
|
of attractiveness. Well, what with his incredibly long catalog
|
|
of women who had been blessed with his sexual skills, it seemed
|
|
to take days before Rob and I were let out by the side of the
|
|
road a hundred yards from the La Porte, Indiana, exit. We were
|
|
profoundly embarrassed, but still we both felt this was an
|
|
adventure, a real adventure, and that he had been a character in
|
|
an adventure, almost a stock character."
|
|
|
|
Sam laughed. "La Porte! La Porte! Hardly a name of magic, eh? A
|
|
little known rural burg somewhere down below us where farmers
|
|
buy tractors and Ford pickup trucks and seed. There's a movie
|
|
house and a `home cooking' restaurant and a corner bar and the
|
|
county high school. I think it might be the county seat. I don't
|
|
know for sure, though. It has a substation of the Indiana State
|
|
Police, however. The station is painted white and blue and it's
|
|
very clean inside. That I know.
|
|
|
|
"The night was as black as burnt coffee, which we would have
|
|
gladly accepted at that point. We were cold, just out of that
|
|
old guy's overheated car. Rob wasn't dressed for winter. He wore
|
|
a thin corduroy jacket. I took Kristen's scarf off and lent it
|
|
to him. Cars passed us by scornfully. We kept our thumbs out
|
|
when there were headlights coming at us, then plunged our hands
|
|
into our pockets as the cars passed. We had had such luck
|
|
already -- one ride! That was our luck -- that it shocked us
|
|
when we were still standing by the side of the road a half-hour
|
|
after the old man let us out.
|
|
|
|
"Finally a car pulled onto the shoulder in front of us. I
|
|
screamed in delight and Rob grabbed his bag and we trotted to
|
|
the car. A red light suddenly whirled on the car's roof and a
|
|
siren moaned softly. A large, a very large State Trooper climbed
|
|
out of the car. `You boys don't understand,' he said. `You're
|
|
not allowed to hitch on the tollway. Come on, fellows, get in.'
|
|
|
|
"We climbed into the back seat of the cruiser, feeling abashed
|
|
and foolish. `Cold out there, isn't it?' the trooper asked. We
|
|
didn't answer. He didn't care. `Heading for New York, boys?' We
|
|
nodded. `Well, good luck, but you're going to La Porte first.'
|
|
We rode into La Porte. The cop was a human guy. His car was
|
|
warm. He told us we could not hitch on I-90, but we could on
|
|
route 20, which was parallel. But first we went to the
|
|
stationhouse. Cops took our fingerprints and asked our names and
|
|
checked to make sure we weren't runaways or wanted men. We sat
|
|
on a long, hard, wooden pew, like a church pew in a state police
|
|
station in middle Indiana somewhere. Time was passing. It was
|
|
almost 11.
|
|
|
|
"The shifts changed. A sergeant came in and looked us over. Then
|
|
he and the desk officer went into the back room somewhere,
|
|
probably to get coffee. We were left alone. The door was six
|
|
feet to our left. I grabbed Rob and his bag. Rob started to say
|
|
something but I shook my head at him. We ran out the door and
|
|
ran as far as we could in the dark. It had begun to rain
|
|
lightly, a cold mist. Rob ran loosely, easily, a track man. I
|
|
kept just behind him, urging him on, adrenaline pumping
|
|
furiously through my veins.
|
|
|
|
We escaped.
|
|
|
|
"I can't tell you what that meant to me. It was Robin Hood and
|
|
Zorro, Jesse James and Cole Younger, Harrison Ford movies and
|
|
all the remakes of "Beau Geste" and "The Prisoner of Zenda!"
|
|
Even as I ran I laughed at my pretending, at my pretensions. It
|
|
was preposterous. We had been caught hitchhiking, for heaven's
|
|
sakes. But it all fit in with the adventure. It was all part of
|
|
it, running from the cops in the rain in mid-America, and me in
|
|
love for the first time. Our breath spouted in front of us hot
|
|
and steamy and we tore through it as we ran. We were running
|
|
past a feed grain store in La Porte, Indiana -- the stuff of
|
|
romance, yes?"
|
|
|
|
Sam looked down at Indiana and smiled. The engine hummed softly.
|
|
The radio crackled and popped, but no one interrupted his story.
|
|
|
|
"We ran until we hurt and then we slowed down and tried to
|
|
figure out where we were. I had tried to remember which road
|
|
lead up toward the Interstate and I guess I was right, because
|
|
up ahead of us we saw the glow of traffic. We trudged up toward
|
|
the highway, watching warily behind us for the State Troopers.
|
|
|
|
"That was when we actually had some luck. A bright yellow
|
|
Mustang pulled over and a young guy rolled down the window and
|
|
asked if we needed a lift. `Yes!' we cried and we piled in as
|
|
quick as we could. He was a teenager, like us, and he was going
|
|
into South Bend for some reason or another. We told him about
|
|
the cops and he said, `I hate pigs!'
|
|
|
|
"We rode together until South Bend, where, it turned out, Rob
|
|
had a friend at Notre Dame. We debated calling the guy and
|
|
staying with him, but we decided to keep going. The kid in the
|
|
Mustang suggested we go to the truck stop by the interstate and
|
|
try to bum a ride with a trucker. We thought that would work,
|
|
and, sure enough, it did. The third or fourth trucker we asked
|
|
was heading for Toledo, Ohio, and he said he'd give us a ride.
|
|
So we rode high and dry and warm across the rest of Indiana and
|
|
into Ohio. It was late when we got down from that trucker's cab,
|
|
and we were achy from the bouncing and giddy from being awake.
|
|
|
|
"We had no idea where we really were -- somewhere in western
|
|
Ohio, that's all. Not many cars were going by at that hour. Rob
|
|
and I waited under a highway bridge, out of the freezing rain,
|
|
sleet, snow, whatever it was then. We were actually happy. I
|
|
wrapped Kristen's scarf a bit tighter around my neck and stamped
|
|
my numb feet on the concrete. Although I was cold and bored and
|
|
tired, I still quivered with excitement. Every bit of me knew
|
|
that this was an adventure, that every car or truck that picked
|
|
us up was part of the adventure. Even the cars that whooshed by
|
|
and ignored us were part of it. I walked deeper into the shadows
|
|
of the bridge and peed against a pillar, my back to the road.
|
|
Rob yelled my name.
|
|
|
|
"A van was slowing down, a white van with a luggage rack on top.
|
|
We ran over and climbed in. The driver was a guy in his
|
|
twenties, going back to Akron where he worked in the Goodyear
|
|
factory, he said. He gave us a ride. I fell asleep on the dirty
|
|
floor of his van, my head on Rob's bag. Rob snored in the
|
|
passenger seat. The radio played country music.
|
|
|
|
Sam stopped. "Well, nothing much else happened. That guy let us
|
|
out near Akron, and we waited out the dawn on that
|
|
meteorological margin I told you about. The snow behind us,
|
|
sunshine ahead. A guy picked us up there after a longish wait,
|
|
and gave us the best ride we had had, all the way across
|
|
Pennsylvania to Philadelphia, Willow Grove, to be exact. The
|
|
driver was a silent kind of guy, not unfriendly, just not
|
|
talkative. I tried to figure out what he did, but he was just
|
|
someone going home for Thanksgiving, like us.
|
|
|
|
"The Pennsylvania Turnpike looked very beautiful to me. The rain
|
|
and snow hadn't fallen this far east, and it was an autumn land,
|
|
all browns and yellows. There was an old barn near Somerset and
|
|
I imagined rebuilding it into a home for Kristen and me. Rob was
|
|
asleep again. I was no longer tired. The guy listened to talk
|
|
radio and muttered at some of the callers. He seemed faintly
|
|
right-wing, but not a jerk. I stared around me from the back
|
|
seat.
|
|
|
|
"We got our last ride near Philadelphia. A man and a woman in
|
|
their late 40s picked us up and drove us into New York City.
|
|
They said we reminded them of their twin boys, who were at NYU.
|
|
They had Maryland license plates. They were going to have
|
|
Thanksgiving with Danny and Davy in `Greenwich Village, imagine
|
|
that!' We thanked them for the ride and got out of their Ford
|
|
just under the Washington Square arch. I was on more-or-less
|
|
home turf, then. My folks lived out on Long Island, but friends
|
|
and I had often come into the Village for shows and to buy
|
|
albums and books. It was just about five. The city glimmered and
|
|
gleamed in the dusk. With the change in time zones, it had taken
|
|
almost exactly 24 hours to get to New York from Chicago.
|
|
|
|
"We still had most of our money left, so we splurged on a cab. I
|
|
got out at Penn Station. Rob got out of the cab for a minute,
|
|
too, and hugged me. We didn't have to say we had made it. We
|
|
had, and that was that. We were dirty and stupid with fatigue
|
|
and cold. We were unshaven and splashed with the mud of five
|
|
states. We had come so far, through wet and cold and dark. We
|
|
had been arrested and had escaped. People passing by heading
|
|
into Penn Station looked well dressed and clean. They smelled
|
|
fresh. They were smiling and carrying packages and briefcases.
|
|
|
|
"I said goodbye to Rob and laughed. He laughed back. He
|
|
continued on to Grand Central, I went into Penn Station and ate
|
|
a slice of pizza. I bought a ticket for the train and a
|
|
paperback book. On the train I looked at the people around me
|
|
with surprise, somehow. They looked so normal. I started to read
|
|
the book and almost fell asleep. I stood in the vestibule near
|
|
the door so I wouldn't sleep past my stop.
|
|
|
|
"I listened to the other passengers talk, and their New York
|
|
accents were thick and relentless. I had never noticed how we
|
|
spoke before; I had grown up there, talking like that. But I was
|
|
growing away from them. Kristen made fun of my accent and I know
|
|
I was trying to change, to soften my speech, to slow it down."
|
|
|
|
"You don't have much of an accent now," I said.
|
|
|
|
"She kept working on me, I guess." Sam smiled. "Even years after
|
|
she was gone.
|
|
|
|
"At 6:30 I was home. My folks were in an uproar to see me. My
|
|
mother had been telephoning me every hour to find out when I'd
|
|
be home. My father glared at me for making my mother upset. But
|
|
they were both happy to see me. My mother screamed even louder
|
|
when she learned I had hitchhiked home. Dad just smiled."
|
|
|
|
Sam shrugged. "That felt fine, too. Everyone asked where I had
|
|
gotten the scarf and I just said `College.' I hadn't told anyone
|
|
about Kristen yet, and I wouldn't for a while. I went upstairs
|
|
and showered and shaved and changed and called my old high
|
|
school friends. We said we'd meet at the local diner, around the
|
|
corner from my family's house. I got there early and called
|
|
Kristen from a phone booth. Then I waited for my friends.
|
|
|
|
"The next day was Turkey Day. I ate enormous quantities of
|
|
turkey and mashed potatoes and pumpkin pie. Then I went for a
|
|
walk. It was cool, but not cold. I saw my reflection in
|
|
storefront windows and didn't think I had changed that much on
|
|
the outside. But I was different. The place seemed smaller. I
|
|
saw my high school girlfriend and I was embarrassed, somehow. So
|
|
was she. She had been dating other people, too, and neither of
|
|
us knew how to say that. But eventually we did, and we stayed
|
|
friends.
|
|
|
|
"Well, that was that. Kristen and I broke up long, long ago,
|
|
before the next term was even half over. If I felt pain at the
|
|
time, it's long since passed. God knows where that scarf is now.
|
|
I haven't hitchhiked in, oh, who knows how long? I can't stay up
|
|
all night these days. No matter."
|
|
|
|
For a while we flew on in silence. Sam looked out his window. On
|
|
the horizon we could see Chicago spreading itself out in front
|
|
of us, stretched along the deep green water of the lake. I began
|
|
a gentle bank to the right, to the north. The sun gleamed off
|
|
the wings. The sky was a bright blue, endless and wide.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Brian Quinn (quinnsplus@aol.com)
|
|
----------------------------------
|
|
Brian Quinn is the chief writer and a professor of writing at
|
|
Molloy College in Rockville Centre, New York. He has been a
|
|
public relations writer, a speechwriter, an advertising
|
|
copywriter, and a television commercial scriptwriter. He has
|
|
ghostwritten two books, is a member of the National Association
|
|
of Science Writers, and is a consultant to the National Hockey
|
|
League, the American Lung Association, and the Congressional
|
|
Glaucoma Caucus. Besides writing short stories, he has written
|
|
a novel of the Civil War to be published next year. He is
|
|
currently at work on a comedy about Watergate. Brian also
|
|
wrote "Prospero's Rock" in InterText v9n3.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
FYI
|
|
=====
|
|
|
|
Back Issues of InterText
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<ftp://ftp.etext.org/pub/Zines/InterText/>
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On the World Wide Web, point your WWW browser to:
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<http://www.intertext.com/>
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Submissions to InterText
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InterText's stories are made up _entirely_ of electronic
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submissions. Send submissions to <submissions@intertext.com>.
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For a copy of our writers' guidelines, send e-mail to
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....................................................................
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That would make him the biggest bigamist in bigamy history.
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..
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This issue is wrapped as a setext. For more information send
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$$
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