Monday, December 11, 2017

The Christmas Letter 2017


Merry Christmas 2017 from the Prices
A friend sent me a message not too long ago and reminded me that I had not written a Christmas letter in over four years.  I thought to myself, “My how time flies when you are senile.”  I couldn’t tell you why I stopped writing them, but it could have been that the cost of paper, postage, ink, Medicare, taxes, etc. exceeded my ability to do so.  I imagine it was that, like other events in life, Christmas seemed to pass so quickly each succeeding year that I just missed it altogether. I write every day, but I use the electronic media and my thoughts are cast into cyberspace with an occasional “Like” never to be seen again.  Some of my friends, though mentally and financially able to do so, have chosen not to join the rest of us in the 21st Century.  So, I am going to dig around in the already full basket that sits in my desk above my computer screen and see how many forever stamps I have left.  If I can find my snail mail address book, and you haven’t moved and not notified me, I will send you this letter.  I will turn on my seldom used printer and go through the maintenance program to clean the print heads and use up several of the ink cartridges in the process.  The extremely smart digital printer only cost me $42.00 at Sam’s Club, but the ink is $400.00 per tiny cartridge.  No, this is it.  You will not receive a large package delivered by FedEx a week before Christmas.  We, the Price Clan, are living in Harlingen, Texas which, if you go by the nearest route to the Rio Grande River is located about 8 miles from Mexico.  Our girls started their families a little later than some, but we can’t complain about the quality of the grandkids they have produced.  Barbara and I are still able to drive and baby sit so there are no plans to put us in assisted living yet.  Amanda and her husband, Chris Daniels, have our little two year old, Caston.  Andrea and her husband, Leonel Munoz, (imagine there is a tilde above the “n”) have Aaron (our eldest 6th grader), Ava (4th grader) and our little surprise, Landry, who is one year old. We are royally entertained.  All are doing well.  Barbara and I have had our 50th High School reunions since the last letter, and we celebrated our 70th birthdays this year.  I know this may seem young to some of you reading this letter, but it isn’t.  If you think this print is too small, go and find your magnifying glass.  Barbara and I decided to go on a cruise from Barcelona, Spain to Athens, Greece to celebrate making it this far.  We just got back last Sunday.  I still don’t know what time it is and I have to look at the calendar to get the correct day of the week.  It was a great cruise and we were treated royally on the ship.  Our ship was the “Marina” of the Oceania Cruise Line and it lived up to the billing. I can’t say as much for the airlines. I haven’t flown much since 9/11 because of the ridiculous security measures now in place, and the airlines have now exceeded all reason by adding seats without increasing the size of the planes. In the redesign of the 300 passenger jets, intended for the long haul, they saved money by staying with the four restroom plan. P.S. The aisles between you and the restrooms are usually blocked by the beverage cart.  I have been sleeping in my recliner for the last week to decompress.  Our mail of late has had the usual bills, but we are seeing an increase in letters telling us we qualify for all kinds of medical devices and special government programs to make our lives easier.  I have given up on all paid employment as of last December and have chosen to live on the government dole.  Our cars are so old we had to unplug the phones because the extended warranty people were tying up the line.  I hope I’ve covered all the bases.  We do miss seeing all of you and we fondly remember our visits.  If you are inclined to come for a visit please do.  As we celebrate the Christmas season we wish you all a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.  Remember, Jesus Christ is the reason for the season.  Please share our greetings and hug all your kids for us.  We are hoping to see you all soon. 


All our love to all of you, The Prices


Wednesday, October 11, 2017

I have been away for a few days, and I thought I would continue with the rest of the story.  The stories I shared were made from memories and feelings that came well after the fact.  This is a picture of my dad taken in Mobile, Alabama probably months prior to his death.  He looked fine, but the Leukemia that ravaged his body was only slowed a bit by the "Experimental Drugs" that brought his blood count back in line.  The term "chemotherapy" was not used until much later.  It was really hard to tell that anything was wrong as our lives continued much as they had before the diagnosis.  But, the drugs themselves had side effects and in October of 1963 my dad died from a cerebral hemorrhage that was related to his treatment.  I remember it all in snippets of foggy recollections.  He was 47 years old and I was one day away from my 16th birthday.  After his death I was in a surreal world.  I never really thought about the reality of what life would be like without him.  My dad was a Christian man and he taught us with his bible and his example in his own quiet way.  I had accepted the Lord Jesus Christ as my savior when I was nine years old.  I was trying to hold to my faith that we would one day be together again, but the realities of life were crashing hard around me.  I remember not really knowing how to act after I was notified that he died.  I had been to the hospital the night before to visit him and now he wasn't there anymore.  I was told more than once by well meaning friends and relatives that I was  now the man of the house.  They just didn't know how much I didn't want to be.  Well, my mother, who was a full time housewife, took the reins and quietly marched forward.  She had gone to Junior College and taken some business courses before she and dad married.  She sold our house in Mobile and went to Hattiesburg, Mississippi and bought another one.  We moved and she enrolled in secretarial courses by correspondence.  I was starting the 11th grade.  My sister was two years younger, and my brother was 10 years younger.  Mother finished and landed a job as the secretary to the Dean of the Business School at the University of Southern Mississippi.  We made it.  I always liked the story of the little boy who was proudly standing with his foot on the head of a large bear that had recently been shot.  He commented to passers by "We kilt a bear, Ma shot it."  Life moved on and here we are today.  Years later I wrote this poem in honor of my father.  Both my parents were Christians and dealt with life with a strong faith in Jesus Christ. 

              WHAT’S IN A NAME?

Over 40 years ago, he died.
I still miss him everyday.
Quiet country boy – Brought up hard.
Learned early how to make his way.

Strong from work and tan from sun.
Dark hair and winning smile.
I never saw him waiver, change,
in good times or in trial.

He loved hard work, family.
Served his country. Spoke the truth.
Taught with bible and example.
Twigs need bending in their youth.

Outdoors was his favorite place.
Hunting, fishing, sun, fresh air.
He taught me manly lessons
when there were no women there.

Grave illness struck, he fought hard,
working right up to the end.
He crossed the bar so peacefully
to meet his Lord, and friend.

The world won’t know how great he was.
He had no wealth or fame.
Because he would not compromise
the value of his name.

I’m older now than he was
when he left this mortal frame.
But hope, that like my dad I leave
the treasure of a name.

 Dennis Price 

Wednesday, October 4, 2017

The Heart of a Man

The Heart of a Man


     The distant crowing of a rooster pierced the early morning silence.  It was soon followed by similar, shrill, grating cry as another barnyard herald joined the fugue of the feathered symphony.  Inside the front room of a weathered house, a pile of quilts in the middle of a big, old-fashioned, poster-bed began to unfold, and slowly assumed a more recognizable shape.  A few short strands of matted red hair emerged from under the lumpy patchwork.  Suddenly a freckled hand swept open the warm cotton nest exposing a sparsely clad body to the filtered chill of the room.  Thirteen year old David Reins slowly raised himself into a sitting position, and turned so his legs slid off the edge of the bed, and dangled aimlessly as his mind focused on his surroundings.  He glanced through the darkness and his eyes stopped as the luminous dial of the alarm clock came into view.  The hands were spread to read five o’clock.

     David knew his mother would object.  Just in the last year she had become extremely overprotective.  David eased his weight onto his bare feet.  His hands kept steady pressure on the rusty bed springs until he was in a position to release them slowly and silently.  Everything had been carefully placed so it could be found easily without the use of a light.  His faded jeans, and his old checkered flannel shirt were carefully draped on a short bench which stood in front of the dressing table with its three arched-topped mirrors.  His worn leather boots were directly beneath the bench.  From the top of each boot, a thick wool sock hung like a large worm about to escape a tin can.  David was almost ready.  All he had left to do was to pick up the canvas hunting coat, and the shotgun that stood by the dusty, old chifforobe next to the door.  The coat and the shotgun belonged to his father who died just the year before.  The coat was stiff and heavy.  The shell slots in each pocket were full, and the vinyl game pouch at the back of the coat still smelled of last year’s hunting successes.  David’s arms hung inside the warmth of the sleeves which were several inches too long.  He pushed them back in accordion fashion so his hand could grasp the cold, blued-steel barrel of the Winchester .12 gauge.

     David opened the door and stepped outside.  His eyes watered, his cheeks burned, and his nostrils ached as he followed the white puffs of his breath through the darkness.  A November cold front was moving across the southern countryside.  His boots crunched on the gravel in his grandfather’s driveway as he moved toward the gap in the barbed wire fence that opened into the woods.  David stopped at the gap.  The roosters had stopped crowing.  Everything was quiet.  It was the silent time near dawn when everything pauses to await the crest of the sun.  His heart began to beat faster as he gazed into the dark chasm formed by a large hickory-nut tree and some small pin-oaks whose branches arched over the narrow path that led deep into the swamp of the creek.  Things were different; he missed his father’s presence on the trail beside him.  David’s numb fingers fumbled in the pocket of his hunting coat as he pried three of the new magnum plastic shells from their slots.  He pressed two shells into the magazine, then he moved the slide beneath the barrel all the way back, and with a quick, forward jerk it slid back into position, chambering one of the shells.  Even with a loaded gun, David still had trouble getting his feet to move further down the dark pathway.

     Soon he heard the gurgling of the creek that signaled his arrival at the prime squirrel hunting area.  David moved himself into position beneath one of the decaying, hollow, hardwood trees that lined both sides of the creek.  His listened patiently for the tell-tale chatter of the gray squirrel.  The darkness faded with the rising of the sun, and David’s surroundings became clearly visible.  Suddenly the silence of the swamp was broken by a bedlam of chatter.  David’s keen brown eyes turned skyward as they caught a slight movement on a leafless limb of a nearby oak.  The fluffy tail of the fat squirrel moved slowly back and forth in a motion similar to that of a metronome, as he barked indignantly at those who had invaded his private play ground during the night.  David’s muscles tightened as he slowly raised himself and lifted the heavy shotgun to his shoulder.  His thumb caught the exposed hammer and pulled it back into the cocked position with a slight click.  He gripped the large gun as tightly as possible, and planted both feet firmly into the spongy soil.  His arm extended full length down the dark oil stained stock, and his forefinger stretched to make a slight arch around the trigger.  David moved the barrel so that the silver bead at the end was centered on the squirrel’s body.  His heart began to pound furiously, his face took on a powdered appearance, and shiny beads of sweat appeared on his brow.  His finger nervously began to pressure the trigger.  The guttural roar of the shotgun ruptured the early morning serenity of the swamp.  David struggled to retain his balance as the barrel spewed forth its contents and arched skyward.  His ears rang, his shoulder throbbed, and his nostrils were filled with the strong sulphur smell of burning gun powder.  Beneath the tree, David could see a writhing lump of gray fur.  He moved quickly toward his prize, pushing aside the underbrush as he went.  He stopped and gazed down at the suffering creature in sickening horror.  The wounded squirrel’s teeth were bared in pain, and his eyes focused momentarily on the creature that loomed over him.  His hind legs moved in quick staccato jerks, and dark red drops of blood oozed from the bristled fur that covered his body.  David’s stomach retched, and twisted.  He wanted to cry.  The squirrel twisted again and stirred the dry, spongy leaves.  David knew that the job must be finished.  He had seen his father do it dozens of times.  He knew the suffering had to be stopped, but now it seemed so brutal.  He leaned his gun up against a tree, and extended his trembling hand down, and grasped the warm underside of the squirrel.  He could feel the tiny thumping beat of the heart, and see the rise and fall of the miniature chest as it expanded against his fingers.  He knew if he was going to do it he couldn’t wait any longer.  Carefully he placed the small head on the exposed root of a nearby oak.  David’s jaw tightened.  There was no time for second thoughts as he raised his boot and slammed it forcefully down causing the oak to resound with a muffled thud.  He glanced at the squirrel once more, sighed, put the squirrel in his pouch, shouldered his gun, and headed home.

 


     

Tuesday, October 3, 2017

The Season

The Season
  Sweat dripped off of Roy Bond’s oily face. It glistened in the bright September sun.  The temperature was still in the high 90s in south Florida. The registration line stretched from one end of the school to the other.  The hallways were open and ran along the exterior of the building.  Roy was leaning out to see how much further he had to go when someone stuck a permission form in his hand.  Turning, he stared at the slender man with the crew cut. 
    “Son, get you parents to sign this form, and report to the field house tomorrow for a football physical.” 
    “But…” His stammering response fell short of the back of the man’s head.  The speaker continued down the long line with another man following close behind.  They were dressed alike in Khaki shorts and matching purple shirts.  Both had whistles hanging from cords around their necks.  They sized up each male in the line.  If they had any size at all, they repeated the short speech and handed them a form. 
     Golfview Junior High School opened its doors just two years before.  Roy stood in line to register for the ninth grade.  The school sat between an affluent golfing community, Golfview, and the infamous South Gate, a place where the railroad tracks literally marked the boundary between the fortunate and the unfortunate. A few kids, including Roy, lived in a semi-rural area near the school.  Both of Roy’s parents worked and had no time for golf.
     He stared at the form in his hand and wondered about the possibility of playing football.  Roy weighed 165 pounds, but most of it was baby fat.  Very few kids in his neighborhood ever played any organized sport other than baseball.  Still, the thought of putting on a football uniform and running onto the field in front of cheering fans excited him.  Sweat continued to streak down his cheek as he waited in the slow moving line, but Roy didn’t notice. He dreamed of stardom.  In the past, only the well-to-do kids played football at Golfview.  The school win/loss record was dismal.
    That evening when his dad got home, Roy gave him the insurance card and permission form. 
    “Dad, can I go out for football?”
    Before he could answer Roy’s mother said, “You’re in the band.”
    “I could do both.” He countered.
    “You’ve never played football.”  She said, looking at her husband for some support.
    His dad was an athlete: a champion boxer in the Navy.  Roy could sense that his dad was on his side.
      Roy remembered how his dad tried to prepare him for life.  It all started in grammar school. He was too young to start.   He still had his baby teeth.  But there he was at school, back against the wall, trying to avoid contact with strangers.  A large boy stood in front of him looking down at his upturned face.  His stare was unfriendly. 
     “What are you looking at?” The large boy asked...
     “Uh, you look sleepy.” Roy said.
    Apparently he took offense at Roy’s retort and pounded him into a submissive blob.  This was his first encounter with a bully.  His dad later told him that crying and rolling into a ball was not an acceptable defense tactic. He tried to teach him the “sweet science”, but Roy was left handed, and a bit of a bumble foot, so he progressed slowly and avoided physical confrontation.  By the end of elementary school he gained some confidence, but, just when he began to feel comfortable, Junior High School started.  The process had to be repeated. 
    His dad looked at him and then back at his mother. “Let’s let him tryout.”
    His mother turned away in defeat.  Roy started in on the usual list of promises related to what he would do if allowed to play.  Dad signed the form.
     The next day Roy stood in front of the concrete block field house with a great host of other potential players.  Three major groups huddled in separate areas around the front steps.  The kids from Golfview community stood nearest the door.  Most of them had played before.  Another group from South Gate milled around in the shade of a nearby palm tree. This group smelled strongly of cigarette smoke and Vitalis hair tonic.  Roy didn’t know the South Gate kids very well because he spent most of the last two years trying to avoid them. 
   The new coach stepped out of the field house and addressed them. “Men, line up and have your signed forms ready when you get to the door.  After you pass your physical, report to the equipment room and check out your pads.  Practice will start this afternoon at four.  Bring your equipment when you come.”
     He called them “men”.  Roy felt tougher already.  He rubbed his hand across his face to see if he could feel a whisker. He thought for a second that he did, but realized that it was only a pimple.  Once through the door they were told to strip down to their shorts. Roy looked around to see how he measured up with the rest of the guys.  He thought maybe he should order the Charles Atlas muscle building course after he got home.  Once the poking and prodding behind the curtain was complete, they redressed and picked up their equipment.  All were fitted for a helmet, pads, a practice uniform and game pants.  They had to provide their own jock strap.  Roy had never worn one before.  He left with a hefty load of armor stuffed into his football pants.  He purchased a jock strap at the local drug store on his way home.  That was embarrassing.  Now he stood in front of a full length mirror and practiced putting it on over his pants.  He had a horrible vision of standing naked and afraid in front of strangers and not knowing how to put it on.  Once he mastered his most basic piece of equipment, he worked on figuring out the rest.  The remainder of the day whizzed by as he dreamed of flying tackles and crushing blocks.  All of these delivered by him, of course.
     He was at the practice field early.  The Golfview physical training area was a large sandy expanse covered with sand spurs and bounded on three sides by palmetto, cabbage palms, and other scrub plants.  The guys from Golfview subdivision were all wearing matching shorts and tee shirts.  Some of the group from South Gate drifted into the brush on the other side of the fence for one last cigarette.  Roy and his friends stood in between them.  They watched and waited for instructions.  The coaches held a clinic on how to properly put on the uniform. They told the players where to buy their cleats and other gear not provided by the school.
      The practice started with fifty and one hundred yard time trials.  Roy ran as fast as he could, but when the players were assigned, he was told to report to the offensive line coach.  .  He didn’t know the difference between offense and defense.  He was just happy to be there.  The rest of the afternoon was spent running.  He had never run so much in his life.  His lungs hurt, his legs shook, and his gym clothes were soaked and sticking to his body.  Over the next few days they ran until they collapsed.  The loose white sand made footing difficult.  Roy hoped he wouldn’t give out.  Some guys threw up across the fence at the edge of the practice field.  The heavier smokers gave up on football altogether.  Roy stayed.  His mother was disappointed.
     After a week of running, push-ups, jumping jacks, squat thrusts, and agility drills the coach told them to report to the field in pads.  Roy saw the world for the first time from inside a football helmet.  The curved nylon face mask looked like a small ladder just below the level of his eyes.  The pads and other gear made him look like quite a physical specimen.  On the other hand it made the really big guys look like giants.  Roy lumbered from the field house with the rest of the team.  The metal tipped nylon cleats made an awful racket as they ran down the concrete runway.  The coaches and some of the football dads made a wooden seven-man blocking sled.  It was a behemoth.  Seven players lined up in a three point stance in front of the blocking pads attached to its front.  On the coach’s whistle they lunged at the great wooden beast slamming their shoulders into the pads and driving their legs with short choppy steps.  Because the field was sand, and because the blocking sled was homemade, it rarely slid.  The runners of the sled tipped forward and dug into the loose turf.  The linemen continued to drive with their legs until the coaches’ second whistle.  A large deep hole formed beneath their cleated shoes as they strained against the immovable object.  Roy’s calves cramped and his thighs burned but he continued.  He wasn’t going to quit.  His pads got heavy as the cotton backing soaked up the sweat. 
     The offensive line coach showed them how to make a proper block on a running play.  He showed them how plays were diagramed with X’s and O’s, and where they were to block based on the play called.  After that, they learned pass blocking, keeping their butts low and getting under their opponent.  They practiced these moves over and over again.  Then the coaches called the entire team back together for fumble drills and tackling practice.  Roy thought he was going to die.  Every time he thought it was time for practice to end they would start something else.  In the early stages, they practiced everything at half speed concentrating on their form.  The coaches taught them to tackle with their heads on the same side of the ball carrier as the ball.  The wet pads picked up the grit from the sandy field and rubbed them raw.  Just when Roy thought he could go on no more, the coach blew his whistle and lined them up at one end of the field.  They were five or six abreast and on the coach’s whistle they ran one hundred yard wind sprints.  At the end of the field they got back in line and repeated the drill.  Before practice was over, players were stumbling and falling down.  Roy dragged his spent body to the showers and stood under the soothing blast.  He left his equipment in the compartment with his name on it and headed home.  He went to bed early that night.
    The following days passed with the same intensity.  The strong stench of ammonia and body odor filled the locker room and increased with each passing day.  Roy thought they could probably win if the other team had to smell their pads before the game. 
    During the second week, the coaches picked up the speed.  They added tackling drills at full speed.  Bull in the ring and head on tackling introduced Roy to the physics of two large objects meeting helmet to helmet.  He dreaded tackling their big fullback, Mike Rains.   Mike weighed 180 pounds and had a beard as heavy as that of any man. Roy got up after some tackles looking out the ear hole of his helmet.  If the offensive linemen missed a block, the coach would make them run the ball with no blockers.  Several times the coaches pulled up on the belt of Roy’s football pants as he lay sprawled on the ground trying to regain his breath after a collision.  He was playing football.  Roy was put into the lineup at Guard.  He was the smallest man on the line.  He often pulled away from the line on an end run called to his side and led the running back around.  Most of the players on the offensive and defensive interior line were over two hundred pounds.  Roy had to try and hold them out on pass plays and block them on running plays.  His battered and bruised body was evidence of his tenacity.  He had been run over, stepped on, cleated, kneed, poked, jabbed, and flattened, and this at the hands of his own teammates.  He wondered what playing against other players might be like.  The players from South Gate were the toughest.  They played dirty, and they enjoyed a good fight.  Some had earned nicknames; Benny the biter, Knees Orton, Walrus, Scat.  Benny would bite the nearest leg or arm in the pile after a tackle.  Once, in the tangle of the pile, he bit himself, and spent the rest of the game trying to figure out who did it.
     The day soon came when the lineup for the first game was announced.  Roy was chosen to play first team offensive guard.  His mother rued the day when she had agreed to let him play.  She believed he would probably quit before the first game.  His dad on the other hand was quite proud.  Central Jr. High was the largest in the division and they had won every game they played in the last several years.  They were Golfview’s first opponent.  During the week before the game the coach passed out the new purple game shirts with the gold numbers.  Roy wore number 69.  The Golfview Gators were ready to play.
     The game was played under the lights at the high school stadium.  Most of the Gator squad had never been there before, and most had never played under the lights.  Their practice field didn’t have any markings on it.  The referees had to line them up before the first kick-off.  The Central squad looked huge.  They won the toss and chose to receive.  Coach Mays gathered the Golfview players in a big huddle and gave them a pep talk. 
     “Men, their return man is named DeAngelo and he is wearing number 32.  All of you look for number 32.  He is very fast.  Hit him low, and hit him hard.”
     Coach called Roy’s name for the kick-off squad.  All of the team joined in a cheer that started low and got louder as they broke the huddle.  “Gator bait, gator bait, gator bait….”
Roy ran onto the field.  He looked at the other team and found number 32 near the goal line.  He saw himself shedding blockers and plowing DeAngelo into the turf in front of the cheering masses.  The referee’s whistle blew and Golfview’s kicker hit the football.  It sailed toward number 32.  DeAngelo got the football and started up field.  Roy could see nothing but number 32.  He was going to hit him untouched.  Just as he took his angle, Roy was hit by a crushing cross-body block.  He fell to the turf and caught the top of DeAngelo’s sock with one finger.  The running back high stepped and jerked free.  Roy watched as he crossed the goal line at the other end of the field.  They made the extra point, and the score was seven to nothing in favor of Central.
    The Golfview team lined up to receive the kickoff.  Ronnie Massey, the scat back received the kick and ran it out to the thirty yard line.  On the first play from scrimmage, Golfview fumbled the ball and Central recovered.  On their next play, they scored another touchdown.  They missed the extra point.  The score was now thirteen to nothing after three plays.  Coach Mays called a time out and the Golfview team ran to the sidelines.  He didn’t call them men. 
     “I didn’t bring you here to have you lie down in front of the other team.  You either get out there and stop them, or I’m going to forfeit and take you home.”
      The team ran back on to the field.  Roy and his team mates played an inspired game after that.  They even scored.  At the end of the game, the score was Central 13, and Golfview 7. 
     The rest of the season was a dream.  Every team that the scrubby little Golfview team played lost.  Central and Golfview met in the championship game.  The scene was very similar to their first meeting except that Golfview had something to prove.  Roy’s dad and mom attended every game.  Roy even had a girlfriend who ran on to the field and hugged him when the final gun sounded.  The championship was a battle from the first whistle.  The ball went back and forth between the two teams.  At the end of the final quarter, the score was Golfview 14, and Central 7.  The clock continued to run during the final two minutes.  Central possessed the ball and drove to Golfview’s five yard line.  The play gave them a first down.  The big Central full back pounded the center of the line.  In three plays he was at the one yard line.  A defensive guard for Golfview fell and had to be carried off the field.  Coach Mays looked to the bench and called for Roy
     “Get in there and seal off that gap.  I don’t want anyone to make it through.  Is that clear?”
     “Yes sir” Roy said as he buttoned his chin strap.
Roy got down in the awkward feeling four point stance of a defensive lineman.  The center and guard across from him looked huge.  He watched the center’s hands and moved when he snapped the ball.  Roy lowered his butt and pushed his body upward with all his strength wedging himself into the gap.  Through the mass of grunting, pushing flesh he could see the thighs of the big fullback coming straight for him.  Roy lowered the crown of his helmet and strained forward with everything he had.  The knees of Central’s big fullback hit Roy’s helmet and the runner fell just short of the goal line.
      Roy could not hear the cheers or remember what happened on the play.  He awoke minutes later on the sideline with his dad looking down at him and his girlfriend standing near by.  His mother had already gone to the car.  She just couldn’t stand to watch.  Later he learned that he had held his ground.  Golfview won.

     Roy’s dad, who was gravely ill, didn’t live long enough to see another season, but sometimes one is enough.

Saturday, September 30, 2017

THE LAWSON BOYS


     Salty damp air smelling of pine, honeysuckle, and magnolia, surrounded me most of the time.  Huge live oak trees with gray ornaments of Spanish moss shaded my world.  Every road seemed long. Trips in our old blue Ford coupe seemed to go on endlessly.  My sister and I would lie in the rear floorboard sweating, and listening to other cars zooming past on the two-lane highway.
     It was 1952 and I was five years old.  I planted my feet in the sandy soil of coastal Mississippi.  Our wooden frame house was gray.  It seemed large at the time, but I later discovered it was very small.  We had no television or air conditioning, so we played outside most of the time.  When it got dark, our mother would call us inside. 
      Johnny and Jimmy Myers lived next door.  They were older.  They pretended to like me when I brought them my dad’s tools or something to eat, but at other times they pummeled and harassed me until I left crying.  My best friend, David Harper and his older brothers lived down the street.  He was my age.  His two older brothers were Thomas and Boogie.  John Henry Jones lived next door to David.  He was also our age.  David, John Henry, and I played together most of the time.  The older guys occasionally let us join them when they needed someone to do something stupid or dangerous.  They knew we would do anything they asked to show we were worthy.
    The sandy ruts we called a road ended a short distance beyond my house at a pasture enclosed by a barbed wire fence.  If you walked the other direction on our street you would run into pavement just before you got to town.  We occasionally shuffled to town on our summer toughened bare feet to get some treat from the grocery store, but most of our activities took place between John Henry’s house and the woods at the back of the pasture. 
     The woods were dark and swampy.  The creeks and ditches there had black water in them.  Slimy things slithered beneath the surface.  Occasionally the older boys would challenge us to wade into the black water and scoop out some wriggling creature.
      John Henry, David and I occasionally went to the switching yard at the railway station near town.  We would walk along side the blistering hot metal rails, and pick up loose spikes.  John Henry said it was our “doody” to turn them in. I guess, with a name like John Henry, he felt an obligation to the railroad.  He was too small to drive spikes, so I suppose picking up loose ones was the next best thing.  In the switchyard there were huge black steam engines that hissed and chugged, covering themselves in billowing clouds of white.  We were a little afraid of everything.
     Afraid the bull or the cows in the pasture would chase us if we got too close.   Noises in the woods made us run for home with goose bumps on our arms.  And, we were always afraid that we would somehow get stuck on the railroad track when the train was coming.  But, more than all this, we feared the Lawson boys. 
     We didn’t know where they lived or how they ever found the pasture at the end of our road, but they did.
     The older boys said they weren’t afraid of them, but we all made preparations to fight them off if they ever decided to cross into our territory.
     The Lawson boys came to the pasture and stared at us across the barbed wire fence.  They were dirty and their clothes were ragged.  Their red hair was long and curly.   We all had short hair.  They had real big freckles.   I had never seen them at school.  Sometimes four would show up, but at other times five came.  They were all different sizes, but we could tell by looking they were kin.  They never smiled. We stayed in the road, and they stayed in the pasture.
      My mother, who told us who they were, said their parents hung out in Honky Tonks.  I didn’t know what that was, but mother said never to go near them.
      I asked Thomas Harper what Honky Tonks were and he said that he would show me.  Thomas and Boogie took David and me on the center bars of their bicycles and pedaled us by a couple.
     They were buildings with brightly painted metal signs on them. The signs had words on them like “J-A-X”, and “P-A-B-S-T”. The ground around them was covered in crushed oyster shells.  The doors were open and loud music blared all the way to the street.  We could see people sitting at tables.  The Honky Tonks were all lined up in a row across the street from the railroad tracks.
     I hoped that my mother wouldn’t see me, or even hear that I had been there.  I also hoped that we didn’t run into the Lawson boys or their parents.
     The older boys came up with a plan to build two tree houses.  They weren’t really houses, just boards nailed between two limbs high up in a big tree.   We nailed flat short boards to the tree trunk to make a ladder.  The boards were just a little too far apart for my short legs.  I was scared when I climbed up to the platform.  I was scared when I got there, and I was scared as I inched my way back down.
     The Myers had a big tree in their yard, and there was another one at the end of the road.  The branches of the one at the end of the road hung over the pasture fence.  Thomas and Boogie said we should build one tree house in each tree.
       The plan was to stock the slanted platforms with rocks and sticks.  The older guys said that David, John Henry, and I should hide in the tree house at the end of the road.  When the Lawson boys showed up, the older boys said they would lure them onto the road where we could shower them with rocks and sticks.
       Johnny, Jimmy, Thomas and Boogie would then retreat to the other tree house and hold them off from there.
      My fear was we would run out of ammunition and the Lawson boys would climb into our tree while the older guys were still in their tree, too far away to rescue us.  I imagined being captured by them, beaten up, and taken to their house.  I wondered what would happen when their parents came home from the Honky Tonks.
     We built the tree houses, stocked them as planned, and spent many watchful hours waiting for the showdown.  I had nightmares about it. 
     Then one day they came back.  John Henry saw them first and sounded the alarm.  David and I climbed into the tree house at the end of the road.  John Henry soon followed.  The older boys stood their ground in the middle of the street.  When the Lawsons neared the fence, Johnny Myers called out and told them to come over.  He said he had something to show them.  They crossed the fence and walked under our tree house.  The older boys turned and ran toward the Myers house just as we had planned.  The Lawsons just stood in the road wondering what was going on.  John Henry, David, and I unloaded on them with a shower of rocks. 
     Our aim was good and the Lawson boys took a pelting.  They scurried for the fence and ran back into the pasture.  We climbed down and followed the older boys who had seen that we had stopped the invaders at the first tree and were now giving chase.  We crossed the barbed wire fence of the pasture and ran whooping behind our retreating foe.  Fortunately, no cows were out that day. We chased the Lawsons until they disappeared into the trees on the opposite side of the field.  We all slowed down when we got to there.  Moving slowly from tree to tree, we caught sight of the small plywood house that was covered in black tar paper.  The weeds grew tall right up to it.  We could hear several kids crying.  Creeping closer, we could see the house better. Several skinny girls with red hair and ragged dresses were looking at bumps on the heads of a couple of the boys who had crossed our fence.  The yard was full of old junk, a rusted car, a broken washing machine, a metal barrel full of beer cans, and two old stained mattresses.  The inside of the house was dark.  I knew I wouldn’t want to live there.  We all decided that we should go home.
     I didn’t feel good.  I was sorry for them now that I knew where they lived.  Nobody felt good about what we had done, but no one said much about it.  The older guys never told us how bravely we fought. If the Lawsons had ever come back, we would have treated them differently.  They never did.
     I grew older, and sometimes wondered how we could have been so cruel. We were just afraid, and like most kids, unable to see how our actions would affect others.  Many more childhood episodes molded my character. But, our battle with the skinny, red headed, Lawson boys was the first one where I came to a conclusion about the consequences of my actions without being told by a grownup. 

     I moved away from my friends shortly after our encounter with the Lawsons, and did not return until I was an adult.  The trees were much older, but didn’t seem nearly as big as I remembered them. The bark on their trunks had grown around the boards that we once used as ladders.  The road was short, and our house was very small.  I imagined that the Lawsons had probably never left, and might be in some nearby Honky Tonk.

Friday, September 29, 2017

On meeting someone of like persuasion.

ON MEETING SOMEONE OF LIKE PERSUASION

Greetings, fellow traveler,
Out of sync with time and place.
I know you.
The searching in your eyes.
The etchings on your face.
Was our meeting happenstance?
Or planned?
Oh, life’s mysterious dance.

I think the purpose of starting the re-blogging process was to reacquaint myself with my muse.  I enjoy reading, and I tend to read authors and poets with work that somehow speaks to me on a personal level.  I wrote the simple poem you see here many years ago to express this feeling.  I have found that people may be different in appearance and background, but when we can glimpse their inner self we may find common ground.  I will be sharing some background with you in the next few posts to give you an idea of my life experience.  I think you will better understand my position on things if you know this.  Then when I really start to opine on the current state of affairs, you can know why I hold the views I do.  I started with the post on my friend David Rains because we had this type of relationship.  I will be 70 years old next month, and I am feeling some urgency to share what I have learned.  

Thursday, September 28, 2017

The Return to Blogging

I announced today on Facebook that I was returning to blogging.  I have missed the exercise in expressing my views and creations with those who choose to read.  I was reminded when I re-read some of my posts that many were influenced by my friendship with David Rains (deceased) of Pineville, LA.  David and I met many years ago when he moved to Houston, TX following his first retirement.  We were both in law enforcement, and we had both worked as private investigators.  I liked him from the first day I met him.  He had a brilliant mind and was extremely well read.  I'm not sure, but I believe he probably had a photographic memory.  David was a man of eclectic interests, so any subject that one might have an interest in, David probably had some salient commentary.  We didn't always agree, but we talked until we were both satisfied that neither of us was budging on our convictions.  David did not care for getting credit for his research and would often send it to me if I happened upon a blog subject that peeked his interest.  I usually just said that the information came from my friend David with no further explanation.

On April 21, 2014 David passed away from a hidden medical condition.  I miss him.  I will miss his input.  I write this simple dedication to give him public credit for his contributions.  Thank you David Rains.