Sunday, April 4, 2010

Fiction, Chapter 4

He’d grown up in a much larger place, with diners and stop lights and one way streets and a public city bus system, such as it was. There was a professional class in his hometown – small, sure, but there were multiple lawyers, for example, and more than one dentist, and more than one doctor, and more than a handful of small business owners. In Pine Grove there was one lawyer, one dentist, no physician, and just four retail merchants – and they were struggling hard to stay open, and making less each year. Three were near retirement, with grown kids and no mortgages, and they were assiduous and highly visible patrons of the fourth. They overpaid for their cold cuts, staples and day-old pastries at Sonders’ place to try and help him stay open. They could get cheaper everything 20 miles down the road, but Sonders had kids, and he was one of their own, and “it’s what you do.” Will had quickly learned all of this, including the broad uses of “It’s what you do,” and had re-arranged the household budget so that he could afford to get everything he possibly could in town. This made him popular with the business owners, a small and fading social class, but more than that he fundamentally agreed that “It’s what you do,” even though he had to turn the thermostat down and quit taking premium cable.

He liked Pine Grove, but he had to concede that living in a small town was a challenge. He had more education than nearly anyone else in town, and more than certainly anyone his age, and this meant he was never off duty. He could be buying cabbages at the IGA and someone would approach and ask a question about cars or the road construction schedule over on the four lane – neither of which were remotely his field by training or interest – or about their families’ decisions on education, or basketball, of course. No one ever asked him about crops or weather or livestock, thankfully, recognizing that as a “town boy” he wasn’t likely to know any more than Pine Grove’s most coddled eight year old. He had found the attention not unenjoyable when he was newly arrived, but it had started to wear thin.

“Yes, I’ve read the new Fords are quite reliable as well; No, I’m not sure when all four lanes will reopen, either; Well, now, St. Joseph’s has a fine program in business, but Indiana State is good, too, and likely to be cheaper; No question, the Lancers will be just fine without a center as long as Petey makes his share of shots.”

One of his two days off a month was spent in Danville, two counties over but across the state line and so a different (and to Pine Grovers, suspect) place, where he’d go for a pizza and a movie; the other day was usually spent in Indy, at a game if the Pacers or Indians were in town, at the Eiteljorg if not. He liked the anonymity, but he lately found these days oppressive. Everyone was coupled, and he was not; they had family, or purpose, and he had neither of these things. He accepted that he had to get out of town from time to time, to see other people and to be reminded that time was moving and that changes were happening. It was harder to accept that none of it – the coupling, the families, the pursuit of goals, change, was happening to him. His days away had become another of the growing list of things about which he found himself ambivalent.

His was a dying career in a dying town, and the riotous fecundity of the undulating acreage that had sustained the parents and grandparents and forebears and first settlers of the county seemed nearly superfluous now. Wastrel. No kids wanted to stay and work those acres, for less and less money, less and less security, less and less control over what you planted and how you harvested. You could spit watermelon seeds in the soil in this county and get fruit the size of a car seat in 6 weeks without too much effort, and a friend from undergrad who had grown up on a farm in Wisconsin had said “You can’t call what these folks do around here ‘farming’ because it’s too easy!” when he was through on a visit shortly after Will had moved up here. And while what his new neighbors did yielded a life of many subtle if irregularly spaced rewards, it certainly wasn’t easy, and it certainly wasn’t easy to make a living. He didn’t blame kids for going to college or going to work in town and not coming back. The town was dying, and some days he felt he was here to perform last rites.

After he’d see another sagging old barn or farmhouse, or read of another estate sale, or when he thought of the sheer force of human effort that it had taken to drain the swamps and reveal the rich topsoil in the lowlands, or break through the prairie grass and plant trees on the soft ridges, and that this way of life was passing as surely as that of the Miami and Wea before them, it was almost inexpressibly sad. He certainly couldn’t talk to the townspeople about it. And maybe looking at the garden and seeing that beautiful mud this morning had just got him thinking, but it lay heavy on him today. Why did they get up and look at the sky, and watch the weather? Why did they lay awake at night, thinking of the cost of seed and doing the math in their heads until they deceived themselves into thinking the break-even point was higher than it was? Why shush their loved ones to hear the futures prices out of the Chicago Board of Trade on WGFA? Why work every day, year round, 14 hours a day, on this beautiful land, to wrest from it a bounty that no one seemed to know about, or appreciate?

“Christ, have mercy,” Will intoned, ruefully and aloud, and was startled first by his own voice, and then again and even more so by the response. He faltered, forgetting his next line, muscle memory and habit jangling with consciousness at the wrong moment. “Lord, have mercy,” he said, too loudly and after too long a pause, and he could feel Genny Renaud eye him over her tri-focals. He’d have to head out to her farm this week, ideally some morning, for coffee after the daily Mass, so she could see that his eyes weren’t rheumy, that he wasn’t fuzzy headed, that he was sober and engaged and his best solicitous self. He wanted to make sure she was still on his side, before she got a notion to send a letter to the Chancery.

Not that it mattered. No one at the Chancery cared about Pine Grove, or him, really. And certainly no one there cared about a poor old woman like Mrs. Renaud. Will cared about her, or wanted to, it was a compulsion of his to look after those whom others weren’t, and he knew that the ritual and rite, however desiccated they had become to him, still were the centerpiece of her meager table.

He stopped indulging his musings and refocused, finished, and crisply delivered the readings. His homily was on perseverance – six minutes, about right for a daily Mass in a drafty church in a dying town – if more erudite than impassioned, well, it could have been worse. It was the feast of St. Appian, a hermit, so Will spoke a few sentences on his example as one of those who hear a calling and pursue it despite what others might think. He kept to himself his thoughts of how self-indulgent that path could be. With all of the misery in the world, to shut oneself up in isolation and reflect and pray seemed its own kind of profligacy. All three heads in the congregation nodded along.

He thanked the altar boys after Mass – he didn’t always have one, let alone two, and they did make things go more quickly – and turned out the lights after they’d left, and turned down the thermostat to 55°, and left to return to the rectory.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Fiction, Chapter 3

Dray
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Snooze was a funny word. Who thought of it? He’d have to look in Mrs. Mueller’s dictionary and see if they gave an etymology for it. He’d get to think about it for the next nine minutes. Why nine minutes? Odd number. And it’s an odd number! He didn’t have nine more minutes, though. More like four. Not a Fantastic Four, either. Just four. He’d hit the funny-worded button on his alarm clock twice already, so he knew it was time to get up. Like the old man in the movie with the house and all the balloons. Except his dog wasn’t named Doug. There was a kid at school named Doug. Nope, his dog was Rusty. Like mom’s Buick. The Buick leaked oil on the driveway like Rusty slobbered all over his mat – every morning you can tell where they’d slept. So they do have some similarities. Except Rusty doesn’t need warming up in the morning. Or his windows scraped. And he can start right away on rainy days. Maybe the Buick would start right away, this morning? It was spring, after all. Finally. Spring has sprung. “A leak,” mom always says after. Sorta like Rusty and the Buick. Everything around here leaked. Speaking of, there’s a reminder of something he needed to take. Not yet, though. It’s so warm under the covers, and it’s still dark out, and he had… two minutes left. Left right left. Left to his own devices he’d have more than two, but he could sleep in on Saturday. Being sleep deprived was okay as long as you knew when your next sleep was coming. Oh, damn, nope, he had 4-H on Saturday. Is that the right way to swear in this circumstance? He was just learning, very tentatively, and trying it out at school, very cautiously. No one in his class had graduated beyond damn, but he’d heard some sixth graders using other, worse, words. None the worse for wear. Though maybe they did get worse for wear. Everything wears down with use. Maybe every damn word does too. There’s a place over in Greene County that has the tagline “Best restaurant by a dam site,” right there out in the open, right on their sign. It’s a sign. Why wouldn’t it be out in the open? He saw it when he got to stay over with Mark last summer, and they went camping over there on the lake and fishing below the dam. It took him a while but he got it. It had to snow twice but he got the drift. There’s not much left to the snowdrifts now. More like snow berms. Or snow mounds. Mini mounds. Snow speed bumps. Dirty snow driftlets. Driftlettes? They were all iced over and shot through with “dirt from three counties” as his grandma would say. Not really snow anymore. Ice drifts. Dirty ice drifts. But ice didn’t drift, it just hangs from the gutter. Where we were all told to keep our minds out of. Why would Mrs. Mueller care if our minds were up in the gutters? She cared, though. When Mark or Brigid or Robbie would say something dirty, she’d get red and tell us to get our minds out of the gutters. I guess our minds would get dirtier with all those dead maple leaves and all that gross water that’s stuck up in our gutter. And we don’t want dirty minds. What makes some things dirty? What makes a mind dirty? Why are some words dirty? Does the word make the mind dirty or the mind make the word dirty? Or doesn’t making them dirty make them dirty? It seemed suspicious. He really had to take a leak now. Some people thought that was dirty. The having to or the saying of? Or both? Why, though? Was anything about everything down there dirty? Grandma said our dirt was beautiful. She’s right – the dirt is so black after a rain after a planting, it’s about the most beautiful thing ever. And that dirty smell. Dirt-y smell. Why was that dirty dirt-y and the body dirty dirty? It was time to get up. Maybe he’d ask about it today at school. Or after Mass. He figured it would just be him and father, since Chris never showed up. Like that house with the old man and all the balloons and the dog named Doug. Damn, Rusty had to take a leak, too. No more funny-worded alarm clock button-hitting. Up!
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Fiction, Chapter 2

Genny

“Why is someone sweeping the rugs upstairs? It’s still dark out! You couldn’t see well enough to run the sweeper in the dark, or not to do a good job of it, anyway.” She felt ungrateful as soon as she thought it, because whoever was doing it, if someone were doing it, was doing her a favor. She didn’t care too much how dusty things got up there, but she had to keep up appearances and lugging that old Electrolux up the stairs wasn’t her idea of a good time. The sound rose and fell, and Genny concentrated, screwed her eyes tightly shut, and listened to hear if the sweeper and the person running the sweeper were making progress down the hall. By doing this she realized that she was awake, and that she had either been dreaming or she had heard the wind and thought it was the vacuum cleaner. She couldn’t always tell when she was awake or asleep, or what she was hearing or seeing too clearly (or more frequently and more troubling, thinking), but the refrigerator had kicked on so she was going with awake. “Awake, and no one is upstairs vacuuming, and it’s windy.” The mantle clock was ticking away, and if that could go on ticking for another day, well, then, maybe she could, too.

She lay still under the heavy blankets and breathed slowly and deliberately in and out through her nose three times and then exhaled through her mouth to see if she could see her breath. She couldn’t, but it was still pretty dark. “Maybe I’ll get to sleep in bed in a few weeks,” she thought hopefully. Heat was expensive, so she had shut all the hot air floor registers on the second floor, had wrapped old encyclopedias and atlases in towels and pillowcases to cover them, and had shut the door to the stairwell leading upstairs. She couldn’t afford to heat the upstairs, too, the downstairs was expensive enough. When she was a little girl she’d slept in a cold room with frost on the nails that had come through the roof above her head, and she’d had to break the ice on the water in a pail to cook in the mornings. Of course she’d also had a sister in bed with her to help keep warm and to help her cook, and the intervening six decades with creature comforts had undoubtedly softened her. “Oh, well, add that to the list of things that I'm not as much as I used to be: tough.”

She lay motionless for a while, listening to the clock tick and the wind blow and the fridge run, feeling the heft of the mound of blankets pressing on her chest. It was time to get up. She wanted some tea and she had to see about the pressure on her bladder. Genny started the laborious process of getting up from the chair by scooching her bottom down a little to the left, then to the right, back and forth, moving down the naugahyde. After a pause, she rolled the mass of covers off her chest and torso, at an angle, creating an escape route. She wasn’t strong enough to pull the lever on the old recliner to bring in the foot rest, especially on the cold mornings when the limbs – and the extremities even further out – needed extra urging and attention, so she just left the recliner in a prone position. “Just like I’m gonna be all day if I don’t get moving,” she thought.

Bottom down, blankets off, arm of the chair uncovered so she could push herself up, carefully so as to avoid falling, and on the fourth try she put her right leg on the floor. It took a good ten minutes of starting and stopping, every winter morning, to get out of the recliner that had become her bed. It was completely undignified, but no one was there to see it so it really didn’t matter, and she didn’t think of it as being diminishing. If she ever fell, well, then someone would likely see the result, and that wouldn’t do anyone any good. They’d have great reason to get her out of the house then, for sure. Gotta be careful. Once she was standing she figured the new day counted, so she said a quick prayer of thanks to St Mary and John the Baptist for living to see another morning, then after a pause she said out loud in English that it would be okay if she hadn’t, but maybe they knew best.

She took her terry cloth housecoat from the arm of the sofa, which she could reach while holding on to the recliner, pulled it on, tied it closed, and shuffled into the cold kitchen without turning on any lights. Electricity wasn’t free, and besides, if the boys driving out to the County Highway Department saw lights on at this hour they’d wonder what in the world she was doing. Maybe they’d wonder if she was making out okay. One might maybe stop in to check on her, thinking she’d fallen at dinner time and hadn’t been able to turn out the light. Maybe one would wonder if she’d have zucchini bread made and coffee on, and stop in under the pretense of checking in on her. In any scenario, she’d have to put on coffee and make a good show of being in control of things. Or worse, they might just call Louie and tell him she was up at this hour. No, she’d wait the twenty minutes or so for the dawn and get all the free light she needed, without the scrutiny. There was enough of that in Pine Grove without inviting any more. In the indistinct grey she proceeded slowly but confidently, muscle memory and habit working so her mind could pursue other things.

Now standing in the cold kitchen, she balanced herself against the sink and said her Morning Offering. One hand over the other, she moved to the front of the stove while saying a quick prayer to Lou, or for Lou, she corrected herself. She missed him, every morning and every meal. She prayed for her daughter – Genny missed her, too – and for good weather for farming, and to St. Vincent for the poor.

In the growing grey light in the kitchen she took the solitary clean white cup with the tea-stained interior from the drain board, filled it at the tap, and emptied it into the kettle where it sat on the stove. She could barely lift the kettle from the stove to the sink, in the mornings at least, and anyway it took more heat to boil two cups than one cup. She took the used teabag from its resting place in the jar lid on the back of the stove and dropped it into the bottom of the cup. While the electric ring popped to life and began to glow orange with heat, she returned to her prayers to complete the Angelus (unsure of the time but thinking there was nothing really magic about six, noon and six in any event) and the Memorare, one of her favorites, with its beautiful old verse and baroque syntax. She then paused, listening for the bubbling of the kettle, the cover over the spout that would whistle being long gone, and when it was ready she carefully lifted it to fill her cup, balancing herself with her left hand on the towel rack. She'd made her morning tea.

She used to shear sheep and deliver them in the cold barn with exposed arms, she used to hang bushels and pounds of wet clothes onto the clothesline, she used to stand for consecutive hours behind the wheel of a tractor pulling a disker in ruler-straight rows, she used to string fence around their property, she used to do some of those things after being up all night dancing with Lou if a band had come through, and here she had to take hold onto the towel rack of the stove to keep from toppling over making tea. “You’re getting soft,” she thought, and then laughed at herself. “You’re getting old, is what you’re getting,” she said, and added “'Have already got.'”

She returned to her prayers. She reeled through her Notre Pères, saying one each for the Pope, the Bishop (who she prayed knew what he was doing but was not at all convinced), and for the new pastor at St. Anne’s (though this might also fall under “praying that the Bishop knows what he is doing”), and for the President, and for the soul in purgatory closest to heaven. Some days she prayed for the ones furthest away, figuring they could use a boost, but this morning she thought she’d go for some immediate good.

The first week in March was still too early to do much in the way of gardening, but she had to do something visible outside so that folks would know she was good for another season. “Of all the dumb reasons to put in a garden, to keep other people from worrying seems nearly at the top,” she thought. It was a lot of work to contribute to the greater peace of mind of Pine Grove, but she would do it. There wasn’t much doubt that the town could use greater peace of mind.

The tired teabag, in a slow, graceful, feeble unfurling, darkened and flavored the mug of boiling water. Out of habit Genny had reached over and snapped on the radio, listening for the farm report and weather. Crop prices and livestock futures didn’t really matter much to her anymore, but how did you stop doing something you’d done for years, especially if there was nothing to take its place? She’d read something about “empty ritual,” and the expression struck her as odd, and maybe a little offensive. Who was to determine the carrying capacity of another’s rituals? Her rituals weren’t empty. She liked them, even if their original meaning or use has long since passed. Maybe she even needed them.

The garden was a ritual for Genny, and brought comfort to her life - she bad mouthed it around others, but it brought her a sense of the cadence of passing time, and that comforted her. And it brought peace of mind to her neighbors and anyone who should happen to drive by. And beauty to them, too, because once she got it in she was tenacious and keeping it up. Comfort and beauty. And zucchini, God knows. And weren’t comfort and beauty and zucchini meaningful? Of course they were. Did the ritual have to be weighted with county-wide import for it not to be empty? What about pleasure, too? She really loved that garden, and watching the miracle that had sustained her and Lou and their family and their ancestors and their children, writ small, all under her care, certainly brought her pleasure.

“That’s it, then. Pleasure plus comfort plus beauty plus zucchini equals meaning. 'Empty ritual', whoever thought of such a thing?” Happier, she washed her empty teacup, that she didn’t remember draining, and went about making toast. She had to eat before heading into town or she’d pass out at church and there would be more talk about getting her out of her house.

Church: that was another ritual that she loved, but she didn’t ponder more on that right now. Reaching some conclusion about her garden was a good enough start to the day.
Posted by Bren in SoCal at 3/29/2010 12:22:00 AM

Fiction, Chapter 1

26 February 2010
Will (fiction)

Standing in front of the stained porcelain sink, Will pushed his thumbnail against the small chip in the rim of the ceramic cup one, two, three times, absent-mindedly. He rinsed it again and set it in the drainboard to his left, dried his hands, and leaned forward over the sink.

It was the first week in March. The garden wasn’t much to look at, but Will looked west out his kitchen window at it anyway. The muddy patch sprouted only wire tomato baskets, three of them, rusting, listing, looking almost obscene in their optimism, like a forgotten ornament in a discarded Christmas tree browning in a brush pile, waiting to be burned. A responsible gardener would have put the wire cages in storage for winter, of course, and he'd meant to, but hadn't gotten around to it - he would have had to clean out some space in the garage, and to make room in the garage he would have had to have put stuff from the previous tenants in the attic, or pitch it, but he didn't have a truck, and to ask to borrow one of the plentiful trucks around here would have solicited offers to help, and social entanglement, and scrutiny. So there the tomato cages rested. And rusted. "Something else for people in town to notice," he thought. But he loved the garden. And overseeing life, you could say, was part of his job, and he took it seriously – he took that part seriously – so he made a mental note to stop in at the mower shop downtown and ask to reserve a rototiller. The earth would have to dry out eventually, and eventually he’d have to till it. And plant it. If he didn’t, that was something else that people in town would notice for sure. Or worse, notice and till the garden for him when he was out. If he didn't put in a garden they'd think him profligate, or lazy; he might be but he wasn't going to put those traits on display. He loved the garden and would get it tilled and planted as soon as Mrs. Waggoner did. Before then would be unseemly, and unwise - unseemly because people would think he had too much time on his hands, and unwise because he would probably lose it to frost. And he did love the garden, and would hate to lose all that life.

It was now thirteen past seven, according to the timepiece by the door, and Will knew he needed to get to work, “to open shop,” as he liked to call it. He took two breaths, the second deeply, disengaged from his musings, pulled his shoulders back, stood up straight, put on his glasses from where they lay on the counter, next to the sink, mustered some enthusiasm, or serenity, or resignation – did it matter which? – and went to the hall closet to get his coat.

Dawn had broken but it was still a grey, misty morning as he stepped out onto the back stoop. His eyes were pulled to the horizon, out past Route 17 a mile away. Beyond the line of still-naked soft maples along the rill he could see the top two-thirds of the grain elevator, and he looked past it, up the sloping ground, up to the crest of Muller’s Hill.

“It’s so beautiful here,” he said aloud, again, as he often had since he’d first been transferred to Pine Grove and laid eyes on the place. And he’d meant it, every time. People in town, especially, sure didn’t think so, or maybe they just couldn’t say it since they were from here and it would be unseemly, somehow, but he thought it was one of the most beautiful places he’d been. Here on the top step of his back stoop, standing on the worn black rubber mat left by the previous tenant, in full view of the parking lot, wasn't the time or place; he’d take in god’s creation later. He couldn't be late, the show didn't start without him, and he saw the three cars’ occupants waiting for him, steam and exhaust spitting out of them all. Will touched the black button of the door knob of the aluminum storm door with his right thumb, flush, and took the plunge down the stairs and across the small yard, past the playground, across the squelching, fecund yard on the cracking concrete sidewalk and up the new concrete steps.

The boys had already prepped and gone through their routines, and were dressed and waiting for him, idly and half asleep. “Morning, guys,” Will said. It had been nearly a year since this part of his job held any real interest, but he felt clearheaded this morning, and now that he was in he donned his work gear and was ready to start the day. Will nodded to the boys, saying “Ready when you are.”

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