More Short Stories by: Dr. Dennis L. Siluk, Ed.D. (2007-2016)

From one of the top 100-reviewers, at Amazon Books, International (the largest book seller in the world), by Robert C. Ross, the list author says (reference to the book, “Peruvian Poems”): "Dennis L. Siluk is enormously prolific and very well travelled…." The poems are based on places and experiences in Peru, written in both English and Spanish, and provide a fascinating backdrop in preparation for a trip to Peru." (1-1-2009)

Monday, July 28, 2008

Uncle George ((a short sketch, 1987)(a Minnesota story))



(Winter of 1987) I thought we were headed toward the River Road, along the Mississippi, in St. Paul, Minnesota, I, my mother, Aunt Anne, Uncle George was heading to the airport (a tired old man now, about five foot eight inches tall, one hundred and fifty pounds, at one time a lively sort of person, a talkative kind of fellow (a little quiet now), a sporty man and hard working, kind of played the big shot, but it was an act more than reality), and it was winter of 1987.
They picked us up at my mother’s apartment, on Woodbridge Street, George smoking a thin cigar as usual, waiting in his car for Anne and us to come down the two flights of stairs, and get into his 1987 Mercury, he liked Mercury’s, made by Ford, bought one every three years, so he boasted and so he did, matter of fact, it was a highlight in his life to do so, and let us all in the family know. He’d even made sure the car was out of the garage all shined up, on holidays when we went there to visit them, have lunch, several families in his backyard eating, or in his basement or in his living room.
Anne got in the front seat with her husband, me and my mother in the back seat. He looked a bit rigid in holding that steering wheel, holding it tight, as if it was a jet plane. He was 77-years old at the time, he liked his drinking, and his Lion’s Club, perhaps had a few drinks this evening I felt, it was 6:00 PM, and in Minnesota, at 6:00 PM, in winter it gets dark. And so he started driving us to the airport, we were going to Vegas, Los Vegas.
“I’m going to take a short cut,” announced George to all of us.
“We usually would just take, highway 35, along the River Road, and it connects to another highway and it goes right into the airport, fifteen minutes, that’s all it takes, this side of the road will take a while longer,” I suggested.
My mother said, “We got the time,” and Anne remarked, “George nowadays don’t like driving on the Highways.”
So I left well enough alone, looked at my watch, our flight was for 8:00 PM.

We were now driving over the upper part of the city (St. Paul, per se, is in a gully sort of, more likened to a hole), the north side of the highway, being above that hole, and now we were going through a lot of neighborhoods, and moved quite slowly, especially with the slush and mud on the streets seemed to splash all about, and the roads hand their share of holes in them to insure we did not go fast.
“Oh,” I said, “I think we are going too far north now, I mean, we are way off, this road doesn’t connect in anyway to the last section of the highway,” which we’d have to go on prior to entering the airport.
George thought about that, stopped the car.
“Want me to drive?” I asked.
“No, no, I know where I’M going, I just got mixed up again,” and so said George, and I went back to my being quiet, looking at my watch. And now George was driving again.
“What time is it?” asked my mother.
“Seven o’clock,” I answered.
“We got time yet,” she said, and started to talk to Anne, her sister again. As George lit up another small cigar, now I could smell a little booze on him, not thick, but a light scent, with the cigar scent mixed.
Everything was wet and slushy outside the car; you could hear it hit the side of the car, and the windows, and George had to turn on the wipers, as we moved along these side streets. We then came around a bend, dogs ran across the street barking, other headlights were coming toward us, George slowed the car down, not that it was going fast in the first place, but I think he got scared, too much light, it blinded him, it was likened to a lamp on top of his nose.
“I guess I’m lost,” said George, “I used to know this road, been a while since I been out to the airport, they must have changed it.”
“What times it going on?” asked my mother.
“Its twenty-minutes past seven,” I commented.
“I know,” said Anne, “it’s getting late, if you don’t know the way George, let someone who does drive before they miss their plane!” Said Anne.
“I see,” said George, “but I think I got it now.”
So he said and wiped his brow, with a handkerchief, he was sweating,
“It’s got to be up there,” meaning up someplace in front of us.
“Oh this getting old is for the birds,” commented George, yet he would now satisfy anyone by allowing someone else to drive.
Anne said next,
“Alright, I see a sign, go to the left, onto the last part of that highway, 35, before we have them miss the plane, do you see it, the sign?” she asked.
“All right, all right,” he said, “I see it!”
He was looking right at it, turned and went onto the highway finally,
“Now are you happy?” he said to his wife, Anne.
We pulled up to the Departure Area, Terminal, it was 7:40 PM, and we had twenty minutes to get through customs, and so forth.
Uncle George looked at me, slightly, the old man smiled, he had made it, and he leaned back in his big four door Mercury,
“Have a safe trip,” said Anne, George nodded his head, as if to imply the same.

I said my thank you (s), and knew there was no need to say anything else; I kind of knew he was terrible sorry for taking us on this wild goose chase, through the back allies of the city, to get us to the airport. I guess he proved his point, he wasn’t helpless. And my mother and I walked into the airport terminals, I did take a last look behind me, they were seated as before, I just wondered how long it would take them to find their way back home. George died two and a half years after that, in 1990, never did get a new last car.


Written 7-28-2008

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Sunday, July 20, 2008

Seven Poskoks and the Old Man (A sketch from a story)

Seven Poskoks
And the Old Man

(From the book and story:
“The Tale of the Jumping Serpents of Bosnia”)


(Year Two)

The wild man, Mr. Goose, was an undomesticated kind of, someone, quick as a rabbit, and deadlier than a rattlesnake, and quiet as a dove; and I know you folks reading this, are somewhat aware of this, but I felt it needed repeating for this sketch where the old man, sees his seven prey, for as swift and keen as he be, he was no a magical worker, he had to work hard at what he did, and what you are reading is what he did, and therefore we must give him some credit, if not recognition for his efforts, I mean, he is, or was not the most likable someone, anyone had ever met.
“Hmph,” he grunted looking at seven snakes, poskoks, -- in the thick of the woods, “I’ll eat you all, eat you like an axe grinder, like a feed chopper, if I can get to you”! He murmured.
For he was witnessing at this moment, several snakes rolling about on their bellies in the grass and leaves further up, in the woods, mischievously, playing with one another. His head, jerked into position, to size the situation up, his head shaped like a cast-iron, iron, teeth in a flashing arc ready to sweep and chop the snakes, but for the moment he needed to put them into a helpless position, to entangle their inevitable death, he knew they were not as quick and cunning as he, and being young, even more so.
He quietly snuck closer to his prey, his quarry to be, like a hammer his jaws tightened up, half turned, he grabbed one snake before any of them knew what happened, and looked for the next, while grinding away on the first one he just grabbed, his nostrils trembling for more of the tasty poskak meet; uneven, his eating emitted a digging sound.
He stomped his hoof like feet, stomped them like a bull into the soil, his neck thrust outward as to make room to swallow the meat, under his sunburned skin.
Then with a yelp, he said, “Let’s get going!” to the other six snakes, trying to move closer to grab another, but they started to roll over one another to get away, to get to the rear of the others, so they would not be selected, becoming the next victim.
He grabbed one more poskok, as the others, five others fled into the deeper part of the cool dark forest, for a refuge.

The Old man, cursed them from afar, stood on his hoof-like feet, like a cow’s, which separated into three flat like toes, square almost, and he transferred onto another path for a fair assumption and deliberation of the situation; thereafter, he plunged madly into his dugout, he was living in, sank back against the dirt wall, he looked into a mirror at his teeth, they were like wire cutters, yellowish wire cutters, his eyes rolling with anger, for allowing the other five to get away; but youthful snakes were of a more tender texture in eating, a more delightful dinner than a tough old snake, and so he simply justified the kill, marked it off as: what do you expect when eating a rich steak compared to dog meat, you lose interest in other things around you, perhaps like he did: because in his younger days, he could have grabbed all seven of them within a matter of a minute.
(Yes, he was disappointed in himself, although he prided himself that at his age, he shot like an arrow at those youthful snakes, and got two out of seven, which he had eaten them in a wild-eyed frenzy, then had allowed them to scramble their way to live another day, and perhaps only one more day.)


Night in the Dugout

That night, beneath a gibbous moon, the old man was now huddled in his dugout, in a corner of his one room, shadows, with phantom shapes rushed by the moon, he saw them from the corner of his hollow, lingering they were, until morning, thus, but one overlooking his dugout remained…and soon, in the morning Mr. Goose would rise to find the last of the haunting shadows had betaken its ghostly shape away into the mist of the dense woods, and here was no sound in the woods, save an acorn dropping off a tree, or an abrupt thudding he could hear by way of a down wind. The old man yawned like a huge wild cat, dreamy like, in anticipation for a new feast.



Infamous Hero

“Who are you looking for Mistier?” Someone asked, and another said, “That’s the old snake eater!”
“Is he really?” said the first voice, “He sure is,” repeated the other.

Continuously the old man moved forward away from the country folks and their farms, and fields, back onto the dirt roads looking for the snakes, and occasionally back into the woods.



Princess in the Window

Meanwhile, during this second year of the Snake Eater’s task, the princess, unaltered by her potential marriage to the old man, nevertheless, as the days got closer towards the end of the second year, she did think about her losing her freedom after hearing about the good job Mr. Goose was doing; and the more she heard this good news, the more and longer she sat placidly on the sill in her bedroom window, looking down the lane he’d have to come up someday to get his reward, her hand in marriage, whereupon, he’d have to crossover the rampart, and into the courtyard. Then after a short while she’d again forget her fate and obligation that would follow—should he accomplish his mission, and pass her days doing what princesses normally do.

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TheTale of the Jumping Serpents of Bosnia (Revised 7-2008)

The Tale of the Jumping Serpents of Bosnia


Legend of the: Poskok (Vipera ammodytes)
A tale for all ages!



By Three Time Poet Laureate,

Dennis L. Siluk, Ed.D.


Awarded the National Prize of Peru, “Antena Regional”: The best writer for 2006 for promoting culture (in Poetry & Prose)

A Few Illustrations by the Author (in Poetic Prose)
Copyright © by Dennis L. Siluk
The Tale of the Jumping Snakes of Bosnia
Legend of the: Poskok (Vipera ammodytes)



Recent Awards of:
Dennis L. Siluk

Awarded the Prize Excellence: The Poet & Writer of 2006 by
Corporacion de Prensa Autonoma (of the Mantaro Valley of Peru)

Awarded the National Prize of Peru, "Antena Regional": The best of 2006 for promoting culture
Poet Laureate of San Jeronimo de Tunan, Peru (2005); and the
Mantaro Valley (8-2007) (Awarded the (Gold) Grand Cross of the City (2006))
Lic. Dennis L. Siluk, awarded a medal of merit, and diploma from the Journalist College of Peru, in August of 2007, for his international attainment
On November 26, 2007, Lic. Dennis L. Siluk was nominated, Poet Laureate of Cerro de Pasco and received recognition as an Illustrious Visitor of the City of Cerro de Pasco, and Huayllay
“Union” Mathematic School (Huancayo, Peru), Honor to the Merit to: Lic. (Ed.D.) Dennis Lee Siluk, (Awarded) Poet and Writer Excellence 2007, for contributing to the culture and regional identity, Huancayo. December 1, 2007, Signed: Pedro Guillen, Director

The Sociologist School of Peru, Central Region granted to
Dr. Dennis Lee Siluk, Writer Laureate for his professional contribution in the social interaction of the towns and rescue of their identity. Huancayo December 6, 2007 —Lic. Juan Condori –Senior Member of the Sociologist School

The Association of Broadcaster of the Central Region, of Peru, nominated Dr. Dennis Lee Siluk Honorary Member for his works done on the Central Region of Peru; in addition, the Mayor of Huancayo, Freddy Arana Velarde, gave Dr. Siluk, ‘Reconocimiento de Honor,’ and ‘Personaje Ilustre…’ status (December, 2007).

El Instituto Cultural Peruano Norteamericano Región Centro otorga el presente: “Diploma de Honor”, Al Dr. Dennis Lee Siluk por su valiosa contribución a la difusión de los valores culturales andinos. Huancayo – Peru, diciembre 28, of 2007Directora de Cultura Diana V. Casas R. and Alfonso Velit Núñez
Presidente del Consejo Directivo







For: Rosa (my wife), Elsie T. Siluk (my mother),
and Ximena Herrera. (my Godchild)


Father Manuel Rodriguez of Lima (T.V. Evangelist) & Dennis meet
for the second time during a visitation, And Prayer meeting in San
Juan de Mira Flores, Lima. 6/2008





Poet and storyteller Garrison Keillor, and Poet and storyteller Dennis Siluk
meet at the World Theatre in St. Paul, Minnesota, USA 2/ 2005












Of Olden Times
(Advance to the story)


It was before the first noble monarch ruled Bosnia (and Herzegovina), Ban Kulin (1180 AD)—during what was known as Medieval Bosnia (958-1463) this story takes place; a time when cold snowy winters plagued this mountainous land with bluish-purple, violent crosswinds coming from the Adriatic by way of the Mediterranean Sea, when the lands had hellish terrain for its people to crossover, such as the Dinaric Alps, and the beautiful Drina River, which flows endlessly through villages and towns, in Eastern Bosnia, surrounded by hills and mountains, and the Neretva River, which flows in the south into the Adriatic: here the Dinarides provide shelter to the old ruins of fortresses that dot this mountainous landscape, at this point is where our story begins, and ends.
Some folks have said, the old Man, Mr. Goose, came down from Mount Zlatibor, after visiting a village area known as Sirogojno, perhaps he was doing business in that area before he came to King Mon’s Kingdom, no one knows for sure, but here he was a stranger surrounded by the Dinaric Alps, and the Adriatic sea to the south, and the woodlands in Eastern Bosnia, which was heavily forested along the river Drina, in-between all this was a kingdom ruling by the old Feudalism system; we know he passed through Gorazed, the folks of that village saw him, said he seemed shackled on some idea, paid them little attention, “Keep away from us,” the country folks yelped outside of the town, others asked, “What you aiming to do around here?” it was as if this old ugly man knew something they didn’t know. They say, blackbirds followed him, stretched out their wings, and swung, stooped and shuttered as he walked by, swaggering in the Bosnian sun…







Intro
Along the coast of the Adriatic Sea lives what now is called the “poskok,’ better known as the ‘Jumping Serpent’. These creatures are some five-feet long and to my understanding can jump some three feet in the air and leap some five-feet in any direction they wish, simply by aiming at whatever, wherever. But this didn’t happen by chance, this really and truly happened by necessity. And this is the tale you are about to hear, the ‘why,’ of it, how it came about. And to be quite honest, you will be the first to hear of it. It entails also Mr. Goose whom you have already been introduced to, slightly introduced to I should say.
The poskok has a macabre-hissing tone to its dynamic language, a hissing that bellows out fear, and out of fear and inborn aggressiveness, its impulses create a neurological reaction that makes it leap and jump. Again, the why of this will come out in the tale. But it is always prudent to know the background of things, and so I am equipped to share it with you. In addition to its poisonous bite, it has quite the temper, and at times it can look no different than a log or branch sitting by a tree, or alongside a lane or road, or within a dense forest laying next to rocks and decaying wood. And let us add to its natural abode in this narrative background: it prefers—if given a choice, the natural background of trunks of trees—to live amongst.

And now come and join me for my tale of tales, and think naught that there isn’t a feather of truth in this tale, for it would be ill-advised to think otherwise…:









The Poskok:








Once upon a time, several hundred years ago, or thereabouts, there were a multitude of snakes along the coast of the Adriatic Sea, and within the mountainous area thereof, in a land now called Bosnia. They grew the length of the men of those far-off days, in that far-off land. These snakes ((Poskok) (Vipera ammodytes)) were a reddish-brown in color and for the most part, quite clever; that is to say, a brainy kind of breed of a snake, with sharp fangs, which were quite poisonous; these snakes also being rather aggressive for the most part.
Along with living in the trunks of trees, in lack of a better home, and accommodations, and liking the sun, these snakes slept on the side of the roads to a high extent, where often times they chummed with one another—(figuratively speaking that is); looking like dried up old branches, logs and so forth— especially in the fall season (autumn)—laying over one another like little lions. But as winter came around, back into the trunks and holes of trees they’d find themselves. And when they’d see a passerby, especially during the long hot summers, they’d play possum [dead], and when a female—in particular, would be carrying water to the nearby village or to her country residence, and if they’d walk by them, they’d twist their bodies slowly and positioning themselves just right—after that, quicker than you could say ‘help’ they’d have their fangs, in one’s leg. And the water being fresh would feed, and quench, their thirst. It should be noted, because of their aggressive temperament, even on the best of days—the best of their days, it would be hard for them not to do their dirty deeds; they seemed to be simply born with an aggressive nature (character and personality).




—Well, this went on for quite a spell, yes, for the longest time, and one day, one sunlight hour, after hearing—year after year of hearing—people’s complaints (and I can add: criticisms, protests, moans and grumbles), the King of the area announced that whoever could rid the region of these nasty and evil serpents, he’d reward them by allowing them to marry his beautiful and youthful daughter. Ah yes, it was indeed a luring reward, and all within the kingdom’s province, wished they had such courage, if not skill, or perhaps even a spell to subdue these creatures with—to do this task, to receive this reward. But none came forward.

Fine, all is fare in love and war, so they say, thus, Mr. Goose, an old man from Croatia, whom I’ve introduced you to a while ago [eighty-two years old at the time], went to the little mountainous kingdom and spoke with King Mon about his reward to be, should he clear the land of these creepy-crawling type creatures that infested every nook, tree and, oh well, let’s just say, the whole landscape, would he be allowed to take—without question, his daughter, the princess.
Said the King, with a skeptical eye,
“It would take an army I fear to wipe these hills and mountains and the coastline of these aggressive, antagonistic evil doers that have taken, killed, eaten, over a thousand-lives, a thousand lives I say, from my kingdom, my kingdom’s past of which it has been some forty-years, to now; yes, yes without a doubt, how can one man expect to do this, it is beyond me? (plus the old king didn’t like his integrity questions, which the old man implied might be less than what he proclaimed.”
In a way, it would seem the king was giving up, had a loss of hope, despair, but he nonetheless, kept the reward posted throughout his kingdom, and assured his word was as good as gold, he was a king, but also a man of honor, what he said he meant, did, without question; he had integrity, and he implied he should not be questioned on this matter to Mr. Goose.





The Snake Killer of Bosnia



Mr. Goose, the Snake Eater



Said the old man (to the king), an old man who had an odd looking hunchback and legs that looked more animalistic than human with mammalian hairs sticking out all over the place, meaning, in all the openings of his pants, where threads were loose and dangling, likewise his shirt, which had holes in it, and on his face and arms; also inside his ears looked like a bird’s nest with all its hair, and his nose had hair sticking out of it, like thin short spaghetti; in addition, he had a wide mouth, that went almost from one ear to the other; a long pointed skull (tapering towards the back), and that is to say, a very long slant it had to it, with a brow that receded back to his prickly looking hair; and quite thin it was also, and a smirk on his face, that showed he had secrets, secrets beyond our imagination perhaps, and a thin, slim, small mustache, which blended into the rest of his hairy face, and a thin bone structure, big eyes and feet, everything patchy and hairy; his fingers and toes, they were as if claws from a hawk. He also had small ears and short legs for his torso, which was longer; in a way, everything above his shoulders looked similar to a goat almost, in human form. Plus his skin was thick like rawhide.
His receptors protected him from the toxic venoms of the snakes, embodied into his nervous system. Also, it should be added here, his agility and cunning, allowed him to capture snakes with little effort, and he was in his own way, witty and intelligent.
But here, here he stood, the old carnivorous gentleman, smiling with a long pause, and then simply said
(Ah! but said it keenly and sharply to the King :)
“I will take your daughter for my reward, as you promised afterward, should I accomplish the mission of course, but if you want to know how I shall do this feat, it will cost you your kingdom.”





The King



[How insolent thought the king] With a stiff upper lip, and eyebrow reaching into the air, the short and old stubby king, with his curly locks of golden hair dangling over his ears, and long golden beard, stood up in front of the beggar type looking man, who had a deep-set of eyes, big, yes big and confident eyes, that had a small and thin bridge separating them from what was called his nose but looked more like a reptilian type snout with simply two air holes—poked into his upper face, with only a small arch and slits to inhale though.
Said he, the King, said he with scorn on his cheekbones, stiff bones, perturbing bones—even through his fat:
“So be it, you will have my daughter, not my kingdom, should you achieve this task, this mission, and should you not, I advise you, you old coot, to be gone from these hills—far gone, for I will surely have you stripped and beaten to your last gulp of air, should you not accomplish this, simply for your absurd audacity to think so highly of yourself in front of me, and question my intention if not integrity.”
Ah yes, the king was feeling his oats indeed, sharp was his words, and weighty was his heart.





Inside the Castle Grounds



—There was no more to be said, the old man now had turned around and with his shifty looking dark eyes, ebony-eyes that resembled a rat’s intensity, he walked out and through the door, as strangely as he had walked in, almost silently, not looking any which way but straight.
Upon the door opening up, and the king still sitting at his grand throne, two soldiers came in with a huge eight-foot (poskok) snake to show the king their good deed, their catch of the day. They had its mouth tied shut with a rope, and carried it on a long heavy rounded polo. It must have weighed two-hundred pounds or more. As the two soldiers walked past the old man, the king started to stand up to get a good look at the snake, a closer look, a more deliberate kind of look—in the process, the serpent got a look at the old man’s eyes—it was the hiss from the mouth (the old man’s mouth), yes the mouth most certainly, like thunder erupting it was, or possibly like the sound from a volcano, the snake started hissing back, and struggling wildly, its back, head, mouth and through the whole length of the snake, all stiffened—a firm kind of restlessness engulfed the serpent; the closer the old man got to the snake, the more it hissed, stiffened and jumped as if out of some kind of uncontrollable neurological reaction—involuntary reaction.
As the old man now walked next to the snake, almost eye to eye, and shoulder to shoulder, although the snake did not have shoulders, but it did have sides, it, the poskok, was about to fly off that pole out of pure fright, right out of the two soldier’s mitts, trying to get free, trying to escape the old man’s presence. Matter of fact, the viper was so frantic, frenzied, hysterical the snake even started to eat the rope it was bound and tied securely with.

When the soldiers witnessed this, they dropped the pole, along with the bound snake onto the marble floor within the King’s throne room, as the King looked on, on towards the snake and the old man with one glance, a glance he had given the snake, and just one little glance towards the old man, he, the King noticed the fleeting look from the old man had frightened the snake, it was him indeed, thought the king, hence, he knew this man was extraordinary, and although he wanted to, he hesitated in mind and soul to stop this potential marriage right now and then, for he had no other recourses left, the old man was it—who else was there, should he not make the deal, in consequence, there’d be no kingdom to rule in time. And the princess need only wait, time would do the old man in, and she’d be free to remarry again.
As soon as the old man was out of the throne room, out beyond its door: out of sight, the snake regained its weakened composure back to its former self-controlled, pose—it had prior to seeing this old and deformed gentleman of sorts; tranquility, or call it peace, whatever, calm was restored.


For that reason, and beyond, that is, for five-years to follow, the deal was sealed; and now the old man would walk slowly up and down the paths, lanes, roads of the valley and mountains kingdom—to and fro daily; looking in every tree trunk and nook, walking the coast of the Adriatic, and combing miles and miles of forest land, areas within the vicinity of the King’s domain, wiping out all the snakes that he could find: he ate them, like an animal eating flesh, ripped them apart like a rat to a hen. It had come to a point, as it was said, that the area had over 10,000 snakes at one time, it had come to the point, at this juncture, that, that number was being dwindled down quickly.



Secretive Sounds
(The First Summer)


When he, the snake eater appeared in the land, especially within the vicinity of the kingdom, he brought with him his own secret affairs, as this one, which he was pursuing as quiet and secretive as the devil himself might do, and with devious hidden turns, and he made no concessions.
Mr. Goose, the snake eater, was quite the odd looking character also: un-winking, slightly bowlegged, eyes green as the forest in full bloom but stagnate as still water, his quest with vitality and vigor the first full summer.

The vipers, snakes, the poskok of Bosnia, were quiet now beneath the summer’s stars (the first summer for Mr. Goose, the snake eater, he had joyfully and with haste scrambled up the snakes of the land with his presence forcing them to hide or face termination, by way of a choppy death, and now they, the snakes, talked secretive, with minimal sounds, so as not to be detected by him), and beneath the summer’s moon, they gashed vaguely across the dark land of Bosnia, in fear of the old snake killer when night came, when they did not reach their nooks and logs they lived in, they found themselves slumbering beside the roadsides, and dark wood patches of the landscape, hoping not to be seen or heard by this snake eater, for even at night he crept through the denser growth of the forests, lowered his head, snorted into and murmured into the heavily oxidized air, as if into some invisible water, trying to get a sniff of the snakes. Had he heard even a whimper, with hope, this snarling impossible to hear beast of a man, if indeed he was a man, blundered out of his dark foliage like a wild beast to capture just one more viper, thus, disturbing the exquisite sad days they already lived in, to bring about extinction of their kind. In one summer alone, the first summer, the vipers went from ten-thousand to eight-thousand in number.



Seven Poskoks and the Old Man


(Year Two)


Mr. Goose, was an undomesticated kind of, someone, quick as a rabbit, and deadlier than a rattlesnake, and quiet as a dove; and I know you folks reading this, are somewhat aware of this, but I felt it needed repeating for this sketch where the old man, sees his seven prey, for as swift and keen as he be, he was no magical worker, he had to work hard at what he did, and what you are reading is what he did, and therefore we must give him some credit, if not recognition for his efforts, I mean, he is, or was not the most likable someone, anyone had ever met.
“Hmph,” he grunted looking at seven snakes, poskoks, -- in the thick of the woods, “I’ll eat you all, eat you like an axe grinder, like a feed chopper, if I can get to you”! He murmured.
For he was witnessing at this moment, several snakes rolling about on their bellies in the grass and leaves further up, in the woods, mischievously, playing with one another. His head, jerked into position, to size the situation up, his head shaped like a cast-iron, iron, teeth in a flashing arc ready to sweep and chop the snakes, but for the moment he needed to put them into a helpless position, to entangle their inevitable death, he knew they were not as quick and cunning as he, and being young, even more so.
He quietly snuck closer to his prey, his quarry to be, like a hammer his jaws tightened up, half turned, he grabbed one snake before any of them knew what happened, and looked for the next, while grinding away on the first one he just grabbed, his nostrils trembling for more of the tasty poskok meet; uneven, his eating emitted a digging sound.
He stomped his hoof like feet, stomped them like a bull into the soil, his neck thrust outward as to make room to swallow the meat, under his sunburned skin.
Then with a yelp, he said, “Let’s get going!” to the other six snakes, trying to move closer to grab another, but they started to roll over one another to get away, to get to the rear of the others, so they would not be selected, becoming the next victim.
He grabbed one more poskok, as the others, five others fled into the deeper part of the cool dark forest, for a refuge.

The Old man, cursed them from afar, stood on his hoof-like feet, like a cow’s, which separated into three flat like toes, square almost, and he transferred onto another path for a fair assumption and deliberation of the situation; thereafter, he plunged madly into his dugout, he was living in, sank back against the dirt wall, he looked into a mirror at his teeth, they were like wire cutters, yellowish wire cutters, his eyes rolling with anger, for allowing the other five to get away; but youthful snakes were of a more tender texture in eating, a more delightful dinner than a tough old snake, and so he simply justified the kill, marked it off as: what do you expect when eating a rich steak compared to dog meat, you lose interest in other things around you, perhaps like he did: because in his younger days, he could have grabbed all seven of them within a matter of a minute.
(Yes, he was disappointed in himself, although he prided himself that at his age, he shot like an arrow at those youthful snakes, and got two out of seven, which he had eaten them in a wild-eyed frenzy, then had allowed them to scramble their way to live another day, and perhaps only one more day.)


Night in the Dugout

That night, beneath a gibbous moon, the old man was now huddled in his dugout, in a corner of his one room, shadows, with phantom shapes rushed by the moon, he saw them from the corner of his hollow, lingering they were, until morning, thus, but one overlooking his dugout remained…and soon, in the morning Mr. Goose would rise to find the last of the haunting shadows had betaken its ghostly shape away into the mist of the dense woods, and here was no sound in the woods, save an acorn dropping off a tree, or an abrupt thudding he could hear by way of a down wind. The old man yawned like a huge wild cat, dreamy like, in anticipation for a new feast.



Infamous Hero

“Who are you looking for Mister?” Someone asked, and another said, “That’s the old snake eater!”
“Is he really?” said the first voice, “He sure is,” repeated the other.

Continuously the old man moved forward away from the country folks and their farms, and fields, back onto the dirt roads looking for the snakes, and occasionally back into the woods.



Princess in the Window

Meanwhile, during this second year of the Snake Eater’s task, the princess, unaltered by her potential marriage to the old man, nevertheless, as the days got closer towards the end of the second year, she did think about her losing her freedom after hearing about the good job Mr. Goose was doing; and the more she heard this good news, the more and longer she sat placidly on the sill in her bedroom window, looking down the lane he’d have to come up someday to get his reward, her hand in marriage, whereupon, he’d have to crossover the rampart, and into the courtyard. Then after a short while she’d again forget her fate and obligation that would follow—should he accomplish his mission, and pass her days doing what princesses normally do.


Came fall (or autumn)


In the fall, each fall of the following years, the old man worked even harder on looking for these troublesome snakes. The leaves, the abundance of leaves on the uncountable number of trees within this kingdom habitat, in the forest that grew along side the roads, that ran though the upper and bottom lands of the region (and near the castle-kingdom), these leaves, millions of leaves when they turned yellow, orange and red, fell from the trees, then they dried, and crackled and snapped under the heavy bellies of the snakes as they moved and the old man heard them, listened for them attentively. This really was his harvest time he learned; the fall season was his most prosperous time of the year. Along with listening, he checked under the logs themselves, the snakes almost blending into those logs and branches, blending into the landscape in general; for the common eye, not telling the difference between log, and snake at a quick glance, so he took his time in his search, shrewd he was, and he knew he needed to be, and he’d even tell the snakes, which irritated them,
“You can come with me now willingly, or by force later (laughing with his diabolic hiss).”
When the old man caught a snake, he was like a machine cutting firewood, an ax in automatic motion, chopping it apart, and gobbling it up, with his razor sharp teeth, as one would a good steak.


Yes, oh yes, indeed, there were only ten snakes left, almost genocide had taken place in this little kingdom, and these ten got together, and by way of necessity, inevitable you might say, started learning how to jump, and leap. They’d gathered by the waters, the lakes, the rivers, wherever they could and watched the frogs as they moved about, leaped, hurled, dive, then even watched the toads jump, lunge, and drop, all and any creature that skipped, hoped or jumped, they examined, watched closely, then by instinct, and need for continued existence, within a years time had learned how to leap some three feet in the air, and some five to seven feet in any direction—straight forward that is. As a result it was their way of escape from this flesh-eating human animal of sorts: the old man.

Along with this new acquired skill, and with the new younger generation being born, the elders tried to explain to them the value of learning, the jumps, and leaps, and the sounds they make in the fall leaves, and when spring came they got excited to play, but they learned as long as the old man was alive, it was not safe. And even in the winter they needed to be shrewd and conscientious where they went, they’d leave a trail in the snow, they were told, and this was not wise, the old man would follow it. In essence, they needed to be shrewder than the old man, if they wanted to survive, stay alive.
The elder snakes even reinforced the fact the new younger snakes needed to be wicked to the point not to let neither their minds or bodies decay in the winter, so they were swift in spring and summer, and light on their bellies; by and by, they absorbed all such learning.

—Four years had now gone by, and the old man was now eighty-six years old. His heart was tired, failing, and he wanted more than anything to leave a legacy behind—his legacy that is, but had one more year to keep the land free of these evil serpents, should he fail, he’d lose the beautiful bright-eyed young princess: and in his mind, this could not be tolerated, as the old expression goes, he’d lose ‘the goat and the rope,’ so careful he needed to be, astute, perceptive he needed to be, but this time with the king more so than the snakes.


As time passed, the old man found these ten snakes, all in different locations (not knowing of course they had offspring hidden away): some in trees, others alongside of the road playing dead, and others by the great waters of the sea, he’d go to grab them, and before he could touch them, they’d jump, leap right through his hands, right out of his fingers. The old man, you could see on his face a flavor of worried triumph.
Several leaps and the serpents were gone, out of sight. Well, this bothered the old man to extremes, but he knew if he kept the snakes hidden, and busy, he’d still get his reward, or could if he was deceptive enough, a little bit perhaps misleading. And play, consequently, as if nothing had happened—he’d continue to take part in this game, and the king would be no wiser; the end result, the old man kept walking the mountain paths—as all the villagers knew, as all the villagers saw him do, day after day after day—and word got back to the king all the roads were clean and clear of the snakes.
Yet, in checking out the trees, and road sides, he occasionally found a snake or two, but it again would leap out of his presence to safety (and again I say, no one had seen snakes for a long time now, no one that is but the old man, so the king was any the wiser to his charade). And slowly but surely the old man saw the number of snakes started to increase, but they were simply baby snakes, and the mothers kept them hidden from him for the most part, and he wanted to keep it that way, until after he received his reward that is; for he knew himself, his reflexes were not as they were a few years ago, and each year lacking more and more in the impulse reaction area; anyhow, slow they were, and with the leaping, it was impossible to catch them now; yet again, I must stress, in fear they’d become extinct all over again, they hid when they could, and jumped when they had to, or leaped to safety or some hidden area, should they become aware the old man was around.
And so again, I repeat, no one had seen them, and the snakes knew the old man was aging, and would not live forever, in consequence, if only they could out last him, out wait him—in many cases this is the only way to deal with such a menace as the old man, so the snakes concluded, and so they would out wait him. And in between now and his death, they hissed with laughter on finding a way to out smart the Old man. But as the old saying goes and the snakes did not know this saying, ‘He who laughs last, laughs longest.’

And now, the fifth-year had come and passed, the old man, had completed his task, his mission—and so, the old man went to the king to claim his reward. There in the throne room, he, Mr. Goose, stood in front of the king, telling him of his endeavors.
For the first time the princess burned with curiosity, eager to hear what the old man had to say. She leaned forward so she could see through a crack in the curtains in the throne room. At first her thoughts were thin at best, then thinking he could have accomplished the mission, she listened even closer, more attentive, her eyes closed upon hearing he did, and as the old man stared at the moving curtains, he mumbled:
“And for the love making, let’s hurry on with the wedding.”
He, Mr. Goose, was by no means, couth about the matter, rather quite blunt.

The King looking quite dreadful at his parting of his daughter gave her to the old man nonetheless— called over from behind the curtains, with not much to say, and brought forth a great celebration. The lovely twenty-year old princess was adorned with all kinds of flowers, and jewels and riches beyond imagination. And the party went on and on all night.

Surprisingly, during this time the king noticed that he, the old man had only eyes for the princess, his daughter, not the riches she possessed. Somehow that seemed to dignify the whole matter much more, in an ugly kind of way, that is. As the bride danced with the groom, all the young bucks looked on with disgust and envy, perhaps a little more envy than disgust. The princess although in dismay, said nothing, not a word to disgrace her father’s will, like a good daughter, she kissed her husband and bid good evening to the guests, as they went into their room to consummate the marriage.



The Princess



It was early evening and the moon that had been hidden behind clouds, emerged with a warm wind blowing through the castle bedroom window, and the old man now was about to seek his pleasures. There was the sound of music in the bedroom, blown under the bedroom doorway; it gently branched out, throughout the room—black shadows, raced to and fro, from corner to corner in the bedroom.
Heretofore, the love-making had tired the old man to where he was dosing off and on, starting to even snore, his arms underneath the back of his head, lying on his back, eyes closed, save, a little look at his new youthful, and beautiful bride, and wife, off and on, and more off than on as the night went on.

As the extraordinary evening went forward, the old man fell to sleep, and in the morn, the princess tried to wake her new husband up for breakfast, only to find him, lifeless, dead, deceased, departed. She was mortified, and yet relieved, she called quickly to her father, and he called for doctor and the guards. Word had gotten out quickly that the princess’ husband had heart-failure, and she would be in mourning. But the serpents in the area were refreshed by the news, and came out bravely, back onto the pathways, and around the trees and coastal areas with their young ones, almost as if to have a fiesta.


The king now seeing this new resurrection of the snakes didn’t know what to do, but it was not half as bad as it was five-years past, and figured he’d look for another man of same qualities, and tried to find the Goose family to no avail. Then, finding out his daughter was pregnant, he got thinking, possibly, just probably, whatever the qualities the old man had inside his genes, they might be in his blood line, thus, in his grandson to be [hoping it would be a boy].
“Awe,” he said with glowing and ghastly eyes, “sure,” he said to his daughter, “should she give birth to a son, he will be the tempest for the snakes.” (The king thinking, ‘All is fair in love and war.’)


The King’s Castle


And so the king and his kingdom all waited for the birth of the child.
—And then it happened, the ninth-month, third day, in the early morn, the sun had just risen: all waited outside the doorway to hear the baby’s cry, but there was no cry, yet a baby was born (with a loud hiss!). As the doctor looked at the child, he was flabbergasted; the child was horrifying to look at; hence, in all regards, in all the days of the doctor’s life, in every corner of his world, he had never seen such an hideous looking child; deformed, long thin hanging nose, bug-eyed creature; he was simply stunned, astonished, amazed, at its appearance he just shook his head, nodded his head back and forth as if to grab onto some sanity: it looked like a ferret, yet it had human form to it. It seemed the lobes to his brain extended outward, that is to say, pushed the skull like rubber to form an impression on his head, which had no hair. His eyes took up, one third of his face.
Thereof, the doctor remembered what the old man had looked like: comparing child to father—or perhaps using some imagination, comparing child to when the father was a child or might have been a child, or perhaps what he didn’t see of the father he imagined, and as a result, made his own comparisons; and now thinking of the king, he pondered on what to do, for the king and the kingdom.
He didn’t show the child to anyone, not a soul (although he told the king), and ordered all to stay away, that it had the plague; and needed to get the child out of the castle before an epidemic occurred; the king concurring, like-minded with everything he said. And during the late night took the child out of the kingdom, telling all concerned, the child could be contagious (which it did not have of course any such disease), should it touch anyone, it would only kill them only to look at it—figuratively speaking again. But who could understand such ugliness, and perhaps the princess would wanted to keep it. And so the doctor left the castle.
Soft were the dark shadows as he walked down the lane, into the forest, into the tall grass, stealthily past barns and houses and farms, and roads.
He, the doctor who cared now for the child, called the child ‘Mon-goose’, taking the king’s name and the father’s. And left it in the woods—neither one, never to returning to the castle; hence, the Mongoose was named and born.

In time the old snakes had died out, all but one, and the young snakes had now forgotten those trying years with the snake eater, the grim sights of him searching and stacking their parents. All this had been forgotten, until one day, one of the snakes, that elder snake, I just mentioned, perhaps the only one left of the bygone generation that lived through those trying days of Mr. Goose, saw a man, he looked like the old man Mr. Goose, resembled him, but more youthful, and the old snake said out loud (and other snakes nearby heard him, stiffened their bodies in horror),
“The snake eater is back!” or so he said, and all the other snakes wondered, questioned him, if he really saw what he thought he saw, and the old snake just prayed it was an illusion. And said not a word, if anything, he was hoping it was an automatic reaction, perhaps to post traumatic stress.


The Child Born



End of the Tale


Note by the author: a mongoose is a flesh eating animal, looking much like a ferret. It eats snakes, and snakes know when one is present by instinct.

Note: written 12/18/02 © by Dennis L. Siluk [at Barnes and Noble, Roseville, Minnesota, in the deli]; around, 8/2003 this story was picked up and used by the Croatian Education System in Europe. Now revised for descriptiveness, and reedited 1/2006 (put on a number of sites on the internet throughout the years (between 2004 & 2008; in July, 2008, it was reedited and rewritten from 2750 words to 4350); first time in book form. A Great Story for kids and on many their internet programs.









Apolinario Fermin Mayta, Poet, and Journalist;
With Mayor of Huancayo, and Poet Laureate,
Dr. Dennis L. Siluk (11/ 2007), receiving
Award for his Cultural Poetic Writings.




Back of Book

Visit my web site: http://dennissiluk.tripod.com/ you can also order the books directly by/on:
http://www.amazon.com/ http://www.bn.com/ http://www.scifan.com/ http://www.netstoreusa.com/ along with any of your notable book dealers. Other web sites you can see Siluk’s work at: http://www.eldritchdark.com/; www.swft/writings.html; http://www.abe.com/; http://www.alibris.com/; http://www.freearticles.com/




Books by the Author

Out of Print

The Other Door, Volume I [1981]
The Tale of Willie the Humpback Whale [1982]
Two Modern Short Stories of Immigrant Life [1984]
The Safe Child/the Unsafe Child [1985]

Presently In Print

The Last Trumpet and the Woodbridge Demon

Angelic Renegades & Raphaim Giants


Tales of the Tiamat [trilogy]
And other selected books

Tiamat, Mother of Demon I
Gwyllion, Daughter of the Tiamat II
Revenge of the Tiamat III

Mantic ore: Day of the Beast

Chasing the Sun
[Travels of D.L Siluk]

Islam, In Search of Satan’s Rib

The Addiction Books of D.L. Siluk:

A Path to Sobriety
A Path to Relapse Prevention
Aftercare: Chemical Dependency Recovery


Autobiographical

A Romance in Augsburg I
Romancing San Francisco II
Where the Birds Don’t Sing III
Stay Down, Old Abram IV

Romance:

Perhaps it’s Love
(Minnesota to Seattle)

Cold Kindness
(Dieburg, Germany)

The Suspense short stories of D.L. Siluk:

Death on Demand
[Seven Suspenseful Short Stories]

Dracula’s Ghost
[And other peculiar stories]

The Mumbler [psychological]
After Eve [a prehistoric adventure]

The Poetry of D.L. Siluk:

The Other Door (Poems- Volume I, 1981)
Sirens [Poems-Volume II, 2003]
The Macabre Poems [Poems-Volume III, 2004]

Last Autumn and Winter [Minnesota poems, 2006]

Spell of the Andes [2005]
Peruvian Poems [2005]
Poetic Images Out of Peru [And other poems, 2006]
The Magic of the Avelinos
(Poems on the Mantaro Valley, book One; 2006)
The Road to Unishcoto
(Poems on the Mantaro Valley, Book Two, 2007)
The Poetry of Stone Forest (Cerro de Pasco, 2007)

Cradled with the Devil (and Josh, in: Poor Black)
The Tale of the Jumping Serpents of Bosnia (Poetic Prose)












“Along the coast of the Adriatic Sea lives what now is called the “poskok,’ better known as the ‘Jumping Serpent’. These creatures are some five-feet long and to my understanding can jump some three feet in the air and leap some five-feet in any direction they wish, simply by aiming at whatever, wherever. But this didn’t happen by chance, this really and truly happened by necessity. And this is the tale you are about to hear, the ‘why,’ of it, how it came about. And to be quite honest, you will be the first to hear of it.” (Page one: Intro)

“The Tale of the Jumping Serpents of Bosnia,” was written in 12/18/02 © by Dennis L. Siluk [at Barnes and Noble, Roseville, Minnesota, in the deli]; around, 8/2003 this story was picked up and used by the Croatian Education System in Europe. Next, it was picked up by several internet sites between 2004 and 2006. This is the first time in print, and with its extended content, the longer version, which in 2006, the author reedited, and in July of 2008, rewrote parts of it, extended in description, details, and for explanatory reasons, making it a better read.


Dennis L. Siluk, Ed.D., is the author of 37-books, several in English and Spanish, eleven in Poetry. This is his seventh book on myths, tales, and the supernatural. He lives with his wife Rosa, in Minnesota and Peru; he presently is working on, “Old Josh…” and “Cradled by the Devil.”

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Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Ask the Animals

Ask the Animals

Someone, somehow, somewhere, along life’s long line, long before I was born anyhow, I do believe most hardily believe, invented a thing called marriage after s/he figured out, man cannot live with another person, female person, without getting bored, or she could not live with a male without getting frustrated, and without losing the once obsessed desire to have the lover, and so someone, somewhere, somehow, created a symbol, for the person or persons involved, man and woman, for if it wasn’t created, love would be abolish, like one does, human begins do, to everything else, unable to disinfect the heart, this person long ago, created this malady, so it would not cause us superior humans (so we think we are) to kill at will, lesser able men, so I repeat—marriage was invented, lest someone, somewhere, somehow destroy the whole thing, for everybody, everywhere. Thus, this person also invented the pipe, to smoke, to calm himself down, and she invented opinions to deliberate on, to keep herself guessing, and foulness they both created to keep life interesting, and jealousy somehow was manufactured, to pretend one really cares, but unfortunately, people took this word seriously, and created chaos out of it, it was a joke in the beginning.

After all this took place, a fine portrait was painted long ago, and hid from—all of us, but I found it, the devil had it concealed in a metaphor with a moustache: doubtless he despises marriage, disdained such cooperation between two persons. And so you see, I have delivered this to you, this great horror of the past. The worse thing about love, the most annoying thing about it is, you need two people, an accomplice, to make it a crime, and even when it is a crime, one still wants to love anyhow, he or they, or she is still in search for it. One clings onto each letter of the word, even rolling down a slope, s/he will not let go. They think, before all else, this love will save them, that s/he will emerge in heaven with flying colours, plunge into the golden gates—pass go, like a bar-fly unseen. Imbeciles, without the permission; virtue, untested.

What is love, this kind of love, anyhow? Ask the animals, the beasts, they will tell you—the better love is adoring, if need be, to sacrifice and prostituted oneself, it has very little if anything to do with desire and the love organs that is pleasure.

No: 2413 7-16-2008 (poetic prose)

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Friday, July 11, 2008

Writing as an Art (Devotion)


Writing as an Art (it’s called Devotion)

How should a writer write? Or in my case, perhaps how should a poet write? He should write as if he will have a coronary occlusion tomorrow, or he is doing his art wrong. He has a responsibility to his art, and it demands compete pitiless love and devotion, as if he was a soldier and it is life or death. Someone told me once and I didn’t’ say a word, I remained silent, and went about my business, after he told me what he told me, which was, “It’s impossible to write more than three hours a day.” And he was a writer, well kind of a writer, not a writer of art, but a writer of fiction that did sell, but will be thrown off the shelves next year, never make it to the libraries, maybe, but I doubt it. I call it literature made like a chain of hamburgers. He belonged to the new cult, get it out. It takes me three hours to warm up, to get focusd, to get my breathing right, to get on a roll. I ask my wife, so I would not lie to you folks reading this, how much do I read and write a day, seven days a week, take or give a day for rest, once every three or four months, she said, “Between eight to ten hours a day.” I fall to sleep at the computer, or reading my books; I perhaps write 900 to 3000 words a day, depending on my reading, and research, and those episodes falling to sleep. I might be ruthless as I said, but I do believe in one exception to this ruthless life: God first, my wife next, and that is were it stops, I’m somewhere in-between God and Wife, I think after God and wif.
The writer, or artist has a dream, and it kills him, anguishes, him, torments him, obsesses him in his sleep, eating time, so I carry two pens, in case I lose one, and napkins to write, so I don’t lose an idea, the name of the game is get rid of the throne in the side, the torment, write it down, look at it later. It is like writing a book, don’t worry about this and that just write it out, and fix it later, before you lose it all and have nothing to fix later. What is the end of it, you should know, why? How you going to write a plot, have a theme, carry an insight to its end unless you do, you can’t start a poem in one style, and say in the middle: I think I’ll change this to anther style, it don’t work that way, same as in a story, if you change the plot in your story, in the middle, you change the rhyme for the reader and you owe the reader something more than a bumpy road ?
So you see, when you write you get no peace until you write out what is taking that peace away from you. Simple isn’t it. Life needs to be experienced, grant you that, but when you are on a project, everything goes into file 13, until everything in your head (my head) is empty, and thereafter, go back to file 13, and empty the garbage out on the floor, and take out what you want, because everything, almost everything, is second. If it isn’t, then writing is not an art to you, it’s a hobby. Especially in writing poetry, you don’t rob Peter to pay Paul, you may rob both of them, but no one gets paid until you finish the project, paid in the sense of money or finishing a project just to finish it, and of course you want it to get out to be read, that comes second also, or not at all.

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Thursday, July 10, 2008

The Poet and the Pilot (a Poem on Writing Poetry)

The Poet and the Pilot
(A Poem Written During WWI)


“How do you write Poetry?
And why is it so important…?”
asked the General.
I said:
Poetry is a story Sir,
Poetry is a design
And a plan…sir!

The General then said,
“Pilot or poet, explain
Why you had all those
Writings in your cockpit,
A poem written all over
The walls, that long,
Long poem, you wrote during
Flight, last night, under
Fire and alone!”

A plane, a one-seater—
That’s all it was sir,
Flying perfectly straight
Perfectly level, sedate,
Over the German trenches
Into no-mans land, I went
(in a daze writing poetry)
With an open throttle—!
That’s poetry sir, in combat!...
The engine is my mind, words
Are the fuel ignites the engine
We’re both the same, Sir:
The poet and the pilot’s head
Both in that same pen, the one I
Used to write all over the walls,
And ceiling, like unfired bullets,
but words, like the Machine gun,
attached onto my plane, standing
Back and down, behind, I went
Over enemy lines “Come on!
Come on!” the ground
Enemy said, called, yelled…!
Down fast I came, my
Words also, were rolling,
Turning, in my head, through
My pen, onto the walls,
As they dared… all
Over my cockpit, while
Flying down, down, in
Empty air…No breaks in there,
I told myself, sir… (no need
For brakes, in poetry)

Now on the ground taxi-ing
No goggles on, inside
The cockpit, something
Snapped…! My head jerked
Like a fired pistol: now
On the ground everything’s
A muzzle; I give the salute
The scramble starts, to
The plane, me, the pilot
Spitting hard, spitting out
Words, onto the interior
Cockpit frame; trying to
Write the last stanza, word
Trying to accomplish
Something; someone
Says, “What’s wrong with
You?” “Nothing,” I say—
Then he notices all the writings
On the cockpit walls, like on
A dirty tablecloth: I wrote this
Poem, in the middle of a battle,
I said, someone owes something
It’s all blood-strained red;
“Let It be!” I said, Sir, but the
Officer kept on reading, the
Walls, ceiling of the cockpit,
And said, “This reads like
A new 21st Century, Iliad.”
And I said, “That’s how you
Write poetry,…Sir!”

7-10-2008 (No: 2412)

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Sunday, July 06, 2008

In a Dead Voice ((Vietnam, 1971)('Voices out of Saigon'))

In a Dead Voice
((Story Fifteen) (March, 1971)
(Story told by Morgan, March 1986))


Advance: Even to Sergeant Morgan Carter, he knew there were two sides to every man, even to him. One he could lay his life down for a county that did not appreciate his duty assignments, in a War that was not popular, as in his, that being, Vietnam, where he served five tours, or five years, even got two Bronze Stars for Valor, almost a Medal of Honor, for saving a man’s life, in the middle of rocket fire, whereas most men are dead, when they receive such a gifts from the Army, or are even considered for such a award.
His uncle Frank, got one in WWII, but he had to die for it, and was buried in Florence, Italy, along with the Purple Heart.
Yes, he would die, give up his life for folks that called him ‘Baby Killer,’ every time he went home on leave, and he never killed any babies, perhaps the bombing did, but he didn’t bomb anyone, he shot them, or shot at them, and most of the time he didn’t know how many he killed, he didn’t keep count, nor did he go check on the ones he thought he shot, and they were not babies, they were also folks with guns, and knifes, and rifles, and so forth, like to like, he called it.
On the other hand, during the first tour of duty in Vietnam, in 1965, he fought a lot with his fellow comrades over simple things, and would have been called a drunk, and a good for nothing soldier at times, not all the time, but at times, and could have shot your foot off for the skimpiest of reasons. Why was this, he asked himself— (now 1986) the war now long gone, why does a man choose to do what he does when he does it, especially while in the act of war. A hero and a bum in the same body, just not at the same time, you can be, you can be all of that and hide it from the real world. We all looked the same, kind of. So he told himself. He had witnessed many soldiers hide, dig holes in the ground to cover themselves up from incoming rockets, gun fire, all wanting another hour of life, breath, privates, sergeants and officers, they were all alike during such a moment, and he saw many a man go crazy, shoot themselves in the foot to get out of Vietnam. It was he said, “The confused beast inside of each man.” And so it was.

Dead Black Smoke

The helicopter appeared over the airbase in Cam Ranh Bay, Vietnam, March, 1971, almost before Carter knew it, it was there, he could hear it before he saw it, and when he saw it, and it was just a mild shadowy configuration, he went into a process of deliberation. What he heard was a whizzing, a fast whiz of its propelled horizontal rotors, which could have been two or more; Sergeant Carter guessed it to be an AH-1G Cobra, a gunship for the most part, he didn’t think it was a UH-1 Huey (officially the ‘Iriquois’), it was mostly used for transport. It was searching…for the VC, or Vietcong, going somewhat is a circle, a loop around the outer rim of the airbase, in the thick of some jungle brush, thereabouts. It was not a good circle, but rather like a ripple that the helicopter traveled in, even perchance a bit clumsy in its maneuvering.
The chopper was looking for where the VC was launching their rockets from, almost at random; the pilot was Warrant Officer Herald Lund…

The Vietcong had ungracefully tried to shoot rockets out of underground bunkers, out into the ammo dumps, three ammo dumps on Cam Ranh Bay, trying to hit their targets, and in the process trying to deal with a helicopter overhead, one trying to find them and put them out of business, on the other hand, the Vietcong was trying to eliminate the helicopter, as it went in a loop, at an angle as if to make a strike and then an immediate turn, then came a sudden sound of an explosion, and the Cobra disappeared from the air, it whirled towards the bay, and rammed into the waters of the South China Sea.
Captain Rosenboum sent out his company of 167-men to secure the ammo dump, he was Captain of the 611 Ordnance Company; the night stood motionless for a moment, Staff Sergeant Morgan Carter II, came to a stop, a standstill, as he drove his jeep along the white sandy beach road along the seashore of the bay, dead black smoke rising from out in the bay. He disembarked his jeep, walked a few feet closer to the water to get a better view; it was an American helicopter he concluded. At that very moment, a five-ton truck, with some thirty soldiers were on the back of it heading out to secure Alpha Ammo Dump, several miles away, rockets were still hitting the area.
It was night, more night than the Staff Sergeant wanted, and he now had to deliberate, if he was to get on out to the Ammo Dump, or evaluate this circumstances, and then what—he was ordered to go to the dump and secure, and to wait for he troops they would be there shortly after his arrival. The helicopter was some three-hundred yards out into the water, pouring out Black Death. There was no one in sight, but then there was not much sight to be seen. He went back to his jeep, turned on its lights, drove down next to the water; there now he could see the illusion of a Cobra in the water.

He knew Chief Warrant Officer Lund, he had met him, and he was in that copter, although Morgan didn’t know it at this point. Lund’s head was bobbing up and down in the water, smashed between his seat, and the front dash of the chopper, someone else was already in the water, thrown out of the chopper when it hit, which the force blew the door open.

Sergeant Carter could see the nose of the helicopter was sinking, and he also noticed movement in the pilots seat perhaps the person was struggling and couldn’t free himself, was his mental conclusion, everything observable came by glances, a flash, nothing clear.
CW Lund, was a heavy man, and there was a Specialist Five Atwood whom was on board the helicopter, he had freed himself and was now swimming away from the site, evidently he did not go back to try and save the Warrant Officer, or perhaps he couldn’t, perhaps all the strength left in him was to swim to safety, nonetheless, when he saw the headlights of the jeep, and a figure standing on the white sands of Cam Ranh Bay, he yelled, “Lund, still in the chopper—help him!” If there was others Sergeant Carter didn’t notice them or remember them, nor would he put it in his report.
Sergeant Cater made his decision now, and jumped into the waters of the bay, and in a matter of minutes was swimming past Atwood, and down and into the helicopters pilot area, and sure enough there was an acquaintance, CW4 Lund, a half smile came on Lund’s face, “I’ve had it,” said Lund, “not sure if you can get me free, and if so, I’m not sure if I got the energy to swim out of this mess!”
The Sergeant pushed back the seat of the Cobra, and freed the Warrant Officer of his safety belt, and the six-foot, 280-pound man grabbed the five-foot eight inch, one-hundred and forty pound Sergeant, and down they both went, but it wasn’t to freedom it was the helicopter had moved, and sunk deeper, and the CW was panicking, and the Sergeant was being overwhelmed with his panic height and weight in that little space, and he pushed the CW off him, whom was becoming likened to a wild dog, freed himself, and with his feet pushed himself out of the helicopter, thinking Lund would do the same, but he didn’t he evidently couldn’t swim, or if he could, he couldn’t think to swim, or hold his breath long enough to free himself from the wreckage, to swim to freedom.

Atwood was now on the white sandy beach, headlights on him, he was exhausted, and lay there resting.
Next the Sergeant was on the beach, got to his knees, took several deep breaths, “Where’s Lund?” asked the Specialist.
“Where you left him, read the report…!” said Carter, and the sergeant simply walked away, got into his jeep, and went out to where the incoming rockets were hitting, which was: Ammo Dump Alpha.


“Wake up Morgan,” said his wife, Ming: “You’re having a nightmare again,” she told him, “did you get to the end this time?” she asked.
“Yes, I think so,” he said “I left him behind in the helicopter, like Atwater did, I mean Atwood…I’ll explain it all another day, how about breakfast?”
“Yes, I’ll make it, I’m just finishing up on your coffee, the way you like it; are we going to the Russian Market today?” she asked, Morgan nodded his head yes, looked towards the window, the sun was shinning through it, birds were chirping, and then it completely dawned on him, he completely realized it was 1986, not 1971, and he was not in Vietnam, he was in his home, in Cambodia, and his wife was asking simple things, little daily things, things we overlook, in the mass of things that we’ve already stored for who knows when, like old pictures thrown in a box, to be explored another day, or thrown out.

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Saturday, July 05, 2008

Full of Beans at Wallace Creek ((Adolescence) (1965, Chapter Fifteen, summer of 1965))



Advance: In the spring of 1965, Wallace Creek was full of mud and cold cool fresh water, from the meltdown of a cold winter, when summer came the creek was flowing almost like the river it connected to, it was high; the sun likened to a fire from a winter’s, plantation’s hearth, which made for a great summer getaway down by the creek. Bees were buzzing, birds chirping, and dogs barking, and there was a warm wind that whirled its way into, through and around the slim branches of the trees, loosening the leaves attached to those slender branches, and they wiggled free, and fell drunkenly onto the ground; Cassandra was eleven years old looked thirteen if not older and developing; Langdon, was all of fourteen, and as handsome as any movie star in Hollywood.


Those summers prior to 1965, were happy summers for the most part, and this summer for Cassandra and Langdon, would be no less, with a few surprises, but the last. She came to visit as usual for three months on the Abernathy Plantation, sometimes she stayed the full three months, and a few times less, and a summer or two, Caroline and Langdon, stayed in the Hightower House, in New Orleans. They had quite the system, and it broke the boredom of life, although Caroline would only stay for a few weeks, and leave Langdon in Betty Hightower’s care, and likewise, Betty would leave Cassandra in the care of Caroline on their plantation, outside of Fayetteville, North Carolina after a few weeks and leave, and they would get a break from the kids, and the kids would get a break from their parents. And Langdon and Cassandra got to grow up together, harmoniously, with a family member almost their own age.
At eleven years old, she was quite developed, so Langdon would find out this year when they went skinny dipping in the creek. Her body was smooth and hard, with a flat stomach, and Langdon had an iron stomach to match, and once they put on their swimming suites down at Wallace Creek, on Wallace property, it was show and tell time. Both swam together near the river that the creek connected to, it was deeper there, and Cassandra liked looking at Langdon when he floated on his back, she was not shy by no means and even asked him to, and neither was Langdon, if anything they both were a little taken back at each others developing bodies. They snuck glance after glance at each other, checking out each others limbs, and movements, and the erect way Cassandra was now walking (just eighteen months prior Cassandra had asked her mother for a bra, but was told point blank, ‘not yet!’ not until she got something to put into it, and it was a sad day to say the least, but a twelve months later, she had her first bra, and a little something to put into it, and now there was much more to put into it, although her mother had for the interim, stopped taking notice, but Cassandra didn’t, and Langdon, now eighteen-months down the road, could verify, she would be needing a new one soon).

This summer, they both swam almost every day, and they were no longer looking for the deep, deep water near the river, anyplace would do to get wet, and lay half naked, and sometimes a little more than half; they laid by each other and fell to sleep on a blanket. It was perhaps the best of their growing years, the best summer they would ever remember, the most tranquil for sure, untroubled without the slightest worry, matter-of-fact, had you asked them about growing up, I’m sure they didn’t want to this summer, they liked it as it was. But the Wallace brothers saw them swimming, and sleeping by the creek, they were on Wallace land, and created some rumors, gossip that went from the Wallace Plantation, to the Stanley Plantation, and on to Cole and Caroline Abernathy, and even Betty Hightower in New Orleans. Other than exploration, nothing had really happened, that is to say, nothing took place, seriously took place between the two cousins. As close as one can become, to Adam and Eve, in pure innocence, before they ate the apple, Cassandra and Langdon, did. But Cassandra’s childhood was over this summer, and she knew it, she was blossoming, and Langdon knew it I suppose.
Minnie Mae, Frank and Wally’s cook, met both Cassandra and Langdon by the creek one afternoon, told them that the two brother’s had aroused some suspicion among the plantations, and even called Cassandra’s mother in New Orleans told her that they were sleeping by each other half naked on a blanket by their creek; had it been a year ago, it would not have been suspicious news, it would not have mattered, but this year it was different. Thus, Betty Hightower told her daughter over the phone, “This is the last summer you will spend on the Abernathy plantation, without her present,” and she was final on that subject.
Betty was wise enough not to blame anyone in particular, lest she start a family feud, and pointed no fingers in any direction, matter of fact, she said very little on the subject, although one thing she did say to Caroline was, “I think the kids, are not kids anymore, they are adolescents, young people who are changing, and up to now their lives have been uninterrupted, but with unknown factors and hormones going wild, I think I have to give Cassandra a little more personal attention, so if we visit, we’ll do it together, if you don’t mind.”
It promoted a perceptibly cooler relationship between the two families, and to be honest, it was the last summer they, Langdon and Cassandra, truly enjoyed uninterrupted in their whole lives.

Written 7-5-2008

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The Peculiar Case of Judson Small (WWI,1919, Parat II of II)


The Peculiar Case of Judson Small


(WWI, 1919, Part II of II)

One morning, Lilly Ann Small, moved her chair up to the living room window for a long peaceful morning, gloating , not at the empty yard, since her husband had died in WWI, a year or so ago, it was now 1919, but on her new suitor, James Jason, who worked at the Huntsville, courthouse, he was an old boyfriend, one that didn’t make the grade she had felt, one that was now contriving to ease her grieving pain by asking her to marry him. She watched the chickens in the coop over by the large oak tree, and beyond that the orchard her and Judson were going to cultivate through the many years of marriage they had planned together, clutching the windowsill in front of her, she saw a man walking up the lane, she rushed to lock the door, out of some unknown panic, he didn’t look like James Jason, and she was several miles out of town, on her little farm of twenty acres. And strangers usually did not come so boldly up the lane at 9:00 AM in the morning. And then back at the window she looked again, drew back in her chair. Perhaps it was an Army friend of Judson’s, she thought, that one that wrote her about how Judson died, that Private Stanley from New Orleans, or was it, North Carolina, she forgot, but that was over a year ago. She noticed a neighbor was watching also, there was only one neighbor, across from her, in the Old Anderson Place, it was a plantation back before the Civil War days, a productive plantation, now just a high weeded spinster home, to Annabel Anderson and her sister Mary, and a small country church, resided a ways down the road near the edge of her property, which was once Andersen property also, but Annabel gave it to the church, to build a church, that called themselves ‘nondenominational,’ which she could never understand but it sound good. Other than that, the land was doted with small farms all the way into Huntsville.
Lilly Ann looked over towards Judson’s old rifle, he kept it loaded, said for snakes and so forth, but you usually didn’t kill snakes with rifles, unless you beat them to death, he used the end of a shovel usually, to cut off their heads with, if he found them on the steps of his house or playing around in the yard scaring the chickens, the rifle was for mammal use, not the reptile. Anyhow, she looked and felt a little safe it was there. The closer he got, this stranger, the more he looked like her husband, Judson Small. “Maybe,” she said out loud, “maybe he isn’t dead. People all the time make mistakes, a pure and innocent mistake.”
Now he was at the door, knocking, whereupon she realized that he was Judson Small indeed, and she opened he door gave a virulent germ grin, as if she wasn’t sure if she won bingo.
“Judson, Judson Small, is it really you?” she asked.
“I’m hungry,” he said, kissed her, and went to the kitchen table, “how about breakfast,” he asked.
There was something peculiar about him, but she Lilly Ann, simple took it slow, said, “I’ll make you some coffee and hot cakes,” and proceeded to do so, but unstopping, kept an eye on him, wanting to celebrate, but he was sedate in way. Her second thought was: perhaps he’s just come out of an Army hospital; she didn’t know what to make of it, to the edge of being dumfounded.

A few days now had passed, and Judson Small was doing things around the house, and James Jason came over, and so did Samuel Clarence Lund, the preacher from the local church, he usually visited Saturdays anyway, and was curious on who the visitor was, for Annabel Anderson had mentioned Lilly had a male guest in her house, that of course was news, lots of gossip.
James Jason also came over to visit Lilly Ann that very Saturday, Samuel did, Judson knew him from High School, said James came out with, “I thought you were…” and before he could finish it, Lilly said, “Hush!” and he never finished the sentence.
After that, Lilly simply said, “You need to go!”
And he did, without a second’s hesitation, knowing Judson was there, and his peculiar kind of tranquilized looks were a tinge too much for him.
Samuel on the other hand pulled Lilly aside and asked, “Perhaps I was mistaken, but I understood your husband had died in the war, over a year ago?”
“Yes, Samuel, he did, and I been meaning to ask you, but you will not believe it, I think he doesn’t know he’s dead. Because he acts peculiar, and I checked with the authorities, and they sent me some money—insurance and they buried him for me, and here he is, and they will not agree he is alive, and I fear they may put me in an asylum if I insist he is alive but you see what I see.”
“I’m tired,” said Judson.
“I’ll take you to bed in a moment, let me just talk to Samuel a second, he’s the new preacher down at the country church, down yonder.”
And so Judson went to his normal bedroom alone, and sat on the edge of his bed as if, ready to lay down, but was somehow, less tired then he made out to be, and remained sitting.
Samuel and Lilly looked at each other a moment, just wondered exactly what Judson could be up to, did he know he was dead, and pretending not to know, or was he dead and came back because his wife was confused on the intentions James had on her, she would never truly know, but Samuel, somewhat gave his support by saying, “I do believe in such happenings, he found some kind of a passage, and obviously he came to insure you are ok, brief I think now it will be, James will never come back, I mean would you if you were him? (She shook her head no with a smirk on it). Incidentally I heard his side of the face was blown off, it looks just fine to me?”
“Oh, that never occurred to me, but you’re right, that is another point to reflect on I suppose,” said Lilly Ann, as she looked into the bedroom, and saw Judson, then he got up, came out to her, kissed her, and went back into the bedroom and laid down, she saw all this and made sure he was ok, then said good by to the preacher, walking him back out of the house with the to the lane, taking about five minutes, whereupon she came back in, full view of the bedroom from the door, she had left it open, she saw the impression of his body in the mattress, it was the first time she told herself, he ever kiss me so tenderly (in a more caring way). He was gone, I suppose she thought, once he realized things were under control, regardless of his feelings, he had to let go himself, let go of her, so she could let go of him, and go on with her life, somewhere along the line this had to happen, and the moment had come, he was gone. And that was the last she ever saw of him, her husband, or heard of him. She never did remarry her eyes star-crossed with love for a war hero perhaps. In a way, they both were doomed and fated to each other, and it was obvious that day would never be forgotten.

Written 7-5-2008 (dm)

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Friday, July 04, 2008

The Wench is Deceased (1916-1919, WWI)





Earnest Stanley, call this war, his war, WWI, the wench, or strumpet, or wild girl, it was all the same to him, it was on a Bridal horizon you might say, the war took him away from his wife, new wife, a wench grabbed him, and he had to yield to her call to active duty in the United States Military, the Army, this youthful blue-eyed and handsome man had just married, and off to war, to WWI, for it had just started for America, once in Europe, he was among the many foreigners mixed together like goulash, it was 1917, only one year would he remain there, not even that, perhaps eight-months, but he had marred Ella in 1916, and she would wait, and it was hard for him to keep his mind on a war, when he had a new wife, a plantation, well kind of a plantation, he had put money down on it, it was rocky, it had to be cleared, it was not what it could be, would be, if he could take care of it, all the things a young man dreamed of, and her comes a war, he never wanted to fight another mans battles, but I guess some did, and he was part of the pack that elected that someone to office, so he could get drafted into the Army.
It was a traumatic experience for him to see the dead, the maimed, to know about the Missing POW’s, the trenches filled with Germans shooting at him nine-hundred feet away; colonials, privates, the French, and the British among him, among the Americans, God’s human masses colliding together, collectively trying to eliminate an enemy, sometimes at lightening speed. Cigarettes lit one after the other, as men stood waiting for the next onslaught, trying to understand this war of mud and trenches, and death and diseases, while remaining in a repugnant stalemate.
He was one of the Ammo Humpers, who delivered Ammo to the trenches, he didn’t attack over the trenches, like his comrades did, like Corporal Justin C. Abernathy did, although they bother were from the same location, here in combat, and back home: twenty-one miles outside of Fayetteville, North Carolina, they were neighbors, neighbors that hand only met once, when he put money down on the land he purchased, but in this war, on the French front, they were combatants, soldiers of a different kind, Private Stanley was condemned, all to the dodging of bullets and incoming artillery, as he ran from trench to trench, over the fields to get to them, his comrades in arms, to supple ordnance to them men who would, and who did, go over the top, of the trenches, to bombard the Germans in their trenches, to kill, and be killed, by other Germans leaving their trenches to reinforce the trenches their comrades were being killed in, so it was his replacement for a direct attach, which he was not subject to.

The only thing that didn’t settle well for Earnest was that the ammunition he delivered of course, in time would kill others, to kill a man you don’t know, by proxy, he didn’t do it face to face, but had a stand-in you might say, someone like Corporal Abernathy, to do it for him, that bothered him, but on the other hand, out of sight, out of mind, was a good way to live and survive in this mud licking war, I mean if you had to kill, it was a better way of killing.
The Americans had come, and that brought a new spark to the war, and he heard there might be an armistice in the making; General Pershing was in Paris, calling a meeting, he had become General of all the European Armies, under protest of course by the French, but it was a matter of: you fight your own war then, so the French gave in.
He, Earnest, like so many Americans came rushing across the Atlantic, before there was no more England or France to talk about, the Germans were no pushover, they had the war licked, won, but not now, France reminded America of there contribution to the war, that war long forgotten, the Revolutionary War, yes they went back a hundred and twenty-five years to make their point, and I guess according to Private Stanley, they must had made their point loud and clear, and dramatically; before they became homeless; in the process of course, the French had to swallow a lot of pride, something they never like doing, but it all worked in their favor. They knew the old saying, ‘Pride comes before destruction,’ and they were not that dump to play the pride game to the hilt; the new American troops would be the counterbalance in this war. And so the counter attacks with the Americans where in place. It was a bigger war now.

And then the war stopped, just like that, grim and grimaces, and smiles filled the trenches, and the soldiers went home to rebuild their exhausted countries, fad into its lingering society. And Earnest Stanley was about to home also, first to St. Louis, picked up his wife, Ella, and go onto North Carolina, where he had put down that money on some land that would be called Stony Meadows in time, that would take place in 1919. But before he left France, he explored Germany, just a few weeks, something like fourteen days, total.
While in a little town called Dieburg, they didn’t know there was a truce, or a few soldiers pretended not to know, and Corporal Judson Small a soldier from Huntsville, Alabama was with Private Stanley, it was forenoon.
There were three German soldiers less than a hundred yards away, one took his rifle—which was being carried, as if he had just come from the trenches, mud caked on him from heal to head, and even on his rifle, and he must had jumped off a truck, one was going the opposite way, and was about to go home or something, he positioned his rifle deep into his shoulder, aimed, and a shot it, the bullet passed through the air like a bee you could hear it coming, and it hit Small, tore the side of his face right off to where his teeth were showing, ripped it from the eye socket, to the lower jaw, from the ear to the nose, ripped it to shreds, meat, flesh hanging like spaghetti, he fell with a thump, flat on his back, and Private Stanley had no weapon, he stood waiting for the second bullet, looking at Small, not sure if he should run, hide, or remain where he was, but not moving, was also an option, and that was his decision, and that is what he did, and someone in the background yelled, “Ceasefire, there’s a treaty…!” it was a German woman. And the soldier ran, with the other two soldiers, and Private Stanley had a man with the side of his face blown off laying down by his feet, not knowing what to do, whom was ready to go home, tell his wife, the war he fought, was over, we won; the wench was dead, deceased. Now as Private Stanley looked down upon him, he wondered just what he’d tell his wife, they’d try to put that face back together, if they could, and he’d be ugly as hell. His wife would have to find a spot on the other side to kiss him good night. He didn’t show him in a mirror what he looked like, he just told him, it was bad, real bad. And Private Stanley sat cross-legged by him for the longest time, that is what the corporal wanted, and he died, just like that. It wasn’t from the wound; Private Stanley would tell folks later on, it was what he saw in the mud buddle next to him, the mirrored reflections of his face.

Written 6-2007

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Thursday, July 03, 2008

First Death (Sketch, part of "The Last Plantaion, series)

First Death
((for Langdon, Abernathy) (1956-1972))


Occasionally, Jerome La Rue, from Fayetteville, North Carolina, had his friend from Elementary school over to his house, that being, Langdon Abernethy, to study for the next day’s tests, or if it was a weekend, for Monday’s tests.
Jerome had a brother, Henry La Rue, two years older than he and Jerome being of the same age as Langdon.
Jerome’s father and mother (mother’s name being Loretta) were split up, not divorced, just separated, on a long term bases—he was an alcoholic and womanizer for the most part.
The father was fifty-three years old, in 1959, and Langdon and Jerome were both eight, Loretta in her late forties.
It was near the forth of July, 1956 when this happening took place, to be exact, it was the second of July.
Langdon and Jerome were both elbow to elbow on the floor of Jerome’s bedroom studying for tomorrow’s test, pointing out this and that, laughing at this and that when his mother, Loretta came in, to tell him some news, she had a face that showed a crisis was at hand, it showed love that never worked out, but love all the same, the love that once produced two kids, that old love lost, now remembered on her face small face, someone was dead, “It’s you father, Jerome (Henry was nowhere around)…he was found in his car, dead a few hours ago, evidently he died yesterday, it was parked by a downtown theater, clearly he fell to sleep, drunk, and never woke up, I need to go down to identify him at the morgue, the police called, you both can come and wait in the car if you want,” she said as if she had almost expected someday, something like this was going to happen, to happen abruptly, and so she was prepared, and tried to ease it out to Jerome, and perhaps because Langdon was present, Jerome was at ease for the moment, if not a little in disbelief.
Next, Loretta put out her cigarette in the ashtray on the kitchen table near the fish aquarium, fumbled with her keys to the car, as Jerome and Langdon put on their shoes and gathered out by the doorway, waiting for Loretta.

At the morgue, Jerome and Langdon went with Mrs. La Rue into a cold room, there a body covered by a sheet, a white linen, lay over the body Loretta was to identify, a man pulled back the sheets—looked at Loretta, “Yes,” she said, it is Bob, Bob La Rue, my husband,” his face was purple and color distorted, almost burnt from laying in the way of the sun a whole day, the sun seeping through the front window of the car, baking, almost frying it up like toast, to a crisp and dark purplish red, somewhat inflated.
Death did look pretty, thought Langdon, it looked like, ugly as a new born infant, all covered with blood and whatever other substances the infant carries out of its mother’s womb, with him into the new world, it seems like this dead man picked it back up, to carry it back with him, to bring back to where it originally came from.

Written: 6-30-2008

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The General's Star (Part II, WWI, a short story)

The General’s Star
(WWI, 1917-18)

Part II of II Parts


The General watched from his guarded post, the battalion, was to charge over the top of the trenches, day two in his war with the Germans, after three years watching nothing happen, and wanting his second star, the general was desperate. He had put in Corporal Abernathy for the Distinguish Service Medal, and there was much talk about it, everyone now wanting a medal to bring home, and he General wanting the second star, and everyone’s blood was like hot vinegar, hoping to empress him the general, and so he ordered another attack, he was reinforced with a new company, a new 172-troops, soldiers, untested under fire, and these new troops knew, the General lost 125- soldiers a day ago, the day before, and they had just arrived, to be told there was a second suicide mission, and they heard about what happened to the to that 125-soldiers, and they didn’t like what they heard, and they were causing trouble with the other three companies, over 600-soldiers.
Corporal Abernathy being the only one that survived the slaughter yesterday, some soldiers had made it to the first trenches, the ones five-hundred feet away, and took them, but the Germans that were 900-feet away from them, took it back an hour later, supported by those other Germans, 1500-Germans 3000-feet away, but the General figured if one company could reach the 500-level, six-hundred might make it to the 3000-level, and that was his new star, his second star.

Forenoon, the fields were quiet, empty, no firing of artillery or of any kind of ammo, the Germans just waiting as always eating their sour cabbage, and bratwursts eating lunch one after the other, bored, and perhaps wanting the General to send some more troops their way so they could practice shooting them down like pigeons, as usual.
Corporal Abernathy figured it was hard to beat the Germans without air support, that is really what they needed, but he, the general didn’t want to wait, he wanted that star now, before he was sent back to Paris to discus the rest of the war with Pershing and the other generals, he didn’t want to be standing in the last line of generals.
When they call the six-hundred to get ready for the advance, the offensive, they sat around where the officers were, drinking coffee, smoking cigarettes, just like the officers.
“What’s the problem?” asked the General to Major Sharp.
Major Sharp, said somewhat tongue-tied, but spitting out the words though, “The troops heard what happened yesterday, the new ones and they see the officers safe in their dugouts, and they see the sergeants not too willing to go over the top with them, and they want everyone to go, if they’re going die for a worthless cause, everyone should die with them, everyone but you, they said.”
“So the soldiers are on strike, is what you are saying, and that is not possible, that is treason, and I’ll have them shot.” Said the General, but ordered the Major to remain where he was while he thought this out clearer, then remarked:
“Well, Major, the only thing left is for everyone to go over the top, and you too!” said the General.
“Perhaps we can get some air support,” asked the Major.
“Major,” said the General, “if you do not go over that top with you troops, you’ll be a Second Lieutenant tomorrow; where is the devotion in this war, you are like a vegetable tree, fate has me in for a second star and you are in my way Major,” and he pulled out his silver plated revolver, ivory handle, and aimed it at Major Sharp’s forehead, as he dropped his baton at the same time, and when he went to pick it up, the Major jumped on him, and in the struggle, the General was shot in the heart—dead.

In the investigation, they could not find the weapon the German insurgent used to kill the General with, the Major being the only one to escape the fatal disarray that took place in the General’s shelter, and the only eyewitness. The German, the report read was hiding in the General’s closet, and when the Major came in he had the General’s gun in his hands, and escaped right past the Major, knocking him down. The inquiry asked how this could be possible; it all sounded so far fetched, kind of fishy, like a cover-up. The Major said it was as possible as sending 126-soldiers out to commit suicide, and only one returning, and there was no questions asked about that, that wasn’t fishy or abnormal, to Headquarters, matter-of-fact, a Distinguish Service Metal was handed out to the one and only survivor of the suicide mission, and after the fact, not a word from Headquarters was said, and no investigation for the 125-privates now dead as a door nail.
Thus, the Major, received a Distinguish Service Metal, for his bravery, like Corporal Abernathy, and the war went on for another year as normal.

Written June 21, 2008

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