Monday, June 29, 2015

CONTINUED: A Dance



To be honest, I like the lyrics for Ms. Murray’s song, but for me the frisson of the melody is long gone.  Still, I enjoy dancing with my wife, or … don’t tell her … probably any woman.  It’s such an extraordinary thing to put one’s arms around a woman in a fairly dispassionate setting, or so it seems to this Irishman.  I often wonder how an uptight society came to allow it, except for the frigid holy ones among us.

As I think back, I didn’t put my arms around a girl until my first dance at age 13. Understand that I came from a family of boys, and I’m sure that’s pertinent.  We would not have wanted a sister,  but if one had been dropped off at our house for inspection, the three of us would surely have been polite as we walked around the girl and studied her, as a group of gallery patrons might scrutinize a bronze statue.  When she popped her chewing gum, we would have quickly run off like scattering monkeys.

When I entered junior high school and was forced into social functions with the opposite sex sooner than I wanted, I found myself unable to simply walk up to a girl and begin a conversation.  I knew that such was within the scope of male potential, because I saw other more confident boys doing so.  But I couldn’t seem to manage small talk.  Even saying the word ‘dance’ felt so unmanly that when asking a girl to dance, all I could manage was, “Would you like to?”   Had an overly sensitive father been standing at her side, I might have received a black eye.

One Friday night, after standing around  the edge of the dance floor doing nothing but trying to look cool,  I finally worked up the courage to ask a particular young lady if she would “like to.”  As we stepped out on the floor, I  very gingerly took her hand and then swung around so that the two of us stood chest to chest,  a phrase I could never have said out loud.  I slid my arm around her and put my hand on her back.  That felt brazen and intimate to me, but everyone around us was doing the same and so far no one had been arrested.

I felt brilliant about my accomplishment, until I realized I was expected to make conversation.  “Would you like to” was used up and at this point certainly not appropriate.  “Nice weather,” seemed banal, even to me, and “How’s school?” might not be successful if she had just failed an exam.

Finally, thinking it would be safe, I tried, “How’s your mother?”

“What?” said my surprised partner.  “Do you know her?”

 “No, I just thought that… ah .. we all need to care about our parents.”

The conversation didn’t go much further.

But eventually a girl came along who stayed in my arms after the dance ended, a girlfriend.  With her, my social abilities quickly expanded, although they were never to be a natural fit.

My wife has been the major influence of my life and has taught me the important things.  Not just social graces, but about love and loyalty and selflessness.  I am not an apt student, and often not even appreciative.  But I am convinced I found the right teacher.

 “Smile,” she told me as we swung out on the floor at our most recent command performance.  We were at the wedding of her cousin’s daughter who I thought had married enough times to tire out the entire family.  I was not smiling.
“I don’t know how much more of this song I can take,” I said.
“Sing it to me,” she said.
“You first,” I said.
We can still make each other laugh.  I think that’s called a survival skill. It’s one we’ll need if we plan to dance the rest of our lives.



Copyright 2009, 2015 David Griffin


The Windswept Press
Murrells Inlet, South Carolina

www.windsweptpress.com

Thursday, June 25, 2015

CONTINUED: Lights Out On The Sea



As the sun found its way up from wherever it had spent the night, the sky lightened from a dark grey  and made the world around me a little brighter.  For the first time,  I noticed seagulls standing like sentinels  up and down the beach on either side of me, keeping their distance as they will from humans.  More lights transited  the horizon now and I could see the birds’ heads following them.  Like me, they seemed to find the apparitions of interest.  Unlike me, they simply accepted them and didn’t wonder about their origin.



I supposed the lights could have been ghosts, demons or extra-terrestrials,  but I didn’t think so.  Neither did the birds.  The gulls have stood there each morning for eons waiting for a morsel from the immeasurable abundance of  the sea.  A  few goblins would never scare them away. 



I was the only one standing on the beach that morning who could be frightened by my thoughts.  I alone could conjure ghosts from my past or present or fearsome goblins from the future.



But not the birds.  Theirs was a future  they could not comprehend and a past they could not remember.  The unknown lights out on the sea did not disturb their sense of the present.  To them the present is reality.  To me it could be a gift.



Taking a lesson from my companions, I opened my eyes and closed my mind and stood watching the sun come up, a simple witness to the daily miracle.  I felt the wind wash over me and buoy me up, my burdens lifting as I came into the moment.  I never determined the genesis of the lights out on the sea.   For me, they had served their purpose, and they faded away in the presence of the new day.



copyright 2007 by David Griffin



 Windswept Press

Murrells Inlet, SC

www.windsweptpress.com

Thursday, June 18, 2015

CONTINUED: The Bed




Willard leaned back in the chair and swung his feet up on the mattress. 
“Willard, please take your boots off my bed.”
“But there’s no lounge chair for us old folks,” he said.
“You’re confusing this self adjusting bed, Willard.  It just began to recognize me lying  on it and now it’s wondering how I grew two extra feet with boots on.”
“Self what?” said Willard.
“I just took a test drive,” I said.  “You jump in and it feels odd at first, like the worst lumpy bed you ever slept in.”
“Sounds like my Aunt Elva’s bed when I was a lad,” said Willard.
“Maybe,” I said.  “I was never in your Aunt Elva’s bed.”
“Neither was Uncle Jed after their fifth young-un came along,” said Willard.
“But then you feel the bed start to move right under you,” I said.
“Like when I get home to bed after the Annual Hunter’s Ball and Beer Bash,” said Willard.
“No, not quite. The bed doesn’t’ move.  The surface of the mattress  kinda crawls.”
“Like Aunt Elva’s bed in the fall before she put the mouse traps around the house.”
“If I were your Uncle Jed, Willard,. I’d sleep in the barn.”
“Mostly he did,” said Willard
“”But within seconds,” I said, “you can feel the entire mattress re-assemble itself to fit the contour of your body.  It’s like magic, Willard.”
“Abra cadaver,” he said.
“That’s Abracadabra, Willard.” 
 “Aunt Elva did parlor tricks,” he said. “That’s what she’d say to make me disappear.”
“What kind of tricks, Willard.”
“Not for children,” he said in a high pitched voice, shaking his finger at me.
“And Uncle Jed?” I asked.
“Her best customer.  That’s why they wanted me to disappear.”
“Willard, take your feet off the bed and listen to what happens.”
Willard stirred himself  and removed one foot, placing it on the floor.  The boot clunked loudly on the tile and small  bits of mud dislodged and fell around the heel.  We both listened.  Almost inaudible, somewhere under the bed a small air pump began to whir.  The look on Willard’s face was one of incredulity.  His eyebrows shot up.
“It’s moving,” he said.  “It’s pushing up my other foot.
Now the pump sped up a little.
“It’s looking for you, Willard.  The bed is wondering where you went.”
Willard took his other foot off the bed, leaned in and spoke to the side of the mattress.  “Don’t worry, little bed, I’m still here.  I’m sorry I put my feet on you.”
Now another pump switched on under the bed and the mattress began to move beneath me. 
“Did I say somethin’ wrong?” said Willard
“No, but maybe the bed is confused.   Maybe it’s never seen separate weights at either end of the mattress.”
A third pump began to whir and a flapping noise issued out from below.
“Holy ….”
“Willard, get up and sit down at the end of bed.  It wants to know you’re still here.”
“I just told it I was here.”
“It’s still learning, Willard, and it doesn’t have ears.  You have to sit on it.”
The hissing of valves kicked in as Willard jumped up and sat on the mattress.  I hadn’t heard that noise on my test drive.
“It may not be programmed  to recognize two people on the mattress,” I said.  “It’s only a single bed.”  Willard lay back, draping himself across the very foot of the bed.  Then he sat up and again lay back.   I swung my legs up and tucked my feet underneath me at the head of the bed. 
“No, Willard,” I found myself shouting. “Stop the sit-ups. The bed can’t figure it out.”
Beneath me the bed began to undulate, as if writhing in agony over a new discovery it could not fathom.  In its short life since leaving the factory floor the onboard computer had never encountered two people on its surface with a third force rhythmically dropping down from above as Willard popped up and down doing his sit-ups.  Maybe the bed’s brain was struggling to imagine its first tennis match taking place across the surface of the mattress. The electronics obviously did not know what to think of such a conflation of inputs. 
“What are you two doing?” said a rather large nurse as she walked into the room.  I sat on my pillow like a Buddha with my legs crossed.  At the foot of the bed lay a decrepit old geezer doing  sit-ups.  Small motors huffed and puffed to keep up.    
“Willard, stop,” I said.
We sat still, Willard holding his breath.  He twisted his head and stared up and down the length of the tall steely woman.  She was built like popcorn machine, but didn't smell as nice. 
Willard let his breath out loudly and turned back to look at me. 
“I withdraw my offer,” he said.
“Which one of you is Mr. Griffin?” said the woman.
Willard and I pointed to each other.
She walked toward us and stopped next to Willard.
 “I seem to remember you from somewhere,” she said airily to Willard.  “Could it have been the Emergency Room?”
She walked up to my end of the bed. I gulped
“I know who you are,” she said.  “I heard you read at the Library last Fall.”
“Uh huh,” I said.
A sarcastic smile came across her face.  “Will you need any help undressing?” she asked.
“Oh, no,” I blurted out. “Why would you ever think so?”
She chuckled.  “I’m a nurse.  This new bed tells me everything.”
Had I read far enough in the brochure I would have discovered the bed had a built-in intercom.  Willard hopped off the bed and headed for the door.   The nurse watched him leave and then turned back to me.
“Abracadabra,” she said.

Disclaimer: My limited personal experience was with a Hill-Rom Versa Stiyle Hospital Bed. Price $13,250,  Internet sale for $8,500,  The Synergy Air Elite Therapy Surface Mattress is priced separately. I do not know if my technical descriptions are accurate and they were obviously over stated.  Also, I don’t really believe any of the models have an intercom.  But I could be wrong.



copyright 2014, David Griffin

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

Sunday, June 14, 2015

CONTINUED: Curious



Later, with Herself gone off to a movie with girl friends, Murphy and I sat out on the back lawn and watched the stars begin to unfold their nightly revue.  Somewhere along the narrow pond that runs behind the houses on our street a splash sounded in the still night air.  Not much moves in the pond at night and there have been rumors of alligators in the area.

In the half light I saw Murphy’s eyes open with interest, but not concern. 

“Go find out what made the noise,” I said to her.  I was almost instantly sorry for the suggestion and wondered how the heck I’d ever explain to my wife I’d sent Murphy off to do battle with an alligator.  If indeed the dog lost the fight.

Murphy stood as if to obey my command.  Her head swung around to point in the direction of the splash.

“Belay that order,” I said.  “it may not be safe, and we don’t want to lose you without ever finding out if you would have some day become a good dog.”

Even in the quickly advancing darkness,  I sensed her disdain for my remark and I was certain I heard her snort.  She lay back down in the grass beside my chair.  Soon she was chewing on a small rock.  I wondered what a rock tastes like, but my good table manners prevented me from asking Murphy to share it.  Besides, my teeth cost too much to risk them.  And if a rock in a dog's back yard has any taste at all, I can imagine what it came from.



copyright 2015, David Griffin

Murrells Inlet, South Carolina


www.windsweptpress.com

Saturday, June 13, 2015

CONTINUED: Peace Pipes, etc.



Shopodock, the Second married a white woman about 1830 and had 4 sons, Soc-qua or Bill, Kik-a-pa or Kickapoo, Che-wan and John or Jesip.  Three daughters  lived at Zoar and married into the Menominee Tribe.  Before coming to Dupont, they had migrated from the Lake Poygan and Waupaca.  Shopodock, II died in 1900 and the land passed to his 3 sons living in Dupont, Kickapoo, John and Chewan.  Bill or Socqua had taken possession of land at Wabeno, married, had many children, most of whom died of Tuberculosis in the 1920s.

Kickapoo was murdered in 1903 by the Winnebago Indians.  He raised ponies on leased land in Shawano County and his body was not found for several years, but eventually the guilty parties were brought to trial in Waupaca County and were sent to prison in Waupun.

Chewan Shopodock  the most friendly of the brothers and good neighbor to the Dupont farmers.  He married, the wife died in childbirth, married again, she was no good, so he left her go.  About 1900 the government tried to force all Indians from Waupaca County  to Northern Wisconsin, Forest County.  The Shopodocks still maintained their land in Dupont until they died.  Forty acres of land was granted each Indian who would build a shack.  Chewan's land was near Blackwell and Laona.  John had land near Alvin/Nelma on the Michigan border.  Chewan was found dead in 1933.  Both John and Chewan are buried in unmarked graves at the Indian Cemetery on the Bill Kesick farm near Wabeno.  Often little houses were erected next to the grave site and food was placed on a small shelf to be used by the spirit of the deceased during the four days he hovered around the earth before departing on his long journey to the next world,  west to the Happy Hunting Grounds.

John never worked, he had no need of money, he mooched food, free rides on the railroad or walked.  Dressed in his feather headband, tomahawk, peace pipe, battleaxe, war club and blanket.  Charged people to have his picture taken.  John was found frozen to death in February 1940 along the logging trail going to his shack.  The many people from Kentucky who wandered to Northern Wisconsin in the early years of 1900 were good friends of John Shopodock, along with the Waupaca County folks.

So John needed money sometime about 1935 and gave his peace pipe or calumet as collateral to Earl Moldenhauer (1896-1979), then postmaster at Clintonville.  Earl's father Francis (1865-1948)  was editor of the Clintonville Tribune Gazette in the early years of 1900.  Earl was postmaster when the new post office was built in 1934, a historic site still standing.  Before Earl died, he presented this peace pipe  to the Clintonville Historical Society.  This was a ceremonial tobacco pipe  that Indians smoked as a sign of peace and friendship, passed from person to person around a campfire.  Although this pipe of peace had a hatchet on the end, it was strictly ceremonial, never used as a weapon.  Bronze or copper head, with a raw wood maple or oak stem.  Another of John's prized possessions was a war club, as shown in pictures.  One does not know if it was made from wood or steel, but was also ceremonial.  John, as a young lad in Dupont attended Pioneer School, so he was able to read and write.  In those days, students had their own slate, measuring 9x13 inches, with a hole in the corner with a rawhide loop. and John's was donated to the Marion Historical Society, carved with his Indian name  CIYS P CASGP  CYSP on the edge.

Only a memory now, 75 years later of the Potawatomi Indians of Dupont. The only reminder is the Wisconsin State Historical Site, 4 miles south of Marion on Highway 110, complete with a picnic table and the area kept clean and neat by the county crews.

CONTINUED: Retiree's Last Trip to Costco

I told her that it was essentially a Perfect Diet and that the way
that it works is, to load your jacket pockets with Purina Nuggets and
simply eat one or two every time you feel hungry. The food is
nutritionally complete so it works well and I was going to try it again. (I have to mention here that practically everyone in line was now enthralled with my story.)

Horrified, she asked if I ended up in intensive care, because the dog food poisoned me. I told her no, I stopped to Pee on a Fire Hydrant and a car hit me.

I thought the guy behind her was going to have a heart attack he was laughing so hard.

Costco won't let me shop there anymore.

Better watch what you ask retired people. They have all the time in the World to think of crazy things to say.

Forward this (especially) to all your retired friends...it will be their laugh for the day!

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

CONTINUED:Balloon






This is fun, but I’m too high and the edge of the golf course is coming up. If I don’t land now, I’ll soon be over the rooftops of the city’s crowded neighborhoods.  It would be dangerous to drop down among them and try for a landing.
 For the hundredth time, I check the tightness of the old medical tubing that runs down from the balloon and snakes into the cooker between my legs.  I lean to the right and reach down under my hip and let off a burp of helium by turning the dial from Simmer to Roast.  Whoa! I drop like a stone, and the wind whistles through the old fishing net that suspends me from the ancient U.S. Government weather balloon.  I’m going to crash!  I don’t know how far I plunge before leveling off, but far enough to scare the crap out of me.  Much lower now, there are trees on one side of me and power lines on the other.  Thankfully, nothing is in my path and I’m maintaining altitude. But as I glide past the edge of the golf course, I look ahead and realize I will hit the top of a rapidly approaching house.
 I come sliding in across the roof, my feet touching down and dragging along the shingles.  I try to skid to a stop, but I’m moving too fast.  Lunging desperately to the left, I grab for the chimney.  It’s out of reach, and then I’m slipping off the far end of the roof, back into the air.  I see the homes below fall away as the street runs downhill and my height above the ground increases.
 My feet are treading air, as if they’re hoping to find purchase on anything solid, like a drowning man in water over his head.  I feel nauseated, but I’m in one piece, heart pounding in my ears.  I don’t know how to get this thing on the ground.   It’s moving faster than I ever imagined, and now I’m too scared to land.  This is turning into a pretty dumb stunt!  I could be home reading my older brother’s copy of Playboy.
 I look beyond the city and past the river to the gentle green hills in the distance. They seem so far! But if I make it over there, the other side of the valley will naturally rise up to my altitude and rescue me in a safe embrace.  A field of soft hay would be a welcome landing spot.  That would be the perfect ending to my voyage.  I could drop in on my cousins who live in that area.  If I master the art of flying in the next ten minutes, I might swoop down and land majestically in their back yard, instead of crashing into a neighbor’s swimming pool.  Or I could just give up sooner, when I reach the river.  Pull the cork and hope to land in shallow water.  I don’t swim very well, so three feet would be just about the right depth.
 However, I have an entire city to cross before I land anywhere.  Beneath me, hundreds of rooftops drift under my toes in the afternoon silence, broken only by an occasional car horn or a bus roaring up the hill. Along James St., a woman waiting for the bus near Zalatan’s Grocery Store looks up at me and screams.  I wave nonchalantly and force a devil-may-care smile.  No need for her to worry, I’ve been reading up on aeronautics since I was twelve. 
 Damn!  I think I’m losing altitude again, but I’m still going too fast and there’s nowhere to land.  If I can get past South Street, the terrain will drop down rapidly toward the river, a terrific glide path right into the water.
 I sail toward the downtown center of the city and feel the heat rise up to meet me. The wind comes from a new direction, then another, as the tall buildings cause a confusion of breezes. A moment ago, I was well away from the large gold painted dome atop the city’s major bank, but now it’s coming my way.  It’s hard to tell whether I’m slightly above or below the flag on its pinnacle.
 I’m certainly relieved when a gust pushes me upward and away in another direction, because crashing on a dome and not sliding off could be quite a challenge.  Now I’m nudged east toward the twin spires of St. John’s Church.  They’re quite tall and definitely in my way.  Next to the church sits the high school, where I’ll begin the 9th grade this fall, if I live.
 I’m a really good Catholic at times like this.  I’m promising more rosaries than I could ever say in a lifetime.  If I survive, I’ll be on my knees until I’m 80.  I might as well plan to become a monk and forget all those things I wanted to do with girls when I found one who would let me.
 A horn blares persistently  below me, but I keep my attention on the two steeples until I’m elated to find myself pushed between them unscathed.  Then, I peer down at the scene below. It’s George in his family’s old Buick, driven by his mother.  I didn’t think she knew how to drive.  She doesn’t seem to be managing very well, and people are running in different directions as she slowly steers the car down the street, sticking her head out the window and peering up at me, occasionally driving up over the curb.  I feel bad she is so worried, worse to think what will happen when she catches up to me.
 I’m moving north again, and soon I cross over the river and the New York State Thruway.  I had thought about dropping into the water, but chickened out when I passed over it. It looked deeper than I expected.  I’ll wait for the grassy hill near my cousin’s house.  I suppose all of this might be worth the trip, since they just bought the first color TV in their neighborhood.  But if watching Gunsmoke in color was the goal, I probably should have taken the bus.
 The land begins to rise slightly, and now I hear a hiss from the tubing.  Helium is escaping from the balloon and I’m losing altitude fast.  I’ll soon be out of gas and really out of luck.  The winds are getting stronger and I see dark clouds on the eastern horizon.  I’m blown west along Riverside Drive for a short distance, then pushed up a side street.  I’m so low now I can hear kids yelling.   A girl my age looks up and waves. She seems completely unfazed by a boy sitting on an outdoor grill flying over her house. 
 A ripping sound tells me the fishing net has begun to part.  The balloon shifts to the left  and the miniature airship starts a roll to the right.  There’s a field of corn below, and I spot my cousin’s house close by on Trenton Road. The gas is running out and the ground is now coming up fast.  The  homemade dirigible George and I spent so much time building … perhaps two hours … scrapes into the ground and with a fluttering noise mows down a thousand cornstalks. The craft hits a bump and bounces high, then suddenly drops, slamming the earth with a great thud. My teeth slam shut so hard my entire jaw will hurt for days and I’m flipped off the cooker like a flapjack, landing on my back in the corn.  Without my weight, the magnificent flying machine lifts up, struggles for air and soars onward.  I jump to my feet and run away, but the backyard grill seems unwilling to call it quits.  I’ll discover its final resting place when I read tomorrow’s newspaper.
.My cousin is not at home, but my aunt welcomes me at the back door.
 “Did you walk all the way from home?” she asks, incredulous.
 “No, I flew.”
 “Uh huh,” she says without a flicker of doubt. “Well, how will you get back?”
 “I think a friend and his Mom are coming to pick me up,” I say.   “But there’s no need to let them in.”
   "You're green all down your back," she says with some concern in her voice.
   "Rough landing," I say.  "I'm new at this."
   “Well,” she says, “come in and have a cookie while you wait. And do you hear sirens?”
   “Yeah, I saw a flying saucer crash out back.”
   She laughs, “You’ve got more stories!”

 In the local newspaper the next day:




The Utica Observer Dispatch

CONTRAPTION  NOT  FROM  SPACE!
------
Launched By Persons
Unknown, says Sheriff

Astonished Homeowner
was asleep in hammock
------
He Will Keep Grill
------
“Not from Mars,”  say local
firemen,“maybe from Sears.”



Copyright 2008 by David Griffin, and

 dedicated to my Aunt Toot, who believed everything I ever told her.  So she said.


The Windswept Press

Murrells Inlet, South Carolina

www.windsweptpress.com

Wednesday, June 3, 2015

CONTINUED: South Pole



 At Our Lady of The Holy Innocents Elementary School,  Jesse was adrift in an ocean of children.  Seventh grade teacher Sister Clementia  managed 56 children in a classroom built for 30.  Jesse learned his lessons seated at a small desk in the middle of an overheated room.  He ate lunch with two hundred other children in the cellar lunch room that doubled as an air raid shelter, squeezed in among a legion of uniformed girls and boys.  Afterward, he marched to the bathroom and lined up with other boys at a bank of urinals, together pissing gallons of chocolate milk down the sewer, and sometimes down Jesse’s pant leg from the boy next to him.  Although he did not yet have the intellectual power to describe the weight produced by all of the crowding,  his heart could feel it and his soul took notice.


At home, he endured three generations of family stuffed into a railroad flat.  Gram and Gramps had the back bedroom, Mom and Dad the front.  In between, Jesse and two brothers occupied a small bedroom stuffed with three beds, dressers, baseball equipment and all the artifacts of boyhood filled to the ceiling with the lives of three boys.  He was seldom by himself.  In the center ring of a circus going on around him, Jesse was unable to get away from the eyes of others.  Nor did he escape their opinions.   He was the youngest and the most often corrected.  He awoke in the morning to the arguments of his brothers and longed to be away somewhere by himself.


All winter he had been reading accounts of explorers in the arctic wastes at each end of the earth.  He spent weeks devouring every arctic adventure book he could find.  The nun who ran the little library at school suggested he might like to broaden his literary interests.  But Jesse ignored the look of concern on her face.  He was quite happy to stay on the topic of his choosing and continue to read of solitary men who braved the snow and ice and cold, men who followed no one’s direction but their own.

In his favorite daydream, Jesse was dropped by parachute at the South Pole.  Equipment and a tiny house followed him out of the sky from the belly of a transport plane that would return for him the next year.  On the southern ice, he would have a place for himself.  He could read to his heart’s content and maybe learn to play the guitar and stay up all night to watch the moon rise against a black sky as he sat by his tiny window.  Alone with no brothers or grandfather ordering him around, he would be invisible to the rest of the world.  Gone to where no one could follow.  Where nobody could see him.  Where he could do as he pleased. 


At the end of March in 1956, Jesse played The Game for the last time.  He walked home from school in the final heavy snow of the winter.  Sheets of snow slashed furiously across his path and the winds buffeted the boy as he fought his way over sidewalks that were quickly disappearing under a blanket of white.  For a twelve year old, it was a perfect day.  His mother might worry for his safety until he arrived home, but Jesse hadn’t the slightest thought of any danger.  After all, he was on the streets of a small city, and only a block from the local hospital.


When he reached the gate to Murnane Field, an outdated complex of ball diamonds and a cinder running track, Jesse detoured from his route home.  He hung his book bag on the gate and stepped through the wrought iron entrance, now almost invisible in a covering of  wet, sticky snow.


In summer, he sometimes walked here from home and paid ten cents admission to a men’s’ softball game.   He would buy a bag of peanuts for a nickel and climb up to the very top of the decrepit old bleachers. He sat alone and watched the sun go down, eyeing the game occasionally, though he had no interest in sports.  He would gaze over the long expanse of green grass and lift his eyes above the dreary neighborhood to the far off clouds on the horizon, golden clouds against the pale blue sky, a sight that could hold one’s heart forever.  It was so beautiful over there, he thought, and he wondered why a person couldn’t live in a sunset like one could live at the South Pole.


But today, at the end of winter, a deep snow lay on the ground, and more was falling from the sky.  As he entered the field, Jesse was immediately enveloped in a swirl of icy wet crystals beating against his face and piling up on the front of his coat.  Blinded by the snow, he stood there, absorbing the beauty of nothing but white.  Today would be excellent.



The first part of The Game was to walk as straight as possible and not miss the field house up ahead.  He could see nothing, but he knew there were 74 steps to the building.    At step 65 he put his hand straight out in front, ready to touch the front wall of the field  house.  Now his feet began to slide  carefully forward through the snow, to avoid tripping on the front steps in the unlikely event he arrived at the exact center of the building.    Touching the brick wall at 78 steps from the gate,  Jesse felt his way around the building.  When he reached the rear corner, he walked 40 steps across the back to stand in the exact middle of the building.  He put his back against the wall and faced outward.  He was now oriented to the entire field, but in the driving snow he could see none of it.  It had never snowed as heavily and he was elated to see absolutely nothing but snow everywhere.


Off to his right, Jesse could barely hear a few cars making their way through the snow on Burrstone Road.  Across that street lay the small Faxton Hospital. To his left was a dead end street of mostly two-family homes, and across the other street behind the field house he was leaning against was a Firehouse, staffed full time by bored men who sat out on benches in the summer and spoke of nothing but their families or new cars from Detroit.  In front of  him, straight ahead in the middle of Murnane Field was Jesse’s substitute South Pole.


He stepped away from the back wall of the Field House and walked forward 205 steps, the distance to the exact center of the field, as he had measured it on a sunny day last fall.  As he reached his destination, Jesse was elated to feel the snow coming down even harder.  For a moment he simply stood there, absorbing the wonderful feeling of being completely alone.  Hidden by the blizzard, he was cut off from the world.  No one from his family watched him, no fellow students crowded him, no nuns with stern looks stood by to correct him.    Jesse was not just alone, he was invisible.


As the wind and snow drove into his body, Jesse reached  up under his coat, loosened his belt and dropped his pants and under shorts to his ankles, leaving himself naked from the waist down.  After loosening his coat and shirt buttons at the neck and wrists,  he reached back over his head and with both hands grabbed the collars of his coat, shirt and undershirt.  In one fluid motion, he bent forward and pulled them all over his head and threw the clothes behind him.  He  spread his arms and stood in the middle of Murnane Field, completely naked except for the pants around his ankles.  He took a deep breath and screamed, a shout of exultation and complete release.   As he cried out a second time,  a sharp intake of breath hiccupped from his mouth and  a violent shiver overtook him.   He was terribly cold, but  Jesse was now the king of this frozen world.  To celebrate, he pissed in the snow,  spraying what he laughingly called “jet fuel”  into the west wind,  much of the urine coming back to spatter up his front as the wind tried to blow him down.  Jesse stood his ground.  He had not come this far to be beaten by the wind.  He waved his hips left and right and up and down, hoping to make large yellow circles he could not see.  When he finished, Jesse reached around behind for his clothes.  They were gone.


Jesse yanked up his pants, turned and took a step back toward the field house.  He could see nothing.  He plopped down  on his knees, feeling ahead in the snow.  He reached left and right and then he bounded forward a few feet, bending over and feeling in the snow for his coat and shirt.  He moved left again, and then right, and in the process lost his sense of direction.  He touched something, and pulled his scarf back to him.  He was now shivering uncontrollably.  Remembering from his books that the head lost a great deal of heat,  he wrapped the scarf around his ears and tied it under his chin.  In a few minutes, he knew he wasn’t going to find his shirt or coat. He believed he could make a beeline in any direction and quickly be on one of the streets, where he could bang on a door and get warm.  But he hesitated, thinking how embarrassing it would be to show up half naked on someone’s front porch and  have to explain what happened to his clothes.  Well, he supposed he’d have to do the same at home.


Jesse had played The Game before, but never completely disrobed, only dropped his pants and relieved himself in the snow, never taken off his shirt and coat.  He saw the afternoon was darkening and, now thoroughly frightened, he ran toward a sound he heard, the whine of slipping tires on a nearby street.  He hoped in that direction he would find  Burrstone Road, the street closest to his home.


The next time he heard whining tires they were behind  him.  The sound could have been coming from another street, but it seemed more likely he was moving in a circle.  He was running now, with his freezing hands jammed up into his armpits.  He heard a car horn from one direction, and then a siren from another.  He twisted and turned and ran toward each sound.


Jesse was becoming exhausted.  The cold and exertion and feverish state of his mind were taking their toll of his energy.  He wanted so much to sit down and rest, but all of his reading had warned against doing so.  He was staggering now.  He fell, then got up.  He ran a few steps and fell again.  Forcing himself up on his feet, Jesse looked up into the sky and screamed in anguish.  Then he sat down hard in the snow.


Jesse wondered if it was true that when freezing to death a person passed from shivering and frostbite into a state of sleepiness and comfort.  He brushed the thought from his mind.   He didn’t want to die.  He was only twelve years old.  But he couldn’t go on.  He was too exhausted.  Jesse started to cry, finally, the frustration howling inside his head.   


He couldn’t believe this was happening.  He simply could not be lost in the middle of a field in a city of one hundred thousand people.  He must try again, walking only in a straight line.  But it was darker now, and the wind even stronger.  The snow had built up on his skin during the short time since he sat down on the ground.


With a great effort, his legs wobbling and unsteady, Jesse stood one last time.  He was shivering badly and was sure if he took a step he would fall.  He pushed forward off one foot and came down on the other, now numb with the cold.  He stayed upright.


He now knew he was going to die here.  A great sadness enveloped him and he thought of Christmas morning almost three months ago.  Jammed into the small flat with his parents and brothers and grandparents, they had all been so happy.  He looked down at himself and in what little light was left of the day saw his body covered with snow. “Oh, no,” he said.  “Oh, no.”




Jesse’s mind reeled with the agonizing thought that it was almost spring.  Tomorrow morning the sun could be shining and the temperatures in the sixties, as often happened in late winter.  And just a few hours before he would die a freezing death within sight of the hospital and the bored firemen who would have been happy to rescue him.  His family and the police would search all over the city tomorrow, never thinking to look in the summer sports field.  Maybe a fireman across the street from the field’s entrance would notice a book bag hanging on the gate.  The sun might be shining bright and the snow have melted.   On a nearby sidewalk, nurses and doctors and kids and dogs would be walking and playing, oblivious to the presence of his corpse only a hundred feet away.  Jesse would be lying here dead, half naked and probably still frozen, like a visitor from an icy planet or a veteran from the South Pole. 

He became angry.  He took one more step and fell flat.  He couldn’t breath with his face in the snow.  With what little strength he had left Jesse pushed himself up to a sitting position. That’s when he saw the colors.


The cold had made him delirious, and logic said he could not have seen it.  But a flash of light occurred to his right.  He turned his head and glimpsed a break in the curtain of snow, and through it a momentary flash of clouds on the horizon, pink and green and turning gold against a pale blue sky.  He pulled himself to his feet and staggered in the direction where it had been, strength returning to his legs.  In a few moments Jesse bounced into the tall fence that surrounded the field. Stumbling along it, he came to an opening.   He saw headlights, all in a row,  cars slowly moving along the snow covered Burrstone Road, carrying men and women home from a day of work.



Jesse bolted into the road, his eyes blearily fixed on the lights of the hospital.  A driver slammed on his brakes and was rear-ended by the car behind, both cars sliding off to the side of the street and into a snow bank.  The boy kept going, half aked  with the scarf wrapped around his head and patches of snow and ice clinging to his bare skin.  A new surge of energy coursed through his body, but  he knew it would soon end and he must get inside to warm up.  By the time he reached the back stairs of the building, he was beginning to falter.   On his way up the steps, he slipped twice and fell, praying each time he got up that the entrance would not be locked.  It was.  He pulled and pulled on the handle and feebly banged on the door.  It was a long way around the building to the front door and even farther to the Emergency Room, too far for him now.  He slid downward, his frozen hands coming away from the door handle.


The woman would later tell Jesse she had trouble opening the door against his legs and was part way through when she found him huddled up against the pipe railing, almost upright, his arm over the lower rung.  On her way home and bundled against the cold, the cafeteria manager saw a frozen half naked youngster at the edge of the cone of light provided by the light over the back door.  She bent down to touch Jesse, then grabbed his arm and began to drag him inside.  His legs moved to help.  Suddenly he was up on his feet and running away from her.


Jesse pushed through swinging doors into the main hallway of the hospital.  The warm air seared his frozen skin,  every nerve ending writhed in pain.  He sprinted down the hallway with no destination in mind.  Passing the window of  the Gift Shop, Jesse spotted them again, turned back and flew through the open doorway.  He collapsed into a display of cut flowers, his arms thrusting out to grab the warm colors of yellow and green and pink, as he greedily hugged them to his chest.  


The doctors said that only a twelve year old could have survived such an ordeal.  Jesse left the hospital a week later, and was back to school within days of his discharge.   His mother took him in the family car each day for the next week and picked him up after classes.  The nuns banned him from the school library for the rest of the year.  Instead, they sent books to the classroom for him, with titles such as “The Life of Saint Ignatius Loyola” and “Hobbies For Teens.”


Although memories of that fearful afternoon would always remain, Jesse grew up to be as normal as most young men.  Despite the experience, his love of snow was not lost completely, although heavy storms made him uncomfortable.  Certainly, he was never again tempted to stand naked in a blizzard.  And as far as anyone knows, to this day his mother believes a mighty wind blew his clothing off as Jesse crossed Murnane Field in the last major snow storm of the winter of 1956.

               

copyright 2009 by David Griffin