CLICK HERE FOR BLOGGER TEMPLATES AND MYSPACE LAYOUTS »

Thursday, December 10, 2020

 Master of the Obvious #73.....

Be careful with the man who does not smooth his soft cap, back to front, nor his hard hat, front to back.




 There is a voice in the wind...

...so low and distant
it may never be
heard.

Most do not listen
being distracted 
by the
drum and scrape of
cities
by the 
lure of 
highways
by the 
distraction of cell phones
and the
seductions and enticements
of life.

The voice does not
address the ear
but the heart.

It is an acquired voice
that is not shy with time
or reluctant to speak
in simple ways
pompous
lofty hearts
surely miss.

But hush...
be still
and you will hear the voice
the small and gentle
whisper
calling 
calling
inviting you to join your heart
to the horizon.

To the endless
shimmering 
horizon.




The Destroyer 

The early morning seemed
unusually dark
like India ink.

You slept a few feet
from my eyes
of fatherly concern.
I had been awakened
by the stirring of angels
and hurried 
to your door.

There was
near you
the Destroyer
who seeks only to
kill
steal
and destroy.

The paternal sword I bore
was unchallenged by his
and within several 
chilled moments
he vanished.

All this occurred 
long ago.

Indeed
I had forgotten about it
until, once more
the Destroyer
visited me.
He comes now
with sword sheathed.
His rattling laughter is his
blade of cruelty.

He reminds me
it is he
that divides us.

You have never told me
my crimes
that stand between father and daughter
ceasing all conversation
all familial affection. 

This night is darker than the former.

Like you
the Destroyer
does not talk.
Conversation has no merit.

He simply sits and laughs.

I forbid him
and he leaves.
Just like that long-ago night.

But every day
the Destroyer finds a seat
smiling with derision
and I bid him leave.
But he returns each day
and has for years.

My crime must be dreadful.

It comes with a death sentence.

Saturday, November 21, 2020


The Gauntlet

Watching the police line move into barriers
they had established 
I smelled familiar scents known to me
for better than two decades...
gun oil, leather, smoke drifting across their line
from fires lit by "the bad guys"
fifteen yards down field.

I heard suppressed laughter emitting 
from both sides.
Loud cursing coming from down field
the crackling of newly lit fires
breaking glass
sergeants adjusting their line
I felt the familiar chill begin
between my shoulder blades
fanning to my toes.

Of course, I was not there.
The flickering images on my TV screen
carried me back to my position
just behind my officers
standing erect and confident.
They in riot gear.
I in my soft uniform
with military-styled "cover" (hat).

I wanted to be there with my officers
and I was pleased to be no where near
the pending clash would ignite.

I thought it dangerous 23 years ago.
It is more so today.

Today the tumult is joined
by the growl and vapors
of military vehicles
painted black
like ancient dragons.
They would be friendly to me
but they were built to frighten
as much as to discharge their purpose.

Police began to beat their shields
with batons
sending down the avenue 
a threat...
they were coming.
There were no "friendlies"
east of that line.


Drifting clouds hung above the asphalt
toward clumps of protesters.
Miserable, drifting gas clouds were used
with precision by law enforcement.
The occasional rebel would grasp a 
deployed canister
and lob it short of police lines
but was cheered by disorderly 
foolish young people
thinking themselves in confederation
with some twisted idea of flaming democracy
and prevailing anarchy.


They cannot
they will not prevail.

Once the gauntlet is thrown
by either side
there will be
blood.  



Thursday, November 19, 2020



Bounty Hunter

 

Deep into the wood line

the mighty pines

completely obstruct the sun.
No matter the bright
it is always twilight
on the forest floor.
 
Frosted with layers of snows
the branches
like beckoning arms
fill with thick blankets
of hush and silence.
 
It is impossible to pass
and not be heard by predators
animal and human.
 
I step cautiously
supremely aware of myself
my breath exhales in a white veil
my lungs rattling with cold
bitter and revelatory.
 
My gloved fingers burn
with cold
and I grip my thirty ought six
as though it alone
is my solitary link
to the land of the living.
 
The winter wildwood is charming.
 
I hear small birds, squirrels and others
chirp and chatter softly around me.
 
Until they cease
like an unseen conductor waved
his wand
and on que everything swallowed
their songs and chippers.
 
That’s when that mortal sound stopped, chilled me
and I knew, I too
would sleep in the snowy blanket
with all the woodland creatures of the pines.
 
The doubled-click of a shotgun hit my ears
a moment before the buckshot blasted a gaping hole
in my chest.
 
It’s true.
Even looking directly into the sky......

.....all you see are Colorado pine.








The Persistent Little Sparrow


Beyond the window of my truck
On a frosty winter's morning
a small brown sparrow
kept pace with me.

I watched him struggle
against the winter wind
his head tucked low
almost into his breast.

Never before had any bird
conducted flight in this manner.
I thought him brave, determined 
and gallant in his mission.

Suddenly, it seemed the little sparrow
headlonged into a plate of invisible glass.
The small body seemed to crumple
twisting into the roadside rubble.

The sight unnerved me.
Jesus sees even the death of sparrows
scripture assures the believer.
If so, am I to be the sparrow?

We rush and we chase, determined 
to achieve our goals, mindless
of the glass plates awaiting
our spinning bodies.

I pulled into the gravel
to say a little prayer.
I prayed for the amazing little sparrow
and the driven sparrow within us all.








Wednesday, November 18, 2020

Lizzy & Carroll Hudson 

He had braced against the wind
all day.
It could make a man crazy.
By midday the Devil Wind
materialized
into sleet blowing 
sideways.

Lizzy seemed not to notice.
She plodded on
finding footing on the upward
path through the high notch.
She was a good pony.

Somewhere behind
that damned posse trailed him
and they would not give up.
They had a dead sheriff
to avenge. 
But he had the drop on him
and gave him no choice.

He bent over in the saddle 
to stroke Lizzy's neck.
She understood.

Pulling his coat tighter
around him
he shivered. 
He'd been cold before
but this was becoming 
a blizzard of ice
wind
cutting cold
and numbing hours
on a frozen saddle.

Come on, Liz
old girl.
You get us out of this mess
and I swear
we won't do this again.
We're both getting too old for this.

Damned sheriff.

His side suddenly blazed
with penetrating 
stabbing pain.

Hanging onto Lizzy
with one hand 
tightened on the reins
the other grasping 
the pommel
a second flame
blew away much
of his left shoulder.

That's when Lizzy stumbled
and fell 
in the center of the snowbound
trail
a geyser of blood
spraying from a hole
in her neck.
The snow around them
turned crimson
with blood.
Her powerful legs pumped
pumped
then slowly pulsed
until they forever stopped.
Her big, black eyes
freezing pallid with snow and ice.

Six deputies made their way
down from the high
boulders
moving carefully to the scene.

One knelt to look into
the dying rider's face.

"Carroll Hudson
for a fact."

Another:
"Whatta we do with his
carcass?" 

The leader:
"The hell. We leave it to rot.
But that ain't gonna happen
till spring."
Grab his gear.
We'll divide it later."

Another:
"Hated to shoot the horse though.
What did she ever
do?" 

Tuesday, November 17, 2020

 The Steel Pot, Lucky Strike and a Ronson...

On the outskirts of Pleiku, July, 1965


     The steel pot was first to come off. It fell, upside down, to the mud at his feet. There was a brief respite in the monsoon rains that inundated the rice lands and the jungle. It was steamy. Not steamy like the river valley of St. Louis. This was fresh hell. Propping his M-16 against a rock, he took a knee in the baby shit mud. The entire world smelled terrible. There would never be a stench as bad as Vietnam mud. It would remain in his nostrils forever, he thought. If he has a "forever." 

            Above, the sun was a glaring, white disk amid the drenching heat waving from this cursed land. The soldier covered his face with his hand. The sweat in his eyes stung. Unscrewing the cap from his canteen, he poured some tepid liquid into his open palm, and splashed it across his face. A second swallow temporarily slaked his burning thirst.

            One cigarette remained in his chest pocket. Placing it between his cracked lips, he fished out his Ronson lighter and inhaled a deep lungful of sweet American tobacco. Running a hand through his hair, he suffered a brief moment, what he called “lightening thoughts,” remembering Suzanne doing that very thing, her breath warm against his neck, her lips kissing his cheek, his ear. Those were dangerous memories, he considered. Memories like that could get you killed. Returned to his wife in a metal case with a draped flag. No... time for memories later. For the present, enjoy the Lucky Strike dangling between his lips. Take a good draw on the smoke. And another, and another. His Ronson, he considered, looked like a tiny metal coffin. He thumbed the top down with its characteristic "ting."


            High above in the slate grey sky, the distant roar of many jet engines penetrated his thoughts. Rolling Thunder on the way to Hanoi. Contrails unzipping the heavens. He wondered if those air crews got tired. Were thirsty. Aching to get home to their Suzannes.

            July, 1965. Short. He’d been in-country over ten months. He was in for thirteen. Another long pull on the Lucky Strike, followed by a fit of coughing. Sgt. Letterman glanced at him, missing nothing from his “chicks.” Sergeant Letterman's company. The soldier gave a quick nod to the man with three up and three down. He was okay. Not going to be a problem. When they arrived at the outskirt of the village they would torch, Letterman did not need someone erupting into a coughing jag and give them away. The sergeant returned the nod, more slowly. A warning.

            The soldier finished the cigarette, field stripped the butt, and buried it in a shallow “tobacco grave” at his feet.

            The steel pot weighed a ton. Come St. Louis he vowed to never again wear so much as a hat. Let the wind sift his hair. Suzanne kiss his lips.

            Only twenty-two, last month. He rose to his feet, placing his steel pot on his head, M-16 cradled in his right arm. The company rose quietly, the column stepping into place, each several feet from the next "chick."

           That was the last of his cigs. There were more in a buddy's pocket. No problem.

The  soldier considered the sun would eventually slide to earth. This day was going to end. So would the war, with or without his help. St. Louis was a real place, and he was going to get off that jet, embrace that Missouri tarmac and lay a kiss on that damned concrete. He vowed he never, never ever was going to leave the good 'ol USA. And he was going to buy an entire carton of Lucky Strikes!      


            The tall Elephant Grass waved in the late afternoon breeze. Nobody could tell that a little bit ago, thirty three American soldiers squatted here, and one lit a smoke, rubbed his eyes, heaved his ribs in a coughing fit, and grabbed his weapon, departing the way he came. Heavily. Weary. Scared. Empty.

           Most returned to their Suzannes. Many fought to forget. Most never did. Some struggled with their demons. Most continued into productive, pleasant lives. They stood to salute the flag when it passed on Memorial Day. They greyed and toyed with grandchildren. Others were reduced to engravings on a shiny black wall. Suzanne would go to find her soldiers name, and do a pencil rub to frame and place above the hearth in her St. Louis home. She cried out all her tears. But there would always be a breath, a sigh she had saved for her soldier's missing neck and ear, the absent lips of her dear, dead soldier. They sent all his effects. A Ronson cigarette lighter sat on the mantle under her rubbing of his name. It would remain there until her grandchildren fondled it, learning it was "grandpops" from Vietnam. It was all they had of him. Not even a memory. Just a little, steel Ronson lighter. Looking much like the steel coffin they returned of all they could find of him.

          On that long-ago afternoon, the soldier, lost in the haze, was ultimately lost to his Suzanne and lost in that damned bloody god forsaken war.     

                                                                    





Her Italian Story


Sitting cross-legged across from me
she was remembering Tuscany
and its sun-drenched vineyards
of which I had only heard.

Her midnight eyes danced
when she told me of her chance
to see the Eternal City
the Apian Way and statuary.

I guess once you've been to Italy
it's infused in all you see.
But I'm just imagining
having never been east of sunrise.

She'd climbed the Spanish Steps
and with the thought, her heart leapt.
I watched her spirit thrill
and poured myself more tea.

No, I've never been to Rome
never strayed that far from home.
I can't wrap my mind
around what is not American. 

She ended her Italian story
with gold and Vatican glory.
I had all day to reconsider life 
but I had no choice to make.

Except this: never pull up a chair
if you've never been over there
and tasted their wine or golden sunshine.
Son, just buckle in and remain home.
 
So, it's life among the corn rows
and as far as that goes
it could be lots worse
but, buddy, seems it might could be better.










 

Gotta Get This Off My Chest….

 

Twenty-two years ago yesterday, at the noon hour, my cranium filled with blood when a vessel in my brain ruptured, like I’d been shot. I was rushed to a hospital, decidedly one of the very best in the Chicago suburbs.

                        I walked in under my own steam, told the triage nurse what was happening, fell back onto a gurney, and blacked out.

                         I was in and out most of the day. I recall begging the E.R. team to not cut away my new black suit. I would need it for my funeral. There were a few rattling trips to get an X-ray, and CAT Scan. The tests all indicated mortal damage.

                         The doctors conferred and agreed to do nothing dramatic. I would be made comfortable, given liquids, placed in the ICU, and allowed to die. They told my family to expect roughly “6 hours.”

                         My now x-wife was found at her job, and notified. She acted the harried soon-to-be grieving widow, but I later learned she was happy this would end her troubled marriage. I will not go into what her boyfriend felt.

                         My brother sped in from St. Louis. My light coma allowed me to hear voices, but not what they said. Nevertheless, his presence was near, and I felt protected as long as he was there.

                         This is a much longer story than I will relate here. But as you can tell, I survived. Medical science did nothing but rule me out, and tuck me in.

                         I awakened the next day, with a “voice” in my ear, saying, “This is not unto death, but unto the glory of God.” I had good and bad days. Faithful moments and moments of sadness and fear. My brother had to return home. My wife signed me up for ballroom dancing, and dropped me off by myself at the Chicago Auto Show, while she and a friend attended the theater. I never made one class. I limped into the auto exhibit area, and found a seat beside the Illinois State Police exhibit. I thought that the best seat in the house.

                         It was a very hard few years. My wife left for another city, and moved in with the man who is now her husband. She took all my money from my account, and nearly every stick of furniture, save a bed and a china hutch she couldn’t stuff into her rental truck.

                         She took my dog. She took Abigail, a little black and tan dauschund I adopted from a shelter. I made no outcry concerning anything she took. Except for Abigail. I got word to my son to convey to his mother, that I could find her, and I was coming for Abigail. I told her that nothing mattered, least of all her…but I was coming for Abigail. The following night my door bell rang. When I answered, Abigail was sitting there, all by herself. No matter the conveyance, she was in my arms again.

                         The next day, in the early afternoon, the police came to conduct a well-being check. They were from another agency, so we did not know one another. An anonymous caller indicated that I had a gun, and was suicidal. Serving a department in the next town, I had a sidearm. That call, I determined, was not that of a caring friend, but a diabolical wife, laying the framework to cast me as dangerous and out of control.

                         It was a two year drudge through the courts, both in Illinois and Missouri, where she defamed me as having waved my side arm in her face and threatening her with death. Completely false. I learned, however, that judges have favor for weeping wives, and look upon cops as bad.

                         But all things must end. She is gone. We have no contact, not even through our children. The after effects of the stroke will always be with me. Even a careful observer could not tell I suffered such a disabling cerebral accident. I limp upon my right leg, and wear a glove on my right hand to lessen pain in my hand. Significant damage remains in my spirit. I work at confronting my personal demons. I win some, I lose some. I cut off any friendship from those times. Most went to my ex anyway.

                         I am peacefully, and happily remarried. I write to express both the turmoil and the peace in my heart. I never expected to share this here. But if God cradled and supported me in all I endured, he will for you as well.

                         If you would like a word of encouragement (stroke related, or otherwise) all you need do is supply an email address and I will return contact. A word to any cop…you are a good person, worthy of help. Male or female, sworn, or non-sworn. If you are a medic, a firefighter, I am your friend. I will help.

                         Enough of this. Back to what I’m here for…my poetry; good, bad, or otherwise.      

~~ James ~~