Friday, February 27, 2015

CONTINUED: Scroogled



Tough choices, but necessary for someone who would eventually become a strong woman. Angela got out of the trade at age 20, miraculously escaping disease, addiction and a host of other job related dangers. She moved to a new town, led a quiet life and attended church where she met and married the minister's son. The young man was at home after graduating from college and he fell head over heels in love with her. They enjoyed a warm and successful marriage.  Their three children are proud of a Mom who today has her own award winning jewelry arts business and is involved in community volunteer work. 

Angela’s story of redemption began a half century ago when she changed her life, a process she said felt like jumping out of an airplane. A new beginning for Angela in today’s world might not be possible. There's a good chance she would never have the opportunity to start all over. Prospective employers might request her Facebook password so a Human Resources clerk could snoop around for photos of Angela in her underwear.  Mr. Raster at the appliance store might secretly tape their activities and upload the video to an Internet porn site. Angela might get out of her parent's house at sixteen, but her prospects of getting a job in her home town or any city would be remote. Getting a job on the moon might be easier. While she became more desperate each week, a Google of her name could show more arrests as Angela tried to escape from her trap.  A girl has to live while she deals with one rejection after another.  We might say she’d be Scroogled.

A human tradition is to begin again. To move to a new town and make a fresh start, to leave a job one was not suited for and go to work for another company. There was a time when a person could start over. Stories abound of famous people who would not have been successful if they had not been able to go elsewhere to set up their tent. Today that’s less possible.  The Internet and Google aren't the only agencies that can prevent this from happening, but they are major forces that inhibit one's ability to start over. 

You can't escape. No matter where you go, everything about you ... your troubled marriage, your rash decisions at a young age, the anti-business paper you wrote for a high school civics class, a copy of your genome along with a listing of your propensities toward getting certain diseases or even developing a gambling addiction.  The note your elementary school nurse, a born-again Baptist, wrote saying that unless disciplined you might become a sociopath. She wrote that about all the boys. It’s all on line for anyone to view. Your past never truly becomes the past. It is always with you, dogging you, ready to testify against you, to damn you. 

There’s no question one should learn from his mistakes. And yes, society needs information to protect itself from criminal intent. But as you move on in life you should not have to bring along all your mistakes and the opinions of people who never liked you anyway. Energy spent on new beginnings should not be siphoned off to continually fight the bad actions of your past.

If you’re like  Angela, you deserve a chance for a new beginning. You won’t be getting it from the Internet.







David Griffin                                   Copyright 2014



The Windswept Press

Murrells Inlet, South Carolina

CONTINUED: Mail Boy (from MS Place)



When Jesse began firing that day, Mr. Lynch pulled out his pistol and fired three shots at Jesse, right between the eyes.  The kid jumped out of his skin and fell backward to the ground in shock. 
Crying and rolling around in the dirt, feeling all over himself for bullet holes, he reached Mr. Lynch’s feet and crawled up the man’s leg, bawling and groveling and asking for mercy.  I thought this was quite funny, of course, and began to laugh at my brother’s over-acting.  But Mr. Lynch judged that Jesse was seriously frightened.  The postman felt terrible, he said, and interrupted his duties to take the boy down to the drug store on the corner and buy him a milkshake.  I was not invited.  That should have been a life lesson for me, to hold my cards closer to the chest.
So I headed back to the bedroom to plan how to spruce it up.  Mom said if we weren’t done by noon, Dad would back the car up across the lawn to our bedroom and open the trunk.  Mom would start  throwing stuff out the window. I was pretty sure Dad would not back over his precious grass, but Mom was less predictable in those days before they found her the right meds.
Dad was very predictable.  He was born Catholic, raised Catholic, would die a Catholic and wanted me to be a priest.
“Why me?”  I asked. “Why not Jesse?”
“You get the best grades in school.”
“I want to be a playboy when I grow up,” I told him.
“How will you earn a living?”
“Maybe as a bartender, maybe a microscope salesman, maybe—“
“You have to earn your keep in this world,” he said.
“I’ll be a juh-Guy-low.”
“That’s gigolo,” he said. “and you certainly don’t—“
“I read about them in a magazine my friend Georgie has.”
“What the heck kind of magazine—“
“Boys Life,” I said. 
“Boys Life?”
I had him going now.
“Or something like that,” I said.

Jesse arrived back around eleven o’clock, burped loudly and blamed our mess squarely on me.  “And your stupid brochures,” he added.
I specialized in brochures and ephemera from the great American West.  An earnest eleven year old,  I became convinced my entire future lie in the state of Arizona.  I don’t quite remember why, except I was sure a lot of cowboys lived there.  To me, a cowboy’s life was surely ideal, but that was before I fell face first into a cow plop in the field behind my cousin’s house.  And decided I’d rather grow up to be a playboy.
Of course, most of the cowboys I admired weren’t in Arizona anyway.  I was unaware Hollywood faked everything, including location.  I suppose I should have guessed that after watching movies scenes from Mars. 
.  My father said he should have charged me rent for the use of our mail box when I was a kid. I probably cut out every advertisement in the back of Popular Mechanics, Boys Life and The Saturday Evening Post.  I filled in the tiny boxes with my name and address and mailed them off to one company or another. I anxiously waited for the “free offer” to arrive in a couple of weeks.  I don’t remember ever getting much of a return for my efforts, usually colorful brochures and invitations to spend money.  Oh, and a fire extinguisher
The railroads constantly ran magazine ads and sent out brochures tempting easterners to go west and, for all I knew, westerners to come east.  The aim was to sell tickets to the farthest destinations.  My collection of Arizona, Montana and California brochures and maps soon mushroomed.  Piles grew higher on top of my dresser, the only space left in the bedroom I shared with my little brother.  My quest for the west was not a tidy affair.  The walls were already decorated with two by three foot weather maps that arrived daily from the U.S. Weather Bureau in Washington. That’s right … an updated map every single day adding to the pile in our mailbox and filling up the walls.  All for only seventy eight cents per month.  Uncle Billy said we had more maps than the War Department.  Dad bought a second mail box.  Mr. Lynch became grumpy again.
The bottom drawer of my dresser was filled with Stamp Collector Bargains.  For only a dollar, a company mailed me 1,000 valuable stamps from countries I’d never heard of.  “Spend your evenings sifting through them and you might discover a rare stamp worth thousands!”  I had as much chance of discovering a rare stamp as a new planet.
I was hoping to discover gold, however.  Although I no longer have the paperwork to prove it,  I was convinced I owned one square inch of real property somewhere in Canada’s Yukon Territory.  So did everyone who got one of the 21 million deeds printed in 1955. A marketing promotion sponsored by Quaker Oats, people for some reason remember it as the “Square Inch of Alaska” program.  Most Americans have never excelled in geography.  I was spellbound by the thought of actually finding gold in my little parcel. I worried about standing on someone else’s inch while I dug for riches with a teaspoon.  So, in my imagination I saw myself  on a platform supported by a single pipe jammed into my square inch of earth.  I hoped air rights would not be an issue.
No matter where the land was, I doubt if its climate matched the snowy fields and half-frozen Eskimos standing around in my imagination.  Today the 19 acres of tiny square inch parcels are part of a golf course.
I got good grades in school and was pretty impressed with myself, so I decided it was time to “make big bucks in electronics.” Numerous correspondence schools stood by to aid me in my pursuit of higher education.  Used to a free education, I had no idea they would want money.  I mailed away to all of them and soon both mail boxes exploded with brochures, course catalogs and loan applications.  Many of the envelopes had electrical symbols printed on them.  My grandmother, who lived with us, thought these were Satanic icons and told my mother I was being sought after to join a coven.  Her imagination was as overworked as mine.
Grandma answered the phone in the kitchen one night and a man asked to speak with me.
“What do you want with him?”  I heard her say.
She listened to him for a few seconds as I began to slither away toward the back door in an attempted escape.
Grandma’s free hand snapped out as though it was on the end of  a lizard’s tongue and caught my shoulder.  She spun me into the crook of her elbow and held me in a headlock.  Gram was an experienced child sitter and home jailer.  A bit heavy handed at times, she was nonetheless in demand by the parents of unruly children..
“I don’t think he’s able to come to Chicago,” she said into the phone.
I could hear the man ask a question..
“No, he’s not …” she began to say and paused. “That is … he’s not crippled at this very moment, but he certainly will be when I get off the phone.”
I sensed there would be no future in my use of the U.S. Mail if success depended upon my family’s cooperation.  So I struck out on another path.  No more hiding behind a three cent stamp.  I was by then eleven and a half and ready to meet the public face to face.

I made the liquor store a regular stop on my way home from Our Lady Of Lourdes School once each week . On Friday afternoons the staff replaced the  window displays.  In with the new and out with the old.  Most of the stuff did not go back to the ad agencies.  Instead it was thrown out.  But not while I was around.  In the 1950s some of the displays made terrific toys.  A miniature theatrical stage about three feet tall and constructed of poster board originally featured bottles of Gordon’s gin.  I modified it by tearing a hole in the top.  It became a theater for my brother’s Howdy Doody puppet.
A three foot long reasonable facsimile of the Yacht America came home on my shoulders one Friday afternoon.  It too was made of lightweight poster board, which was helpful because there wasn’t much space left in the bedroom and I had no shelf on the wall for the boat.  My brother and I just taped it up on the wall with the weather maps.  It stayed put most of the time, but often fell down in the middle of the night and woke us up.  There was no way I could squeeze it among the brochures on my dresser.  My brother’s bureau was already filled to capacity with model airplanes and his rock collection, which to me didn’t appear any different from a handful of gravel, so small was each rock.  I would lay them out to spell bad words and he got blamed.  We weren’t allowed to use nails on the walls.  So we taped the Yacht America,  sleek with “Schenley’s” writ wide down the hull from stem to stern, back up on the wall and threw a dart at it for extra support.  Within the letter of the law, we never received a complaint.
Mom was embarrassed the night my brother told Aunt Sue I stopped at the liquor store on Fridays after school to stock up for the weekend.  Dad finally put his foot down the afternoon my friend George and I used his Radio Flyer wagon to truck home an honest-to-goodness bar from the liquor store, with a brass foot rail and teak top.  All made from cardboard, of course.  At half scale to fit in store windows, it was just about kid size. We set it up in the basement after my mother refused to let us put it in the dining room.  I guess it didn’t match the furniture.
Then too, alcohol was getting a bad name in our household as the family began to deal with Grandma’s sister, tipsy old Great Aunt Eusebia. I still remember the Thanksgiving dinner when she fell into the bowl of mashed potatoes. She was talking a blue streak … telling on one of her neighbors in Oriskany … when her elbow slipped on the table cloth and she flopped over into the bowl, coming slightly out of her seat at the table. She never stopped talking, but hauled herself up and wiped the potatoes from her face with the napkin she pulled from Dad’s neck as he sat there stupefied, holding the dish of asparagus he was passing to my mother.
“Are you all right, Great Aunt?” he managed to ask Aunty Eus.
“I’m terribly sorry,” the elderly woman answered with a slur in her voice, “but I seem to have gotten a bit clumsy lately, ever since I began to take Dr. Messerschmitt’s Elixir of Life.”
“Perhaps,” offered my father, “you should take it only before bed.” “Oh,” she said, “I’d never be able to finish the bottle each day if I waited that long.”
So my cardboard bar wasn’t very popular.  However, Dad agreed Jesse and I could keep it in the cellar down by the furnace, but for me there would be no more stopping at the liquor store.  The place was now off limits, he said, and he drove there himself to tell the salesmen to kick me out the next time I came in. I tried to enlist Mom’s support but she stood firmly behind my father.  She didn’t mind the cardboard junk so much, but she did mind the mock plastic liquor bottles and cocktail glasses Jesse and I removed from the displays.  They  were quite life like. My brother and I had been taping them on the window panes in our bedroom and the next door neighbors had quite a laugh.
No one laughed at my short career as an advertising salesman, when I tried to sell ad space in the Baltimore Catechism.  The book of Catholic questions and answers was owned by every Catholic school boy and girl. It did not carry ads, of course, until I printed them up on my rubber type printing press and proposed to glue them on the back covers.  I could fit up to five ads on the Catechism cover and reap a quick $25.
Mr. Czurperna, the tailor and pants presser on James Street, was my first prospect.
 “It’s only five dollars for a 2 by 2 ad,” I explained.  Next I planned to call on Pete’s Barber Shop, two grocers and the hardware store.
“How you gonna get these on the Catechisms?” asked Mr. Czurperna.
“The kids will glue them on their own books,” I said.
“Why would they do that?” he said..
“Because at the bottom of the sheet I’ll be printing Catholic jokes.”
“Tell me the jokes,” he said.
“I haven’t made them up yet.”
"It could take forever to think of anything funny," he said.
Mr. Czurperna said he’d take some time and think about it.
Pete the Barber’s reaction was more immediate.  He called Father Mahlarkey who called my father who locked my printing press up in a trunk in the attic. When only a few years later churches began to run advertising in their bulletins I felt vindicated.
Father Mahlarkey wasn’t finished with me, however. 
“You’re going to need to perform some penance, young man, for your little larceny,” he said.
“But I never actually took any money, not really, Father.”
“I want you to think of something to build up the Church, some project that will take up some of your time and be a benefit to us all.”
I always wondered why there was no Block Rosary on my street, where neighbors got together to pray the Rosary out loud in a group in someone’s living room.  I told Mom I’d help her start one for my penance, but she kind of looked at her shoes and then at my hair and told me to go comb it. So I asked Dad, probably the most enthusiastic Catholic on Cornhill.
"Great idea," he said, "you should start one."
So, I asked my friend George if the two of us could start a Block Rosary, but all he could think of were the girls we should invite.
“Of course, we’d have to turn all the lights out,” he said.  “That way it would be much more spiritual.”  
A  girl in our neighborhood named Rosie had sat in the front row of my classes at school and when she heard about my quest for prayer she offered to go in the closet with me and "say whatever you want."  But at ten years old I wasn’t interested.
Finally, after Father Mahlarkey continued to bother me about my Penance Project, I suggested a Church-wide pilgrimage to St. Lucy.
"You mean the island in the Caribbean?" he said, his eyes lighting up.
"No, Father, St. Lucy the patron saint of eyesight."
"I knew that.  I'm a priest."
"For all us kids who wear glasses," I said.
"Where is her shrine?" he asked.
"I don't know.  Tell everyone she was from Utica and she lived on Eagle Street."
"David, that's not the truth.  We can't do that."
"Ask for ten dollars from each family," I said. "Call it a Special Injunction for the Expiation of Cataracts."
"Ten dollars?" he said.
"Times 400 families is four thousand dollars.  Skim twenty percent off the top for your expenses and I'll take just $25."
"There is indeed that old convent on Eagle Street ...."

Just before the year my interests turned to social activities and then girls, one final foray into the world of free offers through the mail led me to more durable goods. 
A magazine ad promised a career with ample compensation and exciting work as a fire extinguisher salesman.  Everyone needed this product, so it would be very easy to sell and the work could be pursued part time.  That was just right for me, having to spend most of my day in Sister Purgatorious’ fifth grade classroom. Here was my chance to  outpace my older brother’s income from his paper route. I planned my sales pitch and even my clothing to help me look older.  The ad emphasized getting started right away.  Older or younger salesmen were encouraged to apply. You couldn’t start too early, the ad said.  However, an eleven year old fire extinguisher salesman wearing a Spike Jones suit and his uncle’s discarded fedora may have set a record.
To get started all I needed to do was fill out an application and in two weeks the U.S. Mail would deliver the sample fire extinguisher. Plain old discretion convinced me to say nothing of this to Mom or Dad.  Plus, my older brother advised me of a tactic gleaned from his on-going teen age experience:  He called it Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. 
It was pretty warm that July as I waited for the mail man to call with my equipment.  As a future salesman I planned to answer that call like a grown-up, wearing  my suit and a school shirt that still had most of  its buttons. I needed to retrieve my tie from its summer job of hanging a plastic model of a jet fighter from the light fixture in our bedroom.  I hoped I was strong enough to grab hold and carry the fire extinguisher to a hiding place when poor old Mr. Lynch the mailman brought the thing to our door. I’d seen them on the walls at school and, unlike modern devices, they were twice as large in the 1950s and made of thick brass plating. They were very heavy.
I missed Mr. Lynch the day he brought my free offer, but found a small package sitting below the mail box when I got home.  Inside was a six inch high plastic replica of a fire extinguisher.  I was disappointed, of course, but relieved to no longer agonize over where to hide a seventy pound fire extinguisher.  Fitting it under my bed among the lumber pieces I was collecting for a tree fort might not have worked out.
Thinking about how to use a fake tiny fire extinguisher to its full advantage, I realized research would be necessary.  We had the remains of a 14 volume encyclopedia in our bedroom and I often consulted it, but it was never easy to use.  Most of the volumes were employed as structural support for projects like my brother’s perpetual motion machine or under the front of the tropical fish tank to keep it from tumbling out of the old easy chair Grandma had given us. Every time I wanted to look up anything on the Medieval period we were studying in school, I had to pry Volume 7 from under the broken back leg of my bed against the wall.  In the only fight Jesse had ever won, my bed did not fare well.  But although many of the books were put to good use in ways the publisher had never intended, volumes in frequent demand dealing with sex, explosives and the paranormal were always kept handy on the discarded washtub we used as a desk.  I found an article that said extinguishers were at one time powered with nothing but baking soda and water.  The little plastic model looked like it would be water tight if I forced a sink stopper in the top.
When the kitchen was empty, I loaded the little thing with baking soda, poured water in from the sink and quickly jammed the stopper on.  Grandma used baking soda all the time and although I expected a little fizzing, I had no idea how explosive it could be when combined with water.  In any case, I reasoned it would make an excellent demo to use in all the grocery stores I planned to visit where I’d make a killing.
My parents were out and Grandma was safely asleep, taking a nap in her bedroom off the kitchen. I’d already written a sales pitch, so I stepped to the kitchen table and began my spiel to an imaginary green grocer across an imaginary counter. I had a good presentation, but without any pizzazz since my older brother talked me out of lighting up a sheet of newspaper in front of the prospect in his store.  So for emphasis when I declaimed, “And what will save your business from the eternal fires of happenstance?” I slammed the model extinguisher down on the table surface. 
POW!  The stopper shot up to the ceiling and shattered the  glass shade on the light fixture.  The light bulb exploded and all the lights throughout the house went out.  The errant model extinguisher flew from my hand into the clock on the stove, bounced back and took off on a powerful line drive right through the kitchen window and out into the driveway as if it were headed for Neptune. Slivers of glass fell from the ceiling and the window pane was now no more than a gaping hole.  Slippery baking soda solution had sputtered all over the table and chairs, stove and counter tops..
Grandma came running out of her bedroom, hand to her throat, her face approaching purple.  Gasping, she surveyed the launch site, rolled her eyes and sat down on a wet chair.  She slid sideways, almost off the seat, but caught hold of the table and hung on for dear life.  I glanced at the light fixture and the window.  Close to tears, I said. “What’ll I ever do?”
As she tried to catch her breath, between gasps she croaked,.  “You could always join a coven.”
“I’m sure I’d need a letter from my mother or someone.”
“Get me a pen,” she said.



David Griffin                          copyright 2015

The Windswept Press
Murrells Inlet, South Carolina
www.windsweptpress.com

Friday, February 13, 2015

CONTINUED: Guardian



I nudged the fellow beside me and nodded toward the young couple.  He shook his head in disagreement.  I stepped on his foot and leaned heavily.  He quickly relented and offered the couple a free ride in our carriage along the route they had chosen, “since we’re going home that way, anyway.”
 I truly hoped they would ride with us.  Walking on the road through Central Park  in a blinding snow storm is something only an idiot would attempt, or a barely handsome young man.  I suppose I shouldn’t be so harsh.  In truth, I often do it myself.   And after all, as the young woman said, it was a lovely snowfall.  It’s impossible to describe the beauty of falling snow in New York City.  The charm in part stems from the covering of the city’s many visual sins.  Then too, the mantel of pure white helps to hush the incessant noise of a million automobiles.

I was relieved when the couple accepted our offer and climbed up into the carriage.  Had they been native New Yorkers, they might have refused us with suspicion.  And maybe with reason, since my partner, free on a kind of parole from a place you seldom hear about anymore, is not the most angelic looking individual.  The top hat doesn’t improve him and barely hides his horns.  Myself, you wouldn’t take  notice of me unless I was standing in your living room, all 1400 pounds of me, swishing my tail and leaving hoof prints on your Oriental carpet.

   It was indeed a wonderful evening to be out and about in the city,  but perhaps not a great night for a carriage ride through the center of the Park.    Each driver coming up from behind insisted on passing, swishing his car in the snow and sliding around us, often getting hardly beyond the carriage before an oncoming car zoomed down on us like a bobsled.   Cabbies tooted and swore and seemed to aim at us as I strained to pull the carriage behind me off to the side each time a vehicle careened our way.  

 New York City  drivers should stay at home when the snow falls, but instead foul weather brought them out that night.   As conditions worsened, so did their driving skills, common sense and demeanor. They were  like crazed battalions of novice soldiers turning more inept as they continued to lose the battle.

 I began to feel sorry for myself and wished I’d let my lazy devil of a partner talk me out of this last trip of the evening.  He and I are from two separate worlds, as different as night and day.  We were paired for that reason, so that we might better understand humanity.

   We crossed the park and delivered the young couple safely to the Tavern.  I’m sure they quickly ran out of money.  But that’s not my concern.  I’ll come across the two again.  Keeping lovers safe while helping out a little is why we’re here.  You could say we’re old softies, especially for the younger lovebirds.

 You may call us whatever you like … heralds, guardians, cupids.   Not all of us have the youth and beauty of an Adonis or Psyche.  We take the  physical form we’re given.  I’m sometimes sorry I wasn’t made to fly.  The view up there is wonderful, surely a lot better than down here between the traces of my harness.  If I were an eagle, you would see my wings spread in grandeur, rather than watch my backside clomping along ahead of you. 

 Ah, but wishes are for the young.  So are magical evenings and snowy walks in the park.  Age brings wisdom to expose our conceit of self-reliance, and with it the dawning awareness that a carriage of benevolence has brought us through the storm.



David Griffin                     copyright 2009
The Master Story List is here:
http://www.windsweptpress.com/stories.htm

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

CONTINUED: Picking Stones and Building Barns



Because the Good Lord again provided  forests,  trees to be hacked down, cut into lumber for the upper part of the barn.  Tamarack, elm, oak, pine,  hemlock.   Lumber had to be air dried for a year before building or the green wood warped, twisted and bent.   Another crew of carpenters, specialty barn builders came to frame the barn. Mortice and tenon frame.   Floor joists, boards, beams, rigid rafters, oak wood pegged.  All hand tools, no electricity, no hydraulic lifts.  Axes, froes, saws, adzs, bull work by strong men.  Oak pegs, square nails.  Gable type roof, covered with red cedar shingles, which again the Good Lord provided in the swamps.



More rocks and boulders were gathered by the children, with the team of horses and stone boat to build a  ramp leading to the upper part of the barn, so wagon loads of feed could be hauled right in the barn.  Bundles of oats, wheat and timothy hay.  Chutes and ladders reached to the stone basement so one did not have to fight the elements in winter.   Home for the doves and barn swallows.

 

Probably a barn dance was held after to celebrate the new barn, and repay all the workers with kegs of beer, hard liquor, good food.



Michael Zillmer (1814-1895) migrated to Dupont in 1879.  His son John Albert Zillmer who married Fredricka Lembke in 1888 probably built the first barn on the acreage, after clearing the hardwood trees.  John Albert's son William, born in 1896 took over the farm after his Father's death in 1936.  In turn William's son Wilbert born in 1930 began management in 1953, which eventually passed to his son Bruce, who today in 2015 dairy farms.



After World War One and the great depression, World War Two was raging in Europe and demand for dairy and beef and pork and chicken products increased.  Prices were good, so it was decided to again enlarge the barn in 1944.  Even though rationing forbid purchasing supplies, the Zillmer swamp provided the lumber, down to the cedar shingles.  Again rocks and stones were picked from the fields, even borrowing, begging or buying boulders from the neighbors.  About the only thing purchased was a keg of nails.



In the spring of 1944 construction began on the barn extension.  Neighbors were asked to help and they did.  Neighboring women came to make food for the hungry workers.  



Because of state dairy inspectors, the milking equipment could no longer be stored outside on a wooden platform.  Blue cinder blocks  were used by the masons to construct a milk house, for the many milk cans, DeLaval milkers.  Water piped in a cement tank to cool the milk, with the overflow water piped outside for thirsty cows.  Eight to ten milk cans were picked up by the Quarterline Cheese Factory and the driver Mike Polzin.    Extra cinder blocks were used to build a smoke house.



Barns in Wisconsin are disappearing at an alarming rate.  Upkeep  is expensive, a new roof is exorbitant..  Frost heaves the stone walls, causing them to crumble.



I flip through pictures

Some are so great

So many memories

Some should be thrown away

But not the ones of me

And the building on to the barn

Erect now and secure

Weathered and worn -

Faithfully it still stands.



No one picks stones nor builds dairy barns any more.  The barn stood for both community and family unity, cemented by honest sweat.  The farmers took pride in keeping a neat barn.  The barns were an icon, an image that stands for something.


copyright 2015, Delores and Russell Miller

Saturday, February 7, 2015

CONTINUED: Feeding A Woman

She listened for a moment, then spoke. “I’m sorry, I can’t fill in today. I have company and he’s already here.”
She nodded, listening to someone evidently from her place of work.
“Well, I’m sorry, but I just can’t leave. I’ll see you Monday. Good bye.”
“I hope you’re not in trouble,” I said. I didn’t want to cause her any concern at work.
She glanced at me and smiled. “If I am, I am.”
She lay back down on her side and pulled one of the daybed’s large boxy pillows to her. Arranging it front of her she wrapped an arm around it and embraced it in a hug. I was envious.
She said she was hungry.
“We can go down to the diner on Amsterdam Avenue,” I said.
She tilted her head in thought. “We could buy bread and eggs at the little deli on the corner and make our own breakfast.”
“Yes.”
She sat up. Her hands slid up her arms. “But it’s so cold out.”
“You don’t have to come with me,” I said. “I’ll just run down and be back in five minutes.”
I pulled my loden coat from her tiny closet and put it on. Then I bent over her as she sat on the couch. She looked up at me with a questioning look, only a hint of a smile.
“I just wondered,” I said, “if I should buy … mustard.”
“For what?”
“For … the eggs.” It was obvious I was just making this up to hover over her.
“Are you going to the store or not?” she said, now with a smile.
“It’s just such a long, long way to the corner. I might get cold.”
She popped up and quickly planted a kiss on my lips. “Hurry back.”
On the street the hard leather heels of my wing tip shoes tapped sharply on the pavement. I hopped off the curb onto the upper Manhattan street. In college less than three months before, I wore only soft sole moccasins or sneakers. I’d just purchased the wing tips to wear on my first real job. I was so impressed with the shoes … their comfort, their weight, their message … that I’d begun to keep them on in the evening and switch from my suit to wool slacks and a sweater. I dressed as an adult now. And when I thought of it, I realized this morning was quite adult and also quite special.
The Dos Abogados Deli sat right on the corner in a neighborhood where English was a second language, a distant second. Near the front door an ancient meat cooler throbbed out a tired rumbling sound. I grabbed a package of bacon and slammed the cooler’s door. When I turned from my task I saw a girl out on the street with a coat like I’d seen in her closet when I put mine on. She rounded the corner and disappeared down 92nd Street toward Broadway and the subway. It could have been her, but she didn’t seem the type to run out on a guy. Unless she had reconsidered working today. But she knew I was here in the Deli and would have stopped to tell me. Unless …
No, that hadn’t been her. I laughed and stepped to the Deli’s other wall. I took  a dozen eggs from the dairy cooler and a slid a loaf of bread from the wire stand beside it.  My arms full, I  brought everything to the counter. Rafael manned the cash register.
“Thank you for journeying to my uncle’s humble supermarket today, your Lordship.”
Rafael’s Jamaican accent was somewhat slurred this morning. I never knew if he was sarcastic or had learned his manners from Edwardian set pieces. The correct answer might have been both. When he wasn’t waiting on a customer, his nose was stuck in a book
I passed the bacon, eggs and bread across the counter and he smiled brightly. “Going to make breakfast today, Your Grace?”
”I’m feeding a woman,” I said.
“Most of us are, kind sir.”
“No, I mean we ... uh … we spent the night together and I’m getting things for her to make us breakfast.”
“You are gentleman and worthy of your station in life, Master.”
Busy punching the prices into his cash register Rafael was unfazed by my singular announcement. This was a momentous occasion. I had never had the opportunity to proclaim anything like it in my entire life. Since reaching puberty some years before I had bought popcorn, hot dogs, and cotton candy for two or three girls. And occasionally an inexpensive meal. But I had never brought groceries home to a woman. Nor spent an entire night with a girl, despite nothing of any importance happening. Still, I was beside myself with the heady thought that my life as a man was off to a great start. I was with a young woman who didn’t have to be home by midnight.
To be realistic, what could Rafael possibly say about the most common of morning occurrences between a man and woman? But somehow he sensed I was impressed with myself.
“Got yourself a girl, huh?” and he smiled.
“Well, yes,” I said too matter-of-fact.
As I climbed the stairs up three floors to the apartment I thought I smelled her perfume in the hallway. The terrible thought struck me she had indeed left. Sending me out for food was a ruse, so she could flee from my company and not return home for hours, assuming I’d be gone by then. She’d gone into work to be with a man she liked better.  I couldn’t think of anything I’d said or done to lose her affection. But I had had indications in the past I might be more boring than I suspected.
I knocked on the door. Nothing. I tried the knob, but of course it was locked. This was after all New York City. Her employer might have called back. A boyfriend she never mentioned to me may have called. That’s why she didn’t stop at the Deli to tell me she was leaving. She ran off with a guy who had just returned from an African safari. Or maybe with an entire rock band, back from their successful concert tour. What did I know about her, really?
This was silly. I was standing in the hallway with a bag of eggs and bacon and I was getting hungry. I knocked again, this time louder. I heard the sound of her springing up off the day bed.
“I fell asleep,” she said, opening the door.
“Understandable, since we’ve been up all night.”
“Were you waiting very long?” she said.
“No, you must have woken up right away.”
She took the bacon and eggs and bread from me and moved to the tiny kitchen on the end wall of the studio apartment.
Soon the wonderful smell of frying bacon filled the apartment. I set the table with dishes from the cupboard that held six plates and six of everything else except for five coffee cups. Maybe she had thrown a cup at one of the rock musicians. We sat down and ate our scrambled eggs and bacon with instant coffee and wonderfully burnt toast.
”What are you doing today?” I asked.
“Nothing. Want to walk in the park down by the river?”
“Yes,” I said. I was delighted to be asked. “We can walk up toward Grant’s Tomb.”
“That’s over twenty blocks.”
“Yes, but I think I need a nap,” I said.
She looked at me, then down at the table. For an instant I wondered if I should have said that.  What the hell, I thought, I’m a man. She took a breath and then laughed lightly.
“I’ve never fed a man before.”
    ”Not your brother or father?” I asked.
“You know what I mean,” she said.
“It’s no big deal,” I said, smiling as I needled her. “It’s not as if breakfast is ever a momentous occasion.”
 “I also do lunch and dinner,” she said, “but only if I like you.”
“Do you like me?” I asked.
“Yes,” she said.
“You don’t have to make lunch for me. We’ll get something at a restaurant after our walk.”
“And after my nap,” she said.
I nodded yes.
“You can sleep in the chair,” she said. “I’ll take the day bed.”
I wondered how I’d ever fall asleep, listening to her breathe as she lay hugging that lucky pillow just a few feet from me in the tiny living room. I wondered how long I’d have to stay in my chair.


.copyright 2014 by David Griffin