Gus-Proof Basket

I’m not saying there are stupid people. I’m saying there are unobservant people. I’m not saying there aren’t stupid people, though.

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Boys

“Is it on fire or is it bleeding?” said Elizabeth.

“No,“ said Jack.

“Then it can wait.”

Elizabeth sighed. Why did he always need her when she was in the tub? Jack was a boy; so different than his sister Annie. Knew all the answers to tests at school, didn’t see the point of doing the homework since he already figured out the answers. Teachers were either exasperated or angry; she’d go to the parent-teacher conferences already braced for their disapproval.  Joe was always better at this. She would ask what was wrong with Jack; he would ask what was wrong with the way they were teaching him. Jack took up all the air in the room but he always made others feel good about themselves.

Sam slipped under the teachers’ radar. He dedicated himself to being Not Jack. Only at home did he show the fire of which he was capable. Once time when she was at her evening college course and Tom was at a sales conference, Jack bothered Sam once too often and Sam’s temper exploded. Jack realized he had gone too far and fled to his room and locked the door. Sam broke the doorframe. Suddenly cooperation was all they thought about: “I’ll get the glue, you get the clamp!” said Jack. It almost looked like it had never splintered at all.

And when she got home, Jack took her aside. “Mom. I have to show you something. Please, please – don’t tell Dad.”  Elizabeth said “If he notices it, I won’t lie to him. But if he doesn’t notice – I’m not going to point it out.”

She wished cooperation didn’t involve breaking things. Tom was just as bad. She came home another night from class. Jack and Tom sat in the living room, suspiciously quiet.  Hmm.

Sam came up the stairs, holding his maroon robe with one hand and a book in the other.  “I just want you to know I had nothing to do with it,” he said, then went silently downstairs.

Suspicious, she walked down the hallway. Just outside the bedroom door two pieces of typing paper hung from the wall.

What the hell? She pulled them off. There was a perfect double-round imprint of a butt. Back to the living room, holding up the pieces of paper. Jack, of course, was the confessor. “We were just wrestling! And the hallway was too narrow! And it’s my butt, but Dad was the one that put it there!” She was deeply entertained they thought taping paper over the hole would stop her from noticing.

Boys, old and young.

Jack and Sam did follow her rules: Use your seat belt. Don’t litter. And return your shopping cart to the cart corral. So maybe she wasn’t such a bad mother after all.

She got out of the tub and toweled off. Time to resume motherhood.

And there, on the table, is a note:

“Mom: I’ve taken the gun and the dog and gone down to the creek. Something there is on fire!”

Since it was a BB gun, blood wouldn’t be involved, but he really should have told her about the fire.

Guest Post from Cambria Pilger!

Please welcome Cambria, my co-worker with the bright smile and bouncy walk.  This is her first post, so comment as you feel called to.

 

Do you ever have something so coincidental and perfect happen that you can’t help but wonder if it was God?

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For this break, I decided to sit outside. The heat was overbearing, but it was worth it to feel the fresh air and beautiful sunlight on my skin. I cracked open my book – something about being too busy (how ironic, as I was barely halfway through a chaotic shift at work) – and began skimming through the text. Just as my eyes pass over the words, “Fascination with God,” I hear a voice.

“Excuse me?” the young voice called. “Could I ask you a question?”

Immediately, my mind races through a thousand possibilities. I’m in my work outfit. He probably has a question about our store. Ugh, or maybe he’s going to try to hit on me since so many men try to do that. Whatever.

“Yes?” I turn around hesitantly.

“Could I ask you question?” he pauses. “Do you know if you’re going to heaven after you die?” I perk up instantly, and a smile bursts out on my face.

“Yes!” I exclaim.

“How do you know?”

“Well, because I love and believe in God, and He’s awesome.” It’s such a lame response, but it felt an appropriate answer given the sudden and unexpected question. We chat for a few minutes longer, and I realize he’s just around my age, getting ready to go to college. He was visiting the state only for a few months before heading off. How exciting! I remember that feeling.

“It was nice meeting you.” He begins to turn the pedals on his bike. “I just felt something calling me to ask you that.”

“Wait! What’s your name?” I probe.

“Jeremiah.”

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I turn back to my book for a moment, reflecting on the perfectly-timed and excitingly-spontaneous interaction I just had. As I look behind me again to see if he was still near, he had disappeared. Just. Like. That.

Maybe he’s just a fast biker? Or maybe it was some kind of wacky, unexpected sign. I guess I’ll never know for certain, but I sure can hypothesize.

 

The Ghost Horse

Last night I saw him again, the ghost horse.

In the shade of the moon

I almost walked without notice nearby

but chalked beneath my foot a sign

stand here

alerted.  He took shape

slowly; a curved hoof,

a foreleg suggesting power.

And through his middle some words I could not read

rode him.

We wheeled from Santa Fe

gently into snow.  Trembling,

I read my hands.

By the roadside the horse turned.  I turned

to tell you.

Absent as a watercolor, he blinked

and was gone.

Jack

For years he dated young tattooed women who were drawn to him—who wouldn’t be;  he’s got the biggest heart in the world—and then wanted to change him.  He gave up after a while; most of them just wanted to be friends, anyway; ask him for advice and then never take it.  He knew everyone but had two close friends:  Sheila, who served as his cat; and John, who was his dog.  Sheila had a contrary opinion for every on of Jack’s and enjoyed sparring; she probably would have slept on his laptop and wandered on his keyboard if that was available for a human. John lived one apartment over from Jack and would come by every night that Jack was available.  He had a key to the apartment but always, always knocked and said “It’s John; can I come in?”  He’d answer Jack’s phone.  “Jack O’Connell’s apartment; this is John; how can I help you?”  Come to think of it, he was more of a butler than a dog.  He’d sit in the big reclining chair, quietly cleaning his guns.  We lived in Nebraska, guys.  This is not an unusual activity.

Mom finally stopped loading up grocery bags with creamed corn and toilet paper when Jack was 26; and he stopped doing laundry at their house when he was 27.  Small milestones on the path to adulthood.  It wasn’t that he was taking advantage; it was just that it was an opportunity to see Mom and Dad. It seemed to be important to her to still take care of Jack and hey, look; free food!

His best friend from high school, Mike, fell in love—or in something—with Sarah.  Jack met her and thought well, she’s the one for me, and I’ll never be able to tell her.  He was best man at their wedding.  Because Mike was a Viking re-enactor, the best man was in chain mail but we all have our quirks.  And then after two years Mike decided he’d go Viking full-time, and Sarah decided no, not so much, and they divorced.  Mike is still angry and won’t have anything to do with her; it’s been fifteen years.  Way to hold a grudge.

And then time went by, and Sarah married again and had two boys, and then that marriage went south and Sarah thought I’m doing something wrong.  I don’t know what it is, but if I keep going south instead of north I’m going to go crazy.  Who is the nicest man I know?  What family do I want to be a part of?

Ah.  Facebook.  Jack.

So she reached out; and he reached back out; and they dated for six months; and then she introduced him to her sons (because she is a good person and didn’t want them to have to deal with men she wasn’t going to be with long-term).  They came to our wedding; him proud; she radiant.  She charmed everyone she met.  And then they married, and we all burst our buttons over the rightness of this, the absolute perfection of the two of them.

Jack said “You know what?  I always wanted a family.  I have one.  I’ll never let it go.”  He called them His Boys from the first day.  When he was gone on a business trip Sarah took his clothing and stuffed it and put it on the couch so Oscar and Hank could still have a Jack to cuddle up to.

Family.  One finds it; and then one makes it.

Sam

He’s a very self-contained person.  Mom asked him, after he walked around the lake near Jack’s house, “Who did you meet?  What did you talk about?”  And he replied “Why would I want to talk to anyone?  I’ll never see them again.”

We’re not even sure he’s from the same family as the rest of us; the inveterate talkers, the invariable handers-out-of-business-cards-because-you-never-know-who-will-be-your-new-best friend.  I have friends I made from interviewing; when their skills didn’t match the job requirements I said “You’re not a good match for this position, but do you want to be friends?”  I shudder to think of the HR penalties for that now.  Nate and I have friends we met at garage sales, friends we met dog walking, friends we found at a bookstore because we liked the same book.

“I’m sure they think I’m the cleanest homeless person they’ve ever seen,” Sam says about being in the library.  He doesn’t spend a lot of time at home, so he has routines:  the coffee shop, the library, the brewery, the other brewery.  Everyone knows him but no one talks to him.  We met him at the other brewery and the bartenders exchanged looks with each other:  see, he does associate with others.  I win the bet.

Mom says she thinks he’s like Noni, our great-grandfather.  “Give him an opera to listen to and a book to read and he doesn’t need anything else.”  The Italian strain comes out strongly in me; all hands waiving and voice inflections and the need to tell everyone what I’m thinking all the time.  I’m not sure how the Italian comes out in Sam.  Noni was happy tending his market garden; he liked people but didn’t always see the point of them.  That’s pretty much Sam.

Dogs are different.  Sam loves dogs.  He photographed humane society dogs for posting on their website.  If he could adopt every abused pit bull he saw, he would.  When our Shiba Sakura went missing, and then was found and returned, Sam was housesitting.  Apparently Sakura was remorseful about her week away from home, and allowed Sam to pet her and even stayed on the bed while he watched Ash Vs. Evil on his iPad.  “I made sure to cover her eyes when it got gory,” he said.

And yet:

At a brewery, wearing Grandpa Gub’s Amoco work shirt, reading.  The guy one stool over says “Hey!  I like your shirt!”  Sam, shockingly, explains that it was his Grandpa’s and they engaged in conversation and then Sam—continuing to shock—sent the guy a follow-up email.

“Hey, Zach.  A few days ago at 300 Suns you noticed my Amoco shirt and we got to talking about Iowa and that small town we both come from, Fort Dodge.  I called my Mom today and asked if she had any recollections; she did remember that there was an Eleanor Troubridge in my Dad’s class.  When Eleanor’s boyfriend went off to the army he asked my Dad to take her to the prom because my Dad was trustworthy and wouldn’t try anything.  So they went and danced and Dad was all those things; a perfect gentleman.

“She also remembers the Lebanese community in Fort Dodge.  That town was a bastion of communities:  Italian, where she grew up; Scots, who lived down on the flats; Lebanese; Czech; and black folks who had come north for opportunity and peace and found it, mostly, working in the brickyard with my Noni.  She has a vague memory of a Lebanese restaurant downtown named Anwar’s with an organist who played during meals.

“None of that I remember.  The family moved when I was about three, and my biggest memory is the enormous blue water tower near our house.  That, and grandpa Gub’s Amoco gas station that he ran for 53 years on South 22nd Street.  He worked six and a half days a week for all those years.  He got a plaque from the company after 52 years and proudly displayed it in their living room.  He knew everyone in town and when he died, Mom was deluged with cards telling her of the many small kindnesses Gubba performed on a daily basis.  She cried for days.

‘Anyway, let me know if this rings any bells for you or your family.  I look forward to hearing back; it was nice chatting with you.”

So maybe there’s a friend out there for Sam.  I like to think so.

Emily

My dear Miss Meininger.  As I told you in my letter the other day Mr Johnson expected to pass through town, and so he did, but I was unfortunate to miss him.  Being in the country, he could not manage to come out through I went in on the first train I did not see him not being sure that he was there as he had said no day for his arrival.  I asked at all the leading hotels, but he had not been, still he had been in town all day, but perhaps not gone to a hotel, as he left that same evening for Odense.  He asked me for Mr Ackermann’s address in Germany but not knowing it, I thought perhaps you or your father might have obtained it before parting, so I wrote to Mr. Johnson I would write and ask you.  Or if you have my dear will you send it right on.  I want to hear from you too.  We have Nothing but rain since I am home regular April weather am so sorry I hope you are enjoying yourself and your father improving.  Please to remember him.  Yours lovingly, Dorthea Jensen

Fifty Thousand Pillows

I like to watch Nate sleep.  Here he is, hand curled around the bars of the headboard; it looks like he’s about to make a prison break in his sleep. I think about raking a metal cup across the bars; then decide against it.

He’s stretched out on the couch, empty cider cup and folded glasses on the glass coffee table. “Do you want to go to bed, or do want me to leave you alone,” I ask. “Leave me alone,” he mumbles, and shifts an arm over his eyes.

He is as horizontal as horizontal can be, lying on the decaying reclined Eames chair. Tablet on lap, water glass on adjacent chair. He’s closed his eyes behind his librarian glasses and is at peace.

We are in bed. He mock-throws three pillows at me, one after another. “There. Enough pillows for you?  Pillow monger.” he says.

When we courted and he was in one city, I, another, we would call every night at 10pm and write notes several times a week. He has one from that time tucked in the corner of our dresser mirror:  a stick figure of me in the middle and a pillow fort on all three sides. Only my feet can escape. “This is me without you” I wrote underneath.

I still build pillow forts but now the open side is the one he’s on. I have trouble doing that emotionally. I’m all tap dance and skitter around my friends; “I’ll entertain you!  Here are my stories!”  I’m in, and then I’m out; no more than three minutes of their time.  That doesn’t, and shouldn’t, work for Nate. I’m trying to move around the pillow fort in my heart. My feet don’t need to be free. I don’t need to escape.

Anywhere Worth Going To

I said “It’s like a puzzle.  When you first look at it, there’s no way to start.  All the pieces are confusing and colorful, or drab and identical.  There’s no way in hell there’ll ever be a picture to come of this.

“Then you put down a piece and wait. Then you see a piece that you can press into the one you’ve got. Then you see two edge pieces that go together. And slowly, so slowly that you don’t even know it, a picture starts to form. And it’s exciting. And you want to keep on until you can see the whole picture.

“Like the time I wrote about the lady who had Wonder Woman grips on her .45 and she founded a group called Second Amendment Sisters and taught a lot of women to Take Back The Night With a Gun and when that guy tried to hurt her, she took him out with a double-tap and made the news. That was your mom. Although I made a lot of it up.”

“So you lie, then,” he said.

“Sometimes.  I have a very bad memory.  Barely recall anything that happened to me before the age of 24.  So if I want to say anything about that time, I have to think of things that make sense to me as I am now and take away all the experience and wear and skills and find some longing, some reason for me to have done something that your dad told me I did or your uncle has a picture of me doing.  I need to start somewhere with something to get anywhere worth going to.”

“Why do you sometimes use a computer and sometimes a pen or a pencil and sometimes your iPhone and sometimes just cut and paste Facebook entries?” he asked.

“I use what suits. And I have to write 50 words a day no matter what. I have to write something even if I’ve broken both hands. Sometimes I’m just going to grab an I-think-it’s-witty comment from a message and build something around that.

“Last night I talked about lying on the couch reading a true crime book while there was beauty all around me on the island, and someone joked about us being in a prime defensible spot for when the zombie outbreak arrives, and then it came to how Nate and I had to supply our own arsenal because his sisters think that’s just crazy talk, and there, I’d gotten to 5,000 words and a saleable piece of writing.”

“Saleable?  How much?” he asked.

“$0.99 for every download.”

“And how many downloads?” he asked.

“3,000.”

He thought for a few minutes. “So you made  $3,000 for putting together a puzzle?  For lying?”

“Well, not quite; but yes.”

And that’s how Oscar became a writer, just like his aunt Annie; though it took me to the age of fifty and him to the age of fifteen, the little imp. I’d better get 5,000 words out of this encounter.

Cari! What Was I Thinking?

My friend Cari gently reminded me that I spelled my Keurig’s name incorrectly.  Please be advised that henceforward she is Cari.  Gots to be respectful to old friends.  Cari Cari Cari.  There.  I’ve got it down.

Sakura

We are by ourselves on a small island off the coast of British Columbia, in my husband’s family’s house. It is a brisk 15 degrees Centigrade and we at some point need to walk the four miles back to the dock now that we know that the key to the utility truck is in the ashtray. Next to me is a book, The Blessings of a Good Thick Skirt, about pre-20th century female travelers/explorers.

I’m lying on the couch, reading The Encyclopedia of Mass Murder.

I Am That Woman.

How well does my husband know me? There is a leave one, take one library that Nate walked by whilst taking care of other matters; he came back with the Encyclopedia for me. He’s pretty sure I won’t kill him in his sleep but sometimes he must wonder.

We haven’t slept well for three nights running. The first night it was the discomfort of a too-soft bed and far-too-soft pillows (well, the lodging was free). The second night there was a fire alarm test. Comforting to know that I a) put on shoes and jacket, b) grabbed iPhone, notepad, and pen, c) used the stairs, not the elevator, and d) got the hell out. I, of course, did not know it was a test. Others who did were less interested in surviving.

Then last night at midnight I was called by an awkward teenager who said his name was Jacob and he had found our lost dog Sakura and where did we want him to take her? Well, I thought, Not Here. We’re 1,500 miles away from you and the dog. And what if this is a scam, and you’re just trying to get our address so you and your tattooed millennial friends can go by our house and steal our old furniture and broken-spined paperbacks? DIDN’T THINK OF THAT, DID YOU?

He knew what color harness she wore and we hadn’t told that to anyone. So he was real. Five phone calls and ten texts later we had a friend meet him and his buddies (none of whom had tattoos and all of whom were awkward) at the local Safeway. Sakura was safe and would never ever, be allowed to leave the house again (Well, maybe. Occasionally. For walks and to poop on someone else’s lawn). And when we get home I’m buying Jacob a gift card for Niketown and have already sworn that, if his dog got out, I’d follow her for an hour down streets and sidewalks and across yards until her leash got caught in a bush and I could catch her and bring her back to him, just like he did for Sakura.

I think we’ll sleep well tonight. The bed’s fine. There’s no fire alarm here and there’s an ocean just a leap away. And none of our other dogs are lost.

I think.

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