Friday, July 23, 2021

Fertile

 




It was 6 ½ miles to the State Park, probably with no place along the way to buy a bottle of water and no vending machines at their destination.  The summer sun was hot and the fields looked dry, seared at their edges, and it would be warm on the hiking trail despite the shade of the trees and the little creeks seeping down the hillsides all poisoned with nitrates and e. coli. 


Trane had a half-bottle of water between the front seats.  An empty pop can was rattling around somewhere in the back of the car.


“I should have stopped and got something to drink when we exited the freeway,” Trane said.


Finn agreed and said that he didn’t want to get dehydrated.


“See that little town,” Trane took his hand from the steering wheel and gestured.  “Maybe there’s store or gas station or something.”


“Doesn’t look like much of a town,” Finn said.  


“I think there’s a gas station,” Trane told him.


Some Coop fuel pumps stood under a flimsy aluminum awning next to the road.  The pumps were card-controlled and there was no attendant.  Trane pulled into the gravel driveway, cratered with potholes gouged out by the grain trucks.  The can in the back rattled.  


“This is no good,” Finn said.


“I’ll go into the town.”


The place was called Fertile.  Two enormous grain bins rose over the village, shiny riveted metal walls flanking the black-top access road.  The bins were disproportionately immense, dwarfing the scatter of old houses and brick commercial structures on the other side.  Most of the village was hidden behind the escarpment of convex steel and not visible from the State highway.


Trane backtracked out of the Coop fuel station and turned onto the two-lane leading into Fertile.


The road ran between the two bins.  The light was blinding on the steel.  On a concrete pad next to the bin on the right, surplus corn was heaped in a golden pyramid, slumped into repose at its edges.  The chasm between the bins was a sleek bright canyon and, overhead, some millwork sutured the two great cylinders together so that they drove into the village as if through a high and splendid gate.  


Fertile wasn’t much more than a single Main Street, wide as half a football field, and, indeed, seeming even broader due to the absence of vehicles parked along its sides.  Most of the town seemed to have fallen down. A couple of shuttered brick storefronts remained upright beside empty lots overgrown with scrub-brush.  Houses stood at the end of gravel lanes, paint peeling off their white walls and barricaded behind junked cars.  A tire swing dangling from a ragged-looking tree peered at them suspiciously.  Once, there had been two competing banks in the village, sternly facing one another across the pointlessly wide street.  The bank on the left seemed hewn from single block of amber-colored rock, a two-story monument with fluted pilasters and windowless ramparts, the sort of place where cash-dollars were not merely protected behind slabs of stone, but, even, perhaps worshiped.  But the place was no longer a bank but a museum of some kind, a yellow pennant suspended from a flagpole next to the carved entrance portico announcing that the building was open.  Across the street, the other bank across the street was a heap of charred-looking bricks, compact and heavy with an arched entry like the door opening into a tomb and some improvised flower boxes on masonry windowsills.   A pickup was parked behind the place where there was a plastic wading pool and a couple of bicycles lying on their side.  


“This doesn’t look too promising,” Trane said.


They drove slowly down Fertile’s Main Street.  In a tangled jungle of half-fallen trees and sumac, an old creamery was shedding bricks from its broken walls.  A pale grey cupola of battered tin stood at the ridgeline above festering shingles.  A school house abandoned for half a century was covered in green vines that seemed intent on tearing the place down.  A swing-set and slide, tilted crazily, glimmered in the underbrush.  An old man on a golf cart had appeared from nowhere and was puttering along behind them, apparently, checking out the visitors to the village.  


Finn said that he had seen a hand-lettered sign on a shack that they had passed.  The sign, he told Trane, said something about a concession.  


“I didn’t see it,” Trane said.  


“It was on the left, next to a booth and some sort of park, maybe a swimming pool,” Finn replied.


“Well, we can check it out.”


They wasn’t any choice anyhow.  The way out of the town was the same way that lead into the place.  The main street dead-ended among some partly burned ruins and so Trane turned around, now facing the golf cart where the old man wearing bermuda shorts and a black elastic elbow brace glared at them.  

“Typical,” Trane said.


“What?” Finn asked.


“This guy,” Trane replied.


Trane rolled down the window.  The air was warm and humid and smelled a little sweet, probably the scent coming from rot within the mountains of yellow corn in the bins.  The concession was on the right, a white-washed shack with a couple of screened windows above a formica shelf.  It was the sort of snack booth that you might expect next to a small-town swimming pool, but there was no pool, just a lawn shaded by some old cottonwood and oak trees with a small playground.  Trane didn’t see any children but there were people sitting together at a metal picnic table.  Trane pulled the car up to the windowless backside of the shack.  The two of them got of the car and walked around the building to the counter.  An old man wearing shabby, frayed coveralls got up from the picnic table, nodded to them, and ambled along the side of the little building, entering through a screen-door.  The other old guy seated on the golf cart stopped in the middle of the street, looked at Finn and Trane for a minute, and, then, shrugging, puttered away.  


Finn went up to the counter and asked if he could buy some bottles of water.  The old man behind the window said that they didn’t have water, but he could sell them Pepsi in a bottle.  “Okay,” Finn said.  He also ordered a grape Slush.  The old man took the money and Trane could hear ice being crushed and spun around in a mixer.  Nothing cost too much.  Finn paid with a five-dollar bill and told the old man to keep the change.  


At the edge of the raked sand at the playground, a flower bed was surrounded by some tilted brick paving stones.  Geraniums were blooming among wood chips.  There didn’t seem to be any honeybees around.  Black and green flies were pollinating the flowers.  Trane waited beside the flowers, idly nudging the salmon-colored paving stones with the toe of his tennis shoe.   


One of the stones fronting the flower-bed felt loose and so Trane used his foot to tilt it forward. Under the scalloped paver, Trane saw some moist soil, black and seething with pale mites and tiny centipedes.  In a round socket indented in the earth uncovered beneath the edger, a grey toad with roughened skin was squatting.  The toad was a fist-sized tumor apparently growing out of the soil, shapeless and inert.  


“You should come and look at this,” Trane said.


Finn was chewing crushed iced.  “What?”


“It’s a toad,” Finn said.


He stooped and touched the toad’s back.  The creature didn’t move.  It’s skin was cool but flabby.  He pressed a finger down on the toad’s head, behind it’s little bulbous eyes.  The toad stirred slightly but didn’t try to hop out of its hole.


When Trane was a little boy, toads were everywhere.  When it rained, sidewalks were covered with them hopping in every direction, ricocheting off the pavement and the curbs.  But he hadn’t seen a toad for several years.  


“It’s not about to hop away,” Trane said.  “This toad’s found a place where it can lurk without moving and eat the bugs that come to it in the dark.  No need to do anything but sit comfortably in its hole under the stone.”


Finn said: “It’s fat enough.”


“Probably hasn’t stirred two inches in a month,” Trane said.  “It feels flabby as if its muscles have all melted away.”


Trane bent over and tapped the toad between its eyes.  It didn’t stir.  He carefully tilted the edging stone back into its place, covering the toad.


The townsfolk at the picnic table were talking about someone’s funeral.  The old man in the coveralls had come back to join the others.  

 

The car was already an oven.  Trane rolled the windows down and set the AC to high.  


They drove back toward the tall columns of the grain bins.  The sun had come from behind a cloud and the towers cast enormous black shadows over the village, abstract hard-edged parallelograms of darkness that seemed to signify something – perhaps, the passage of time or the town’s loneliness or ruin’s inevitable onset.


The banner on the bank converted to a museum had a cardboard panel clipped to it: OPEN from 2:00 to 4:00.  Trane pulled the car into a diagonal parking space by the building’s portico.  Above the door-lintel, the stone was cut into the shape of a bull’s skull surrounded by a ribbon from garlanded wreath. 


The old woman in the bank sat on an old, salvaged church pew behind a folding card table.  She smelled faintly of lavender.  Two wood-framed teller’s cages flanked her but, otherwise, the bank’s furnishings and interior walls had been removed.  High windows, cut into the masonry like rifle slits, let some abashed light enter and mark the tile floor.  The old woman grinned at them.  She had a glass cookie jar in front of her containing a scatter of five-dollar bills. 


“What does it cost to see your museum?” Trane said.


“It’s free,” she said.  “But wiill you put your names on this registry?”


Finn and Trane wrote their names and the town from which they come.  Finn put a ten dollar bill in the cookie jar.


“Thank you very much,” the woman said.  She was wearing a name-tag below her collar that said Volunteer.   “We have some pioneer life exhibits,” she told them.  “Then, there’s a special traveling show from the State Historical Society.  It’s in the old vault.  Out back, there’s a one-room school house and a restored settler log cabin.”


“Great,” Trane said.


Some headless figures, without arms, displayed old clothing.  A high-wheeled bicycle sat in a corner.  Some arrowheads and shards of pottery were in a glass case next to the big, steel disc of the open vault door.  A curtain hung down over the opening into the bank’s vault.  Old photographs on the walls showed families standing in front of sod houses on the naked prairie.  The people in the pictures had strange, half-crazed eyes.  A calendar embossed with the name of an implement dealer showed a battleship exploding – in a spiky orange star rising from the prow of the ship, Trane saw the silhouettes of little sailors blown sky-high.


Trane pushed through the curtain and stood in the vault.  On a small pedestal table, there was a doctor’s bag full of sinister-looking barbed instruments. Some big photographs with explanatory text were installed against the bare concrete walls of the old vault.  The air was stagnant in the vault-chamber and Trane felt a little faint.  The exhibition, courtesy of the State Historical Society, was entitled Diptheria and the Spanish Flu on the Prairie.


“What’s back there?”  Finn asked when Trane emerged.


“You don’t want to go in there,” Trane said.  “Some very disturbing pictures.”


“Unpleasant?”


“Very unpleasant,” Trane said.  


Finn didn’t like to see things of that kind.  “Can’t be unseen,” he always said.


They pretended to look at an old Family Bible and a baptismal font from the country church that had been torn down.  Then, they nodded to the old lady and went back outside.


“There’s a log cabin and one-room country school out behind,” Finn said.


“I’ve seen enough,” Trane replied.


They got into the car and drove out of Fertile.  It was six miles to the State Park.  A trail led along a wooded hillside terrace.  The Civilian Conservation Corps had built some fieldstone bridges on the trail, arching them over little streams that trickled down over dark stones in the shadowy, moss-overgrown ravines.  They saw a deer with a white tail standing next to two dappled fawns.  The animals had huge black eyes and seemed entirely unafraid of them.    

Monday, July 19, 2021

One More Stroll Around the Old Neighborhood

 





The sun drew ants from their homes hidden in the lawn next to the sidewalk.  She saw different kinds of ants on the concrete: tiny red ones stunned by the light and space, black ants cheerfully scurrying in straight paths over the sidewalk, their little shadows tucked under them, and big dark carpenter ants that seemed to row their way across the concrete, each as long as her thumbnail with legs like oars.  Her head was downcast and she inspected the sidewalk ahead of her – any concrete lip more than a half-inch in height would prove impassible to her and so she had to exercise caution and, as she shuffled forward, leaning against the metal walker, she was careful to observe obstacles that might have dropped in her path: seed pods fallen from the trees on the boulevard that crunched under-foot, broken twigs swept down from branches overhead by a recent thunderstorm, forked sticks broken to show their white insides, more seeds shaped like the propellers of tiny helicopters, a scrap of paper, probably a receipt, yellowed by the rain, flies alighting on the pavement for an instant and, then, rising as she approached, a grey moth fluttering in the grass and more ants and a green beetle with iridescent shell and wings strolling in her shadow.  The disease made her unsteady and her feet felt numb and hollow and her leg muscles no longer worked to lift her sole and heel and toe-tip more than a quarter-inch off the concrete.  Before the stem-cell transplant, she wouldn’t have been able to make this excursion.  But she had rallied a bit after that procedure and the day was cool with a gentle breeze whispering in the trees and, so, with her husband ahead of her, kicking debris out of the way, she ventured this last walk around the block.  She supposed that someone watching would think her gait remarkably slow and painful, but, in fact, she felt invigorated and strong enough to walk the distance around that extended residential block, the length of two whole blocks on the long sides of the rectangle that she was traversing, one block crosswise and back, and, therefore, a total of six blocks distance, if she made the entire circuit.


She had come down the ramp built against the side of her house, slowly, step by step, and, then, made her way along the driveway to the sidewalk between the boulevard’s edge, lined with old trees, and the lawns.  Facing the decision to go one direction or another where the driveway crossed the sidewalk, her husband beckoned, but she was feeling a bit ornery and independent this cool evening, and so she turned carefully in the opposite direction – her route was counter-clockwise around the block.  Her husband shrugged to show that it didn’t matter to him and came quickly to her side and, then, a dozen steps ahead of her, staring down to scrutinize the concrete slabs set one after another to make the sidewalk.  He was looking for irregularities, slumps in the cement and cracks, brushing larger sticks and seed pods to the side with his shoe to clear the way for her.  


The next door neighbor’s house was impassive and silent.  A bay window protruded a bit from the front of the home and, when she glanced over her shoulder in that direction, she saw a floral arrangement half-submerged in green shadow behind the glass, a still-life of flowers and sprigs of blossom.  The flowers were artificial because they never changed and for many years had been there in the center of the bay-window pushed out over the carefully groomed lawn and the small shrubs manicured into spherical bulbs.  Someone lived in the house, but she didn’t know that person. A couple of cheerful Mexican workers came to adjust the lawn and plants weekly.  They played music from speakers in their truck when they worked – it sounded to her like polkas complete with singers whooping in a high-voice.  She would have liked to speak to the Mexican lawn workers but they didn’t know English (or, at least, pretended incomprehension) and her High School Spanish wasn’t sufficient for anything more than a greeting.  Probably, the home’s owner lived in a city far away and maintained the place for sentimental reasons.  Thirty years earlier when she and her husband had moved to the neighborhood, an old couple lived in the home.  They greeted her with a straw basket full of tomatoes and cucumbers and a couple of fragrant heads of cabbage picked from their garden. The old folks had roto-tilled a little plot of their backyard into exposed earth, pounding small trellis-shaped supports for the tomatoes into the soil.  Some daisies grew around the garden and she recalled honey-bees browsing in the flowers.  Something happened to the old man and woman shortly after she and her husband arrived and one day they were gone.  A single-mother with kids moved into the place.  She was too busy to maintain the garden and it was abandoned, a weedy patch next to the flimsy-looking swing set in the backyard.  Then, she was gone also and the house seemed to be vacant, although, sometimes, people lived in the place for a couple months at a time, always coming and going at night and, then, there was an expensive SUV parked in the driveway on occasions and the floral arrangement appeared in the window but, now, she never saw anyone around.


The corner lot was large, fringed by a wilderness of old trees tall for the neighborhood.  The trees were planted in two parallel rows  and between them there was underbrush full of shadows and vines and secret places where children could hide under domes of green, fluttering leaves.  On the grass boulevard, she saw a little bottle, empty and marked with a vodka label, the sort of thing you might buy on an airplane.  A wasp was exploring the bottle’s open top.  A battered sidewalk cut through the forest arranged around the edge of the lot.  Her son, who was now grown up, used to play in that little woods, only two trees wide around the edge of the house.  The home itself loomed over the trees, old and tall, with steep shingled gables.  The Mormons lived in the house, a professional man and his wife.  The kids were in Utah attending college.  The house’s windows were mostly dark now – it seemed that the Saints occupied only two or three rooms in the big home.  The Mormon wife once told her that she expected her children to finance part of their education by selling their blood.  It was something that she had done as a young college girl in Salt Lake City.  If you planned your diet carefully, you could produce enough blood to pay, at least, for your meals, a self-sustaining process to keep you well-fed and healthy enough to make more blood to pay for more breakfasts and lunches and suppers, at least if you were frugal and economized...


Some plantains spread between the cracks in the sidewalk.  The spaces between concrete sidewalk panels were colonized by moss that was dull green in color.  The trees here wept down propeller shaped seeds; the freshly fallen ones were pale green – the older ones were brown and grey.  After turning the corner, she went about a hundred feet, not looking up at the Mormon’s old mansion-house because she knew it was there and knew what it looked like and didn’t really need to see it.  These were places that she had seen if she looked and not seen if she didn’t for thirty years and, in the neighborhood, nothing much changed as far as the shape and surfaces of the houses were concerned, although to her left was an exception, a brand-new two-car garage cut into the wilderness edge of the Mormon’s yard, yellow and brown with slate-colored asphalt shingles.  The garage sat on the site where an old carriage house had once been, a dismal-looking shed with a ruinous second story that looked half-collapsed.  It was eye-sore and she was glad that it had been torn down and replaced by this neat-looking, efficient and modern garage.  Across the street, some Sudanese people were barbecuing.  She heard their voices and saw them behind a ragged hedge.


Another big house stood on the corner lot back-to-back with the Mormon’s place.  This house was also very tall with a complicated roof comprised of many angles and slopes and pointed eaves.  For most of the period that she had been on the block, the old Victorian house had been occupied by an ancient couple, an old lady who lived with her equally old, and much more decrepit, brother.  The old man seemed to have no neck and either couldn’t speak, or didn’t want to.  The old lady was shrill and talkative and always seemed to have a grievance against someone.  She worked tirelessly in her lawn, tending to her banks of bright flowering lilies, raking leaves in season, and riding a lawn mower over the grass once a week at least.  Her shrubs were tidy and carefully shaped and she swept her sidewalk every morning, collecting the dark brown seed pods in a wicker basket and, then, composting them in the corner of her lawn, under a wigwam made of crisscrossed branches dropped from her trees.  An enclosed porch jutted from the side of the house and, before the old lady vanished, you could always see four mannequins sitting around a table next to the windows.  The life-size mannequins sat on the porch immobile for twenty years at least, eyes always open and arms arranged to gesture to one another, an eerie display that fascinated the children in the neighborhood, when there had been children, and alarmed the adults as well although no one dared asked the old lady about the artificial people.  She shuffled by the porch, pausing for a second to confirm that the mannequins were now gone.  The dark windows opening into the enclosed porch showed nothing but shadow.  The old man was gone one day – no one knew where he was but, probably, his sister been unable to care for him and he was confined to a nursing home where, of course, he shortly died.  The old woman continued to maintain her lawn, pruning shrubs and watering her beds of bright flowers, but, then, she fell and broke her hip and this was expected to be the end of her, but she clung to life, and, even, made a come-back of sorts, rallying to walk around the block once a day in warm, dry weather, shoving a walker ahead of her just as Dora was doing herself this evening, and, for a moment, she thought that the old woman, who must have been in her nineties, had now become her sister or, perhaps, double, forging her way slowly and painfully down the sidewalk.  Then, the old lady was gone also and the house stood vacant for a season and, when it was spring, the wire fence bounding the property was taken down and the rock garden with ferns and, even, a little cascade powered by an electric pump was plowed away and, after the lawn ornaments (a couple of cherubs and loyal-looking plaster dog) were removed, the house was sold to the mortician’s son who was from the neighborhood, now an adult who worked as a cook at a local grill, and, of course, she wondered, how the young man, scarcely thirty, could possibly afford such a large and prestigious house and, indeed, probably, he didn’t have the resources because the lawn had gone to seed and was now full of four-foot tall saplings, a whole forest of them that had taken root in the sod and the lilies with their ornate trumpet-shaped blossoms and long tongue-like pistils were overflowing the flower beds, poured out in a disorderly bright flood to crowd the sidewalk.  And, so, she had come through the lilies and along the miniature forest and saw some rubble where the old woman’s rock garden had been and, then, she was at the corner where she paused to rest.   


The house across the street was where a drug-dealer had lived.  The man was supposed to be commercial pilot, although this was all rumor.  A strange flat boulder marked the corner of his lot.  The boulder was waist-tall with pale veins of white crystal, set on the grass like some kind of warning.  In the back yard, there was a small swimming pool, now hidden under a canvas tarp.  Once, there had been a round disk affixed to the back wall above the little pool.  The disk was plastic or, perhaps, some sort of molded stucco and was covered with outlandish figures, glyphs and bas relief animals and, at its center, there was a hideous god, a grimacing solar mask extruding a tongue that was sharp as a knife.  It was an Aztec sun-stone, or, more accurately, a facsimile of that artifact, acquired by the drug-dealing pilot during one of his trips to and from Belize.  The home had been raided at dawn.  Someone who was out then, walking a dog, saw the squad cars drawn up around the house at odd angles and the smashed-in door and the husband and wife, scarcely dressed at all, led across the sidewalk in handcuffs to a waiting federal marshal’s SUV.  The house was forfeited as the fruit of an illegal narcotics transaction and, later, auctioned, purchased by a business associate of the pilot who lived in the place one week a month, possibly to establish homestead for tax purposes and, although the people were shadowy, even engaged in criminal enterprises, she supposed, they kept up the place and made sure that the shrubs were trimmed and grass mowed.  


“Dora,” her husband asked her, “are you okay?”  


“Oh, yes,” she said.  “I’m just catching my breath a little.”    


Her legs were weak, but she had good upper body strength still, and so she pulled herself forward, more brittle walnut-brown seed pods under foot.  The lesbians lived in the house to her left, both educators at the High School.  Their garage was open and a Top 40 song was blaring from a radio, but no one was around to listen to the catchy tune that seemed suddenly very big and colorful spreading out across the concrete driveway and the lawn and the trees.  The lesbians were always involved in home remodeling projects and she saw timber stacked in their garage and the blade of a circular saw exposed above its metal table with serrated, flame-shaped teeth glinting in the sunbeams raking down the street.  Then, there was an empty lot where a house had been demolished – Dora had no memory of that place – and, after that, the white cottage-like home where the Trump supporters lived, their American flag hung over their stoop upside-down and a blue Trump banner suspended above the side-door.  An elderly man and his son had lived in the house before the Trumpers acquired it – the old man had a white beard and kept a life-size ceramic German shepherd next to the driveway in his side-yard, probably a scarecrow-canine to deter thieves.  The handsome ceramic German shepherd was gone now, replaced by three flesh-and-blood dogs who pranced back and forth, chained to the house, barking at her as she shuffled forward.  The sound of these dogs inspired others to take up the chorus.  In a handsome, Dutch colonial house across the street, a tiny dog, locked inside, began chirping like a bird.  Dora didn’t know the family but was aware that there was a pretty High School girl who lived there – a sign congratulating the 2021 graduate was posted in the yard and, once, when her husband was driving her past the place, she had seen the girl in her white Prom dress posing for photographs taken by a friend (also in an evening gown) and her mother.  


The street on this block had been recently resurfaced and she could faintly smell the odor of fresh asphalt.  Little signs marking where fiber-optic cable was going to be laid were stabbed into the sod.  A couple of dandelions decorated the edge of the sidewalk.  Some of the slabs were new, white as freshly laundered linen, but others were old, worn, with rough aggregate surfaces.  In one slab, she saw a mark:  CONCRETE IDEA - 5-14-08.  She was astonished, at first, that the concrete was over a hundred years old, but, then, remembered that it was a new millennium, although she had spent more than half of her life during the last decades of the 20th century and 08 meant 2008.  Across the street, there was another vacant lot, a place where there had once been a little house where an old lady lived with her mentally retarded daughter – sometimes, she saw them walking arm-in-arm to the small bus that took handicapped people around town to their appointments.  The old lady died and the mentally retarded daughter just vanished, as is often the case with people with disabilities who have no one left to love them, and, then, their house vanished also, bulldozed into its cellar, and, for another five years, there was a fractured sidewalk leading to nowhere and a stub of driveway also leading nowhere, remnants of the demolished home, but, then, these cement-fragments were also jack-hammered away and hauled-off in a dump truck and, now, the lawn was a meadow where nettles grew and thistles and white clover where there should have been bees but there were not – Dora had read that some virus was killing all the bees...


On her side of the road, Dora passed the house of the retired meatpacking inspector at the plant – dead for more than a decade – and the house of a foreman at that same packing plant, identical white houses with steep roofs and lofty attic space built next to one another.  The foreman and the meat inspector were married to identical twins, neat and sweet-smelling little old ladies.  Once Dora had attended a tea party that one of sisters had hosted with a little brunch also served and the old ladies, who looked exactly alike and were accustomed to dressing in identical frocks, said that they were going to eat their ice cream desserts before they tasted the petite open-faced sandwiches and chilled fruit: “We are eating our dessert first,” the one old lady said, giggling, and her sister said: “We are eating our dessert first” as well.  Then, they both ate their desserts first and giggled at their audacity.  The sorrow of their lives was that their husbands were mortal enemies: forty years earlier the meat inspector had insulted the meat cutter in the plant, before the eyes of God and witnesses, and shamed him and there had been a celebrated fistfight in the slaughterhouse parking lot and, from that day onward, the two men never spoke to one another again, except to occasionally hurl an insult and taunt.  Dora assumed that they were all long gone.  The two houses looked forlorn, their windows dark with shadow.  


Some heroes lived across the street.  They were young men, roommates, who had enlisted in the National Guard and, upon returning from the War, rented the old house where the Community College chemistry professor, retired and very deaf, had once lived.  After returning from Iraq, the young men hosted parties that went all night long and ended with brawls in the alley that upset prowling cats and garbage cans, and, sometimes, they shot off fireworks in the dead of night, but no one dared complain because, after all, the men were war veterans and, therefore, heroes.  Sometimes, one or the other of they young men would meet a girl and move in with her and, even, have a couple children with that woman – but the relationships never worked out and the soldiers returned to their barracks in the old chemistry professor’s house and, even now, she saw the men, now no longer as young as she remembered them, balding and a little flabby with some girls and children, drinking beer and barbecuing over a fire-pit in the backyard, a big orange flame burning there and, of course, strictly forbidden because of the protracted drought, but no one dared to call the police and, even, the cops were a little intimidated by the heroes who had, after all, risked their lives in the deserts of Iraq.


She paused for a second and looked down the street and saw that the lawyer was sitting on his porch, a book on his lap, and his yellow Labrador was chained on the porch next to him and scrutinizing her and, it seemed to her, that she would have no choice but to exchange greetings with that man, a tedious and argumentative fellow with a white beard like an old-time preacher.  Between where she stood, resting for a moment, and the lawyer’s porch with its two hanging flower baskets trailing blossoms down almost to the ground, she saw the home of the suicide, a sad place like a haggard L-shaped farmhouse far out in the country, walls raw with peeling paint and shingles disheveled above the drooping gutters.  The man who lived in that house had been depressed, although no one knew this, and was unhappy at work (he managed a complex of hog houses across the border in Iowa), fearful that the corporation by which he was employed was preparing to fire him, and he had some credit card debt, as well, that he didn’t think he could pay if he lost his job.  And, so, he used a captive bolt gun to kill himself with a shot to the middle of his forehead and that was that.  The man was a good Catholic and supported the parochial schools in town, and the local priest, who was a humane fellow, reasoned that his parishioner was the victim of a fatal illness, untreated depression, and so didn’t hesitate to bury the suicide in consecrated ground in the cemetery south of town – this offended the suicide’s brother who was also a Catholic priest and he said that if suicide were not punished by burial in unconsecrated earth outside of the sacraments of the Holy Mother Church, then, of course, everyone would commit suicide because life is a burden at times, indeed, an intolerable burden.  Dora thought of the funeral and the gaunt, villainous face of the priest who was the suicide’s brother, and she thought to herself that life was a blessing even if it involved suffering and that every moment of life was a gift and that she was not dying of a fatal disease but living with it – that was how she dealt with things.  And, so, she turned away from the sad house and looked across the street to where the Mexican immigrants lived, their stucco home painted the bright color of marigolds and their hydrangeas blooming under their windows and, then, she was on the sidewalk next to where the lawyer lived and he called out to her and she called out to him in reply.  They exchanged a few words and the old Labrador uttered a couple of deep, guttural barks, just to show that she was also present and watching over the front steps and the porch with the overflowing flower baskets and, then, a neighbor in a big white SUV cruised up on the street behind her and said her name and this was relief so that she didn’t have to continue the futile conversation with the tedious lawyer.  The neighbor lady in the white SUV had once been one of the town’s greatest beauties, married to a civic booster who had retired from promoting the our city through its Chamber of Commerce.  Her husband was accustomed to mowing the lawn almost entirely naked, wearing a Speedo swimsuit and flip-flops, his bare chest and belly covered in a pelt of white hair.  As a young man, the former beauty’s husband had played drums with a local rhythm section that had once performed behind Louis Armstrong, the great jazz trumpeter, and there was a signed picture of the musician in their home, above the piano that she had never really been able to play.  Her husband was on the City Council for a number of years and well-liked by all and, then, cancer carried him off so that he shrunk into a withered little old man almost over night and no longer had the strength to mow his lawn (his wife performed that task) and, then, he was gone but the great beauty still lived in the neat home, shaped like a gingerbread house with an elaborate, carved lattice above the porch, just around the corner.  So the neighbor-lady, who retained some of her former great beauty, said to her: “I will go for a walk with you, Dora.”  And Dora’s husband lingered a little bit ahead of his wife on the sidewalk, gazing suspiciously at the yellow Labrador who gazed suspiciously back at him and Dora said yes, that she would like to go for a walk with the neighbor-lady whose husband had played with Louis Armstrong and who had been on the City Council and, then, the white SUV glided away and Dora felt a little bad about misleading the neighbor-lady because she wasn’t likely to ever go for a walk with her despite what she had said.  She moved forward and lawyer said goodbye to her and, then, she approached the house where the contractor lived, a place that was perpetually under construction with pale grey Tyvek wrapping under the eaves and stapled to the outer walls of the house where the siding had been removed and this was the corner now and she looked at the lawn ornaments in the shrubs at the contractor’s house, a painted clay frog and a mouse hoisting drinks under a sign that said HAPPY HOUR and some ducks and little Dutch children under a shrub and a row of lights in stakes embedded in the ground that caught the sun’s rays when the sun was shining and stored energy so as to glimmer, like stationary fireflies, when it was night and dark, and, there were also Christmas tree lights tangled in the shrubbery and, then, there was the house of the man that rode motorcycles that made a loud roar early in the morning and the place where the ER nurse lived with her most recent boyfriend and her three children, all with different men, a very kind and efficient woman who had helped her several times when her sickness forced into the hospital and there was an alley and a flowering lilac that drizzled petals onto the sidewalk and the white house with a steel-link fence where the old lady had lived until she died quite suddenly, only a week after a windstorm had toppled the big maple tree in her front lawn, dropping it onto the grass where it lay with enormous branches sprawled next to a great wave of leaves, some of the limbs covering the sidewalk so that you couldn’t walk around the fallen tree without venturing out onto the curb and, even, into the street.  When the tree fell, Dora wasn’t yet much afflicted and she could raise her feet high enough to traverse a curb and so she had to go out into the street to walk around the leafy obstacle on the sidewalk and the old lady was standing on her front step gazing with amazement at the fallen tree and Dora had said to her: “It’s terrible about your tree,” and the old lady replied: “If it’s not one thing it’s another,” – a true enough statement because only a week later (and only a couple days after the tree service had hacked up the fallen maple and trucked it away), the old lady suddenly died and people came to watch the hearse haul her body away and her front yard was littered still with broken twigs and windrows of pale, yellowish sawdust left by the chainsaws that had dismembered the tree.  


A white picket fence had once fronted the art teacher’s place, perfectly proportioned with a swinging gate under an arched trellis where vines were once entangled, all bedecked with little purplish flowers.  The art teacher had a big beard and hair like a hippie from the sixties and Dora remembered him as very witty and cynical and, so, she imagined the Tom Sawyer fence as an ironic fixture in his yard, something that wasn’t meant to be taken seriously like the pink flamingos hovering over his rose bushes or the tire swing slung from the tree that always seemed a little sinister to her, a rubber bulls-eye with vaguely sexual implications dangling down from the green bower of the oak.  The art teacher was gone now and the people who lived in the house had little children (the teacher had been childless, of course) and she saw a plastic wading pool under the tree from which the tire swing had once hung – it was also gone and the picket fence as well with it’s arched gate and trellis rooted up by the new people when they took possession.  Apparently, the current owners of the place didn’t appreciate irony, but the purple paint decorating the facade was still intact and the bright yellow shutters and she wondered about the rec room in the basement, the pool table and the mural between mirrors behind the bar where a naked man was painted, a life-size figure with brawny shoulders and straining arms who was pulling himself up out of the pit of hell, the image extremely foreshortened, an eye of fire tickling the man’s rounded buttocks and, on the shelves, strange liqueurs with colors like chemicals used in lab experiments and candelabra on corner tables, the dull glint of brass in the shadows – she had been there once for a neighborhood block party and toured the house, inspecting the teacher’s paintings and the paintings of his gifted students, some of them, then, studying at art institutes all around the country, and the place was full of marvels.  What had happened to all of that stuff?  At the corners of the lot, deep sockets marked where the picket fence had been anchored, bottomless black holes piercing the grass close enough to the sidewalk to pose a hazard to pedestrians and dogs and, Dora thought, not safe for the children who lived in the art teacher’s house and who splashed in the round plastic wading pool in hot weather.  She had seen them in from her front yard because now she was coming close to home, the circuit of the block almost completed, a good thing because the strain on her back and shoulders was telling on her and each step came with a certain amount pain, so far good pain, she thought, although soon enough it would become something to be suffered...


Nazis lived across the street.  She had seen a flag with a swastika hanging in their garage among the garden hoses and rakes and brooms.  The two Nazis were young men, only a little older than Dora’s son, and they lived with two women who were, perhaps, sisters and there were small children in the house, nursing babes in arms, because, sometimes. the girls sat on the front stoop holding their children as they fed them, something that would have been an outrage, probably, to the old unmarried woman who had lived in the place, inherited from her parents, for more than 30 years before she became too old to live alone and had to move to assisted living – an awful thing, Dora thought, to lose you independence and be at the mercy of others, even those favorably inclined to you.  The Nazis had put up a basketball hoop, perching precariously on step-ladders too short for the project, and, once the backboard and hoop were installed, the next-door neighbors who were Black kids shot baskets with them, no one keeping score because if a tally were maintained that would lead to quarrels and quarrels lead to fights and fights would lead to the cops being called, something that neither the Nazis nor the Black kids wanted and, so, Dora saw the orange basketball thudding against the backboard and the girls with their babies at their breasts sitting on the concrete stoop and the Nazis and the Black kids taking turns shooting baskets from various locations on the driveway and not keeping count of baskets made as opposed to misses and, perhaps, that white face peering through an upper window beneath the round oculus in the center of the facade (the house was an imitation of Georgian era terrace), those pale luminous features like a skull was the old maid who had lived in the house and was now, somehow, confined to an airless upstairs room while the game of hoops played out beneath her endlessly in the twilight.


Then, there was the house on the corner, made from brick where no one ever lived for more than two seasons  – the city councilman’s wife, a famous beauty formerly, had resided in our town all her life and she knew the histories of every house and every family, who was related to whom, what the maiden names had been, legitimate children and illegitimate, and she had told Dora once that a child had died in that brick house and that it was a sad place and that when it was hot, in the days before air-conditioning, for three days the inside of the home would remain cool as a cavern, moist and shadowy, and, then, on the fourth day, the bricks would radiate heat inward and the rooms would become a kiln, warm as an oven baking bread, and unbearable and, in fact, when cooler weather arrived, the house would retain its nightmarish heat for several more days before becoming chilly again.  It was always too cold or too hot in the house and that may have been part of the reason that the child died, although who knows?  And, beside that corner house, there was another noble-looking edifice, built entirely of brick, with hunter-green shutters, and this was where the mortician had lived, or, possibly, still lived – he had another place in Tucson, apparently and, so, he wasn’t around much any more.  His son had beat his pet dog to death on the front lawn, a horrible spectacle that no one talked much about and that Dora, who loved dogs, didn’t want to remember at all, particularly since this boy had grown up and bought the house where the old woman had lived with her brother with a roomful of store mannequins for company and, then, there was a vacant lot that had always been there, at least so long as Dora recalled, a grassy plot behind a fence with iron spear-points guarding a hedge of ancient lilac bushes and, then, another noble-looking brick edifice, the twin of the mortician’s home where a divorced lady lived with her four dogs, then, the home with a sign advertising that it was a “dog park” which seemed to Dora to be a violation of our zoning ordinances and, another, empty lot with a stained sidewalk running between banks of dragonish orange flowers to where the house had been.  Dora recalled that the place had been ramshackle with a porch collapsing from rot and, always, a couple of wrecked cars littering the driveway, the place where the former submarine sailor lived, a sort of wild man drawing a pension and, perhaps, on disability as well, with a wife and two daughters who never seemed fully clothed to her, cats crawling all over the decaying furniture that had been lugged out onto that rotten porch to die there, motorcycles always coming and going until the day that the former submarine sailor was mangled in a wreck and lost his leg and, then, he didn’t venture out any more and the motorcycles sat in dark pools of oil gathering dust and all was melancholy, the girls growing up and leaving and the shingles peeled off the roof by storms, both winter and summer, and, then, the chimney at the ridge-line fell over and the pipe sprawled across the shredded roof and, even after the old submariner had died, you could still smell the skunk of marijuana lingering on the derelict porch and over the ruined cars and motorcycles, so much dope smoked on the premises that the Flame Calla lilies with their orange and yellow throats exhaled that smell.  Then, the house was demolished but the lilies somehow remained, a mystery to Dora because she thought that the flowers sprung from bulbs and that the bulbs had to be dug out of the ground each year and stored in cool, dry place, but, of course, there was no one to perform that service now that the wretched house had been demolished and hauled away to the landfill and the one-legged sailor’s wife and girls were scattered and only the sidewalk remained and the strange persistent flowers.


Dora was tired now and thought that, perhaps, it would be best to have her husband get the wheelchair from their house, only a hundred feet away, but, resting, she felt her strength returning, not all of it but enough to forge ahead and reach home under her own power.  Her head drooped between her shoulders and it had now become quite dark and, when her husband called to her, she heard him as if he were calling from a great distance.


The street lamps came on and little moths rose out of the grass to greet the light.


If you live in a place long enough, she thought, the landscape embodies a chronicle of loss, people who have died or gone away, although, also, Dora supposed a chronicle of new beginnings, new families making a fresh start, but, somehow, the losses seemed more poignant than the new beginnings which would soon enough, she supposed, turn into yet other losses because this is the nature of human life, one thing follows another and, so, she leaned forward a little and her feet shuffled a step and, then, another step and she was underway once more.


The pavement was marked with scribbles of paint, odd declarations and signs that she couldn’t decipher.  Some sort of utility work was scheduled for this part of the sidewalk and those designing the work had marked the slabs, painting on the old concrete.  She saw some square brackets in orange paint, then, a blue hatchmark extending half-way across the concrete panel.  A couple of arrows in yellow had been drawn on the sidewalk and the number 27 followed by some enigmatic symbols.  Ahead of her, the sidewalk slab was marked SOW – although, then, realized that she was reading the letters upside-down and that they spelled NOS.  The next slab, she read as SOT with a backwards “S” and the “T” also inverted, but, then, turning her head saw that the letters were actually TOS above some more marks including an orange triangle.  Above the letters on the pavement, another white house shone in the darkness, faintly lit by the street-lamp swarmed with moths – this was her next-door neighbor, someone that she had never seen and never heard, the house well-kept and, even, a “Neighborhood Watch” decal pasted in the corner of a window, and the flower boxes full of geraniums, but no one ever present in the home and, then, at last, she had come full-circle and her own house stood above the white apron of her driveway,  also pale as a cloud, the FOR SALE sign marked “SOLD” at its bottom and posted next to her hydrangeas (something that seemed very odd to her –was this really her home?)  She thought of her children when they were had been small and remembered their dogs and all the birthdays they had celebrated, the Thanksgivings and Christmases, the small emergencies, the times when everyone was happy and getting along so well that you might want to fall down on your knees and pray that this moment would never end, that it would last forever, but, of course, such prayers aren’t answered, and shouldn’t be.  A light was burning in the window and Dora knew that there were two wooden chairs in the dining room set around a folding table on which they had eaten take-out from Mexican café down the street and, in the next room, was Dora’s wheelchair and her hospital bed big as a boat and her husband’s little cot and, tomorrow, none of those things would remain in the house, now otherwise empty because, of course, they were moving to place that was more handicap-accessible.  She paused and looked up at the house with its dark incommunicative windows and shadowy eaves and thought that she would miss the place and the old neighborhood, but this was her last stroll around the block and the end she thought.

Tuesday, June 29, 2021

The Great Man's Gait

 




The photo-op with the Great Man was scheduled for the steps of the Palace of State.  Journalists were gathered on steps rising to the building’s vast marble and bronze portico.  Sometimes, the Great Man answered a few questions shouted at him by the reporters and, perhaps, he would say something newsworthy today.  A few big cranes tilted their giraffe-necks over the former Palace.  Everyone knew that the place was being remodeled – the great reception halls had been subdivided into sheet-rock cells and information kiosks were installed in the formal lobby with its towering mirrors and porphyry pilasters.  In a few months, the Palace would be a hospital, serving the poor but with teams of physicians so accomplished that it was thought that, even, the wealthy would clamor to be admitted.


The sun was bright and high overhead so that the journalists and photographers stood on the hems of their own abbreviated shadows.  Panel trucks and pickups were coming and going at the service entry to the Palace and crews of sheet-rock workers with buckets of mud and aluminum stilts swarmed into the building hurrying like industrious ants.  From inside, we heard the faint report of pneumatic nail guns and sanders sanding and heavy panels booming as they were dropped into place by hydraulic hoists.  The General directing the construction work stood flanked by men in dress uniform and white, spotless gloves.  The General was heavy-set and wearing camouflage fatigues and his wrists and fingers were bare so that he could shake the Great Man’s hand.


The motorcade approached slowly.  Behind the barricades, people surged and pushed.  The big car with the dark windows and flags on its hood stopped next to the roadblock where a row of soldiers stood.  The door opened and the Great Man emerged, slipping his sunglasses over his eyes.  Then, he approached the group of dignitaries at the bottom of the steps rising to the Palace.  I had never seen him before in person, but he looked like his pictures: his head was large and handsome with the ruin of his broken nose between high cheek-bones; his shoulders were broad as condor’s wings.  It was curious that he didn’t seem to walk in a straight line, but, instead, shuffled to his right and left, limping a bit, and, sometimes, taking tiny steps, at other times, lunging forward to plant his big feet decisively on the sidewalk under him.  There was something unhealthy and hobbled, it seemed, about the way that he walked.  His great, famous head was turned downward, sweeping back and forth as he surveyed the concrete ahead of him and under the soles of his boots.


The Great Man approached the General who was supervising the hospital and shook his hand for the cameras.  The photographers jostled one another and their digital devices whirred and hissed softly.   Questions were shouted, filling the air.  Then, the Great Man gestured for silence and it became very still.  He made a few comments about transforming the Palace of State into a charity hospital.  Then, he shook the hand of the General again.  Journalists shouted more questions, myself included, but the Great Man merely bowed slightly, turned with face downcast, and made his way back to the motorcade a hundred feet away, beyond the orange saw-horse shaped barriers.  Again, he stepped sideways, then, forward, striking his boots hard on the pavement, zigzagging over the pavement.  


I turned to the cameraman from my paper.  


“Why does he walk that way?”


The cameraman shrugged.


“Maybe, it’s from the torture,” everyone knew that the Great Man had been tortured for years by regime.  His political enemies had kept him in solitary confinement for a decade and he had been imprisoned for almost a quarter of a century in the harshest conditions.  Perhaps, torture had ruined his legs and caused him to walk crookedly.


“It must be because of torture during the Resistance,” I said.


“No,” the cameraman told me.  He had covered the Great Man for several years and knew about his habits.  


“Do you see the insects, there, on the sidewalk?”  


I looked down and, at first, saw nothing.  But, then, when my eyes adjusted, I saw ants here and there, darting across the concrete.  A beetle with green iridescent wings scuttled along a crack in the cement.  One ant seemed misshapen but I looked more closely and saw that the creature was carrying the tiny corpse of a fruit-fly.  


“I suppose he doesn’t want to step on them,” I said.  The Great Man’s reverence for life was well-known.  Everyone had read about his pet mouse in his prison cell and the spider in the corner for whom he had tenderly cared.  


“No, it’s weird,” the cameraman whispered.  “It’s the opposite.”


“What?”


“When he walks down the street, he slips from side to side so that he can crush as many ants as he sees under his feet.  He’s zigzagging to step on them.” 


I looked at the Great Man. It seemed that he was doing a strange dance on the concrete, tapping his feet to one side and, then, the other.


An attache opened the door to the limousine and he stooped to slide inside.  The windows were tinted so that we couldn’t see within them.  The car rolled forward, then, turned in a sharp circle.  I saw a couple of small butterflies like tiny forlorn pennants caught in the limousine’s grill.  Then, the big dark car, towing its motorcade behind it, sailed down the boulevard of the Revolution.  


Saturday, June 26, 2021

Red Flag





Red Flag means fire.  Drought baked the foothills and the stock tanks ran low.  Heat squeezed the sap out of the douglas firs and the juniper trees and the pine-scented air felt combustible.  The wind was too much, spilling down the dry canyons and roaring across the bare hilltops.  Red Flag means fire or the risk of fire.  


Before things became too unbearably warm, Milt drove his pickup from the house up along the ridge road.  The bluffs broke into brown and pink cliffs with aprons of talus, broken like the shards of pots, at their base.  Milt told Billy that he had dreamed that a gate opening into the upper pasture had been left free to swing on its hinges.  Billy said that there were a couple of cattle grids in the gravel road under the upper pasture and that the cattle couldn’t cross over those.  “It’s open range anyway,” Billy said.


“Just humor me,” Milt said.  “I have the feeling that something’s wrong.”


Milt had the AC running full-blast but it wasn’t sufficient to cool the cab of the pick-up and so both of them had rolled down their side-windows.  The wind was enormous and buffeted their vehicle.  A few dust devils were twisting on the hillsides below the outcropped rock at the top of the bluffs.  


The road climbed in lazy switchbacks into the foothills.  The higher mountains were blisters of blue lava against the sky.   They bounced over the first cattle guard.  The road ran straight along a grassy terrace overlooked by low ridges lined with pines.  In the distance, Milt saw a pale plume rising over the road.  


“Fire?” Billy asked.


“I don’t think so,” Milt said.


At the base of the plume, there was green Impala lurching from side to side on the gravel road.  Milt saw the oncoming vehicle shudder as it barreled over a cattle grid a half mile away.  The car was dragging a wide tail of greyish-yellow road dust.  


“It’s odd that someone’s up here this time of day,” Milt said.  Billy nodded his head.  


The Impala didn’t exactly yield to them and, so, Milt pulled to the side of the gravel lane to let it pass.  The car’s sides were white with dust.  Inside, Milt saw a driver with his face masked and two passengers.  They had masks over their faces too, eyes popping beneath sun-burnt red foreheads.  Milt saluted the people in the car, but they ignored him, the Impala fishtailing through the loose gravel.  For some reason, the trunk of the car was open.  Milt looked in the rear-view mirror as the Impala passed and thought he saw something red glinting under the lid of the trunk.  


“They’re sure in a hurry,” Milt said.


“Fucking idiots,” Billy replied.


At the top of a rise, a mile down the road, Milt pulled over to inspect his gate.  It was federal land, but he had grazing rights under his lease.  The cattle were resting in the shade of trees beyond the drought-yellow meadow.  The gate was padlocked shut.  


“You see,” Billy said.


“I guess my dream lied to me,” Milt replied.  


As they were turning around, Billy said that he saw a slick of black smoke above the head of a canyon gouged into the hillside about two miles down the road.


“We better take a look,” Milt said.


A single-lane track ran from the county gravel road toward the canyon.  They bounced over the track.  In the shade of trees, they saw an old sheepherder’s trailer.  But there didn’t seem to be anyone around.  The road ruts ended at a point of land overlooking the canyon, a dry stony trench angling downhill between eroded banks of sand and gravel.  The grass was burnt at the overlook and a stain of sooty black was spreading across the hillside, oozing grey smoke at its edges.  


“Fire,” Milt said  


The wind flung handfuls of cinders at them and, as they looked down at the fire, burning ash fluttered up overhead and lit tufts of grass along the lane over which they had come.  The flame snaked across the meadow and ignited a pine tree.  


“We better get out of here,” Milt said.


As they drove back to the gravel road, the pine tree exploded into a shower of orange sparks.  


“I knew there was something wrong.” Milt said.


A tongue of flame crept along the side of the gravel road.  Milt stopped and drained his water bottle onto the fire.  Billy pissed on the flames.


“Not much chance of putting this out, I guess,” Milt said.


They drove a mile back toward the ranch and, then, Milt pulled over to call the Forestry Service to report the fire.  


The man at the Forestry Service said that someone else had reported the fire ten minutes earlier.  “He wouldn’t give his name,” the man said.  “He said that he was right there when the fire lighted up.”


“There was someone on the road,” Milt said.  “Going hell for leather down out of the hills.”


“Who knows?” the Forestry Service guy said.


“I had a feeling that something was wrong,” Milt said.  “It come to me in a dream.”


They drove down to the ranch.  Some planes with big silver bellies were hovering above the foothills, dropping water onto the grass and tree-tops to steer the fire away from the livestock.  


The wind blew the blaze down the canyon, funneling the flames into the valley below.  A crew of men with bulldozers on flatbed trucks inched up the Ridge Road.


Mid-afternoon, Milt and Billy went to the Cattlemen’s Lounge in town.  The dust-coated green Impala was parked among the pickups outside the bar.  The air-conditioners roared like jet turbines.  


Milt and Billy went into the tavern.  Three young men that they didn’t know were sitting at a corner booth, behind the pool tables.  The young men had a pitcher of beer sitting between them.  Their surgical masks were lying like limp, dead butterflies next to their glasses.  A half-dozen ranchers were watching football, an exhibition game. 


Milt went over to the corner booth. 


 “I thought I saw you up on the ridge road,” Milt said to the men.


One of them looked up at him, a little startled.  His eyes were wide and staring and his forehead and the bald patch on his skull were sunburned.


“We don’t know the area,” the man said.  


“What’s the ‘Ridge Road’?” one of the others asked.


Billy had come up behind Milt.  “We seen your green Impala,” he said.


“Yeah, we’re in a green Impala,” the man with the sunburned bald patch said.  “What of it?”


“Well, what were you doing up there?” Billy asked.


“Well, friend, that’s none of your business, is it?” 


Billy shrugged.


The other man said: “I think you’re mistaken.”


“You were wearing masks,” Milt said.


“You want to make this into some kind of political situation?” the sunburned man asked.


“Nah, but you’re not wearing masks now,” Billy said.


“Not required in this establishment,” the man said.  “We inquired.”


Milt said: “I thought I saw a red gas can in the trunk of your car.”


“How could you see into the trunk of the car?  You have x-ray vision or something?”


“It was open,” Billy said.  “I seen too.”


“Are you making an accusation?”  the man with the bald patch said.


The other two strangers shifted uneasily in the booth.


A sheriff’s deputy came into the bar and said that the town had to be evacuated.  The wind had suddenly shifted and the fire was coming in their direction.


“No need to panic,” the sheriff’s deputy said.


People filed out of the tavern, handing cash to the owner who stood by the door. A hillside about a mile away was burnt black between copses of trees that were blazing like torches.  The air smelled of smoke and burning tree-resin.  Billy wanted to follow the strangers in their Impala down the highway in the procession of vehicles leaving town.  But Milt said that they had to get up to ranch to get some of their personal effects and valuable papers.  Wild fires were common in the foothills and it was Red Flag weather and so, like most folks, they had suitcases packed and important documents wrapped-up in rubber bands in plastic bags in a duffel bag.    


As they bumped down the drive-way from the ranch house, Milt asked Billy: “Did you get their driver’s license?”


“I didn’t see the plate,” Billy said.


“That’s a damn shame,” Milt said.


“Was there a fire-pit up there by that sheepherder’s trailer?” Milt asked.


“You know, I didn’t think to look,” Billy said.


Smoke drifted over the highway and the ditches were burning.  Their eyes stung and it was hard to see.


Wednesday, June 23, 2021

Bridge






The bicycle’s rental was more expensive than he expected.  The credit card was maxed-out and so Teabury paid with cash.  The clerk in bike store gave him eight dollars in change.  There was no more money.  


He had the motel room for another 24 hours.  His fuel tank on his car was about half-full.  Teabury didn’t think that would get him back to Santa Fe but he didn’t know for sure.  


What next?


It was about nine miles to the famous bridge over the gorge from the bike rental place in the strip mall.  The morning was clear and the air was cool for the time being, a faint incense-smell of creosote pine in the air.  People were eating in cafes near the intersection downtown and, already, traffic was backed up at the stop light.  Some of the art galleries were already open, glass windows full of pictures of Indians and pueblos and abstract desert landscapes that were the color of salmon and bone.  


Even if you haven’t been on a bike for years, you never forget the skill.  To avoid traffic, he took residential roads toward the edge of town.  The houses were shaped like old adobe dwellings, but the walls and flat roofs were built from concrete.  The lawns were pink gravel studded with cactus.  He saw expensive cars parked in driveways.  Behind him the mountain rose like a blue and green shield, looming over the village so that it seemed to protect the place or, perhaps, threaten it depending upon the configuration of the clouds at its summit.


The plain outside the town was barren and there was no shade.  Cars and trucks passing him on the highway flung pebbles in his direction and bathed him in gusts of hot wind.  Sometimes, the road climbed to plateaus above the plain, stony embankments where ATV tracks had scuffed the patina off the desert surface.  Behind each plateau, the road ramped down into hollow places where ragged-looking trees stood hip-deep in black craters.  


The sun began to torment him half-way to the bridge over the gorge.  Hot rays beat down on him and a cross-wind seemed to nudge Teabury out into the traffic speeding by on the straight highway.


The empty landscape and the wind as if from an oven and the sun blazing overhead turned Teabury inside out.  What was hidden within his body became his surface, exposed to the cruel light.  Purplish dots swam before his eyes.  There was no shade anywhere.  


The road curved down to the metal ramp rising over the desolate terrain to the bridge span.  Trucks zooming by caused Teabury’s bicycle to wobble a bit.  In all directions, blue flints of mountain rose above the horizon, immeasurably distant and featureless like shadows without any object casting them.


It didn’t seem that far down to the jagged-looking terrain below the approach span.  But, then, suddenly, the slot of river gorge came into sight.  Teabury only glanced downward as he labored, pedaling up the incline.  A joint rattled underneath and, then, he was on central span, an arch of girders hanging over the great black fissure where the river ran as a dark ribbon far below. In the midday light, the sun’s rays dropped down into the center of gorge and ran in bright and blinding scales across the river.  From this height, the river seemed entirely motionless, a grim, grey serpent ground to death by the stony vise of the canyon.  


Midway across the gorge, a metal-fenced balcony extended out from side of the bridge, an overlook into the canyon.  Some tourists wearing sunglasses and colorful red and blue baseball caps were making their way from the opposite rim toward the center of the bridge.  The height seemed to appall them and they approached in silence.  Another bicyclist wearing a streamlined purple hat paused at the balcony, dismounted, and, taking a selfie-stick from a backpack, posed for some pictures.  


Teabury put down the kick-stand and looked down into the grey and black gorge.  He was very thirsty.  Wind swept across the bridge, a hot torrent of air that made Teabury’s eyes sting.  The wind deafened him.  If people were speaking, he couldn’t hear their words, swept away by the hot gale.  


Next to the overlook, a sign said that if you were considering suicide, there was hope: there is hope.  Teabury felt his insides were outside.  The sun was roasting him and his mouth was dry.  Implacable mountains many miles away stood sentinel on all horizons.  At one of the corners in the fenced balcony, a silver box was printed with words: There is hope and Crisis? the letters next to a red button.  Call here, it said on the face of the box.


How many people had thrown themselves off this point?  Teabury thought of pregnant girls abandoned by their boyfriends, old men with cancer, junkies.  He had no insides because everything had been turned inside-out.  Therefore, he didn’t know why he had chosen to ride to the gorge.  Whatever thoughts that had impelled him to make this trip, using pretty much all of his remaining cash, were unclear to him.  He felt inaccessible to himself.


After the tourists had gawked for awhile at the depths, muttering about the heat, they turned away and walked over the span toward the access ramp and their cars glinting in the sunshine on a distant ledge.  Some more cars and trucks swept by, hauling behind them dismal plumes of hot dust and tiny, sharp stones.  Teabury felt a little dizzy.  The abyss was calling to him.  Out of an impulse, he pressed the red button on the box labeled Crisis.  If there was any response, Teabury couldn’t hear it – the wind seemed to swirl up out of the depths and spin in a vortex around his head.  He took out his phone to dial the phone number emblazoned on the sign next to the words There is hope.  But, on the ride out to the bridge, he had used his map function a little too much and the cell-phone’s battery was dead.  To get over the fence, which was chest-high, you would have to haul yourself up atop the metal rail and, in this wind, that would be a difficult thing to do and, most likely, you would fall, not jump – it wouldn’t be a clean dive into oblivion, but a tumble down into the gorge, topping end over end like a rag doll.  Teabury thought that would be distasteful, particularly with a small group of tourists approaching, several of them small, and, it seemed, children.


Teabury put up his kick stand and wobbled away from the overlook, the bicycle unsteady under him.  The wind pushed him out onto the highway and a passing SUV honked loudly.


Halfway back to town, Teabury thought that he had never intended to jump off the bridge and that it was merely the heat and thirst that made his head pound and throb and the invitations to suicide posted all over the span that had confused him.  The bike seemed to move on its own, automatically without any effort on his part.  But when he came to the long incline up to the stony plateau overlooking town, he had to dismount and, panting, push the bicycle to the top.  The plateau was completely desolate, knee-high wrinkles of congealed lava twisting away from the highway.  A calligraphy of tread marks scarred the barren top of the plateau.


Then, it was all downhill into town.  He felt faint and nauseous.  Sometimes, he rode with his hands at his side, not touching the handlebars and in the center of the highway, letting the cars roar around him in a blaze of honking horns.  


The houses on the outskirts of town looked like stone barges stranded in the stony wilderness.  Teabury felt that he would perish if he couldn’t find a drink of water.  He saw a bright green hose screwed onto a faucet on the side of a house, let his bike fall into the gravel by the mailbox, and, then, lurched forward toward the hose connection.  He turned the faucet and a tiny spray of water misted the air where the hose was screwed into the pipe.  It took all of his will power not to suck at the hose connection.  Instead, he turned and walked along the course of the hose to where it flowed into a small bed of prickly-looking roses mounted on a wooden trellis.  He put the hose end in his mouth and sucked at it.


A voice sounded: “Can I help you?”


Teabury turned around and saw a middle-aged woman with grey hair and a sun-tanned brown chest covered with freckles under heavy loops of bright turquoise necklace.  The woman was holding a baseball bat, a Louisville Slugger by the look of things.


“I got caught out in the sun,” Teabury said.  “I’m real thirsty.”


The woman said: “It’s the high elevation.  You have to stay hydrated.  I have some lemonade, if you’ll wait at the picnic table.”  


She gestured toward the side of the house where there was a paving stone patio and a metal table under a remuda hung with red, tallowy-looking ristras of chili.  


“Thank you so much,” Teabury said.  He put down the hose.  “Please shut off the water,” the woman said.


She went into the house and Teabury twisted the faucet shut.  He sat at the table.  In a hollow cactus, a dozen feet from the patio, Teabury saw a tiny white owl winking at him.


The woman brought a large glass with lemonade and ice.


Later, he returned to bike to the cycle shop, bought some day-old doughnuts for ninety-nine cents at a gas station convenience store, and, then, went back to his motel room.  The motel was old and built with adobe brick and the inside of the room was as cold and moist as a cave.  The walls seemed to be very thick and held the heat outside at distance.  


Next to the bed, a deep niche in the wall sheltered a little painted statue.  A young woman wearing a green dress down to ankles stood in the shadowy alcove.  In her arms, she cradled a book with a gold cover on which a four-leaf clover was embossed.


Teabury took a shower to wash the poison from the sunburn out of his skin.  His neck and arms tingled.  The sheets on the motel bed were fresh and clean and he laid down to take a nap.  He was sure he would feel better after sleeping.   

Wednesday, June 16, 2021

Legion of Glory

 




1.

The terrorists stood behind a long yellow banner on which red words were painted.  They had come in great numbers on foot or by bicycle.  The Metro was closed and the buses detoured far around the place where the terrorists had gathered so as not to feed the mob of rioters.


The day was warm and moist.  The Colonel watched as bottles and paving stones flew through the air. Those toward the rear of the procession were also throwing things and the projectiles fell short, landing amidst the front ranks of the terrorists.  The Colonel saw a stone knock down a woman in a blue vest, her face masked against tear gas.  He thought that the security forces would surely be blamed for that injury.  A couple of bottles burst on the pavement in front of him and a questionable liquid splashed in the air.  


So far the soldiers were showing forbearance and good order.  The command was to shoot to wound, not kill.  Dead terrorists just meant more funerals and each of these ceremonies led to additional rioting.  Wounded terrorists were a burden to their movement and a warning more severe, the Colonel thought, than dead martyrs.  


The terrorist mob was a river of people with its headwaters in the suburbs.  All the alleys and side-streets were tributary to the rioters in the public square.  Signs surged on the rippling spine of the crowd.  The lettering was sloppy and words were misspelled.  Terrorists, the Colonel thought, are poor spellers.  He looked to the periphery of the mob: it was important that the rioters not flank the triple line of security forces deployed across the square.  More bottles and rocks arced overhead.  The troops batted them down with their rifles or riot batons.  Some mortars were deployed behind the Colonel and he heard their muzzles coughing as they tossed tear gas canisters in high trajectories down into the mob.


The rain of rocks and bottles ceased.  The terrorists were singing their marching song.  The Colonel thought that this was a good thing – people who are singing aren’t likely to pitch projectiles at the security forces.  He had heard the song before, enough times that he almost knew the words, but had never really paid much attention to it.   He noticed the song to the extent of recognizing that people who are singing aren’t attacking, or, at least, not yet.


The song was built on the melody of an American pop tune that had been played frequently a decade earlier.  The Colonel listened for a moment.  He recalled that he and a girlfriend had danced to that music in a discotheque several years before.  The tune made him a little nostalgic and brought warm memories to him. Why was it that the subversives and hooligans had all the best songs?


At the back corner of the plaza, there was some kind of skirmish.  Some shots sounded.  The Colonel saw two armored personnel carriers slowly lumbering into position along the side of the terrorist procession.  More tear gas canisters burst on the pavement and the air was stinging.  The marching song broke into fragments, here and there a choir of voices, it seemed, still shouting out the words but without melody.  


The terrorist mob suddenly seemed to boil, hissing like the monsoon rain when it fills city lanes with water almost hip-deep and flushes away all the debris in the gutters.  The Colonel saw the shadows of projectiles fleeing across the pavement like black birds.  He didn’t need to give the order to fire.  The troops were shooting sporadically into the crowd on their own initiative and some of the terrorists were motionless under the big yellow banner with red letters.     


2.

That night, at the barracks, the Colonel heard some of the troops gloating about terrorists that they had shot.  The Colonel thought that these remarks were tasteless and he pretended not to hear them.


In the toilet, one of men was whistling the terrorist’s marching song.  The notes were clear and piercing.  


The Colonel admonished the man: “Soldier, who’s side are you on?”


“What do you mean?”  The man asked him.


“That song you’re whistling,” the Colonel said.


The soldier looked bewildered.  Then, he said: “Oh, I hadn’t even noticed.  It’s a catchy tune.  It gets caught in your head.”


“Be more careful,” the Colonel said.  


3.

The terrorists returned the next day in even greater numbers.  But the rioting was anticipated.  The Colonel’s men stood to the rear of the front-line of armored soldiers.  Bottles and cobblestones rained down, rebounding off the shields that the front-line troops wielded.  


The Colonel heard the marching song rising from within the mob.  The melody sounded wind-borne, inflated somehow by the humid breeze, amplified by the concrete towers surrounding the square.  The Colonel remembered his girlfriend and dancing with and resolved to ignore the song.  But today the singers seemed particularly robust and enthusiastic and the Colonel thought that he heard harmony in some of the stanzas.  There were endless words affixed to the song, but they didn’t matter – only the melody had significance and it rose and fell, climbing to high notes that vibrated over the crowd.  


“There’s no reason we shouldn’t sing as well,” the Colonel said to his adjutant.  He ordered that the supporting troops in his column sing their regimental tune, “Legion of Glory.”  The men did as commanded, but, reluctantly, it seemed – their notes were haphazard, words pronounced hesitantly as if half of the men didn’t know the verses that they were supposed to be singing.  “Legion of Glory”, the Colonel thought, is a dull, listless tune, dour and gloomy and monotonous without the fine fire and esprit of the terrorist’s song.  


A bottle ricocheted off the pavement in front of him and smashed into his shin.  The men behind him kept singing monotonously like robots.  Waves of melody rolled across the columns of terrorists.  The soldiers in the front line, dropped their shields, knelt and fired into the mob.  The Colonel wasn’t sure whether they were using live ammunition or rubber bullets.  A swath of terrorists dropped to the concrete and their song turned into a high-pitched atonal wail.  


4.

After his evening meal, the Colonel paced back and forth across the parade-ground between the barracks.  Fires set in the city’s center painted the sky orange and red.  The Colonel found that his steps fell into a certain rhythm.  Then, he found himself humming a tune.  To his dismay, he realized that he was humming the terrorist’s marching song.  He jammed a cigarette into his lips and began to smoke to avoid singing along with the terrorist’s melody.  Even when he was silent, however, the song vibrated in his imagination.  For some reason, the melody was caught in his mind and he couldn’t expel it.


5.

Even more terrorists had gathered in the square the next day.  The city workers had only just washed away the blood stains from the day before when the mobs appeared, crowding forward toward the ranks of security forces.  The same badly spelled placards and banners bobbed over the mass of people.  All sorts of things were flung through the air and dropped among his troops.  The Colonel knocked away projectiles and heard stones rattling like hail on the pavement.  


He wished the protesters would sing, but they didn’t.  The soldiers and the terrorists mingled in hand-to-hand combat.  Tear gas boiled off the ground.  Far away, in an alley somewhere, the terrorists were singing, but the melody was distant and hard to hear.  Nonetheless, it seemed to resound in the Colonel’s ear.  


A thunderstorm covered the sky and obliterated the city streets with vertical sheets of rain split by lightning.  


6.

Crowd control was going poorly.  Many of his men had suffered minor wounds in the fighting.  Several trucks came to cart the dead terrorists from the square.  The bodies were sodden and heavy.  Far more rioters were thought to have been killed, but their bodies had been dragged away from the square by their fellow rebels.  


The Colonel thought that the authorities should ban people from singing the terrorist anthem.  The song seemed to be giving the hoodlums strength.  


7.

The next several days were for funerals.  The people who gathered for the funerals were different from the mobs that attacked the police.  But, after each burial, great choruses of mourners sang the terrorist anthem.  The Colonel and his men watched the funerals from a distance.  The song inspired the hooligans to lay down in a solid carpet at several intersections.  City police rode on horseback over the protestors dashing them with the sharp hooves of their horses.  But, when one person was injured, another took his place.


8.

The riots were getting worse, more violent and deadly.  A soldier died when a rock split open his skull.  There was sniper fire and it wasn’t always entirely from the security forces.  When the Colonel sent his men hurtling down the streets on patrol, they quick-marched past acres of burned buildings.


9.

One morning a large mob of terrorists, most of them women and children, had gathered in the plaza.  Their voices were raised in song.  The Colonel thought that he could sing as well as these hooligans, that he had a better and more robust voice.  So, he decided to step forward and show the terrorists that he knew their song as well as they and that he could sing it even more vigorously. 


The heroic melody surged in the humid air.  The Colonel stepped forward, advancing through the open space between the ranks of his men and the terrorists.  Some bottles bursts before him and a couple of tear gas canisters dropped on the pavement were whirling around like tops, hissing and jetting fumes into the air.


The Colonel had a beautiful tenor voice and he began to sing the terrorist anthem. Something knocked him down and he heard the shot barked off the concrete walls of the towers only after he had fallen face down on the pavement.  In his mind, the melody continued even as the darkness gathered around him.  

Sunday, June 13, 2021

Think: Why Die?

 




1.

The four-lane pushed down from the hills onto the flood plain.  Twenty-eight miles from the city, construction stalled.  The plain was flat and plowed black with deep fertile soil and land prices were exorbitant.  Acquiring highway rights-of-way proved difficult and eminent domain proceedings advanced slowly through the courts in the two counties traversed by the new road.  Some tribal land intervened between the place where the freeway narrowed to the two-lane county blacktop and the broad controlled access road at the outskirts of town and tribal negotiators asserted sovereignity over their territory, further complicating acquisition of acreage for the roadbed.  Then, the economy went into freefall, not once but twice during the fifteen year hiatus in construction.  Land values were unpredictable and budget estimates had to be revised repeatedly and, for a time, the Department of Transportation engineers supervising the project despaired – the link between the City highway and the freeway in the hills seemed indefinitely delayed.  


But the economy improved and legal obstacles to finishing the 28 mile stretch of freeway still incomplete seemed to dissolve, perhaps because all parties were exhausted, and, one Spring, when ice had melted in the little meandered creeks winding across the river bottom, earthmovers as yellow as the dandelions growing in the easement ditches, rolled into place and began cutting open the fields to lay the new roadbed.  Lebendiger drove out to the hillside where the bulldozers were knocking down trees and gouging out troughs where four-lanes of concrete would be poured.  A survey crew was about a mile away from the construction, shooting gradients along the mapped route.  The old two-lane county state-aid highway curved away from the little knoll where the surveyors were working, trucks and cars passing over that portion of road.  A half-mile distant, the highway’s curve straightened where the black-top went white, a cement overpass arched only slightly over a small stream.  The bridge stood on pale pylons, far longer than the little meander that trickled under it – on this plain, these streams were prone to flooding and so the span stretched across a broad, shallow trench lined with reeds and small willow trees before crossing the braided river bed.  One of the survey transits was aimed at the chalk-colored bridge.  


“Take a look,” the surveyor said.  The sky was bright and the man was sweating in his bright orange safety vest.


Lebendiger put his eye to the transit.  On the far side of the creek bed, three diamond-shaped signs stood atop four-foot iron stakes.  The signs were lettered: Think: Why Die?  


“State fatality markers,” Lebendiger said.


Lebendiger knew that the inverse of the sign was labeled X Marks the Spot.  The top half of the diamond-shaped metal sign-face was treated with a reflective surface intended to capture and reflect beams from headlights.  The bottom part of the sign was funereal black, but, also, shiny.  Lebendiger knew that this part of the sign also reflected light, although as a dark, scarcely perceptible flash when it was night-time.  


“What are we supposed to do with those?” the head surveyor asked.


“I’ll be damned if I know,” Lebendiger replied.  


2.

Back at his office at the DOT, Lebendiger looked up the State’s regulations as to motor vehicle accident fatality markers.  Old-timers swore that the signs had first been placed in the late 1930's as part of a campaign for road safety mounted by Farm State Mutual Insurance.  But this was a myth.  According to the official web site, fatality markers were first installed along highways to identify places were travelers had died in car crashes beginning around 1990.  Although the program was partly subsidized by an insurance company, the markers were owned and managed by the State.  


Signs were supervised by County road officials.  Regulations were simple: markers were installed unless the family of the deceased objected.  When new road was constructed, signs were removed.  There was no other guidance.  The markers were numbered and, somewhere, there was a registry identifying the date of the MVA and the name (or names) of the victims.  Lebendiger located the computer ledger but it was only current for the last decade.  No one knew where earlier records were stored.


The State Patrol maintained records by road and mile-marker.  Lebendiger called his survey team and wrote down the mile-marker closest to the signs.  The accident turned out to be 25 years old, a crash involving some Hispanic migrant workers.  Alcohol was involved and the car had veered from the road to slam head-on against the bridge abutment.  The car rolled into the swamp under the bridge pylons.  Everyone was ejected (speed and seat-belt violations): someone survived but the other three were DOA.  One of the bodies was recovered, a little downstream, washed into a tangle of brush by the river’s current.  The young men were undocumented; the names they had given their employer, a sugar beet refining company near the County Seat, were invalid and their social security numbers registered to dead people in Harlingen, Texas.  Rumor was that two of the bodies were collected by cousins and driven down to Mexico.  The third corpse was cremated at County expense and the ashes delivered to the local Catholic church.   


Lebendiger sent an email to the General Contractor on the road project: he was authorized to remove the accident markers and send them with the State Engineer back to DOT headquarters.  Probably, the signs could be re-purposed.


3.

Lebendiger was on a ZOOM-call when the receptionist handed him a slip of paper.  Someone named Mr. Hernandez was waiting in the lobby.  “Does he have an appointment?” Lebendiger wrote on the note.  “No,” the receptionist scribbled.  Lebendiger muted his microphone and told her that the visitor would have to wait.  “I’ll come out as soon as I’m done with this call,” Lebendiger said.


The ZOOM conference lasted another half-hour.  After he logged-out, Lebendiger went to the lobby.  The waiting room was empty.  “He just left,” the receptionist said.  “Is he planning to come back?” Lebendiger asked.  “I don’t know,” the receptionist said, “I had trouble understanding his English.”  Lebendiger went to the window and gazed out at the parking lot.  He didn’t see anyone outside.  It was hot and the air shimmered over the chrome and metal car bodies and, across the green mall, the State Capitol building, looked wilted and pinkish in the blaze of sun, a great pale blossom turned upside down under the blue sky.  “It’s a scorcher,” Lebendiger said.


But the lobby was cold and the receptionist had put on a sweater.  “Too much air-conditioning?” Lebendiger asked.  “I guess,” the woman said.


The next day, Lebendiger was on the road, meeting with several concrete contractors.  He didn’t return to the DOT until later afternoon.  “That Mr. Hernandez was here again,” the receptionist said.  “Well, I wasn’t here,” Lebendiger said.  “You weren’t here,” she repeated.


“That guy is weird,” the receptionist said.


“What do you mean?”


“He was dirty and wet.  Maybe, he was just sweating,” she said.  “He said he wanted to talk to you about a sign.  I think he waited for a half-hour and kept falling asleep.”  


“Falling asleep?”


“Just closing his eyes and dozing I guess,” the receptionist told him.


“Well, I’m glad I didn’t have to deal with him,” Lebendiger said.


“Thanks a lot,” the receptionist pouted.


Mr. Hernandez appeared again, late the next afternoon.  “He’s here again,” the receptionist said, shuddering a little.  


“I don’t want to see him,” Lebendiger said.  


“What am I supposed to tell him?” 


“That I’m sick.”  Lebendiger added: “It’s not far from true.”


“Okay,” she said.


Lebendiger went out the back door and got into his pickup truck.  It was still hot and, except for heat, the sky was empty.  The legislators weren’t in session and the Capitol grounds were deserted.  


On the way home, Lebendiger felt faint and had to pull to the side of the road.  He got out of his car and vomited into the ditch.


In the morning, he felt better and went to work early.  The waiting room at the DOT building smelled bad and there was a puddle of stagnant water on the carpet in front of the reception desk.  This was inexplicable  – it hadn’t rained for several weeks.  Lebendiger thought that the air conditioning system was leaking.  The muddy puddle on the carpet looked menacing, the kind of water that transmitted Legionnaires Disease.


Over the noon hour, Lebendiger went to DOT garage across town.  A couple of workers were washing down some State dump trucks in the pole-barn bay.  


Lebendiger asked the workers about the MVA victim markers retrieved from the project linking the State freeway to the city boulevard up in the Valley.  “They were here until about a week ago,” one of the workers said, gesturing to the metal wall against which some battered signs were resting.  The other man said: “I don’t know where they’ve gone.”  


Yellow hard hats hung on brackets on the wall and there were yellow vests with outlined with reflective tape.  


“They’re gone now,” the worker holding the hose said.  Water spread across the concrete floor and gurgled down a drain.


4.

The State Highway department partnered with a county far to the north on an overpass project.  Lebendiger attended the bid-letting at the county courthouse.  It was late afternoon when his work was done.  He’d been feeling a bit queasy in recent weeks and considered staying at the motel in town.  But the place looked uninviting and, so, Lebendiger decided to drive home.  


He took the State Highway jogging through the northern forests.  The late afternoon sun raked through the trees and they cast long crooked shadows over the black top.  The little towns in the woods seemed deserted.  It was still light when the highway dropped a ramp down onto the freeway.  The sun set over the rolling prairie.  Lebendiger pulled in to a rest stop.  Under the florescent lights in the toilet, he caught a glimpse of his face in the mirror.  Lebendiger thought that he looked old and harried, his skin pinkish-yellow.


There was very little traffic.  Now and then, he passed a semi-trailer hauling animals to slaughter.  Headlights in the oncoming lanes were few and far between.  After an hour, the divided highway skated down some hills between shadowy, black ravines and, then, the road ran over the flat flood-plain.  Construction signs warned about the place ahead where his south-bound lanes contracted to two-way traffic.  Obediently, he slowed, following a line of orange cones on a temporary slick of asphalt over the median onto the old State-aid highway.  Headlights flared oncoming, dangerously close.  On the side of the old highway, Lebendiger glimpsed some colossal machines hulking in the darkness, earthen ramps, a conical pile of gravel looming over a dump truck.  Someone had hoisted a generator forty feet in the air where it hung from a crane draped with an American flag.


The fatal bridge abutment was ahead.  His tires singing underneath the car changed tone as the road went from asphalt to concrete.  A white skull-like face suddenly loomed out of the shadow on the right side of the highway.  Lebendiger was startled and instinctively veered left, away from the apparition.  A cold chill ran down his spine and he shuddered.  


It wasn’t obvious how he could turn around.  Some headlights glared behind and, far ahead, the front of an oncoming truck sprayed rays ahead of it.  Lebendiger thought that it would be best to just continue on his way, but the pale, bony face hovering in the darkness troubled him and he thought it would be cowardly to proceed without investigating.  A quarter mile beyond the bridge, he found a long gravel driveway running to a palisade of trees where a yard-light glimmered.  Lebendiger turned around and drove back up the road, over the bridge, and, then, turned around in the construction site.  A scatter of stones like pebbles on the moon shone in his headlights.  He looked up and down the highway: nothing.  Then, he drove toward the bridge, rolling forward at about 10 miles an hour.  He lowered his window and could smell the moisture in the air, a heavy warm odor of mud and still water.  Crickets and frogs sang.  


A white plastic bag, a grocery sack, it seemed, was caught on one of the tenth-of-a-mile markers, a stake on the side of the road with a little diamond-shaped reflector.  Although there was no breeze at all, air had inflated the bag and it hung bulbous from the top of the marker.  The sack billowed slightly and, as it moved, Lebendiger saw that it simulated – at least when seen obliquely and glimpsed – a human skull.  Eye sockets were indented in the pale plastic and there was a bald bony brow over them.  Sometimes, a round mouth twitched at the base of the sack blown against the metal stake and trapped there.  


For a few miles, Lebendiger felt relieved.  There was a natural explanation for what he had seen.  But, by the time, he reached the city, he was troubled once more.


5.

The new four-lane reached the stream.  The old cement bridge was jack-hammered into rubble and buried in the median under a mound of dirt.  


Winter was coming.  Soon most of the work would have to be suspended.  


Lebendiger’s engineer at the construction site sent him an email with a photograph attached.  Someone had jabbed a MVA victim marker into the wet concrete on the new overpass above the stream.  The steel stanchion and the metal lozenge of the marker hung from the side of the bridge like a hatchet.  Graffiti was scribbled on the new abutment: KILLER.


“Already defaced,” the email message said.


“Probably several felonies here,” Lebendiger replied.  “Better set up a surveillance camera.”


“Just kids,” the site engineer wrote back.


A small camera was set inside a pickup truck parked near the new bridge.  Several times, the camera showed shadowy figures on the bridge deck, but it was agreed that these were probably deer crossing the river on the concrete span.  After the MVA marker was retrieved and the graffiti sandblasted from the abutment, there were no further incidents.  The MVA marker was indexed as one of the three that had previously been planted near the old bridge.


6.

The cancer seemed to advance from place to place.  It was building bridges across his body.  Lebendiger was unwell.  He thought of his body as comprised of nodes of sickness that were slowly constructing connections over spans of glistening tissue.


7.

A couple days before the stem-cell transplant, Lebendiger went to the DOT garage and asked the supervisor to tell him the truth about the three MVA markers.  The man was suspicious and asked if he were in some kind of trouble.  “No,” Lebendiger said, “but I just need to know.”


The garage manager said that the markers were unstable and kept falling over with a loud crash that startled the men.  Finally, one of the workers said that he was just going to get rid of the signs.  The manager didn’t know where they had been taken.


Lebendiger had the employee brought to the shop office.  The man looked uneasy and asked if he needed to call his union steward.  Lebendiger assured him that all was well.


“I know I shouldn’t have done it,” the man said.  “But I took them over to a lake out in the country and dumped them off the fishing pier.”


The man named the lake.


Lebendiger and the worker drove out to the lake.  It was a perfectly round body of water, shallow and surrounded by reeds.  Some clumps of brownish algae were floating as islands near the center of the lake.  Big dragonflies darted between the cattails and, across the lake, four steel grain bins were reflected in the still surface.


At the end of a couple hundred yards of gravel lane, a sandy spit extended into the water.  To the side, some planks had been hammered together to make a rickety wooden pier.  A big dead carp, eviscerated, lay on the wood planks.  In the center of the lake, a rowboat drifted, apparently empty.  The rowboat was cream-colored with oars in their locks and bright with a single red safety vest.


“I pitched the markers off the dock,” the man said.  Lebendiger walked to the end of the dock, careful to not slip on the entrails of the carp smeared on the planks.  The water at the end of the dock was muddy and he couldn’t see any trace of the signs.  The row boat slowly rotated in the middle of the lake and a cloud dragged shadow over the water.


“I wonder where the man has gone,” the worker said, gesturing at the little boat.


“He’s probably fallen asleep and we just can’t see him,” Lebendiger said.


“I suppose,” the highway worker replied.