Thursday, June 23, 2005

All Alone with the Enemy



Alone, she thought. I’m all alone. All alone, left to rot in this rotten world, all alone. She wondered at the thought as she kicked off a pair of faded and scratched, black oxford shoes that felt like they were two sizes to small for her feet. Old woman shoes, she thought. Was she an old woman? She looked at her feet. Feet that were short, and wide, and would never fit into a pair of slim, narrow highheels again. Yes, she was an old woman. And all alone. Of course that was only the beginning or the ending depending on if you were to start looking at the top of her head or at her feet. At fifty years of age, she thought, there wasn’t much about this old broad that didn’t feel to short, to wide, and differently tired, and wore out. Just plain rotten, and falling apart.

Her head came up at a slight sound. She couldn’t identify the noise, or tell for sure where it had come from. Was someone at the door? She turned back and opened it a crack so she could peek out. No one there. She shut the door slowly, then made sure it was locked tight. Maybe it had been her imagination again. Seemed like she was always hearing strange noises. Maybe it was just one of her dogs or cats.

She started to take off her worn denim jacket but had second thoughts as she felt the chill air in the old ramshackle house. She limped on her sore, swollen feet into the little livingroom, opened the door of the small pot-bellied stove, tossed in a few sticks of a bad grade of firewood, that the kid down the lane had chopped and stacked in a cardboard box last weekend. “I know I should rake out the ashes, but I don’t have what it take,” she told the stove. She waded up a couple of pieces of newspaper to get the fire going and tossed them in on top of the sticks of wood, then hunted through the clutter on a nearby coffee table until she found a box of matches. She struck one, and lit the paper, leaving the door to the stove open a crack. As she stood she felt a soft, furry body rub against her leg. She reached down and ran a hand over the calico cat. “Hi, Mazie.”

She had a pang of sympathy for the small creature as she felt how cold her ears were. Quickly she added another ball of paper to the stove. In seconds the paper caught, then the pithy wood. The rotten pine would burn fast but would help heat up the old drafty house and maybe help keep the utility bill down. She picked up the cat, which purred, and meowed softly as she cuddled her against her chest, trying to warm the animal and herself. She felt eyes staring at her. She searched the room with her own faded blue ones until she located the scathing yellow ones. At first she saw only the cat’s eyes, then slowly was able to make out the shape of the black creature where she was nestled into a brown-stripped blanket. She didn’t have much sympathy for this one. She hadn’t wanted another cat, couldn’t afford to feed another one, but it had come and stayed anyway, even though she had tried to get it to go away. Standoffish, it was. Didn’t want to be petted. But wouldn’t leave. Now the yellow eyes seemed to be trying to look into her very soul. She turned away from them.

A scratching at the back door reminded her she should let in the dogs. Most likely they were cold, too. Toby, a tall, skinny, yellow thing that she figured was part greyhound, part lab and who knew what else., and the other one she called Sonya, was probably a dashound cross of some short. She petted them giving them a smattering of baby talk, asking how their day was, and if they had chased off any robbers or other unwanted people that day, or maybe even some gremlins. She scooped up a bowl of dog chow for each one. The dogs whined and whimpered as if trying to tell her something. Had someone been prowling around the house while she was gone? Maybe some pesky kids looking for meanness to get into. She wondered who would want to break in and rob an old place like this. There certainly wasn’t anything of value in this old rotten house. For a moment she thought she heard boards creaking in the ceiling. A gust of wind rattled the windows.

Yeah, this old house was a whole lot older than she was. She and Charlie had managed to buy it right after they got married. Married right out of high school. She thought of all the plans they had made for remodeling and fixing it up. Plans they had made while lying in bed and making love together. Plans that had gone by the wayside when she found out she was pregent. Oh, there had been occasional coats of new paint and once they put up wallpaper in the bedrooms. Once long ago. Now that wallpaper with the pick roses was faded and pealing. Rotting off the walls. Now the paint was dark and dingy with dirt, grime, and smoke from the woodstove. Now the bit of carpet that was left was shredded along the edges. Smashed into the shape of the warped, and rotting wood floor under it, and impregnated with a vast collection of cat and dog hairs that would never come out. Now the roof leaked regardless of the neighbor kid and his efforts with the little bit of tar she could afford to buy to try and patch it with. At least there was one decent kid in the neighborhood. The roof, like the rest of the house was just rotting away. Just as she was.

Depressed and disgusted at her thoughts, she went to the tiny bathroom with the facet that never stopped dripping, causing rust stains that no amount of scrubbing would remove from the porcelain. She stripped off her polyester shirt with the name and logo of the grocery store she worked for. She handled all that money for that big name company that didn’t pay her enough to move into a decent apartment. She knew she was destined to live in this rundown old house the rest of her life. She could feel it in her bones. All alone now. She unzipped her jeans and let them slide to the faded tile floor. Then added her bra and panties and socks to the pile. The water was rusty orange at first then came almost clear, first cold then timpid warm. She hurried to wash her aged body and shampoo her stringy hair, hoping the sting of water would drive away the ache in her bones and the dismal thoughts from her brain. She was all alone; or she hoped she was. Sometimes it felt as if someone or something was watching her. Had to be her imagination didn’t it. Wasn’t no one or nothing around except the cats and dogs? Was there?

Seated on the old couch, wrapped in a ragged, blue chenneal robe that drug the floor when she walked she picked at the TV dinner she had heated in the microwave. Here she was eating a tasteless, cardboard meal all alone again. But not really alone. Four sets of eyes starred at her, hoping she would drop just one little crumb in their direction. “Go away. You all done been fed. This here’s mine.” She scrapped out the last tasteless bite, then followed it with a half cup of this mornings left over coffee, reheated; it was as black as the cat, and just as bitter.

The four pairs of eyes continued to watch her. Two pair belonged to the Mutt-and Jeff-like dogs. Warm, friendly, deep brown eyes begging for a crumb, a kind word or a brief pat on the head. They didn’t really care which. The green eyes of Mazie, the calico cat, old and wore out as she felt herself to be. Mazie sat at the end of the threadbare, cat clawed couch. Waiting, her white feet tucked under, green eyes gazing at her owner, not really expecting anything, just waiting. Waiting for what, neither of them knew. Old cat had to be what – ten – twelve – maybe thirteen, if she was a day. Hadn’t Tina drug her home as a tiny kitten back when the girl was in highschool.

Curled at her hip was a ball of black fur with the forth pair of eyes gleaming at her. The black cat with the yellow eyes. First time it had come to sit with her. It was young, playful, daring to be bold, full of life, daring anyone to get in her way, to tell her she couldn’t have the warmest spot in the room, curled up next to the old woman, on the couch, in front of the fire. That was why she was there, for the warmth, not the companionship. The woman reached to pet her, but pulled her hand back as the creature hissed in warning. “All right, all right, have it your own way, Black Cat. I’ll leave you alone. Don’t want a pet no fussy little cat, no way.” She wondered why she had even tried. Maybe because the half-grown kitten, unnamed except to be called Black Cat, was the only thing in the woman’s life that didn’t seem lost, rotten, and decayed, as she, herself felt. But still it seemed all alone. Unwanted. So she had let it stay. It could be all alone here as well as somewhere else, although she didn’t understand why it had chose to stay here, except she gave it some food, a warm place to sleep, and a soft, friendly word or two. She tried again, reaching a hand slowly to the animal. This time it excepted the brief flutter of the old woman’s hand on it’s head and back. The woman knew enough not to expect more. She knew, or hoped, that in time, the cat would come to except her offer of companionship more and more. Or so she hoped until she heard it growl softly. But it wasn’t looking at her; it was staring at something in that far dark corner of the room. Maybe a mouse she thought. She didn’t like mice or rats. Another reason to keep the cat. Mazie was too old for catching mice. But not Black Cat. “You can stay, Cat, as long as you keep the rats and mice out a this here old house.” The old woman giggled at her dark thoughts. “And any other a them gremlins and ghosts that try to come in.”

Ghosts she thought again. The decaying, the rotting had begun so long ago. She couldn’t really say for sure when it had first happened. Maybe it had been when Charlie lost that good paying job at the factory. When had that been? She couldn’t remember now or maybe it had been when their oldest Debra had been killed in that car accident. Debra had been a senior in highschool, full of life and joy. So pretty, when she had left with her boyfriend to go to the prom. But they had never come home. That had been the beginning, the beginning of the rot in her life. What had happened next she wondered? Oh, yes; how could she forget? Charlie, Jr. had gone off to fight in that war. What war was it? Didn’t matter. Charlie, Jr. didn’t come home, either. And her Charlie, he had just weithered away after that. He couldn’t seem to handle loosing two children. First the whiskey, and then the cancer, just ate him up.

And their youngest, Tina; cute little Tina grew up blaming her for all those deaths. She tried to make it up to her. Worked her fingers to the bone. Worked two, sometimes three, jobs to put that girl through college. Now she was a big, fancy lawyer in the big city. What city was it? She always had trouble remembering the little things like that. Tina made sure to call her old mama once a month. On the first of each and every month. Tina never forgot to make her duty call to mama on the first day of each month.

Her old, faded blue eyes filled with tears that threatened to spill over but never did, as she sat in front of the fire, soaking up the warmth, sipping at a bottle of wine, not even bothering with a glass. She heard the noise again. Was it the creaking of the ceiling, or the floor, or maybe the door? Didn’t matter. Nor did she notice the eyes. Big yellow eyes, encased in a dark, furry body staring at her, a thick liquid matter slowly dripping out of its’ gaping mouth.

The dogs whimpered in fear of the strange creature that had invaded their home, and crept closer to the old women hoping she would drive it away. But she didn’t. She couldn’t since she didn’t know it was there. Mazie edged over by Black Cat, and for a moment it seemed as if the two cats were communing with each other.

Later, much later, the women stumbled into her bedroom, fell onto the bed and pulled the ragged quilt her own mama had made around her tired body. She never realized when short-legged Sonya managed to get up on the bed and lay down next to her. Then came old Toby to keep her feet warm. Mazie curled at her shoulder, and Black Cat kept watch, ready to warn her new family if an intruder should threaten them. Black Cat was always sure that there was a threat, a danger, lurking about, ready to pounce on the unaware.

But then who or what would want to bother with a wore out old women and her friends in this decaying house, living out their time in this rotten world.

Later much later when all seemed to be sound asleep the invader crept into the room. Black Cat opened her eyes just a slit. Slowly, ever so slowly she uncurled her body and prepared herself for the attack. It was her job, her duty to protect the house and its occupants. She slithered off the bed so as not to let the enemy become aware that she knew of its presence. Just as the intruder was about to pounce onto the bed Black Cat attacked. The fight was wickedly silent, efficient, and fatal. It was over in a few brief, seconds

The next morning the old women crawled from her bed, wishing she hadn’t drank so much wine the evening before. She stepped in something gooey on the floor. “What the hell,” she muttered as she sank back onto the edge of the bed and examined the bottom of her wrinkled foot. Whatever it was, it stank like nothing she had ever smelled before and was a strange shade of yellow and blue. “One of you critters barf on the floor?” she asked of the two cats and two dogs that still lay on the bed. She noticed Black Cat had a rip in one ear. It dripped a drop of red blood onto the sheet. “What happened, Cat? You tangle with somethin’ almost get the better of you?”

Black Cat turned a defiant stare on the old women, and tried to ignore the pain in her ear, as she
thought about the dead creature that was now just a furry mess under the bed.




Saturday, May 28, 2005

Harry?

Here is another of my stories. I call it Harry? It is the story of an elderly couple and there drives between their little home and a Veterens Hospital.
Harry?


“You ready to go, Harry? Do we need to stop anywhere else ‘fore we head back home? You got all your medicines, and stuff. Listen to this old truck rattle. Hope we get back with out any problems. Old truck barely holding together. Needs boo-coddles of work done on it, but I know we can’t afford it. Well, what did that quack of a doctor say this time, Harry? Are you gonna live for another couple of days? Heeheehee. I thought so. Sure can’t understand why we have to make this ridiculous dive ever week so’s that quack can just say ‘come back next week’. That’s what he said, ain’t it, Harry? That’s what he always says. Come back next week. I get so tired of havin’ to make this drive week after week. I have to do all a the drivin’ now that you can’t, Harry. Oh, I know, if you could you would, but you can’t, so I have, too. Sometimes I wonder if you’re really as sick with that there cancer as you and that doctor say you are.
“Don’t know why we have to live all the way out there, in the middle of this damn desert. Why can’t we be like normal folk, and live in town. Why did we ever move out here to start with, Harry? Why aren’t we still livin’ back in Milwaukee, instead of here. We still got relatives and friends there. Or I figure we do. Don’t know for sure. Ain’t heard hide or hair from them in ever so long. Why did we come to New Mexico, Harry? Huh? We could a gone to Florida, with Alene and her husband. Alene would a took us in. She’s our daughter, for Pete’s sake. Even if her no good husband don’t like us. Or Hawaii, we could a gone to Hawaii, or California, instead of Dry Creek, New Mexico. And why Dry Creek? There’s lots of places we could live that would be a whole lot closer to that crazy V.A. Hospital in Albuquerque, rather than Dry Creek. Nothin’ there but a dozen or so trailer homes. Half a them got old, retired folk, like us, livin’ in ‘um. The rest got them lazy young kids that ain’t got no jobs, livin’ on welfare. Always drunk or stoned on those drugs.
“You listen’ to me, Harry? Would make a lot more sense if-in we was to move up closer to Albuquerque, so we don’t have to make this drive ever week. Probably just helpin’ that cancer ya got, eat ya up just that much faster, livin’ out in that heat, and sand. Hot sun always beatin’ down on ya. Dryin’ a body out. Wind blowin’ sand and dirt. Don’t never let up. And you always complainin’ your cold. Cold. ‘I’m cold, Polly’, your always sayin’. Harry, did I ever tell you how much I hate livin’ in this damn desert. You can’t be cold livin’ in the desert, Harry, it’s always hot. Must be at least 90 degrees today.
Middle a summer, and we’re havin’ to make this here trip ever week, cause some smart ass V.A. Doc says we got a, cause you got cancer. I’m getting’ tired of it, Harry. And this here old Ford truck’s getting’ tired of it, too. Hope it don’t over heat today, like it did last week.
“Ain’t nothin’ out here in this desert but sand and sun. Sun and sand, and this damn highway. Mile after mile after mile of highway. Some times I think there ain’t nothin’ left in the whole world but this here highway. And me drivin’ on it. Two lanes goin’ north, like we did this mornin’. And two lanes goin’ south, like we are now. Mile after mile of nothin’, cut in half by this here highway. Nothin’ but us in this old truck, and all them other folk in their cars, and trucks, just a goin’ down the highway.
And nothin’ out there to even look at but sagebrush and tumbleweeds, and blowin’ sand. Feel that wind today, tryin’ to blow us off the road. Don’t know how them little cars stay on the road. You see them cows out there in the brush, Harry. Damn things are so skinny they might just blow away. Wonder there they get water. Ain’t much water out there. Nothin’ but blowin’ sand and miles and miles of highway.
“Did you see that, Harry. Crazy idiot cut right in front of that big rig. Wonder he didn’t get his butt run over. He should of. Cuttin’ over like that. Crazy people out here on this highway. Mile after mile of road. It’s enough to make any one go crazy. You think we’re goin’ crazy, Harry, drivin’ up and down this road ever week. Hey, Harry, I wonder how many times we been up and down this highway. Might be interstin’ to figure it out. Then we could figure out how many miles we done drove on this road, too. How many weeks in a year, Harry? Fifty two or is it fifty three. And you done had this cancer for what, two years now? And it’s ‘bout three hundred miles round trip from that itty-bitty trailer we live in out there in Dry Creek to that V.A. hospital in Albuquerque. Well that’s a lot a miles. A whole lot a miles. You listening to me, Harry? Hell, no your sleepin’, Again.
“I do the drivin’ and you do the sleepin’. Nothin’ ever changes. I gotta stop, Harry. Rest area should be just a few miles ahead. Only be a minute. Then I’ll get you on home, Harry. Harry, you fellin’ all right? You Okay? You don’t look so good, Harry. I’ll be right back.
“Time to go again, Harry. Harry? What did that doctor tell you today? You never said. Ain’t gonna tell me, huh. Think it’s just your problem, do ya. Think I like makin’ this drive ever week, do ya. You and me, Harry. We done been through a lot these past fifty years. We didn’t have nothin’ when we got married. All that scrapin’ to get by. Then you went, and join’d the Army. Twenty five years of Army life. The kids, the movin’ all the time, the wars, finally the retirement, and our own little place here in the desert. Not a great place but at least it’s our. Bought and paid for. And now you got the cancer. I don’t know what we’re gonna do, Harry. Do you?
Harry? Hey? Harry, wake up. Talk to me, old man. I’m pullin’ over now, Harry. Why don’t you wake up? Harry? Why ain’t ya breathin’, Harry.
“Damn it, Harry. What did you go and do that for Harry? If ya was gonna die, you could a done it while ya was at the hospital. What do I do now, Harry? Should I turn around and go back to the hospital or should I go on home to Dry Creek. Well, I can’t just turn around, ‘cause there’s no way to get across that big stretch of desert in between this part of the highway and that other part. Okay, Harry, your right. We’ll just go on home for now. It ain’t that far, then we’ll decide what to do.
“Harry, what am I gonna do now that we don’t have to drive them three hundred miles to and from your doctor ever week?

The End

Thursday, May 26, 2005

Moose Obsession

This is what happens when you are sent a moose as a get well gift by your family.
You become a Crazy Person

A Moose is Loose by a Crazy Person

Thank you for your thoughtfulness,
Thank you Edmonds, one and all,
Thank you for the moose.
Thank you for the moose,
I do so much hate to confess,
I took him all the way to the mall,
I’d like to turn him loose.
Now really can I turn him loose.

Thank you for the cool tee-shirt,
Thank you, but I think you have erred.
Thank you for the moose.
Thank you for that darned moose.
I hate to be so – should I say - curt,
How could you really have dared,
To send a moose that is loose
But can I really turn him loose.


Thank you for your kind thoughts,
Thank you, but I would have preferred
Thank you for the moose.
Thank you for – I guess – far the moose.
I’d have better liked a kitten that purred,
Now I really, really think I oughts,
To turn the dang thing loose.

Thank you for the earrings,
Than you again, again and again,
Thank you for the moose.
Thank you again for the moose.
My house now has many dings,
He told me he’d like to join his kin.
When can I turn him loose.
He’s begging me to turn him loose.

Thank you, thank you sister, Dear,
Thank you for this wretched creature,
Thank you for that moose,
But all the commotion, you should hear,
Thank you, for my moose,
The neighbors want me to turn him loose.
He and I had a great adventure here
But to his real home, he would like to go loose.

Thank you, also, niece Cindy J,
Thank you for this moose
Thank you for this huge beast,
Thank you for this moose.
Is it, please, please Okay,
If that darn moose goes loose.


Thank you, Jim Senior, you were so kind,
Thank you for the moose.
But he would rather have gone - Loose.
I hate to say I’ve half a mind,
If you don’t care, to turn him loose.
Thank you, he said, as he away did RAN,

Thank you, nephew Eric Joe,
Thank you, he did say, said the Moose.
Thank you for the moose,
But I really do think he’d like to go,
I’ll tell you now,
The moose, he must very soon be loose.

Thank you, James, Junior that is,
I thank your family for the moose.
I have to admit he’s not like you, a college whiz,
He surely would like me to turn him loose.
He went to Oregon, did you know,
That now he is
LOOSE.

A Postscript to the Moose Obsession



And now the moose is loose at last,
To where I do not know.
I think we lost him in the blast,
The blast of blinding snow.

OOPS!!!!!!!!!

But do not fret about the moose,
I had to turn him free.
But if I hadn’t turned him loose,
I wouldn’t be up this blasted tree.

HELP!!!!!!!!!!!

Monday, May 23, 2005

Wonderin' Words

This is to be a writers blog. I will post short stories that I have writen, and, hopefully someone out there in cyberspace will take the time to read my stories, thoughts, opinions, and any other wonderin' words I might decide to write.

I Want-------

This first story is a very short sci-fi story called flash fiction.
Hope you like it.

“I Want….”

“Mikey, don’t touch that.” The little pre-school age boy pulled his hand slowly back from the bag of chips he had been reaching for.

“Michael, Mommy says don’t touch ANYTHING.” Again the little boy pulled his hand back, this time from the box of cookies, watching his mom as she moved on down the isle of the grocery store. She added some snack crackers to the shopping cart, while talking baby talk to the fussy, whining baby sitting in the seat of the cart. “Come on, Mikey.” After a moment Michael followed.

They turned down another isle, moving by and around other shoppers. Several things were added to the cart. The baby cried. “I want cookies,” demanded Michael. “No,” said his mom, picking up a can of green beans, and then a bag of noodles. They moved on.

“I want cookies – cook-ies – cook – kook-eyes, cook-ies,” sang Michael. “Want cook-ies – kook-eyes.”

“Mikey, please be quiet. If you’re quiet I’ll get you some cookies. Okay, Mikey.” His mom was getting more flustered as she tried to finish her shopping. Michael knew he had her going now. “Goodie, goodie, goodie,” he sang. “I’m going to get cookies - cook-ies, kook-eyes.”

“Mikey, be quiet,” wailed his mom while the baby echoed her. She checked her list. “Need to get milk, juice, and baby cereal. And some hamburger.” She added a jar of pickles to the cart, and crammed a pacifier into the mouth of the crying baby. She wished she could give one to Mikey, too.

“Cookies, kook-eyes. I want cookies – kook-eyes, more kook-eyes. Kook - .” Michael stopped singing. “Mommy, Mommy. What’s that? Mommy, are those eyeballs.” Michael pointed at a jar. “Those look like eyeballs, Mommy.” He took a step backward. “Mommy, that jar there. The eyeballs are moving. Their rolling around in the jar, Mommy, how do they do that.”

“Of course not,” said his mom, hardly glancing at where he was pointing. “Those are olives, Mikey. Come on.”

“No, there not ‘lives. Their eyeballs. Kook-eye balls. There looking at me. Make them stop looking at me. I don’t like kook-eye balls.” Michael grabbed his mom around the leg and hid his face, then peaked back at the jar.

“Stop that, Mikey, those are only olives.” She pried him loose from her leg.

Michael looked back at the jar. “Don’t look at me, kook-eyes,” he yelled, and flung a small fist at the jar, barely grazing it. It was just enough to cause the jar to fall to the floor, where the glass shattered and the contents rolled here and there, helter-skelter. “Mommy! The kook-eyes jumped off onto the floor.”

“Now look what you’ve done, Michael!”

“They jumped, Mommy! Honest they did!”

You’re going to get it now, Michael. Do you hear me? Your in ….in….trouble….now,……” her voice slid to a halt, as she took in the sight of the broken glass and the still rolling ---- jumping, ----- and rolling ----- eyeballs.

There were hazel eyes, blue eyes, brown eyes, and green eyes; some with the eyelids still attached. And all those many eyes were staring at her. As she watched back, her mouth still open, she gave a little screech. When she did one of the eyeballs winked at her.

Horrified at the sight she and several other customers screamed some more as they began to move away from the wilding rolling eyeballs, and toward the exit doors. An excited stock boy yelled for a manager, wanting to know what he was supposed to do with the run-a-way eyeballs.

“Mikey, we’re leaving NOW!” shouted Mikey’s mom as she grabbed the boy by the arm, and drug him with her, while pushing the cart with the screaming baby, toward the nearest door.

Eyeballs continued to roll after her while Mikey sang about Kook-eyes.

The End