153 lines
9.6 KiB
Plaintext
153 lines
9.6 KiB
Plaintext
Dallas Vordahl [75126,1436] This is not the first story I've
|
||
ever tried to write, but it is the first story I've ever
|
||
finished. Please criticize, good or bad. Thank you. 1,640 words.
|
||
|
||
Before the Beyond
|
||
|
||
A nurse quietly entered Avery's hospital room. She was young, barely out of
|
||
her teens, but gifted with true compassion and feeling for her patients.
|
||
Gently, without disturbing his sleep, she slid her right hand around Avery's
|
||
thin, bony wrist. His pulse was weak and slow, but steady. For awhile she
|
||
stood, his aged and bent fingers resting in her smooth and caring young hands.
|
||
She looked upon Avery's time-warn face as she would the towering trees of an
|
||
ancient redwood forest--with awe and wonder of life which began so long ago. A
|
||
tear welled in her eye. It was a tear of sorrow, it was a tear of joy, it was
|
||
a tear for life so fully lived.
|
||
|
||
Avery was old. The ravages of life long-lived were apparent: lines of
|
||
laughter splayed from the outer corners of his eyes, lines of sorrow drooped
|
||
from the corners of his mouth. His long white hair lay tangled and unkempt,
|
||
his gnarled and arthritic hands lay useless at his sides. Less apparent were
|
||
the insidious ailments of the aged: eyes that could no longer see, ears that
|
||
could no longer hear, teeth that no longer were. Crippled by arthritis and
|
||
brittle bones, he was unable to walk. Cancer was spreading. Avery was dying.
|
||
|
||
Opening the door to leave, the young nurse glanced one last time at the old
|
||
man lying on his deathbed. It was the last time she would see him alive--it
|
||
was the last time anyone would see him alive.
|
||
|
||
Moments after the nurse left the room Avery began to stir. He opened his
|
||
tired and useless eyes, and nervously looked about as if searching for
|
||
something, for somebody. Avery's attention drew to the foot of his bed. His
|
||
eyes seemed to focus on something, but nothing was there. Avery smiled weakly
|
||
and relaxed. His eyes sparkled; they showed no fear.
|
||
|
||
"So, you've finally caught up with me," said Avery, seemingly to himself. He
|
||
continued to stare straight ahead at nothing, at something. "I've expected
|
||
your coming for some time now, wished it in fact, ever since Catherine passed
|
||
away." Avery's face brightened as living images of his long dead wife passed
|
||
before his unseeing eyes. "Catherine," he murmured wistfully, "She was my
|
||
friend you know--my best friend." The senile fogginess of Avery's mind cleared,
|
||
leaving the meandering paths of his life memory unclouded; his thoughts drifted
|
||
into the past, to the moment his life with Catherine began.
|
||
|
||
Avery met Catherine when she was eighteen years old and he, nineteen.
|
||
Catherine worked as a waitress; Avery was unemployed-- a typical casualty of
|
||
The Great Depression. With a veritable fortune in his pocket, a quarter, Avery
|
||
entered Bernie's Cafe for a doughnut and coffee. Being out of work, Avery
|
||
didn't usually indulge in such extravagance, but his fruitless search for work
|
||
that day and the preceding weeks had dampened his spirit. He needed something
|
||
to lighten his dark mood. Though not on the menu, Avery got exactly what he
|
||
wanted, exactly what he needed, in Bernie's Cafe: lifting his eyes from his
|
||
gloom, Avery looked into the glowing face of the prettiest girl he'd ever seen.
|
||
It was Catherine. She was neither beautiful nor glamorous; she was simply
|
||
pretty. His first thought upon seeing her: "I could spend the rest of my life
|
||
with that girl." And indeed he did. Perhaps Catherine sensed their destiny,
|
||
for she rashly changed her usual and brusque, "What'll it be," to a more
|
||
friendly, "May I take your order?"
|
||
|
||
"Catherine was my life," Avery said. "She made it all worthwhile. She made
|
||
the good times better, and the bad times tolerable. Catherine was always there
|
||
to see us through." The times of their life together became clear in his mind,
|
||
and he remembered them all.
|
||
|
||
Avery and Catherine courted for less than a year before they married. Avery
|
||
found work as an apprentice carpenter, they established a home, and Catherine
|
||
quit her job as waitress to become a housewife. They raised three
|
||
children--two boys and a girl--and watched them grow into adults with lives and
|
||
families and problems of their own. Their house seemed empty and their lives
|
||
without purpose after the youngest child moved away to begin his own life.
|
||
Avery and Catherine became closer than ever before. Catherine took over the
|
||
job of bookkeeper for Avery's carpentry business, and together they worked,
|
||
relaxed, and enjoyed their latter years. Then, seven years ago, Catherine died
|
||
of a sudden heart attack. Avery was devastated. He postponed his retirement
|
||
to keep busy and to keep his mind from his sorrow, but he couldn't keep up the
|
||
pace and had to retire anyway. Catherine's death marked the end of the full
|
||
and happy life Avery had lived. He spent the last few years waiting for his
|
||
life to end. His children and their families tried to show their love and
|
||
concern, but their lives were busy and far away.
|
||
|
||
Avery's awareness of the present gradually returned, and he again directed
|
||
his attention to the foot of his bed: "Yeah, I remember," Avery answered.
|
||
"How could I ever forget? Had Frank not pulled me out of the water when he
|
||
did, I'd of drowned for sure."
|
||
|
||
Avery and his brother Frank were told over and over by their parents not to
|
||
go near Crawford Creek, but once in a while the two brothers found themselves
|
||
playing in and around the creek anyway. On one such occasion, on a hot and
|
||
muggy July afternoon, they peeled off their clothes and plunged into the cool
|
||
clear water with the excitement of knowing that what they did was sneaky and
|
||
against the rules their parents had firmly established. Frank was then
|
||
fourteen, two years older than Avery. They played tag in the water, vigorously
|
||
chasing each other back and forth across the creek. After a few minutes in the
|
||
water Avery doubled over in pain from a severe stomach cramp. He was in the
|
||
middle of the creek, over the deepest part, and unable to touch bottom or keep
|
||
his head above the water to breathe. After what seemed an interminable time to
|
||
Avery, Frank realized his brother was in trouble and pulled him to shore.
|
||
|
||
"Frank saved my life that day," said Avery. After a few moments of
|
||
reflection Avery spoke again, softly, "If only I could've returned the favor."
|
||
A few days after graduating from high school, Frank got a job in
|
||
construction--building a bridge across Crawford Creek. The bridge being built
|
||
was only a few hundred yards downstream from where Avery almost drown. The
|
||
bridge spanned Crawford Creek at a place where the creek cut a deep gorge
|
||
through the earth. A sudden gust of wind hit Frank while he walked untethered
|
||
along a girder; he lost his balance, and fell seventy feet to the creek below.
|
||
The water was not swift or deep or dangerous, but the fall knocked Frank
|
||
unconscious, and before any of his follow workers could get to him from the
|
||
bridge, he had drown.
|
||
|
||
"That was a sad summer for us," said Avery. "At Frank's funeral I saw Dad
|
||
cry for the first time--the only time. And he didn't really cry, it was just a
|
||
tear, a single tear. Mom and Dad were tough old Norwegians and, I guess, used
|
||
to such grief. They became over-protective of me, however, after that."
|
||
|
||
Avery's parents were Norwegian immigrants. They came from a small village on
|
||
the shore of one of the many fingers of one of the many fjords that penetrate
|
||
the western coast of Norway. They came from a hard life: small, hard rock
|
||
farms that grew just enough produce and truck during the short summer to feed
|
||
them during the long nights and short days of winter. Avery's mother came to
|
||
America to get away from Avery's father; Avery's father came to America to find
|
||
her. Their first child died shortly after birth, but their next two children,
|
||
Frank and Avery, escaped the dangers of birth and grew healthy and strong.
|
||
|
||
"My own children? Oh, they were a great bunch of kids," said Avery with a
|
||
smile. "If I had to choose the best time of my life, it would have to be the
|
||
years Catherine and I and our children were a family: sharing the fun and the
|
||
troubles, and the growing up--all of us together."
|
||
|
||
Avery and Catherine raised their three children like most parents: eagerly
|
||
awaiting the first real words, eagerly awaiting the first unsupported steps,
|
||
then suddenly finding their babies leaving home for college or for jobs, or for
|
||
independence. Avery had a strong hand in raising their children, but he
|
||
honestly and rightly gave most of the credit to Catherine.
|
||
|
||
"Catherine," Avery murmured wistfully, again. "God, how I've missed her
|
||
these last few years." Avery's thoughts drifted into the past once more, but
|
||
something disturbed his reverie: "No, I'm not stalling," replied Avery,
|
||
seemingly to no one. "There are so many people and places and times to
|
||
remember, so many regrets to forget." He continued to contemplate the past
|
||
until he saw each moment of his entire life coalesce into a single image, a
|
||
vision, like seeing the picture of a completed jigsaw puzzle after years of
|
||
seeing only its individual pieces. His life complete, Avery was ready for the
|
||
beyond.
|
||
|
||
"So, which way do we go, up or down?" Avery asked facetiously, but with faint
|
||
seriousness. He listened intently as if hearing an answer to his question, but
|
||
there was no sound. After a few moments Avery's expression changed to one of
|
||
astonishment, then, understanding. Avery smiled with satisfaction. His smile
|
||
slowly widened until his lips parted in silent, amused laughter. His breathing
|
||
and heart slowed to a stop, his body went limp, his eyes closed. Avery was
|
||
dead.
|
||
|
||
|