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Mom

By Don Kenton Henry

MARIETTA FELDER HENRY 1950 PURDUE UNIVERSITY II

Yours was the first voice I heard

Each breath you took you shared with me, My heart beat but for you

You kept your place each time I stumbled, though everything inside you begged, “Pick him up!”

But you were there when I took my first steps

You counseled me through my failures and my victories and taught me what to take and what to leave behind from each

And I watched as your partner, a guy they called “my dad”, walked out the door and left you with three more like me

And I saw the first hint of gray

 

You had a patch for broken hearts delivered at the hands of winsome school girls

And ice for the black eye delivered by a bully or two

“Wear them proudly!” you urged, “You’re just giving life a whirl!”

And so I did

And I watched your hair turn a little grayer

 

You were at the principal’s office each time they said I couldn’t learn

At the police station each time they said I was bound for juvy hall

And when I totaled my first three cars

Some said I had a death wish

I replied, “I like life too much . . .”

And you said, “He’s finding his way. He will show you all.”

And you believed this even though I did not

And I watched your hair turn grayer still

 

I watched you cry as the bus took me away 1,500 miles to live with that same guy we once called your partner. Something you swore you would never let happen

When everything inside said, “Stop that bus and let my young man off.”

But―when no one else would take me―that’s when I got religion. And you were there when that bus came back the other way

And four high schools later I graduated. Something of which you said you had always dreamed

You smiled a smile―more with those big brown doe eyes of yours―than with your lips

Eyes that spoke more than words could say

And you never pushed college on me the way you did number two and number three

Younger . . . but far more focused than I

 

You watched me walk across that high school stage and then let me walk out the door of our home once more. You let me earn my way with my hands and back. Watched me grow strong while I labored with older men building boilers and railroads until my arms became hard like those things of iron and steel

All while your hair became like laced with white―as the bark of oaks―or Indiana corn rows become laced and lined with wind-driven snow

 

But my mind was soft and idle so I came to you

And you asked, “Is it time?” And I said, “Yes”.

And you went to bat for me once more and got me a chance  where no one owed me one

And that chance changed my life. Once more you changed the course you had set in motion

 

And when my only child was born, and everyone held their breath in fear I would neglect the gift that life had brought me, you told them “Watch him rise to this occasion.”

I named her for your mother. But for her, I wouldn’t have had you. But for you, I wouldn’t have the gift I pay forward in my daughter

And I lay in the other bed, across the room from yours, and listened as you spoke with pride of your children and grandchildren

You spoke not a word of regret for yourself or of what I know life shorted you

Only of your pride in us . . . and me

The others more deserving. I guess me because I walk straight where once I stumbled

And somehow you managed to keep your hair, though now all was white and thin as the frost on the hospice windows that Christmas, your favorite of the holidays

 

I listened to the nurses and caretakers who had looked after you the last three months enter your room and I bore witness as they told how you changed their lives. More than one single mother going back to night school or college

“Your mother believed in me when no one else did,” they told me, with tears in their eyes.

“I’m sure she did. She saw the good in you. She had that way about her,” I said

 

And I was there for you when the radiation failed and cancer was claiming a body that should have had many more days with her flower garden, grand babies and, now, grand babies

And I told you so

And you said, “Ah, Don . . . I was just giving life a whirl. You keep doing it for me.”

 

And I was there, just me and the preacher holding hands at the foot of your bed, the others having gone home for a change of clothes and a meal, when that preacher prayed, “Dear heavenly father, please take Marietta into your arms and welcome her into the Kingdom of Heaven.”  I watched your chest slowly rise and fall with his words. And it went up with, “Welcome her into the Kingdom” and came down with “Heaven”. And never came up again

 

And I am here now. Still breathing and my heart still beating since you started this thing for me called, “life”. And I see you standing in the door of our home. It is summer and you are wearing that cotton plaid dress, the one of subtle red, black and green you sewed for yourself so you could buy store bought for the four of us. And your hair is thick and dark as that of a Persian Princess and your brown, doe eyes are deep and bright and smile even more than your lips as I come up the steps

 

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Only One Version

By Don Kenton Henry

 

There is only one version and you can’t buy it off the shelf

If can be redeeming; It can be utterly cruel

It shines bright when brought into the light

Or it can haunt you in the dark of the night

It’s the currency of the wise and the counterfeit of fools

It need not always be offered but, when, asked for, must always be given

 

It’s a mirror in which you can’t hide from yourself

It makes for a hard friend to keep but one you can’t afford to lose

Often hard to defend, it’s a path you choose

It can cut like an knife―friends and enemies alike

 

Fidelity is the heart of the matter

Lies come served on a silver platter

They tarnish the bearer and poison the guest

And the conscience of the first shall know no rest

If a conscience there be

 

This course could be served in a plain white wrapper or a brown paper bag

But its contents liberate―for better or worse―the good and the bad

 

So think before you speak, for your conscience’s sake

You can sleep like a lamb or you can lie with snakes

Truth is the friend of which I tell

Evidence of it will be known―or not― in your name

As will the times you stood with honor or the times you fell

In shame

 

Speak the truth and you’ll never have to remember which story you told

You are writing the story called The Book of Your Life

It will have only one version . . . and you’ve only one soul

Truth will be its author, there will be no rewrites

Let honor be your lantern . . . let its way be your light

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New Boots

FLASH FICTION BY DON KENTON HENRY    

OLD GRINGO BOOTS

When shopping for new boots, the cute young sales girl said, “How do you like these Old Gringo?”

I replied, “Please don’t call me old!”

She said, “No! The boots are made by Old Gringo!” (What a difference a comma makes!) So . . . I thought, “What the heck!” and asked her out.

She said, “You’re my dad’s age.”

So I asked, “Do I get a senior discount?”

“At Denny’s!” she said.

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Menagerie A Trois

CIRCUS TENTS BY RIVER 1

By Don Kenton Henry 

The scene unfolded as Argo, The Strong Man, went looking for Bertha, the Fat Lady. The Fells-Floto Circus was camped on the banks of the Colorado River, just east of Austin, as it was each September during its six-day run. Argo rounded the corner exiting the arcade strip and walked past the Deep Fried Oreo booth when he ran into Curley, The Bearded Lady. “Say, Curley, have you seen Bertha?” 

“No, Argo, I haven’t.”

“Well, no one has seen her since last evening―which seems odd. As you know―she’s a little hard to miss! I need to talk to her about something.”

Just then they heard a commotion coming from the animal tent fifty yards ahead. A crowd of circus performers and roustabouts were gathered around the entrance. Argo and Curley jogged ahead to see the source of the morning gathering.

“What’s up?” Argo asked one of the carnies just inside the tent.

“One of the elephants died during the night inside the pen . . . and in a most peculiar position. He collapsed straight down with his legs splayed! One of the handlers told me they usually die on their side. It was Ernie. A young pachyderm in his prime. The circus vet is trying to determine why he died.”

Argo and Curley pushed their way through the onlookers to the edge of Ernie’s pen. The vet was performing a close inspection of Ernie’s eyes. They could overhear him saying to the ringmaster, “Based on the massive amount of ruptured capillaries, I suspect a stroke or possibly a severe heart attack. But it will take an autopsy to be certain. If we want that, we should have him transferred to the nearest veterinarian college. Where would that be?”

“Texas A&M in College Station,” said one of the handlers.

“Well, let’s get headquarters on the phone and see if they want to authorize that. And someone advise the head animal trainer he’ll be one elephant short for tonight’s performance.”

The call was placed, authorization was granted and a big rig with flatbed, small crane and lift was brought in to extricate Ernie from the tent. He would be hoisted on the flatbed and transferred to the veterinary college. The carnies were sent looking for the animal trainer as they were certain he would want to accompany Ernie on his one hundred mile “last ride”.

Argo, and most of the performers involved with the animals stood in a quiet state of mourning as chains were fastened around Ernie’s head so he could be elevated to a point a harness could be inserted around his midsection. Once the harness was attached by a chain to the crane, he could be hoisted onto the flatbed. Argo rested his massive forearms on the top rail of elephant corral and watched the process. He was greatly saddened to see such a magnificent and massive creature (which reminded him of himself) reduced to cargo for transporting. Then again, he supposed there was no delicate way to move seven tons of motionless meat, no matter how emotionally attached to it one might be.

Ernie seemingly came to life as his huge, magnificent head was raised. His trunk swung side to side and Argo anticipated he would emit a mighty trumpet at any moment. Instead, the attending audience let out a collective gasp followed by shrieks of horror. As Ernie floated higher his splayed legs came together and his chest rose off the ground. The spectator’s eyes widened and their mouths dropped in unison. There, beneath Ernie, was Bertha the Fat Lady. Face down. All knew it was Bertha because six hundred pounds of gelatinous white lady could only be the second biggest thing in the circus next to Ernie. And that was Bertha. To make the scene all the more bizarre and beyond belief was the equally undeniable and uncomfortable observation that she was naked as a jay bird! Now how does a six hundred pound naked lady get under a fourteen thousand pound elephant was the question all inquiring minds present at the scene were asking themselves. They looked about in each other’s eyes and asked that same question without saying a word. Crickets.

After what seemed an eternity, the veterinarian spoke and said what was also on everyone’s mind. “We’re gonna need a second crane.  . . . Oh yeah, and another phone call. This one to 911 and a coroner. Elephants are part of my job description but naked fat ladies flattened by them are not!”

Word spread quickly and the crowd grew ever larger. All came to gawk and, with their cell phones, take selfies―seemingly photo bombed by Ernie suspended over Bertha―as they awaited the arrival of Austin homicide. A twitter went out, “Brave new Fells-Floto circus act falls flat on Fat Lady. – #CircusSmore

Someone obviously tipped a news crew as a van from KVUE TV arrived just behind a series of patrol cars from Austin HPD. The crews immediately went to work filming as much of the scene as they could for a live feed before the police cordoned off the scene with yellow tape. Argo wondered if it was premature to deem it a crime scene or was it simply a tryst between two consenting large circus performers gone terribly wrong?

With the scene secured, the police stayed on the perimeter while the cameramen uploaded images of the breaking news coverage that had as many of the people in central Texas riveted to their television sets as during the Kennedy assassination a couple hundred miles up the road half a century earlier. And this mystery might be as difficult to solve as the former. Surely Director Oliver Stone would want a piece of this action!

Eventually, an unmarked, black SUV arrived and slowly maneuvered its way through the crowd to the yellow tape. Out stepped a statuesque man in a gray Silver-Belly Stetson and black, spit-shined Lucchese boots. He was unmistakable to the news crew. It was Detective Bonham Cartwright, Austin’s preeminent homicide detective, whose image had graced the cover of Texas Monthly magazine more times than Governor George Bush and Lady Bird Johnson combined. In typical fashion he slowly strode, dipped just under the yellow tape and drew himself up, processing what he saw. “What do you see here, Detective Cartwright? Is this a murder scene?” asked a pretty young female member of the news crew while thrusting a microphone over the tape in the direction of Cartwright’s set and rigid jaw. After a long moment of silence, he drawled in his thick East Texas accent, “Not unless you know someone strong enough to throw an elephant on top of a Fat Lady . . . young lady.”

      “I’m quoting you on that, Detective!” she squirmed with delight, beaming as though she had caught a big scoop.

“You do that, Missy,” said Cartwright without so much as turning to face her. “Let’s get some photos,” he said to the rest of his team. “Then let’s get these two love birds outta here and give them what little bit of dignity an absurd situation like this will allow.” The Travis County Coroner arrived and agreed this was the appropriate course of action as there was not much he could determine until he got Bertha back to the morgue and on a slab except that―he stated―”It doesn’t take someone with a medical license to determine it is difficult for anyone to breathe under a seven-ton elephant!”

     “I’m quoting you on that!” shouted the news anchor.

The photos were taken and police video recorded. All this none too early as the two decedents were getting a little gamey in the hot Texas sun as noon approached. Already in an apparent state of decomposition, our two performers began emitting the most noxious odors accompanied by equally offensive sound effects.

Ppppfffftttt . . .!” went Bertha.

Brrrruuuupppptttt . . .!” went Ernie.

Gaawwwddd, almighty!” went Detective Bonham Cartwright.

At this point, all but the most professional of the homicide squad withdrew to a safe distance. Once Ernie was safely squared away on the flatbed it was decided a crane would only be used as a backup, if necessary, to get Bertha on a stretcher. Or perhaps two stretchers. Instead, ambulance workers, with the assistance of a few police officers along with Argo (who was enlisted from the audience) gathered around her and reluctantly wrestled for a safe handhold. None to be found, they settled for what they could get and, on a count of three, lifted her as one. That’s when the other shoe dropped.

ELEPHANT DEAD 2

     “Well . . . sheeeeiiiitttt! If that don’t beat all!” Standing back about ten feet from Bertha and the boys, the normally quiet and poker faced Detective Bonham Cartwright took off his Stetson and said, “It looks like Bertha was just the cream in the Oreo! Who is the naked, little twit with the riding crop and pith helmet under her?”

The rest of the crowd could be heard gasping, “Well . . . . sheeeeiiiitttt!”

“That would be Valentino, the head animal trainer,” said one of the roustabouts. “That’s why we couldn’t find him!”

“Looks like we got us a ‘Menagerie a trois’ here, boys!” said Cartwright with uncharacteristic enthusiasm.

“It looks as though Don Juan has cracked his whip for the last time!” reported the intrepid news anchor.

The KVUE broadcast was picked up by all the National Evening News channels and “Little Missy” eventually won an Emmy for her “fearless” coverage of the incident. The next of kin were notified of the unfortunate demise of their loved ones and Little Missy attempted to interview all. Ernie’s relatives in India could not be reached for comment. Bertha’s parents asked that in lieu of flowers donations be made directly to Nutrisystem to the attention of Marie Osmond. As for Valentino, his only living next of kin was his widow, Sheena, the former Fells-Floto “Sword Swallower”. Her interview was conducted by telephone at her location on the set in Las Angeles where she was pursuing her new career in porn at the behest of her Ear Nose and Throat specialist. When confronted with the circumstances she exclaimed, “Wow! An elephant! That gives me a great idea for a script!”

     “I’m going to quote you on that, Sheena!” squealed Little Missy.

One year later . . . news leaked that Sheena’s screenplay, “Dumbo Does Dallas” was in the process of coming to the silver screen. That’s when boycotts by PEOPLE FOR THE ETHICAL TREATMENT OF ANIMALS brought filming to a screeching halt.

ELEPHANT PETA

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Ghost Ship

GHOST SHIP EDIT FOR BARD

By Don Kenton Henry

 

A man has to have worked very hard at being this alone

I am asked if this was always my plan

I reply, you mean to inhabit a one person home

To be an island unto myself , a solitary man

It took years to lose the people, friends, pets, lovers and dreams my neglect has cost

Life’s not a ship that goes down with all hands lost

Rather, one by one they disappeared over the side

And were singularly swept away with the tide

 

I stand tied to the broken mast of a ghost ship adrift

In the dire straits of the Sea of Regret

Lift me up mother wind, lift me up in your arms, carry me home

But no wind, no breeze and no moon appear to see me there

Just the gray fog of missed chances for which to atone

Children at home and lingering romances that weren’t

So many smiles squandered through the miles, precious moments spent alone

 

I remember what I beg to forget

And forget the feel of things I love to remember

Kisses in June, Dances in December

Memories of the worthy, so easily I dismissed, swirl in the wake of my ghost ship adrift

Oh, how they tried to climb aboard when southern winds filled my sails

But I had new shores to discover and they were lost in the wake of my young sleek seaworthy clipper

And now, far behind they swirl in the eddies and backwater of time

In the wake of my ghost ship adrift

There you will find them . . .

Lovers with arms outstretched, grandpas and grandmas standing in doors

Mom’s house for the holidays

So many knew those were last good-byes . . . so many but I

The scents of ginger bread, warm candles, burning leaves and puppy breath

Perfume on a neck

The sight of more newborn children to replace the vision of old ones in bed for the last time

Then lost to time

 

Ah, to have sailed so far alone, now a fool tied to the mast, albatross of misspent youth about my neck, no shore in sight

A life adrift in the night

When did I lose my compass

One more storm and take me to the deep

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Postscript: “I never let myself stay down too long. Under every rock of a bad day, there is an optimist waiting to get out.” Let this meme serve as a reminder:

GHOST SHIP IRISH MEME

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SHE ME US

A Flash Fiction By Don Kenton Henry

COTTAGE BY THE SEA 6

 

SHE

She does not come in a can off a shelf. Her gown has that “slightly worn” look but is not in tatters. She is comfortable with her femininity and not threatened by my masculinity. She is the summation of her mental, physical and spiritual self. She does not favor one to the detriment of the other. She engages me in these ways. She will get my attention with her good looks but will keep it with her sense of humor. She is passionate and playful, seeking merriment and mirth. She wants to learn the Lambada. She inspires me to leave poetry on her pillow. She prefers dogs but has a cat. She can cook but not in the kitchen. She knows I like it spicy. She is not opposed to spending the rest of her life laughing with her best friend. She wants to be my muse. She is ready to ride and can leave her figurative baggage at the train station. She sends a courier.

ME

My armor is a little rusty . . . a few dents here and there but . . . underneath, still the gentleman my grandmother encouraged me to be. I deliver merriment and mirth. Usually accompanied by melody, though not of my own. Unless she considers a poem. In which case I leave it on her pillow. I can wear black tie when not wrestling with her younger brother in the back yard. I long to do the Lambada on the banks of the Llano. Her ex-boyfriend hates me. Her mother loves me. I make her laugh sometimes until she wets herself. Though I prefer dogs, I pretend to like her cat because of her redeeming qualities. I send her love letters written in long hand. I need a muse. I tender a note sealed in wax from the hand of a courier. My horse leaves at 8.

US

This tale continues in a house on a beach . . . I’m in my study looking out over the water, writing my novel. My old dog is at my feet. She comes home after practicing brain surgery or putting in a long shift at Wal-Mart. Our grown children send us letters in long hand. As night falls, the sea wind blows through the open French doors and windows of our bedroom and the white linen curtains caress her face and back. My hands follow their lead. The moonlight reflects across her breasts. The moon smiles and our breath becomes one with the wind. It is carried across the sea where, somewhere, in a far, far away land, another breathes it in and kisses his lover.

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The Midnight Farmboy

(Plagiarismeven regarding a titleis not my style. But when life imitates art to this degree . . . Well, hell . . . sometimes you just have to commit the crime.)

By Don Kenton Henry

The red, white and chrome Continental Trailways bus wound southbound down that ribbon of Highway 59 ensconced in the darkness of the piney woods of east Texas. Head lights of the coach lit the road ahead and stars lit the clear night sky I gazed upon, my head propped against the window in the forward most seat across from the driver. In the terms of the Louis L’Amour paperback on my lap, Houston was about a two day horse ride ahead . . . or about forty five minutes at the rate we were traveling.

CONTINENTAL TRAILWAYS BUS TO DALLAS

It would be my third time to Space City. I had first visited with my family during spring break of my eighth grade. We toured the Astrodome. The second time had been going north on the bus ride home to Finn’s Landing, Indiana. I changed buses in Houston coming and would do so going. It was New Year’s Day 1971. My journey had begun two weeks earlier in McAllen, Texas and that’s where it was scheduled to end. Three hundred fifty miles further south, in the Rio Grande Valley, in a place where pine trees would be replaced with palms. I was sixteen years old, an age many might consider young to be making a three thousand mile trip by bus unaccompanied by an adult. But it was a safer time, or what many believed, a safer time. And in certain terms for me . . . a more innocent time. Besides, beggars can’t be choosers. And that is exactly what I had done. I had begged to go home. Begged to visit my mom and family. Begged to visit the girl back home. Begged to escape the culture shock of being a kid from the Midwest who stuck out like an Indiana cornstalk in a field of Valley melons. I had no one to blame but myself as I had seemingly gone out my way to get myself in the position I was in. I had already be expelled from two high schools when my mother took a second mortgage to cover the tuition of the military academy she sent me to in early November. Three short weeks later I was expelled from there and―with no other options available to her (as I was not yet old enough for the United States Marines to whom my maternal grandfather wanted to consign my care)―she shipped me off to my father in McAllen. I will not distract you with all the reasons I was expelled from schools except to say I was an incorrigible and borderline felonious prankster suffering an acute case of small town boredom and inspired by the same curiosity which killed the proverbial cat. My psychiatrist said, in spite of my high IQ, I was a dumbass. And as to why my mother was reluctant to send me to live with my father, I will only say the same could be said for my father as said for me except that his behavior exceeded any borders and was more convenient, enabled and enhanced by living on the border and channeling Pancho Villa in weekend raids into Mexico for booze,  what, on this side, would have been prescription drugs and a lifestyle which would have made Hemingway blush. Given all the disappointment and accompanying expense I had generated, precipitating my predicament, none felt me deserving of the airfare for a plane ride home for the Christmas holiday. But, such was the degree of my contrition, my mother sprung for the bus fare.

In spite of his rapscallion ways, on the rare occasions of his sobriety, my father honestly was capable of tendering the responsible kind of advice a parent typically offers one’s child. “Now, Junior. Your bus is going to be stopping in a lot of towns, big and small, on the road to Indiana and back . . . and sometimes in the middle of the night. I know you think you got the whole goddamn world figured out but it’s obvious you don’t or you wouldn’t be taking the fucking bus in the first place. So when it stops in a station, I want you to either keep your ass on the bus or make a quick trip inside to take a piss―or whatever―or― if you have to change buses―to keep your ass inside that station until you board the next fucking bus. Is that damn fucking clear?” And, over the phone, my mother said the same thing. “Now, Donnie, I’m worried about you. You’re only sixteen years old and those are big cities, Louisville, Little Rock and Memphis, you’ll be going through. So please―for safety’s sake―promise me you won’t leave the bus stations at any time, day or night! I pray . . . do you understand what I’m saying?”

“Yes,” I assured them both. And I meant it. And, as they hoped, the trip up had been uneventful. I was certain the return trip would be also but was cognizant and proud of the more confident and experienced world traveler I had become.

I had left Finn’s Landing the day before, on New Year’s Eve. My mom and my best friend had taken me to the bus station to see me off.

DON KENTON HENRY 1970 BARDDON KENTON HENRY PRIOR TO DEPARTURE 12.31.70

Through the window of the bus I watched my mom wipe her eyes with a kerchief she kept specifically for the times we shared together. As we pulled into the street for my long ride back to Texas, a light snow fell from a gray Indiana sky. Now, evening the next day, the highway signs indicated we were only one hundred, seventy-five, fifty then twenty-five miles from Houston. I sat straight up in my seat peering ahead down the highway while most of the passengers slept. I had already napped a good portion of the day’s trip and was wide awake and excited about the prospect of seeing the big city once again. As we neared closer and closer the lights of Houston loomed larger and brighter through the bus’s big windshield. The skyscrapers were lit up and the view reminded me of the one Dorothy saw as she Toto and the gang skipped along the road to OZ.  Magical. Alluring. Drawing me closer to the infinite and wondrous possibilities my imagination indulged me. Not that I intended to partake of any of them. Just imagining them was exciting enough. As we entered the outskirts of the city I leaned forward in my seat. My eyes widened as the buildings loomed taller and the lights burned brighter. I could hardly contain myself as we approached and the bus took a long curving exit ramp into downtown. Why was everyone else not awake taking it all in, I thought. It was Friday night and, even though it was almost eleven at night, the city was alive with activity. From my view high above the street, I could look down inside all the fancy cars with beautiful women in the passenger seats, their jewelry reflecting the light of street lamps and neon. Billboards offered suggestions of things and a life of which I could only dream. How lucky people were to live in a city like this.

The bus slowly traversed the streets and intersections of downtown making its way to the bus station. I gazed at the seemingly endless blocks of restaurants, pawn shops and night clubs. A person could eat in a different restaurant every day of his life here and never try them all. Of course, it would have taken more than the twelve dollars I had left in cash in my pocket from the two tens my mom stuffed there the day before.

We pulled in the station amidst other buses coming and going from all points of the nation’s compass. The Houston Continental Trailways bus station at 1114 McKinney Street was a crossroads for the south in the forties through the seventies. Before air travel became affordable, there was hardly a southern girl bound for fame and fortune in Hollywood or a Texas farm boy bound for war or coming home from one that didn’t stop there. And that’s where this kid with Indiana hay seeds in his hair found himself.

 CONTINENTAL TRAILWAYS BUS STATION HOUSTON TEXAS 1950SHouston, Texas Continental Trailways Station at 1114 McKinney St. and San Jacinto, Circa 1970

First on, and first off, I took my place next to the bus and waited for the driver to open the horizontal door to the luggage compartment between the front and rear wheels. My two, by three, by one and a half tan, heavy duty fiberboard foot locker with a brass latch and lock and brown leather handles on each end stood out among the rest and the driver tossed it off first. It was too cumbersome and heavy to carry and most everything I owned was in there. It’s not that it was much. At sixteen you don’t own much. At least not back then. It wasn’t like I could get a bicycle in that foot locker. It held my clothing, pictures of my girlfriend and family, along with a favorite book or two. I had dragged it with me from my home in Finn’s Landing, to my grandparent’s when I attended high school number two. Then to military school, to Texas, back home and to Texas once again. I wish I’d a gotten a sticker to slap on that trunk. One for every little town, city and place it went with me. You know, like the immigrants and rich folks who brought their belongings in steamer trunks back and forth across the Atlantic and pasted labels bearing the names of exotic places like London, Paris and New York. Mine would read Howe Military Academy, Gnaw Bone, Evansville, Paducah, Buck Snort, Arkadelphia and Texarkana.

I picked my trunk up by the leather handle on one end and dragged it through the boarding doors of the station into the lobby. I immediately stopped and processed the sheer number of travelers amassed in a venue far too small to accommodate them. It was, after all, New Year’s Day and I wasn’t the only one returning home from visiting family for the holidays. The room was filled to standing room only capacity with people holding children and carryon bags. They were standing next to each other, tired and weary, most simply wanting to get safely home and rest before the work week began. I dragged my foot locker to the departure board and saw that my bus to McAllen, by way of Corpus Christi, did not depart until 4 a.m. That gave me four and a half hours waiting in the hot and crowded lobby imbued with the scents and complete sensory experience that comes with sharing a confined place with diesel fumes, tobacco smoke and fellow travelers, some of whom had not showered or had a change of clothes in three days. What would I do to pass the time but sit on my locker and read a little more L’Amour. Before resigning myself to that, I made my way to a wall of windows bordering the street and from there assessed the situation. It was, eleven thirty and I could see the street was still alive with traffic and the sidewalk with people. I also knew there must be a lot to see beyond the station door. I know I had promised my parents I would not leave a station but this was the last stop with a layover before arriving at the trip’s end the next day.  Besides, I had been good so far. In fact, I had almost kept a promise to my parents for once. I thought to myself, “What harm would it do to just take a walk on the street to see what was out there? But what do with my locker in the meantime?” I went back to luggage check-in, in an attempt to check my foot locker but was told I could not do so until 3 a.m., three hours prior to departure and an hour and a half from now. I could hardly lug it down the street with me. I stood there for what became obvious to me was a waste of my young life until I noticed a large mass of people congregated in the middle of the lobby beyond strays like myself outside the herd. I deposited my book inside the locker and, with it in tow, made my way to edge of the crowd. I nudged in far enough to see that, like settlers circling the wagons, they had given up holding their luggage and had placed it in the center among that of other travelers. They were now free to stand back, relaxed and unencumbered but still able to observe their items. “Hmmm . . .” I thought. “All I have to do is place my foot locker among their luggage, retreat to the crowd and watch for five minutes and no one will remember I am associated with it. I can then withdraw from the scene and look for a storage locker in which to place my own, secure it and, key in hand, go into the street for a little tour.” This I could do knowing my belongings were safe. And so I did. According to plan, I waited then slowly backed out of the throng of people to the walls of the station in search of a locker. To my disappointment, every locker in the station was occupied. A key extending from a lock was the indication the space was available. And not one was visible. What could I do. I made my way back to the inner circle of people and could see my foot locker remained untouched. Now, I wouldn’t want to go out and for any extended stay or adventure but what if I simply left it for ten or fifteen minutes on  a short reconnaissance mission. Surely, under those circumstances, no one would notice that I, the owner, was not present. Surely, it would be safe. Secure with that thought, I again backed away from the crowd and made my way to the door. I opened it and stepped into the streets of Houston, at that time, the fifth largest city in the country. Immediately my ears were filled with the sounds of car horns and distant sirens and my lungs filled with what, even in January, was humid, Gulf Coast air. Not knowing where to begin, I thought to walk around the block and began by turning left. This took me to what I now know to be Fannin Street. There was a jewelry store on the corner and I gazed in awe at the items on display.

CONTINENTAL TRAILWAYS JEWELRY STOREContinental Trailways hostess of sixties on their FiveStar Luxury Service, running from Dallas to Houston, gazes in the window of the jewelry store around the corner from the station on Fannin Street.

They were nothing like the high school class rings and Timex watches in the window of Fitzgerald’s back in Finn’s Landing. “Somebody would have to be a movie star to afford this stuff,” I thought. I walked on past pawn shops and window after window filled with neon lights advertising everything from liquor and dancing to adult porn. I caught a reflection of myself in the glass, my mouth agape. Embarrassed, I straightened myself and attempted to look more adult like. I was just about at the end of the first block, and at a total loss as what to do for the next three and a half hours, when I spotted a movie theater’s lights flashing brilliantly. Encouraged, I jogged to its marquee. Much to my delight, it was showing a James Bond triple feature! And it was only $1.50 admission! Why, I could see at least one and half or more movies and make it back to on time to catch my bus. But what to do with my luggage. Surely I didn’t want to leave it unattended that long. I rushed back to the station.

As I reached to open the door, a tall man standing just inside opened it for me. He had seen me coming and politely paid me this courtesy. I said thank you and rushed past him to make certain my foot locker was where I had left it. To my huge relief, it was. But this didn’t solve the problem of what to do with it. I again searched for an empty storage locker and, again, found none. Once more, I assumed my position in the crowd, arms crossed across my chest, contemplating a solution.

“Those are some pretty big shoes you’re wearing, son. Do you play football?”

I looked up to my right, directly next to me, almost pressed against me in the crowd. It was the man who had held the door open for me. He was about 6’3″, a good two or three inches taller than myself, medium build and between thirty and forty years of age. He was neatly dressed. In fact, very neatly by bus station standards. He wore a light blazer of gray and tan, small checkered fabric over a crisply starched shirt with an open button-down collar. I stepped to my left a little to create some space between us and, as I did, I quickly looked him up and down. In addition to the blazer and shirt he wore black dress pants pressed with a sharp crease and black dress shoes that appeared to have been spit shined. He had the bearing of a military man and looked like the school principals at the high schools I had attended. All four of them. “Why yes, sir. I do play football.”

“I thought so, he said, continuing to size me up. “What position?”

“Quick tackle.”

“Quick tackle? Well, you have the shoulders for it. Where do you play?”

“Mac High, McAllen, Texas,” I answered.

“Awww . . . the Bulldogs.”

I was a surprised. “You know McAllen?” I asked.

“I used to get around the Valley a lot. Is that where you are headed? Headed home I bet.”

“Yes, sir. I live there with my Dad now. But I was back home visiting my mom and family.”

He asked my name and a lot of questions about my family and Indiana but always brought the conversation back to football and asked if I had seen the day’s bowl game scores. I told him, no, that I’d been on the bus all day. He said that Notre Dame had upset Texas, the previous year’s National Champions,  24 – 11. At the same, Notre Dame had gotten revenge for last year’s Cotton Bowl loss. I had grown up fifty five miles south of Notre Dame University. “Well, those boys on the McAllen winter football team are going to want to take that out on me when I get back to McAllen,” I said with a grin. He laughed at that and carried the conversation. Uncertain about him at first, I began to relax. Consistent with my first impression of him, I came to perceive him as a football coach or teacher. He was articulate and confident. He smiled easily.

“Say, I couldn’t help but see you come in off the street. In fact, I saw you leave the station. What were you looking for out there?”

“Well, sir, I have never been in a big city like this without my parents so I thought I would just do a little exploring and see what was out there. You know, see if I could find something to do until my bus leaves for the Valley.”

“And what did you find?”

“Well, I saw a lot of fancy stores but they were all closed. But (my eyes must have widened a little and I know I was I was grinning as I told him with no small amount of excitement in my voice) I found a James Bond triple feature! And I figure if I go there I can see a lot in the next three hours before my bus leaves!”

He pulled back, squared up and, looking down at me, said, “Son, you mean to tell me that you come from small towns like McAllen and Finn’s Landing and you find yourself in the largest city in the South and the best you can come up with to do is go to a James Bond triple feature?” He laughed heartily and incredulously as he said this.

My smile dropped and I felt my face flush. “Well, sir, I am only sixteen years old and there’s only so much I can do at age sixteen.”

“Sixteen! Why I thought you were older than that! Hmmm  . . . well let me see. I know a lot of people.” He seemed to be giving something a lot of thought. “Say, what if instead of coming to Houston, Texas and seeing a movie, the next time you came through here you could put a quarter in the phone and call somebody your age? They could come down here and pick you up and you could have some friends to hang out with while you were in town. How does that sound?”

“Gee, I guess that sounds pretty good. Who are you talking about?”

“There are a lot of nice young people your age who live where I live and, in fact, one of them, a nice, pretty German girl is having a party at her place tonight. It’s probably just getting really going right about now! How’d you like me to take you there and introduce you to these kids?”

“Well . . . that would be pretty cool. But what am I going to do about my foot locker there?” I asked him pointing toward it.

“Let me worry about that.”

He made a bee line to my trunk, picked it up by both handles and carried it through the crowd. I followed right behind him as he went to the luggage counter and threw my trunk on it. “I want to check this in to 3:30 bus to Austin, ” he told the clerk.

“Wait!” I exclaimed, “I’m not going to Austin! My bus leaves at 4:00 to Corpus!”

He turned around, put his hand on my shoulder, leaned in, and, lowering his voice, said, “Listen, Don. We can’t check it in to Corpus Christi for another half hour. Don’t worry. We’ll be back in plenty of time for you to give him the ticket, he’s about to give us, and reclaim your trunk in time to get it on your bus to Corpus.” And with that, he paid the clerk, who gave him a yellow ticket, and put my trunk on a rack behind the counter. Handing the ticket to me and said, “Follow me.”

I followed him through the crowd, through the station door and onto the sidewalk where he immediately hailed a yellow cab. It pulled to the curb and he opened the back door and told me to get in. Shutting the door behind me, he climbed into the front seat next to the driver, gave the driver an address to which I paid no attention and we were off. I watched where we were going, more out of curiosity than anything, but within minutes had no idea where the station was from that point. It was now past midnight and, with little traffic, we traveled quickly. Within ten minutes, we had left downtown proper and, in another five, had entered a residential neighborhood. We pulled up outside a relatively small, older, three story brick apartment building. There was a palm tree in the front yard. We got out, he paid the driver and I followed him to the entrance leading directly into a hallway with doors to each unit. It was well lit, clean and all was quiet as we headed to a stairwell in the center of the floor. It was dead quiet. There was certainly no party going on, on the first floor. I followed him up the stairs to the second floor where there was something of platform we had to traverse to the stairs to the third floor. There was nothing but silence on the second floor. “The party has to be on the third floor,” I thought.

I followed him up the third and last flight of stairs and we exited onto the floor. Again, dead silence. No music. No laughter. Not the sound of a voice. Just total quiet. I followed him to a corner unit not twenty feet from the stairwell. “I don’t hear anything. I can’t hear any party going on,” I said, as he stopped at the door and removed a key chain from his pocket. “This is a nice place. People are respectful. I live in this apartment. I want to get some things to take to the party.” With that he opened the door and motioned for me to go in ahead of him. I did, and turned as he entered and closed the door. There was a dead bolt lock on the inside and he took a key, locked it and put the keys back in his pocket. It occurred to me that I was locked in but I determined that as this was a big city―it probably had a lot of crime―and one couldn’t be too safe. I would do the same, I thought. The apartment was small and dimly lit. He brushed past me and within three steps we passed a short hallway leading to a bathroom on the left and very small kitchen across from it. This put us on the edge of his living room. It was no more than about eight by ten feet. He paused and pointed to an orange vinyl sofa along the left wall. The middle, bottom cushion had a long horizontal tear in it with dingy white cotton stuffing sticking out. He pointed at it and told me to have a seat. I took a seat on the far end against the wall. “Let’s get going to the party. I don’t have a lot of time before my bus leaves,” I told him.

“Patience, kid. I’m just going to get a few things and we’ll go down there.”

I looked about as he entered the bathroom and, having left the door open, I heard him brush his teeth. Next, I heard him gargle. He gargled in earnest and for what seemed an inordinately long period of time. I think it was somewhere, just prior to his spitting in the sink, a sense of uneasiness began to come over me. When he spit, it enveloped me.

He re-entered the living room and, before he could sit down or say anything, I asked him, “Could we please get going to the party!”

“Easy, kid. Let me call down there and see what she needs us to bring.” With that, he made his way to a black rotary dial phone on a stand across the room from the sofa. He picked up the receiver and dialed some numbers. I couldn’t hear a thing but he looked toward the ceiling and appeared to be waiting for an answer. Finally, he put the receiver down. “There’s no answer. They must have gone out to get some more things to eat or drink. We’ll just wait  a little while. I’m certain they’ll be back soon. He then took a seat at the opposite end of the sofa from me, leaving the torn seat cushion between us.

I did not at all like that we were not going immediately to the party. Something was just not right about that. I sat rigid with my hands on my knees. He leaned forward and slightly in my direction and, as he leaned, he reached to a shelf under a coffee table and grabbed a pile of magazines. As he withdrew them, he slid a little closer to me and placed them on my lap. I looked down.

“Take a look at these kid. These should get you in the mood for that cute little German girl I’m going introduce you to. I focused on the cover of the top magazine. It took some moments to appreciate what I was seeing as I had never seen an image like the one that appeared there. In black and white was something entirely foreign to a sixteen year existence shaped by an insulated small town upbringing and alternating indoctrinations in the Presbyterian and Church of Christ. It was certainly nothing like the crusty Playboy that made it around the barracks at the military academy. I felt a wave of revulsion wash over me. Apparently, I had skimmed over Galatians in bible study and, thankfully, that was probably because it wasn’t illustrated with pictures like these. The scene was of every possible sexual combination of men with women, women with men, men with men, women with women, of every race and color in every possible combination of copulation, penetration and―for the introvert in the corner―masturbation. I felt the blood run from my head. He scooted a little closer as he asked, “What do ya think of that, kid? Does that do anything for you?”

“No. No that doesn’t do anything for me,” I said. “Look, could you please call the girl and see if we can go.”

“Would you relax. I just called!”

Now I was scared. I wanted to stand but I was frozen. He reached and turned the cover, and a page or two, to one with a photo of a woman giving oral sex to a man endowed with nothing like I had ever seen in the junior high locker room.

“How ’bout that!”

“No.” It was all I could manage to say.

He moved even closer. Now he had covered most of the distance of the middle cushion and leaned against my right shoulder as he turned to another photo. My knees began to shake. I tried to stop them by holding them tight with my hands but now my hands were starting to tremble and the harder I tried to stop them both from shaking the harder they shook. He kept turning pages and asking the same question. Then, getting more specific, “Does that make your dick hard, kid? C’mon, tell me. I know it’s gotta make your dick hard!”

“No. No, it doesn’t,” was all I could manage.

My mind raced. What had I gotten myself into. All my parent’s nightmares were materializing and I was in the middle of the worst of them. With no idea where that was except Houston, Texas. And my parents had no idea where I was. And no one at the bus station knew where I was. If this was going where I ingeniously realized it was going, and I refused him, all he had to do was get up and go the kitchen around the corner, come back with a butcher knife―or worse―go to the bedroom and get a gun and he could kill me. All they might find of me would be my foot locker unloaded and waiting on the bus station luggage dock in Austin one hundred sixty miles west of my last scheduled stop. My mother would never be the same. I had read about people like this but never believed they really existed. Long before Cold Case Files became a TV series . . . I realized I could become one.

I had to get out of there. But how to do it. First I would have to steady myself but now my entire legs were shaking so hard I couldn’t stand. I tried but they just wouldn’t respond. My knees were literally knocking. Even if I could stand and run, the deadbolt on the apartment door was locked and the key was in his pants pocket. I had to make a decision. I knew I would not let him touch me. I could not consider a man touching me in a sexual way. I could not live with the memory of that. I could not live with myself. I would let him kill me before I gave into that. I saw one possible solution short of that. There was an approximately four foot high by six foot wide window on the wall opposite me. Under it was the phone, on the stand, and a small wooden dining table to the right with a two foot gap between. If he came at me with a knife or gun, I would run and dive straight through that window and take my chances with the three story fall before I would allow this man to compromise me. I was committed to that as I am to each breath I now take.

His questions about this photo or that photo had taken on a frustrated, almost angry tone, when he made his final move. He slid hard to the left, directly against my right side. He pressed his shoulder hard into mine and his leg against my leg,  forcing it inward. There was nowhere to go. My left shoulder was up against the wall. Then he reached with his big paw of a left hand, grabbed my right knee from above and squeezed hard. Very hard. The message was clear. He was tired of fooling around with some nervous kid. “C’mon, kid. I know your cock has to be hard by now. Let me feel it! I’m gonna feel it now!”

A switch flipped. A switch flipped and it was like a bolt of lightning shot through me. I grabbed his hand with my right and crushed it. I could feel his knuckles folding over each other as I squeezed. Never letting go, I shot straight up taking hand and arm with me. My legs no longer shook but felt like might oaks as I spun on the ball of my right foot to face him. I held his hand and arm fully extended above his head then slammed them down in his lap. I leanded directly into his face. I could feel my teeth bared like a wolf’s and in a slow growl I said, “Now you get in your pocket . . . and you get that key out. You go straight to that door . . . and you let me out of here!” Then―practically screaming―added, “Do you understand!” His eyes got wide and he flushed white. I felt I could strangle him and he sensed it.

“Ok, kid! … Ok, kid! I understand! Calm down! I’ll get the key out.” I took a step back and he rose to his feet and, as though in slow motion, reached his right hand into his pocket. He brought it out holding the key. I stepped aside and motioned to the door, “Now open the damn door!”

He began walking slowly toward it. “Faster! Faster!” … I thought. Would he really unlock the door or gather his courage, spin on me and make me fight him. I was ready. I stayed one foot behind him and had he started to turn I would have jumped on his back. But he moved to the door. His hand raised the key toward the dead bolt. The second dragged on like hours until the key stuck in the lock. It seemed like there was a pause and I prepared to go for the key. But slowly it turned. I could hear the tumblers. Then he let go and turned the knob of the lock, reached for the door knob, turned it … and the door opened. It was only a crack but when I saw the bright light of the hallway I jumped around him, shouldered him aside, shot my hand through the door and flung it open as I ran toward the stairwell. I hit it flying and practically sailed to the second floor. I crossed the platform and started clearing multiple steps. Just as I hit the first floor, I heard him and looked up to see him leaning over the rail of the third floor. “I’m sorry, kid! I didn’t mean to scare you . . . ”

“You fucking pervert!” I yelled. I wanted at whole building to hear me. “If I’d known you were a pervert―I never would have come here!”

“Yeah? Well someday somebody’s gonna get in your pants, kid!”

“Yeah―and when they do―it’s gonna be a girl!” And with that I shot through the doors of the building and wind sprinted the next two blocks before slowing down. I looked over my shoulder to make certain he wasn’t coming after me. And there I was. On a dark street in a place that seemed a million miles from the bus station. Not knowing which in direction I just kept walking straight ahead, looking behind me every twenty feet or so. I walked and caught my breath. Soon, I could see a well lit area about three blocks ahead. It turned out to be an elevated freeway. Getting closer, I could see the lights of an Exxon station under the freeway on the opposite side. All I needed to do was get there, call a cab and get back to the bus station.

(Now, my friend, I know you’re probably thinking this adventure ends here. How naïve of you.)

I had no change for a pay phone. I would have to get change. I continued to walk toward the Exxon station and, as I got closer, I could see the interior was well lit. This was good because that meant it was open and there would be an attendant on duty. 1971 was before self service and, if a station was open, there was always someone there to pump your gas. I would need him to get in the register and break a dollar. As I got to the edge of my side of the freeway I had a clear view and could see the attendant leaning back, his feet propped up on a desk. Checking for what little traffic there was at this time of night, I jogged across into the parking lot of the station and through the front door. It was a young man (probably mid to late twenties) behind the desk and, “Boy!” was I glad to see him. He perked up, took his feet off the desk and sat straight up looking me in the eye. Somewhat breathless and, I am certain, wide eyed, I walked to edge of the desk, produced a dollar from my wallet and asked him, “May I please have some change for the pay phone?”

A smile crossed his face as he leaned forward. “We don’t have a pay phone,” he  answered.

“What! You don’t have a pay phone?  You have to have a pay phone! I have to call a cab and get back to the bus station or I’m going to miss my bus home. Please! You gotta have a pay phone!”

“What’s your name, boy?” he asked me.

“Don. Don is my name. Now, please tell me where I can find a pay phone and could you please give me some change?”

“I’ll tell you what, Don,” he said, “you just keep your money and go into the office right behind me. There’s desk in there with a phone on it and a phone book right next to it.”

A sense of relief came over me. Finally, I was getting somewhere. I walked to the door and entered into the back room of a well lit office. Sure enough, there was another black rotary dial phone and a giant Yellow Page directory next to it. I thumbed through it for cabs, then taxis and went straight to Yellow Cab. I glanced at the round clock on the wall above the desk. It was 2:10 so I had an hour and twenty minutes before my luggage departed the station ahead of me and in the wrong direction. That should be plenty of time I thought. I dialed the number and the dispatcher picked up. “I need a cab. I need a cab to take me to the Continental Trailways bus station, please.”

“The Continental bus station,” she confirmed. “And where will you be picked up?”

“At an Exxon station. An Exxon station next to a freeway.”

There was a long pause. Then she said, “Son, I’m going to need an address.”

“Yeah. Yeah, oh sure! Just a second. I’ll get you one.” I set the phone receiver down and ran through to door into the lobby. The young man grinned as he gave me the address. I went back and picked up the phone. “I’m at Montrose Boulevard and the Southwest Freeway.”

“Roger that. Exxon station at Montrose Boulevard and the Southwest Freeway. I’ll send a cab. It could take up to half an hour or more.”

“Half an hour! Oh, no. I have to catch my bus!”

“I’m sorry son, but at this time of the night … that’s the best I can do.”

I hung up the phone and began to feel a sense of panic once again. “At least I wasn’t about to be molested,” I thought, in an attempt to calm myself. That’s when I turned around and saw him standing behind me. The attendant had managed to enter the room and close the door without me even knowing. He was in my path and I just looked at him. “So your cab won’t be here for at least half and an hour, is that right?”

“Yes. That’s right.”

“Well, it’s the weekend and a half hour gives us time to party,” he said, as he moved around me and plopped into the leather seat behind the desk, rolled back and opened a drawer and reached in. “Ok, I thought, “What’s he got in there? Is this where the gun comes in?” His hand came out and he was holding a fifth of Jack Daniels.

“What a ‘ya say you and me have some of this and get to know each other, kid?”

“Oh, no!” I thought. “What’s wrong with this town? Is everybody a pervert!”

“No thanks, sir,” I told him, “I’ll just stand outside on the corner and wait for my cab.” And I bolted out the room, the station and across the parking lot to the corner. I stood under a street light on the feeder and Montrose Boulevard. And waited. Every once in awhile I looked over my shoulder and the attendant, with his feet once again propped up on the desk, would smile real big and wave me in. I quickly turned my eyes back to the streets and looked for my cab. Time seemed to drag on forever. Once I got back to the station it would take some time to get my trunk out of baggage check and get it on the right bus. I waited nervously . . . and waited. Three times a car pulled over and some young man or middle age guy would ask me if I wanted a date. (I did not know it at the time, but would subsequently learn, I was standing on a corner, under a street lamp, at 2 something in the morning, in the second largest gay community in the United States, “Montrose”.)  “A date! No, I don’t want a date!” I said with little semblance of composure. At last, a streak of yellow flew by me and I jumped into the street, thinking he had missed me. Then he slammed on his brakes, did a u-ey, accelerated toward me and slid the driver side of his tires right against the curb. Fortunately, I had jumped back on the sidewalk in the nick of time.

(Once again, I bet you think this story is basically said and done here, don’t you? Read on.)

“Boy, am I glad to . . . ” my words trailed off as I peered in at the driver. The biggest afro I have seen, before or since, sat atop the head of a giant, shirtless Mandingo warrior. I know, once again, my mouth was agape. This dude was in his prime. I would say he was in his late twenties to thirty years of age. His hugely muscular arm rested on the frame of his open window. His wrist bore a beaded bracelet, every finger rings and multi-colored love beads draped his neck and lay against the black, tight curls of the chest hair carpeting his pectoral muscles. (You have to remember this was 1971. It was the height of the “black pride” movement and this cat was workin’ it better than Shaft.)

“You the kid going to Continental bus station?” he asked. I hesitated. I looked past him and saw a big machete blade on the seat directly next to his right leg, its point almost making contact with the radio of his cab. “Well, is you my ride or is you ain’t, kid?” He asked again. “Cause is you ain’t―I gots other rides to catch!” I looked back into the Exxon station. The attendant hoisted the bottle of Jack Daniels above his head and grinned. I concluded I would rather have my head cut off and shrunken than deal with that.

“Yes, sir. Yes, sir, I’m your ride. Please get me to the Continental Trailways station downtown. I have to get home!” I started to get in the back seat but the door was locked and he told me to get up front beside him. I slid onto the vinyl bench seat, closed the passenger door and hugged it. He put the car in gear and burned rubber taking off. We drove along and I could not take my eye off the machete. Eventually, I assured myself this guy would not decapitate me and shrink my head as it was the pygmies of New Guinea that did that kind of thing  and, for certain, this guy was no pygmy. He was at least six five and that might have qualified him as a Watusi but not a pygmy. His taxi id identified him as, Walt. I don’t recall his last name. “Walt The Watusi” is how I remember him.

“Whatcha’ doin’ away from the bus station at this time of night when you s’pposed to headed home, kid?” His tone was friendly. All that nervous energy was pent up inside me and I just opened up and told him the whole story.

“Man, you one stupid white kid, that’s all I can say. You is damn lucky!”

“Yes, sir. Yes, sir, I know that.”

We were back on the edge of downtown and, being about the only vehicle on the  street, were cruising along at a pretty good clip. I knew we couldn’t be more than five minutes from the bus station. That’s when we came to a slow stop. Not at a stop light. Not a corner. But in the middle of a long street. “Why are we stopping, here?” I asked.

“‘Cause we outta gas, kid.”

“Outta gas! How could we be outta gas!” I asked.

“Don’t worry about it, kid. I be right back.” And with that, he put the flashers on, jumped out the door and flagged down another Yellow Cab driving by and, jumping in its front seat, off they sped. Probably for what he thought was my safety more than his, he took his machete with him.

The clock on the cab’s dash said it was now 3:10. This left me twenty minutes to get back, retrieve my trunk before it was bussed to Austin and fifty minutes to catch my own. I peered down the street leading into the heart of downtown. I looked to my left and saw vacant lots where it appeared buildings had been torn down. Then I looked right and saw them. “Them” was about five or six black guys propped up against the side of a long white two story building. Four of them were seated and two standing. Semi-standing, anyway. They were passing a bottle or two between them. And then them saw me. That’s when the whistling started. I heard, “Hey, white boy!” and one of the two standing started making his way toward the cab. Even for January it was  a warm and humid night in Houston and my passenger window was down as well as the driver’s side. I quickly rolled mine up and locked the door, along with the back, and did the same on the driver’s side. Fortunately, my latest acquaintance of the evening, about to make his introduction, was stumbling at a rate slow enough to allow me time to do his. As I sat back straight up I heard him knock on my window. “Hey, white boy . . . you sure is cute. Yeah, you is!” I looked straight ahead not wanting to make eye contact. But then he tried to open my door and I couldn’t help but jump to my left and look at him. He couldn’t get in, of course, but that didn’t stop him from trying. He pressed his lips up against the glass and made like he was kissing me. I could hear his friends laughing hysterically. “C’mon on, fish. C’mon out and play wid us. We nice be to you. Dat’s a promise.” That’s when the his buddy stumbled out and climbed on to the hood of the car. I couldn’t stand to look and that’s when I noticed a folded evening addition of the Houston Chronicle. Walt had it opened to the sports section and the headline was “Irish Defeat Longhorns In Cotton Bowl.” I pretended to be absorbed with the statistics as Houston’s version of Welcome Wagon crawled around on the hood of the car and the Chairman of the Chamber of Commerce tried the remaining three doors of the cab before joining his friend on the hood. The latter appeared to be attempting to suck the antifreeze solvent out of the passenger side windshield washer port. “C’mon, sweet pea . . . you shoo is purty! Open up and share some hooch wid da brothas!” he said, coming up for air.

That’s when I again heard the sound of tires screeching to a halt and a car door slam. With a can of gas in one hand and his machete high above his head in the other, he charged the car, screaming, “Offa my cab, niggas or I’ll cut ya fuckin’ heads off!” (Later, in calmer moments, I would reflect . . . “So Walt does cut heads off after all.”)

I have to say, whether it sobered them or not, the boys on the hood acquired a new found spring in their step and beat a hasty retreat over the curb and back to their rightful place on the wall. Walt emptied the gas can into the tank, jumped in and didn’t say a word as he revved the engine, slammed the care in gear and raced toward the bus station. It took no more than three minutes at the 70 miles per hour I estimated we were traveling. I don’t think Walt ever came to a stop without sliding and that’s how he arrived at the station on McKinney. The meter had run to about fifteen bucks after sitting still on the street and I told Walt twelve dollars was all I had.

“Don’t sweat it, kid. We cool. Not everybody in Houston be bad. Dis here one’s on Walt.” And with that his radio squawked and he burned rubber into the night. I ran to the luggage counter waving my claim ticket as I went. I could hear the PA system announce, “Bus to Austin departing loading zone four in five minutes . . .”

“Oh no!” I thought, “My foot locker has probably already loaded on the wrong bus!”

I ran to the luggage counter, a look of panicked desperation on my face, and tendered my claim ticket to the clerk. He looked at me with a wry smile. It was the same clerk that had checked it in a few short hours earlier. He reached under counter and produced my trunk. He gave me a wink and said, “I held yours till last.” I took it from him and―suddenly able to carry it in both hands―ran to loading zone five where we would both soon be on the bus to Corpus. A few short minutes later, it was loaded and I took another seat next to a window. This time as far back in the bus as I could get.

CONTINENTAL TRAILWAYS LOADING ZONESContinental Trailways loading zones.

As the bus departed, the lights of the streets replaced those of the station’s boarding area but I couldn’t bear to look up or out. I could only see their illumination on the seat back in front of me. I felt dirty. I wanted to go home. I felt us come to stop after stop until there was a long period of acceleration and I knew we had entered the freeway and were headed south to Corpus Christi. “The Body of Christ”, I thought. “Our blessed father . . . thou hast delivered me from evil.”

When we had traveled continuously for some time, and the cabin darkened, I knew we were well on our way. Flat marsh land and prickly pear cactus told me I had escaped the dark and seedy experience that, for me, was Houston. “How could people live there? How could people live in big cities?” I thought. I could not wait to get back to my safe, small town in Texas and . . . maybe someday . . . to the one in Indiana.

*****************************************************************************************************************************************************

Postscript: Later, upon returning to Indiana, I read in the Indianapolis Star: “Dean Arnold Corll was a Texas serial killer who abducted, raped and murdered a minimum of 28 boys in a series of killings spanning from 1970 to 1973 in Houston, Texas.” The majority were found buried in the sand bottom of a boat shed on High Island Beach, Galveston Island. The crimes, which became known as the “Houston Mass Murders” were, at the time, considered the worst case of serial murder in America.

DEAN ARNOLD CORILDean Arnold Corll, shortly after his enlistment in the U.S. Military in 1964.

Based on a description of his behavior and documented residences (which were at least several miles from the Southwest Freeway in Houston) I do not believe he was one in the same with the individual who invited me to join him at a party hours post New Years Day 1971. Then again . . .

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A red-carpet ride courtesy of Continental Trailways

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1971_Cotton_Bowl_Classic

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dean_Corll

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THE BARD’S ROAD TO STURGIS 2015 . . .

BUCK DEPARTS FOR STURGIS

By Don Kenton Henry

I am on the road to South Dakota for the 75th Anniversary of the world’s most famous bike rally. Along the way I have met, and will meet, people from all over the world who have come to witness the spectacle that is “Sturgis”. Literally, it is a town that is less than 7,000 people the remainder of the year. But, during the seven days which comprise the rally, over half a million people will migrate to this sensory extravaganza. They come for a myriad of reasons not the least of which is the love of motorcycles. But not everyone rides here. They come for the sight of people liberated in their element and in awe outside of it. They come for the music, the roar of the pipes and the buzz of the crotch rockets; the over-the-top attire which includes more leather than that worn by any migratory herd of buffalo which once roamed the area—and sometimes consists of little at all. Well . . . you’ll see soon enough.

Me. I’m the Bard. I like to think of myself as a wordsmith. I was raised in the farm country of Indiana and have made my home in Texas most of my adult life. I am a mix of down home Hoosier, Midwestern values and Texas Pride. For the purpose of this blog you might call me, “Buck”, as good friends do when they are referencing my wilder side.  When I get to Sturgis that might sound relatively tame. That being the case, I think I might introduce myself as “American Mongrel”. After all, that’s what I am.

So what brings Buck, aka American Mongrel on a 21 day, 6,000 mile trip on an old school throwback—like myself—’99 Evo Harley Fatboy. She is the last of the carborated models. I refer to her as the “Freedom Ship”. That’s because she sails me away from my career and the desk to which I am tied most of the year and a lifestyle in which I am asked to conform and reluctantly oblige. It is a glass cage of convention. Thus—on this trip—on this 21 day escape—I am a refugee. A “Refugee from Convention”. Sturgis is a place and just one experience along the way. I come for the journey.

FREEDOM SHIP 1

I left Saturday, a week ago, shooting straight north through the 100 degree heat of Texas where Texians fought and died to establish a Republic free of dictatorial governance and where rugged independence was not only revered but mandatory. It was, and is still, a vast and grand place where once rode the infamous outlaw, John Wesley Hardin, taking lives by the dozen and pursued by the equally infamous Texas Rangers in hot pursuit.

I crossed the Red River into to Oklahoma, once known as “Indian Territory” and what became for many the end of the “Trail of Tears”. Here was the stopping point for what was left of the Cherokee, Comanche, Kiowa and other great Native American Nations decimated and forced into migration from their homelands by bullet and starvation in the name of Western Expansion. Otherwise known as genocide.

This took me into Kansas where pre-Civil War “jayhawkers” terrorized residents on both sides of the Kansas Missouri border for the stated cause of abolition. The ghosts of “Phog” Allen and Adolf Rupp still haunt the high school basketball gymnasiums of this state. It is a sport which brings welcome relief from the cold, hard winters here. But, on this trip, the plains I crossed were as hot as Texas and a strong head wind blew straight in my face as I crossed them. It was like someone blowing a hair dryer on full blast, high heat in my face and was like that all the way into “Colorful Colorado”.

At the border, I met Zach and Rachel who asked me to take their picture. They were college students destined for Yellowstone National Park (my fist big stop) after a stay in Estes Park, CO. As we parted I said, “See you in Yellowstone.”

ZACH AND RACHEL CO LINE

BUCK AT COLORADO LINE

From there I continued, stopping, as always, to fill my gas tanks, consume two liters of water and check messages on my iphone. One of the messages I received was from my very dear friend, Karen Beightol. She said I could visit but it would be about an hour detour off my path up and around Denver into Wyoming. I would have to travel through Denver. In rush hour. I responded, if I couldn’t take an hour out of my way, what kind of a friend was I. It was not only bumper to bumper stop and go traffic but in the same scorching heat I fought to this point. Still, I hadn’t seen her in 22 years and, as she was one of my first clients when I started in the insurance business back in Indy in the eighties (when the “bust” hit Texas), I feel a special affection for her.

When I broke free to the west side of Denver, I started climbing into the Rockies. The air began to cool and single dark clouds awaited over every other crest, sprinkling me with widely dispersed but large drops of mountain air-filtered rain. It gave my skin goose bumps and my face a smile.

I took a beautiful, incredibly winding road off the highway to Karen’s town of Central City. It took a while to find their business, “The Burger Joint” which she said you can’t miss. I finally found it on a bend in the road, just past the town center. It, like the entire town, has a wonderful past. The town was once the site of one of the biggest gold strikes of the 1800’s and became the home of people for all over the world seeking to strike it rich. I assume riches were not only quickly found but lost as well for gambling and gambling houses became ubiquitous. The “Joint” was no exception and was a casino during this period. It reeks of history and character.

I spotted Karen and her husband, Dave, up a hill and around a curve, rode up, got off and was greeted by both with welcome hugs. At some point—not long after—I came to realize Dave was also a long lost friend who had been Karen’s partner in her photography business in Avon, Indiana where I made a cold call in 1987. I about fell over to learn I knew him—as my memory is typically impeccable—but in my defense let’s just say . . . well—let’s just say Dave has slimmed down a little. He credited this change to a new healthful lifestyle which I am certain I correctly credit to Karen. She has always appreciated nature and respecting it and yourself. Evidence of this is the organic food and items they provide to travelers the world over. You can’t go around the bend in the road without seeing their place and the scents are certain to lure you in. They treated me to an Elk burger and an unbelievably rejuvenating organic drink whose name I cannot pronounce.

After posing for photos with each other and the Freedom Ship they bid me on my way and to my relief did not send me back through Denver.

BURGER JOINT

KAREN DAVE KENTON

Mercifully, they sent me on an exit through a canyon which would take me to Boulder and the freeway north toward Wyoming. As if seeing Karen and Dave weren’t compensation enough for the detour I had taken, the beauty of the canyon was exhilarating and validated my good sense in undertaking this long and sometimes arduous road trip. I wanted to get out of the canyon with its twisting steep roads before dark but the splendor behind each curve made that a formidable task.

CANYON PIC 1

CANYON PIC 3

CANYON PIC 4

To be continued . . .

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Life’s A Canvas Painted

SUNDAY SUNRISE FOR THE BARD

By Don Kenton Henry

 

Sun rise or sun set, it’s hard to know which is best

A day of honest labor, or one of rest

A day begun or day done, like a song to be written or a song sung

A spring breeze or a winter’s blast

A first love . . . or a last

Which would you choose

A life still young or the bountiful life of a well lived one

A passed test, or a failure’s lesson

Each day’s end can provide a different answer, each dawn a different mission

Each one a picture painted by two hands, one yours and one unseen

One sets the scene

One lives the dream

 

Life consists of broad brush strokes . . . graduations, war, peace, marriage, births of children, death of parents

Interspersed with deft dabs and flecks of tears and laughter

Life’s a song and you’re the dancer 

 

Take it, seize it

Grasp it, feel it

Live it honest and live it strong

Breathe life in and hold it long … for in one breath out, all will be gone

Life consists of measured brush strokes, a few bad choices and sometimes starting over

Two hands … one brush … one canvas

One life painted

 

Let the child live in a child’s world

Help him catch the frog and the pollywog

Tell him kiss the girl with the ribbon and curls

And tell him how you set all three free … when you were a lad as young as he

Let him play with the puppy and rest his tired head on the old dog

He’ll come to know each brings a separate treasure and, in these moments, his life will be measured

 

Take it, seize it

Grasp it, feel it

Live it honest and live it strong

Breathe life in and hold it long … for in one breath out, all will be gone

Life consists of measured brush strokes, a few bad choices and sometimes starting over

Two hands … one brush … one canvas

One life painted

 

And, in the end, you’ll ask yourself

Did my sun come up more than it went down

And did my life bring more smiles than it did frowns

And the answer to the first is … no greater than one more or less, one than the other

For that was played by the unseen hand

But the answer to the second shall be answered by others

Brothers, sisters, sons, daughters and lovers

And strangers benefited by unexpected of random acts of kindness

 

Take it, seize it

Grasp it, feel it

Live it honest and live it strong

Breathe life in and hold it long … for in one breath out, all will be gone

Life consists of measured brush strokes, a few bad choices and sometimes starting over

Two hands … one brush … one canvas

One life painted

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Better’n Bread ‘N Butter Pickles

BREAD AND BUTTER PICKLES 2

By Don Kenton Henry

Nothing but the sound of crickets rose above the corn in the mid-day sun that hot July. I’d shut my tractor down, taken my brown bag and thermos and left the field for the row of trees bordering the Wabash. That river cut right through grandpa’s one hundred twenty acres and the heart of Indiana. I lay on its bank in the shade of a sycamore focused on the sunlight streaming through lily pads at the river’s edge – a soft, green stage light on tadpoles dancing to the rhythm of its current just beneath the surface. Dragon Flies hovered in the sun above.

WABASH RIVER POSTCARD FOR FACEBOOK
My sandwich gone, I sipped mom’s sweet tea, head propped against a log and my Farmall hat pulled over my eyes. I dreamed of the coming weekend, town picnic and dance in the city park. 40 years later I still think of Sara, her hair all tied in yellow ribbons, sunlight streaming through her cotton dress, a soft and subtle stage light on her youthful form dancing just beneath the surface. We swayed to the rhythm of the music. In my young but callused hand, that dress felt as thin as the wing of a dragon fly.

 
When the sun went down, we slipped away to the grassy knoll above the ball diamond. I still see the stars reflected in her eyes as she gazed upward at the night sky. Lord she was better’n watermelon, sweet corn, burgers and granny’s bread n’ butter pickles straight from a Ball Jar on the 4th of July. That memory cuts right through 120 months of summer since and the heart of this ol’ Indiana farmboy.

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Excerpts from “A Phobia of Walls”

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