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It’s That Time Of The Year Again. Halloween . . . Time For Tragekitty

 CAT WITH BOMB 1

TRAGEKITTY “A classic case of trag-i-dip-i-ty: the occurrence and development of events by chance with tragic or CATastrophic consequences.”

By Don Kenton Henry

It is rare two seemingly unrelated incidents in time come together at precisely the same place such that the lives of all involved  – or in this case the lives–and–death of one – become inextricably entwined and forever changed. But on Halloween in the year of nineteen hundred and sixty-nine, not two but four incidents, each of which should have had no relation to each other, coincided in such a way that forty three years later some cannot yet speak of what came to pass. And Halloween each year, some cannot help but doing so. It is this tale true I tell to you. A classic case of trag-i-dip-i-ty: the occurrence and development of events by chance with tragic or catastrophic consequences. As a tribute to Rod Serling, I ask for your indulgence.

Bull and I decided this, our fifteenth pagan holiday, would be the time to pull off the greatest prank since Dr. Frankenstein created the monster. And apparently it was the Doctor who inspired us for the plan began with a mission to obtain a fresh road kill from the back country roads outside our small town of Finn’s Landing, Indiana. It went on to involve a burglar alarm my brother had purchased from an army surplus store. The alarm worked on the same principle as a hand grenade with a pin which, when detached, caused the alarm to emit an ear piercing screeching sound which could be heard two or three city blocks away. The plot was to freeze the road kill in a standing position then surgically insert the alarm into the abdomen of the animal. This incision would be stitched tight but a string would hang attached to the pin in the alarm now inside the creature. The final phase of the plan was to put the mechanically altered cadaver on the front porch of some hapless victim, activate the alarm by pulling the string thus removing the pin and leave them to process how such an aberration of nature could have managed to visit them this holiday.

Our morbid scavenger hunt began the eve before. We enlisted the help of Little Schuler who, a year older than us, had his driver’s license and a huge, white 1963 Plymouth which bore a striking resemblance to Moby Dick. A raccoon is what we had in mind as we climbed into “The Dick” and began to scour the county roads. What could be more fitting then a furry trick or treater already sporting a mask? On any other occasion, the roads would have been littered with countless creatures of the night which had a particularly difficult time crossing the road. But this afternoon was the exception. We searched almost three hours to no avail. It was almost as though the highway department was one step ahead of us clearing the roads of carcasses and thus spoiling our plan. Finally, as dusk set in and the shade of the trees over the road began to blend with the night, Bull said, “Dang, Henry–it looks like this is one scheme of yours is one that isn’t going to happen. At least not in time for Halloween.”

“Yeah,” said Little Schuler. “It looks like you’re going to have to kill something if you want to make this happen.”

“I was thinking the same thing myself,” I said. “But now I think I have a better idea.”

“Uh, oh,” said Schuler. “When Henry gets a better idea – things usually get worse!”

“Head back into town and turn east on Main Street,” I instructed him.

Schuler did so and we proceeded to that end of town. “What do you have in mind, Henry?” asked Bull.

“Dr. Bird, our family veterinarian has his office three blocks up. When we get to it, I want Little Schuler to pull the car behind the office. When my cousin worked for him as an assistant, she told me they always take the animals they put down that day out to a separate dumpster behind the office and the city picks them up each morning and takes them to the county landfill. All we have to do is reach in that dumpster and “voila'” we got our dead dog or whatever to work with. It won’t be quite the same as having a screaming raccoon on your doorstep but a very high pitched poodle would be pretty cool, don’t you think?”

“Henry is  a genius,” said Bull.

“Yeah, a regular Leonardo DaVinci!” laughed Schuler as he pulled into the alley behind Dr. Bird’s office. I got out and asked Schuler to open the trunk of his car while I approached the first dumpster. He did then came up behind me. I opened the lid and peered inside. It appeared to be filled with nothing more than trash bags full of paper and used supplies. No dead pets. I moved to the second dumpster, red in color, with the words City Property painted on it. I opened the lid and peered in. Little Schuler could not do the same because … well – because he’s little – so he asked, “What a’ ya see in there, Henry?”

“Well – we got two choices. We can go with a Saint Bernard or we got an orange tabby cat. What do you think?”

“I think it will take Bull to get a Saint Bernard out of there and how are you ever going to get it into your mother’s deep freeze!”

“You are right about that, for sure!” I answered. But the sight of a frozen St. Bernard on their porch would make quite an impression!” I laughed. Still – it would take days to freeze him even if I could keep my mom from getting any frozen waffles out of the freezer.” With that I climbed over the edge and into the dumpster. The cat, an old female, was a little stiff, but not terribly so. They must have put her down at the end of the day. I handed her over to Bull who had exited the car by now. He took and threw the kitty in the trunk and said, “Let’s get the heck out of here.”

Once back at my house I got a box from the garage, we put the tabby in it and I carried it into the house and down into the basement where my mother kept her bronze upright Amana deep freeze full of the aforementioned waffles, pot pies, tv dinners and fudge sickles with which she fed her four kids as she tried to earn a living as a single mother. We went past it to my bedroom which had formerly been McNamara’s Irish Tavern before we owned the house. It was the main reason my father, and Irish drunk if ever there was one, had wanted the house. Now that my parents divorced, I asked mom if I could move my bed in there next to the pool table. She said, “Sure, honey, if that will make you happy.” It did and had instantly made me the most popular kid in the freshman class. I slept in the glow of flashing Pabst Blue Ribbon and Falstaff beer signs along with statues of Johnny Walker Red and Kentucky racehorses lining the ledge along the walls.

We set the box down on the pool table and I told the guys I would be back in a minute. I went upstairs and grabbed last Sunday’s edition of The Indianapolis Star. Once back with Bull and Little Schuler, I removed the cat from the box and lay him on the financial pages which I had spread on pool table. “She’s getting stiffer by the minute. Pretty soon, I won’t even be able to work with her,” I said. I then took the newspaper and rolled it into a big, fat roll and tied it with some string I had also grabbed on my way back down. I placed the roll of paper in the middle of the bottom of the box running length wise. It was a perfect fit with the ends of the roll wedging themselves up against the ends of the box. Next, I picked the cat up and placed it on the roll, straddling it with two legs on either side. I made certain to bend all her paws and place them on the floor of the box so she would freeze in a perfect standing position. The cat was just a little too long for the box and I had to pull her chin up and rest it against the end of the box. This meant she would freeze with her head posed as though she were looking up at a forty five degree angle. Her tail was hanging out and over the edge of the other end of the box and I took it and bent it over and wrestled it under the flap at that end then closed the other three, took some duct tape and taped the box shut. As it was mid evening by now, I thought it safe to take the cat to mom’s deep freeze and deposit her for the evening. There was a key to the freezer on a nail on the wall behind the freezer and after burying the cat under a pile of pop tart and ding dong boxes, I closed and locked it. The plan was to let her freeze all night then get her out in the morning before my mom opened it to prepare for breakfast . I would then take her into the bar and place her in a smaller freezer inside a refrigerator there. The key to the deep freeze would remain with me until then.

I then explained the rest of the plan to Bull and Little Schuler. “Ok, guys. I will get the cat out of the freezer early in the morning and move her into the one in my room. You guys be over here right after school tomorrow.” Tomorrow would be Halloween and a Friday. “By then ,” I continued, “the cat should be frozen but not entirely. We will implant the burglar alarm in the cat and place her back in the freezer to really make her hard and frigid. You guys can leave then but be back a little before dark when we’ll load her in the car and go out to find our victim.”

“Whose porch are we going to put her on, Henry?” said Bull, a look of boyish glee on his face.

“I don’t know yet. I haven’t thought that far ahead. But you guys think about it. Think about some teacher or someone you hate enough to do this to. ”

“Wow, this is going to be so cool, Henry!” This will be cooler than when we hand-cuffed Mary Ann Atkinson to the tray at the “Dog N’ Suds” when she brought us our Black Cows and Coney dogs!”

“Oh  yeah, this will be way bigger than that!” laughed, Bull, literally jumping off the floor with delight. “But who do we hate that much? This is going to be tough!”

They left and I went upstairs and watched Bewitched and Dragnet on TV before bed. I returned to my bedroom and pondered what a great Halloween awaited as I fell asleep to the flashing red recessed lights in the ceiling and the almost lullaby quality of “Hey Jude ” on the 78 rpm album by The Beatles.

My alarm (not the one for burglars or cats) went off as planned at 6 a.m. By now, kitty had been on ice for approximately ten hours. I did not bother to inspect her as I moved her from one freezer to the other. In approximately nine hours, Bull and Little Schuler would return and we would proceed with the next phase of our plot. In the meantime I went back upstairs for some of those frozen waffles before school. My little brothers and sister ate with me, oblivious to the macabre plot which was unfolding in the inner sanctum, which was my Irish tavern bedroom, beneath them.

Almost on cue, I heard Bull and Schuler pounding on the back door of my home opening to the stairs leading to my basement and bedroom. I went to let them in and, to my surprise, it was not only Bull and Schuler waiting to enter, but “Reidy Bones”, Mark Comerford, the Maverick twins and “Finko”. Word gets around in a small town and it seems every teenage boy that got wind of this wanted to witness the unveiling and surgical enhancement of our frozen feline friend.

I led the seven others down and into the room where they gathered around the pool table and took seats on the scotch guarded floral fold out sofa bed and one of several bean bag chairs. The pool would become the surgery table and I had prepared it in advance with the burglar alarm, sewing needle and thread, a ball of white kite string, scissors, a pair of kitchen tongs and my mother’s GE electric kitchen knife. This was the same knife that, less than a month later, my grandfather would use to carve the Thanksgiving turkey. It and the other items were spread out in an orderly fashion on another edition of the Indianapolis Star.  The guys were laughing in nervous anticipation until I spoke up and asked Little Schuler to serve as my surgical nurse and assist me in the operation. He agreed and rose to stand at the table beside me. I went to the door of the bedroom and locked it to make certain neither my mother or one of my siblings barged into the less than sterile environment of the operating room. I then went to the refrigerator and opened the door. Next I opened the freezer compartment where I had barely managed to wedge the box containing the cat and pulled it out. I turned and carefully carried and placed it on the pool table behind me. The boys leaned forward in their seats as I began to remove the duct tape from the lid of the box.

No one knew what to expect. The orange tabby had gone in as someone’s recently deceased pet but other than the obvious lack of animation had no particular characteristics to distinguish it from living house cats. As I raised the lid, one flap at a time, the boys rose and gathered at my and Little Schuler’s backs. “Oh my god, what in the hell is that!” exclaimed Schuler. We all caught our breath as we peered over the edge and into the box. After regaining my composure, I reached in and carefully grasped under the sides of the cat and slowly pulled her off the newspaper roll, extricated her from the box and placed her on the papers spread on the green felt of the table. I pushed the box aside to give full view and an opportunity to appreciate my creation thus far.

What had gone in as an old but otherwise, cute tabby cat whose head one could have easily imagined themselves stroking as they smoked their pipe, sipped their tea or enjoyed the Ed Sullivan Show, now bore more resemblance to some poor creature which had somehow survived a nuclear holocaust or was the genetically mutated result of such. It looked like one of the monsters in the Japanese horror shows which came on at midnight except that this one was three dimensional and in color standing in the middle of the pool table.

“Holy shit! That’s one ugly fucking cat!” said the Maverick brothers as one.

“If I saw that on my porch, I would sure run like hell!” said Finko. “Get as far away from that fucking thing as fast as I could!

Of what were once two beautiful green eyes, the right was now frozen shut. The left was frozen wide open but covered with a deep frost making it white as the cue ball in the corner. It’s left ear was frozen so flat against the top of its head, it was imperceptible. On the other side the right one stood straight in the air as though perked to hear what was next in store for its owner on reprieve from a junk yard grave. Of the four paws, three remained steadfast to the surface beneath them. But the left front leg had somehow retracted in the freezing process was raised as though pawing the air in front or attacking some invisible adversary. Say another cat or some horrified homeowner for example. But it was the tail . . . the tail that defied imagination and provided the coup de grace to my excellent invention. After having been wrestled and contorted in the process of manipulating it into the box, it now was frozen, rising straight into the air for a quarter of its length. When observing the cat head on, its tail next took a ninety degree turn to the right for another quarter, then a ninety degree straight up again before taking a ninety degree turn to the left. In essence, it formed a perfect question mark which is exactly what you thought when you saw it. Specifically – “what in the hell is that!”

After ample time for admiration had been had by all, and an abundance of effusive accolades heaped upon me for my artistic genius, I announced the surgery would begin.

“Schuler, while I prepare to make the incision in the cat, you cut off and tie about a twelve inch piece of string to the pin of the alarm.”

As he did so, I turned the cat over on its side with its belly facing me. I inserted the chrome knife blades into the electric knife and plugged it into the extension cord I had running under the pool table. I pressed the trigger on the knife and the blades quickly slid into motion ready to prepare a holiday dish like none before. I asked Schuler to hold the front paws still as I raised the top rear leg to provide me full access to the abdomen, started the knife and began to make a length wise incision which would ultimately run from about half way down from its neck to its groin. I proceeded managing only to run it about a quarter inch deep due to the frozen constituency of the cat. I made a second pass which took it another quarter inch down or so. At this point I came to realize if I were ever going to get the alarm hidden entirely within, I would need to plunge the knife at least four inches in cut a path the same in length. To do this, I turned the cat on its back and with the knife whirring away forced it hard into the belly. I pierced it inch or two when the knife suddenly broke through to unfrozen material, followed by the emission of some of what remained of what was obviously kitty’s last meal. This was accompanied by  the foulest odor I encountered before or since. Schuler and I gagged simultaneously and everyone in the room began spewing expletives.  It was then I knew instantly why surgeons ask you and your animals to fast before surgery. But imagine if the patient has had Fancy Feast Tuna Delight putrefying in its large intestine for a least two days–a portion of which while lying in the bottom of dumpster with a Saint Bernard.

After several of us went through an odd dance of heaving, waiving arms and spinning to some tune unheard to all but bearing no resemblance to “Hey Jude”, I attempted to proceed with the surgery but could not succeed in disengaging my gag reflex. So I called a recess and everyone backed into a corner of the room while I went upstairs. I soon returned with two red bandanas and a can of lilac air freshener I requisitioned from the back of a toilet seat. I instructed Schuler to spray the air fresher directly at the cat while I proceeded with the surgery. Enveloped in the fog of the air freshener which created the ambiance of a sewage treatment plant in the middle of a field of lilacs–all too insufficiently filtered by the bandana–I managed to create an orifice of large enough to allow insertion of the alarm. I had installed fresh batteries and quick test of it produced a loud screech which had the result of the guys instantly placing their hands over their ears confirming its functionality for this mission.

Once inserted with the string hanging out, I took needle and thread and stitched the cat at least as tight as a Wilson football. Having done so, I turned the cat upright in a standing position and stood back to admire my work.

“Excellent job, Henry!” said Bull. It’s beautiful! We have to give her a name. She needs a name!”

Everyone immediately agreed and as we continued to admire her offered all the predictable clichés, most of them names of cartoon characters. In the end, that’s what we settled on. Felix – a cartoon cat popular on television in the fifties and sixties.

“But Felix was a tom cat and this cat is a female!” objected Bull.

Little Schuler, who suggested the name in the first place, countered, “That’s a technicality! Can you think of a famous female cat?” None of us could so the name stuck.

“Yeah … well by any name she’s gonna really going to scare the shit out of someone!” I said with no absence of pride.

Then Mark Comerford asked the “sixty thousand dollar question”. “So whose porch are you going to put it on, Henry?”

I answered, “I still don’t know. I’ve been so concerned with getting the cat ready I haven’t given it much thought. Have you and Schuler thought of anyone?” I asked Bull.

“All I can think of is “Dog Ears”, our school principal whose ears appeared cropped like a Doberman Pincher’s, or “The Blond Bomber”, our history teacher, Mr. Rossi, who dyed his long thick hair platinum blond and combed it straight back over his head before shellacking it with so much hair spray spit balls just bounced off it.

Everyone said something to the effect that they agreed those were rather worthy options and I said, “Well – that will do for a start. We’ll think about it some more while I put the cat back in the freezer and let it set up until this evening when trick or treaters start to hit the streets.”

With that I put the frozen feline back in the Frigidaire and the rest of the guys departed up the stairs and out of the house laughing as they went.

(TAKE NOTE, DEAR FRIEND. THAT WAS THE SECOND OF FOUR INCIDENTS INEXPLICABLY LINKED IN TIME AND SPACE THAT HALLOWEEN OF 1969 I SUBMIT FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION.)

That night, about an hour before dark, Little Schuler and Bull arrived in “The Dick” which they pulled into the alley next to the back door to the basement. I told Bull to get in the back seat and deposited the cold cat cargo, still in its box between us. Schuler exited the alley headed east down Sycamore Street, our ultimate destination still uncertain.

“Ok, guys–it looks like we are thinking of Dog Ears or Rossi, is that right?” I said this as I removed the duct tape from the lid of the box and removed Felix. I threw the box in the front seat next to Shuler and stood our frozen companion on the seat between myself and Bull. Bull immediately began to stroke her head. “Don’t pet the cat, Bull! You’ll make her thaw out too soon! Look! The frost on her eye is already starting to melt!”

“Geeze–she’s hard as a rock! I think it’s going to be awhile before she melts!” Bull replied.

Little Schuler spoke up from the front seat, “I sure would love to see Dog Ear’s face when he sees this! But the “Blond Bomber” is such a priss – he’d probably have a heart attack. It’s a tough call!”

“Well I know where The Bomber lives, but do you guys know where Dog Ears lives?” I asked.

“Nope.” They both answered.

“If we are going to put it on his porch we better get a phone book and look his address up,” I said. “Go to the phone booth by the fire station.”

It was just around the corner. Schuler parked and I got out and went into the booth. A few seconds later I got back into the car shaking my head. “No such luck. His number is unlisted.”

“Well that’s probably a good move on his part,” said Schuler. “He probably got tired of having his house egged and grocery bags full of dog poop lit on fire on his porch!”

“Yeah . . . so I guess it’s ‘The Blond Bomber’,” I said.

Everything and everyone was just a few short minutes away in Finn’s Landing and “The Bomber” lived two streets north and just a few blocks west so in no time we were cruising slowly by his house.

“All his lights are off. It doesn’t look like anyone is home,” Schuler said. “The curtains are open in his living room but it’s dark inside.

“Maybe he’s playing not a home,” I said. “Maybe he’s tired of the eggs and the dog poop too! Pull in the alley behind his house and we’ll check his garage and see if his car is in there.”

We did. I got out and peered in the window of his garage. Felix patiently waited on the seat but was now moist to the touch. I  steadied her as I slid back in next to her. “Nope. His car is gone. He must be staying at his mother’s house wherever she lives. You know what a momma’s boy he is. ”

At this point, Bull shouted out, “Hey, how bout Missy Bumbauer? She lives right next to ‘The Bomber’ and the lights are on in her place!”

” Missy Bumbauer!” exclaimed Schuler. “What do you have against Missy Bumbauer?”

“She broke up with me about six months ago.”

“You mean you want to torment her because she had the good sense to break up with you!” I laughed as Schuler drove out the alley and around the block while we gave it some thought.

“Yeah . . . and because she’s a real bitch!” Bull continued, pressing his case. “Besides she is so uptight and proper and all that. I would just love to see her when she sees Felix. They’ll probably hear her scream clear across town!” As he did we passed her house slowly and the three of us checked it out. It looked like everyone was home and preparing for trick treaters a few of which were beginning to make their way down the sidewalks. A five foot witch of the scarecrow variety was on the porch with a lit Jack O’ Lantern next to her. Two women were in the kitchen and Mr. Bumbauer was in full view through the full length glass of the storm door. The wooden front door was fully opened behind it. He was seated in his leather recliner with his feet resting on an ottoman.

Now Mr. Bumbauer had the distinction of being an Indiana State Senator and had been for the past twenty years or more. Like many of his kind he had a reputation of having a penchant for women and scotch which even as kids we, along with everyone else in town, had heard of. He constantly won reelection through his support of farm subsidies including a federal program which paid farmers for an experiment conducted by Purdue University in conjunction with the Department of Agriculture. Its purpose was to determine whether classical music played round the clock in barns increased the birth weight of pigs.

“Yeah, Missy Bumbauer would be pretty cool!” agreed Little Schuler.

“Well, I guess that settles it. Bumbauer it is! Now drive down the street for a minute while we get the plan straight. Schuler – I want you to go turn around and come back west by her house so that my side door opens facing her front porch. I am going to jump out, run to her porch and put Felix right next the pumpkin looking up at the front door. I’ll set off the alarm, jump over the side rail of the porch and run through the alley next to the house and come out on the other side of the block. I want you to drive like blank around the block and – when I come out – I want Bull to have my car door open so I can jump right in so we can get the blank out here! You got it?”

“Got it!” they said in unison.

We had turned around and slowly approached the house. I pulled Felix onto my lap and grasped the handle of the car door with my right. “Now remember!” I reminded Schuler, “Pull right around the block and get me!”

He quietly pulled the car to a stop and I jumped out, carrying Felix like that Wilson football as I jumped three steps and landed on the front porch. A quick glance and I could see the Hogan’s Heroes on the television. Senator Frushour was engrossed in the newspaper with a tumbler of scotch in his hand which rested on the armrest of his recliner.  He did not even look up and was apparently going to let Becky and her mother greet all the trick or treaters. I set the cat down staring straight up through the glass of the front door and pulled the string. The alarm went off as planned and, even from inside Felix, its scream was deafening. With one hand on the porch rail, I cleared it and ran down the alley to the back side of the block. As I exited, I saw “The Dick” fly around the corner almost on two wheels as it sped toward me. It never came to a full stop as, on cue, Bull opened the passenger side door and I jumped in, my face almost landing in his lap. I sat up, and pulled the door shut as we sped east away from the crime scene. As I got my breath I joined in with Bull and Schuler laughing hysterically.

“Boy, can you imagine Missy’s face when she sees that cat!” said Bull.

“Yeah, and I bet Senator Bumbauer drops his scotch right out of his hand,” I replied. “Let’s give it a few minutes, but we have to drive back buy so we can see what they are doing”

We drove around downtown which was just a few blocks north for about five minutes before heading back toward Missy’s. “You know there’s going to be a huge crowd in front of the house. Everyone who lives in the neighborhood is going to come out of the house. All of the Olsons, the Bunnells, the Blacks, the Schnerples will be trying to get a look. We probably won’t even be able to get the car through the crowd,” said Schuler.

As we got closer to the house, we grew silent. The windows were down and we could hear the alarm still wailing, its new batteries holding up nicely. But to our utter dismay there was no one in the streets. In fact, as we slowly drove by, there was no one on the porch. The streets were conspicuously absent of any sign of life, including trick or treaters. It looked like a ghost town. Once again, we drove around the block, our speed now down to that of a slow crawl as we expressed our disbelief. We tried to peer back through the alley toward the Bumbauer’s but it was now dark and we could not see a thing.

“What the hell!” said Bull. “Why aren’t they out there checking it out. The front door is still open and there is no one even in the living room! Who wouldn’t be out there looking at something like that!”

I was just staring ahead, struggling for an explanation. “I don’t get it. No one is in the street. No one is on their porch. It just doesn’t make sense!” Two more passes in our car confirmed this was still the case before I finally said, “Well . . . I guess you might as well drop me off at my house. I suppose we’ll hear something about this from Missy when we get to school on Monday.

(TAKE NOTE, DEAR FRIEND. THAT WAS THE THIRD OF FOUR INCIDENTS INEXPLICABLY LINKED IN TIME AND SPACE THAT HALLOWEEN OF 1969 I SUBMIT FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION.)

“The Dick” dropped me off in front of my house and no sooner had the car door slammed than my little sister, just eight years old, came running from the house. “Donnie! Donnie!” she screamed, tears streaming down her chubby face, “Tell me it isn’t true! Tell me you didn’t do it!” she pleaded. Kenton is my middle name. Donnie is what everyone called me whenever I was in trouble. They called me that a lot.

“Do it? Do what, Sis?” I didn’t have to feign I was incredulous. Was she referring to the cat? How could they possibly know?

“The police are on the phone with mom right now! They say you put a bomb on Senator Bumbauer’s porch inside a dead cat and it is going to go off any moment and blow his house up! Tell me you didn’t do it!” she continued, clinging with her arms around my waist as I made my way into the house.

“A bomb! I didn’t do it! I promise, Sis!”

I walked into the house as my mother set the phone down on the receiver. She looked up almost expressionless and said, “The police are at the Senator’s house. They cannot figure out how to disarm the bomb you put in the cat and they want you to go there and stop it before it explodes. They have patrol cars out looking for you right now.”

“Mom, I didn’t do it …” I began.

She instantly held her hand up in traffic cop fashion instructing me to stop. “That was Mr. Fink I just got off the phone with. He is going to accompany you to the Bumbauer’s.”

I could see there was no point in lying all together or even in trying to explain it was a burglar alarm and not a bomb for now. I went out the door and over, to Mr. Fink’s (Finko’s dad) house.

Mr. Fink was on his porch when I arrived and as I started to walk up his steps I attempted to explain. He must have attended the same traffic school as my mother for he immediately presented the hand gesture to stop. I hung my head as he came down the steps and together we headed down to the middle of the block and cut through the alley where we saw a huge crowd gathered at its end. The Bumbauer’s  lived just one street over and the alley came out almost directly across the street from their house. The street where there was no one a half hour earlier there were now dozens, fifty or more people including all nine of the Olson kids and the Schnerples lined the sidewalk opposite the Bumbauer’s. They had all come running when they heard the emergency vehicle sirens. Mr. Fink and I had to push our way through the crowd. “There he is, that’s him! Kenton Henry, you’re a freak!” yelled Missy angrily pointing her finger at me. Senator Bumbauer, had a obviously finished his scotch, perhaps the entire bottle, and was off to the side telling anyone who would listen that this was probably some plot to thwart his reelection campaign.  I didn’t know it at the time, but Mrs. Bumbauer was in the back of the fire engine emergency vehicle that was first on the scene. She was being treated for a rapid heartbeat before eventually being taken to the hospital and sedated.

“I don’t know, but he could be a ‘Young Republican’!” I heard the Senator him rant as we made our way toward the porch. It was an already surreal event which became more so by the moment. Standing safely back, a uniformed police officer kept the crowd out the street, while another in fully padded, white bomb detonating protective gear–replete with a helmet and facemask–stood on the steps of the porch with an instruction manual in hand. 1969 was the height of the Vietnam War and people were constantly calling in bomb threats to high schools around the country. Supposedly, it was to protest the war but I know, on at least one occasion, it was to get out of school the rest of the day. Regardless, after a few of the these scares, the City Council ordered a costly expenditure for this equipment. This was probably their first opportunity to use it in disarming what they, apparently, truly believed to be a bomb. The problem appeared to be there was nothing in the manual which accompanied with the equipment on how to disarm a cat.

I still was not ready to accept responsibility for what at this juncture I rationalized was simply a huge misunderstanding. Instead of holding up that ubiquitous stop sign, the man in the mask simply pointed to the cat. By now the batteries were almost as dead as it was and the sound was reduced to one long whining moan as though the cat were trapped in the bottom of well. Or perhaps a closed dumpster. And the miracle of refrigeration was running its course also for now the cats head was hanging and its fourth paw had surrendered to gravity. So too had its other front one and they were both splayed flat on the porch. However, the rear legs remained frigid enough that they left her butt suspended in the air and aimed pretty much in the direction of the guy with the instruction manual. And that question mark of a tail? By now it was dangling like a participle and was more a comma than a major punctuation point.

Still the whole image begged the question which I provided, “Oh no!” I feigned. “Who could do such a thing to an animal. I love cats. This is terrible!”

“Cut the crap, kid and just disarm the damn thing!” said Mr. Bomb Squad.

I thought I’d give it one more try. “I wouldn’t have the slightest idea how to disarm it. What if it blows up! We don’t have gear on like he does, Mr. Fink.”

As if he had realized he had lived his finest hour and was ready to surrender to the inevitable fate he miraculously dodged for days now – her right rear leg collapsed under her and Felix rolled over in much the same position he assumed on the pages of the Indianapolis Star, exposing his belly. Those football stitches had done their job, but now the incision gaped open as  Felix experienced a meltdown and a portion of the alarm had slipped out and exposed itself. Mr. Fink spotted the string on the porch with the pin tied to it and picked it up and examined it. He looked and reached to grasp the alarm. “Don’t, Mr. Fink–it could blow up on us!”

He didn’t hesitate, but took the alarm with his fingers and extricated it from the cat. Holding it in one hand and the pin the other, both level with his face and without saying a word, he put the pin back in the alarm. With that the quiet was deafening. Felix the Cat had purred her last.

I do not know if the astute Finn’s Landing police department realized at that point the device Mr. Fink had just saved the neighborhood from was a burglar alarm from the army surplus store or whether they believed a major terrorist threat had just been averted. But for some reason, they found it necessary to handcuff me in front of all my friends and neighbors before escorting me to the first six or seven squad cars which had to include a State Police car to two all of which were in line behind the fire engine and emergency ambulance. I guess when the call goes out from a state senator that a bomb is on his porch it’s almost the equivalent of screaming officer down over a cb radio. Even if the delivery device is a frozen orange tabby. As they pushed my head down and me into the back seat of the squad car, I could hear Mrs. Bumbauer screaming at the Senator from the back of the ambulance. I had no idea why.

We arrived at the police station where, until my lawyer, Ferman Thompson arrived, they attempted to charge me with everything from criminal mischief, disturbing the peace, committing mayhem, threatening a federal official, theft of city property and desecration of a corpse. Even I knew that last one wasn’t going to stick because I’d been charged with that one before.

“Aren’t you one of those kids who stole that tooth out of Dr. Farrar’s skull up there at Mount Hope Cemetery last spring?”

I started to say, “That would be me”, but Ferman held up that stop sign again and for once I was glad to see it.

“You don’t have to answer that Kenton, ” he instructed me.

I caught on real quick and mouthing a line I’d heard watching episodes of Perry Mason, I said, “On the advice of counsel, I politely …” but before I could finish Ferman put his hand on my shoulder and gave it hard squeeze.

“So now we’re not only dealing with a grave robber and a terrorist but a smart ass to boot!” proclaimed Officer Dawalt.

Ferman asked the officers to step into the hallway with him and when he came back in, he had apparently Ferman worn the guys down. Or maybe it had something to do with the green fee vouchers he gives to officers so they can get in 18 holes at the country club or the tab he’d cover for them at the bar afterwards. Whatever it was, he managed to work a pretty sweet deal in which I agreed to plead guilty to disturbing the peace. That one was pretty hard to argue. Besides, Ferman said he had to give them something. I wanted to ask if that was in addition to the eighteen holes but I saw an invisible hand sign and stopped myself. I told you I was a fast learner. Ferman explained to me the disturbing the peace charge was a misdemeanor and would be expunged when I turned eighteen along with the one for grave robbing. That one he had succeeded in getting reduced to petty vandalism. I copped that plea. Furman was worth every penny of what would have otherwise funded my college education.

Before releasing me to the custody of my mother, I had to have an answer as to how the  police learned it was me who placed Felix on his porch.

“Well, you see, kid–we’ve got a list of people in this town who do bizarre things to the remains of things that were once alive and precious to someone. It’s a pretty short list. But the truth is, while our squad cars were patrolling for you earlier this evening, I was questioning Senator Bumbauer. It seems your jig was up even before you executed your cat caper. Or before your cat was out of the bag, so to speak. When you pulled him out of the freezer the first time there were several witnesses present. One of them, Mark Comerford, ran from your house just dying to tell the story of how Kenton Henry was the mastermind of a plot wherein he and a couple of his twisted friends would put a bomb inside a frozen cat and detonate it on the front porch of, at that point, an unknown, and therefore, unnamed victim. As fate would have it Mr. Comerford chose to tell relate this plot to a one Miss Melissa Bumbauer, the Senator’s daughter.  You said your original target for this demonic Halloween prank was Principal Swihart, with a close second being Mr. Rossi, your history teacher. Maybe it has something to do with Halloween and the spirit of that poor desecrated cat but you screwed the pooch when you picked Missy Bumbauer as your mark, kid.”

(TAKE NOTE, DEAR FRIEND. THAT WAS THE FOURTH OF FOUR INCIDENTS INEXPLICABLY LINKED IN TIME AND SPACE THAT HALLOWEEN OF 1969 I SUBMIT FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION.)

“But it gets worse, Henry. Stick around for this one Ferman– there may be some business for you still to come. This whole feline fiasco–and I’m about to tell you just what a fiasco this really is–could very well cost Senator Bumbauer his marriage and–when this gets out–his bid for reelection!”

“I don’t understand,” said Ferman. “How could my client’s prank possibly cause those things?”

“Again, Ferman, maybe it’s just a Halloween thing or bad kitty karma. But it’s definitely one for the books.” He turned his attention to me. “It seems that cat you boys took to calling Felix, in life, went by the name Mrs. Beasley. Now are you ready for this?” He said, almost doubled over in his chair with laughter. “Are you ready for this, cause your just gonna love this! She was named this after being rescued from the Killarney County Animal Shelter by one, Mrs. Hubert Bumbauer. That orange tabby was her beloved Mrs. Beasley and her constant companion of the last seven years. Can you believe it!”

My mouth had been hanging open so long I had begun to drool on myself.

“Well, it’s pretty hard to believe, but how does that cost the Senator his marriage and his office?” Ferman asked a second time.

“Pretty simple really, Ferman. Poor Mrs. Beasley had come down with inoperable cancer and, after a trip to the veterinary hospital at Purdue confirmed this, Mrs. Bumbauer brought her home but couldn’t bring herself to do what was necessary. Senator Bumbauer finally convinced her putting Mrs. Beasley down was the only humane thing to do. She finally accepted this but insisted she could not be present and asked that it be done while she left to visit sister in Marion for a few days before returning today. Because she was aware of the common practice of disposing of animals at the city landfill, she made Senator Bumbauer promise to bring Mrs. Beasley home from Dr. Bird’s office and bury her in the flower garden in the back yard. There she sleep beneath what would become a literal bed of roses when spring came around. Obviously he did not. He left Mrs. Beasley with Dr. Bird, came home, kicked a little dirt around in the flower bed and, I guess put some big rock over the spot beneath which he told Mrs. Bumbauer he buried Mrs. Beasley. Apparently, Mrs. Bumbauer was greatly consoled by all this. Then you show up tonight, Henry and she comes running to the door when the alarm sounds and who’s the first trick or treater to the door? None other than Mrs. Beasley, defying death on Halloween, her paw raised in anger and back to take revenge on another politician who broke a promise! Mrs. Bumbauer fainted at the site of seeing her beloved kitty who was supposed to buried in the back yard which is where they quickly carried her after falling all over each other escaping out the back door before the bomb went off! The Senator kept everyone behind the house including all the neighbors and that is why the streets were bare of people when you drove by survey your damage. But the real story is Senator Bumbauer  name will be mud even among his loyal constituents when it gets out what he did to his own wife and it will be worse than that with cat lovers everywhere when they find out he let Mrs. Beasley go in a dumpster. When the Finn’s Landing Republican gets wind of this, and somehow I think they will, he might as well resign from office. So there is some justice in the world! What a ya’ think of that Ferman!”

(TAKE NOTE, DEAR FRIEND. THAT WAS THE FIRST OF FOUR INCIDENTS INEXPLICABLY LINKED IN TIME AND SPACE THAT HALLOWEEN OF 1969 I SUBMIT FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION.)

And so I learned the hard lesson of unintended consequences. Bull and Little Schuler were brought in for questioning. Not because I ratted on them but because Mark Comerford dropped more than my name that Halloween in 1969. No charges were brought against them because law enforcement had already nabbed and forced a confession and plea agreement out of the mastermind. No point in trying to get accomplices to accept more serious charges than the ringleader. Senator Bumbauer’s marriage somehow survived his betrayal of his wife but his senatorial career did not survive that of his betrayal of Mrs. Beasley. It was soon over. He was soundly defeated by a cat loving Republican. Mrs. Beasley, I think we can safely assume, ended up in the bed of roses where it was always intended she spend eternity. I just saw Missy at my fortieth high school reunion and–after all these years–the only word she had to say was–“freak!”. I thought that’s what Halloween was all about.

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Princess Xanax And The Ride To Kalispell . . . (the road goes on)

By Don Kenton Henry

GRAND TETONS 1

(From A Phobia of Walls)

     “Throw your leg over, Princess Xanax and get on this steel horse behind me. I promise by the time we hit the Bitterroot Range–three days from here–you’ll throw all those pills–in that thing you call a purse–in the Flathead River and never look back. Let the trout get high. You’re through swimmin’ upstream. This bike, those mountains and I – are what you been lookin’ for. And we’re pawnin’ that purse before we get to Kalispell. From there we’ll drop down the Beartooth highway into Wyoming and I’ll show you the Grand Tetons. … And they can get a gander at yours. Now saddle up.”

     “You certainly have a way with words, Buck. How could any woman resist an offer like that! Just sweep me off my feet and right out of that diner where you met me just three days ago. You want me to give up that dream job waiting tables and pouring Joe for every trucker, biker, loner and family seeing the USA in their Chevrolet on the cheap? And–on top of that– you promise to get me off the only thing that keeps me from going back to that rat hole apartment in that piss ant town and crying myself to sleep every night dwelling on all the other broken promises and dreams that can be made to girl.

“My promise hasn’t been broken,” I said, looking up from checking the oil level on my bike.

“Not yet, anyway. Why do I deserve the honor of such an offer. And please, don’t tell me it’s because of my big tits!

My mouth twisted into that little smirk and my eyes gave off that glint I know they do every time I know I’ve been caught at something and I said, “Well those didn’t hurt your chances any but it may also have had something to do with that red hair and the way those emerald eyes of yours flashed when I told you about standing in June snow at 14,000 feet–the highest point on the Great Divide–wearing nothing but a sleeveless T shirt, the sun over the Rockies shining down like it was on you alone, knowing not a soul other than your own knows where you are. Knowing you left no forwarding address so not even the IRS or your own mother can find you if you don’t want them to.”

“Unless you get in trouble with the law. Are you wanted for anything?” she asked. She looked me square in the eye as she waited for the answer.

“I don’t have any outstanding warrants. What about you?”

“No convictions other than moving violations,” she said with a wink.

“Just what were you moving?… No–you don’t have to answer that. Just park that sweet thing on the back of this bike before I give you a non-moving violation. Let’s blow this state. We can be through Cincinnati and Indy by nightfall. Tomorrow night we’ll be camping in the dells just east of La Crosse.”

“Camping! You mean you can’t even spring for a motel? I thought you said I was through swimming upstream. What are we going to sleep in?”

“I didn’t say I couldn’t spring for anything. But there’s a pup tent in that bedroll, baby, along with a sleeping bag and my shaving kit. And before I go parting with our seed money, you’re going to sleep some nights under the stars and get your head as clear as the night sky that holds ’em there. The two of us are going to squeeze into that sleeping bag until you feel things free of all those chemical that have numbed that beautiful body of yours for so long – until you think it’s your first time. So, unless you’re ready to sell that fancy bag of yours today, we’ll be saving the nights at the Motel 6–or better digs to come–for special occasions.”

“Special occasions! You mean like when I need a shower? Besides, this purse is a knock-off and won’t fetch much anyway. And it’s the only thing I have to put the few things in, I’m taking with me.” Her face dropped as she finished these last words. It was a sad face and seemed to bear the look of someone ashamed and humbled at having to admit this is all she had to show for thirty-five years.

I put my index finger under her chin and gently pulled it up until those beautiful green eyes met my own and said, “Hell, I knew it wasn’t an original when I stole you from this Waffle House. But you are! And that’s what counts. You’re the only waitress I’ve ever talked to who could recite every line of Tennyson’s Charge of the Light Brigade and most of Kipling to boot. But when you outlined the equation used to solve a puzzle Archimedes wrote an entire treatise on in 250bc–that wasn’t solved until a few years ago–you had me. I knew you were a special girl and if life hadn’t dealt you a bad hand a few times along the way there was no way you’d been serving cheese grits to truckers.”

“I didn’t solve that mathematical conundrum. I just memorized the solution.”

I laughed and said, “Well–that was a five napkin solution!”

She smiled big now and told me, “That’s what three years of being a math major with a minor in lit at Kent State before dropping out will get you. And–if you’re not going to make me go into the messy details in order to take this ride with you, let me say I had a hand in some of those bad hands life has dealt me and let’s leave it at that for now.”

I smiled back as I climbed on the bike and said, “Let the wine blush and keep a straight face, baby. We all gotta past and you ain’t heard mine yet either.”

“What the hell! To tell the truth, you’re easy on the eyes too. And pretty charming at that. So – if you’re willing to take a chance on me, I think I’ll just take a chance on you. I don’t have to hear your details either. So let’s make a wild charge, flash our sabers bare, break through the line and make for the Valley of the Bitterroot or wherever it was you suggested my dreams would come true!”

With that, she grabbed the hem of that waitress dress right  in the middle, hiked it up to that beautiful red bird’s nest and threw one of those long, athletic legs of her over the rear fender seat of my ’68 Shovelhead, hooked her thumbs in the belt loops of my jeans and we punched it into the western sun.

(to be continued)

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Princess Xanax And The Ride To Kalispell

By Don Kenton Henry

GRAND TETONS 1

“Throw your leg over, Princess Xanax and get on this steel horse behind me. I promise by the time we hit the Bitterroot Range–three days from here–you’ll throw all those pills–in that thing you call a purse–in the Flathead River and never look back. Let the trout get high. You’re through swimmin’ upstream. This bike, those mountains and I – are what you been lookin’ for. And we’re pawnin’ that purse before we get to Kalispell! From there we’ll drop down the Beartooth highway into Wyoming and I’ll show you the Grand Tetons. … And they can get a gander at yours. Now saddle up.”

Buck Wild from A Phobia of Walls

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Buzzards Beware Before Dining On Me

Fun fact of the day: Just before heading to the gym, I decided to Google the drug, Ketoprofen, the anti-inflammatory my doctor prescribed for me yesterday. Among other details, here is the most interesting thing I learned: Recent studies have found ketoprofen is a veterinary drug causing lethal effects in red-headed vultures. (Not blondes or brunettes. Just red-heads.) These “ginger” Vultures feed on the carcasses of recently treated livestock and suffer acute kidney failure within days of exposure. According to research, the vulture population has undergone a sharp decline on the Indian subcontinent, a 95% decline in 2004 and 99.9% decline as of 2008 due to its use in animals.

Hopefully, it will not have any deleterious effect on that long-legged red head I’ve been dating but . . . it provides me some peace of mind to know that–if I die by the side of the road–any Texas buzzard that feeds on my beautiful arthritic bones is going to be in the same position as me within days. Pay it forward, I say! – DKH

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red-headed_vulture

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

https://bardofthewoods.com

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The Day Jack Benny Died

THE DAY JACK BENNY DIED

By Don Kenton Henry

“Who would have thought a tale of star-crossed love which began with the death of a celebrity … would reach its near conclusion with his own.”

The hearse made its way onto the gravel road and into Weston Cemetery. I followed in the first car behind along with my mother and dad, fiancée, aunt, and uncle. Sitting next to the front seat passenger window, I looked out at the November sky. It was gray and lined with pale streaks of pink and blue—like the inside of a Wabash River mussel shell—the kind I’d find as a boy digging my toes into its muddy river bottom. Good colors for a funeral sky.

Relatively unfamiliar with the death of loved ones, it was difficult for me to fathom I could be attending the farewell to a man with whom I shared the most intimate of conversations less than one week ago.

It took place at the Rainbow Lodge, out along the banks of the Eel River near Greencastle, Susan’s (my fiancée’s) hometown. It was the occasion of our wedding announcement and all the families on both sides were in attendance. It was a day long anticipated by all, and welcomed by most.

I was named by my mother, Jessie, after my great-uncle, who died at the age of forty in a plane accident. He was admired by all the family and, after the death of his grandfather, had become something of the patriarch of the family. Though my mother was only six when he died, and remembered little of him (other than the many stories told), she knew how much he meant to her father, Preston’s oldest brother. And so she named me Preston.

All toasts had been made and the celebratory pats on the back tendered when the family retreated to a bonfire down by the river. There they seated themselves about on various benches, logs cut for this purpose, and tree stumps. The last of fall’s red leaves clung desperately to the branches overhead like the hands of little papooses clutching their mothers’ arms. A slight wind did little to mask the sound of water cascading over rapids illuminated by a half moon. I was struck by the contrast between the table nature set for my eyes and the sight of Susan going over her wedding list on a picnic table with my Aunt Mari.

It was then I felt another hand on my shoulder, from behind. This one lingered and I turned to see it belonged to my grandfather. This was my mom’s dad and, like my mom, I just called him … “Pops.”

“Hey, Pops … what’s up?” I said. His intense focus on my eyes did not go unnoticed, as he asked, “How ya doin’, kid?”

“Great, Pops! Wouldn’t you be if you were marrying a girl like that?” I said, as I nodded in her direction. Her long blond hair radiated in the moonlight; her cheerleader form accentuated by her designer jeans—an image made postcard perfect by the waist-length Hudson Bay candy-striped jacket she sported.

“She’s a pretty one … that’s for sure.”

I had gone with Susan through three years of undergrad at Indiana University in Bloomington. After the wedding, we would finish my senior year and remain there, where I, like my namesake, would attend law school. Who knew where we’d end up after that. Susan just knew I’d finish up at the top of my class and she had us off to Los Angeles or New York City where I was certain to have been offered a job with some fancy, big-name law firm.

Pops had become very direct in his senior years. “Follow me, kid,” he said. “It’s time you and I had a talk.” He walked around me and headed up the bank of the river toward the lodge. His orange-spotted English Setter, King Henry—who went with him everywhere—trotted behind. I followed the two of them, turning back to look at Susan. She didn’t notice I was leaving, but Mom did. I just looked at her and shrugged my shoulders.

We went into the banquet hall where we had feasted earlier. The cold night air we left behind was replaced by air warmed by the fire still burning in the huge fieldstone fireplace. The fireplace was at the far end of the long hall, a room which held the musky smell of the old logs which lined its walls. The scent mixed with that of burning oak from the crackling fire. Pops took another log and put it on the fire while I took a seat on the warm hearth. King Henry settled in on the floor, his head resting on Pop’s boot where it was most every time Pops took a seat.

Pops made a few statements and asked a few questions I perceived he deemed obligatory for such occasions. (A generous gesture coming from him.) Then he took a seat beside me and got down to it.

“You really want to go to law school, kid … or is that your idea of what it will take to make Suzie happy?”

“Susan, Pops. She prefers to be called Susan.”

“Seems more like a ‘Suzie’ to me. But what about law?”

“Well sure … sure, Pops. Law provides a good living. And besides … our family has a great tradition of producing good lawyers, right?”

“Ain’t that the truth,” he answered. “Why, between your Great Aunt Mari and all your cousins, my nieces and nephews that are in that profession, I feel as though I have the numerical equivalent of a Boston law firm on permanent retainer.”

I laughed and told him, “As rowdy as you were in younger days, I guess that could come in pretty handy!”

He looked down, lowered his voice and said, “Well, that was then, son. Now I’m just an old man trying to pass a little of what I’ve learned on to a young buck like you.”

He paused and neither of us said anything. I found myself wondering where this was going when finally he said, “Do you really think this Susan is right for you?”

“First law school, now Susan. Do you really think I don’t know myself, Pops?”

“That’s what I’m making sure of. Do you?”

“Yeah, yeah—of course. Mom raised me with a strong sense of identity, just like you raised her. What makes you think I don’t know my own mind?”

He looked at me as though sizing me up. His eyes moved from my boots, past my flannel shirt. Again, they made contact with my own eyes in an earnest and searching, almost disconcerting way. They were dark blue and it was difficult to tell the tan shards in a halo around his pupils from the fire’s flames which reflected in them.

“I know this must sound like a cliché, coming from a grandfather, but it’s just that you remind me so much of myself when I was young. And when I look at you and Suzie, uh—Susan—what I see is a young man infatuated with a pretty girl all picture-perfect, but not …”

Then his voice trailed off.

“All picture-perfect but—but what, Pops? What is it you’re not saying? Is there something you don’t like about Susan? Just get it out!”

He drew a breath then said, “Kid, that girl is about as shallow as she is pretty.”

“That’s a pretty harsh assessment, don’t you think, Pops?”

“If you really think so—stop me. You don’t strike me as the kind of man that is going to be content with that for long. Three years of college, three years of homecomings, fraternity and sorority parties, is one thing, but when you settle in after a few years of marriage—that’s another. Days will end with you on your way home from an exhausting day at the firm and all you will have to look forward to is a recounting of her hours at the mall or time spent sipping chardonnay with her girlfriends. And heaven help you if you make it until the children you have are grown. At that point you’ll find yourself funding countless trips to the plastic surgeon, the next of which is certain to ‘guarantee’ her happiness! Only to realize—too late—they have not yet perfected an implant for depth of character and intellect. The thing—and albeit others—from which passion, in guys like you, is born. Try settling for less than you really want and need and … that’s exactly what you’ll get.”

Indignant, I started to respond, but something registered. Just enough that I paused and tripped over my retort. He closed the gap with the punctuation, “And if you do not acknowledge those things about yourself, son, then, no … no—you do not yet know yourself.”

We locked eyes as I gathered my thoughts and contemplated my reply. Finally, I managed, “Is that what this is all about? Is that why you brought me in here?”

“I brought you in here to tell you a story.”

“Well, this is a heck of an introduction. What kind of story?” I asked, my voice rich in skepticism.

“A story about the day Jack Benny died.”

(You could have driven a John Deere combine through the pause that followed that line.)

“Who is Jack Benny?” I asked.

“A comedian. A very endearing comedian who was extremely popular with the public, presidents, and popes—back when I was a boy.”

“And just what in the hell does a comedian have to do with my wedding?” I asked imploringly.

“I didn’t say the story had anything to do with Jack Benny, counselor. I said I came to tell you about the day—the day—Jack Benny died.”

With that, I reached behind into my pocket and produced a flask. I removed the chrome-covered cork from the bottle, extended it to him, and asked, “Would you like a pull on some of this brandy, Grandpa?”

He maintained his position at first—leaning forward, elbows on his knees and hands folded between them. “That kind of thing can be a liability in this family,” he said. “Then again, at this point, any addiction is bound to be short-lived. Give it here,” he said.

He took it, put it to his lips, and took a hard swallow. I figured I might need it and followed suit.

“Back when I was a very young man,” he began.

“Yeah, once upon a time in America, Pops!”

“I can still get a cuff across your teeth before you know it.”

I had no doubt he could and might well, so I let him continue.

“I had a young and pretty girlfriend and, not unlike you and your Suzie, we had gone together quite awhile.”

“You’re referring to my mom’s mom, right? Grandma Pam?”

“Lord no! This was many mistakes before that one!”

“Back when dinosaurs roamed the planet?” I smiled.

He glared back. “Somewhere around that time.”

“Anyway,” he continued, “her name was Judy. Hell … even sounds like Suzie, doesn’t it!” he said with a twisted grin.

I didn’t bite on that and he continued.

“She had the long blond hair thing going and green eyes. Athletic, feminine body, the stereotypical profile for the cheerleader she was in junior high and member of the drill team in high school. Any way you cut it, she was easy on the eyes and made me the envy of my buddies.”

“You’re not going to try and sell me on the idea that you had something against good-looking girls, are you, Pops?”

“Not by a long shot. I’m sure you know better. The feminine body is God’s greatest work. But that was pretty well where it began and ended with Judy.”

“So that’s the only reason you were with her? That’s all you saw in her?”

“No. She was spirited. Loved the outdoors and ready for just about anything that was fast and dangerous—cars, horses, motorcycles. Me. One of the guys, so to speak, just a lot prettier.”

“Well, that sounds pretty good so far. What was missing?” I asked him.

“Those things were fine in high school. We started together when I was sixteen. But when I got into college, my interests expanded and went in directions no one who knew me would have predicted. Judy and I got married and she moved to Bloomington but did not attend college at first. She was happy to work at a clothing store in the mall. Finally, I talked her into going to college, but she never really took to it. She wasn’t a stupid girl. She had done reasonably well in high school. That was in large part because she followed instructions and knew how to connect the dots. But she certainly wasn’t capable of anything profound.”

“And you were?”

“Certainly not in high school, but later—in college—I was always asking questions. One question always led to another with me. I was always pondering the imponderable. I’d come home from class and ask these questions of her. She’d just give me a blank stare. Judy couldn’t ponder the imponderable—because with her—they really were imponderable! The questions never occurred to her in the first place. And the further I went in college, the greater the divide between us. Our divorce was final not long after the completion of my senior year.”

I was checking my watch and getting a little anxious to rejoin Susan and the rest of the party. “So this is a story about ‘what not to look for in a woman’? Is that the moral?”

“No, no, not at all. Exactly the opposite, in fact.”

I took another hit on the brandy and handed it his way, but Pops waved his hand and passed. He continued.

“It was Christmas break during my second year of college, December of 1974. My dad, Don Henry, Sr.—your great-grandfather—lived in McAllen, Texas. McAllen is pretty much at the tip of Texas in what is known as the Rio Grande Valley. I don’t need to tell you what the weather is like around here in late December. Everyone, like yourself, starts itching for warmer weather, and the subtropical climate of that valley started beckoning to myself and family. So, Judy and I, your Great-Aunt Mari and Great-Uncle Mark decided to pay a visit to see ‘Dad.’ Grandma Henry lent us her station wagon as it was the only car which would comfortably hold the four of us. And so, about four or five days before Christmas, we headed for Texas.

“We spent the first night in Little Rock and drove into Austin the next day. Austin is my favorite place. The weather was warm and perfect in every way. Much of our time was spent outside shopping at a street fair and market in front of the university. What they called ‘The Drag.’ 

AUSTIN THE DRAG

That day, like the entire trip, turned out to be one of the best times I ever spent together with my brother and sister at once.

“I can’t recall when we made it into McAllen. It was either late that night of that same day, or earlier the next. Regardless, we arrived what was probably a couple of days prior to Christmas.

“Now, you probably heard, Dad had a drinking problem. He and Jim Beam were more than casual acquaintances. In fact—they had to be brothers! But he loved his kids, and when we showed up on rare visits, he somehow managed to stay straight the entire time, never conveying a sign he had a problem. And he cleaned up real well, obviously taking great pride in our visit and playing the wonderful host, making certain we had a good time.

“And we did have a good time. We went shopping across the border and, beyond that, we just did the simple things you do as a family—about the only things you can do in what was a relatively small town back then. Which was how it should be during the holidays. Holidays should be spent in small towns with your family.

“I guess everything was going so well that no one noticed, as the holiday approached, I became increasingly preoccupied. Normally, my talk, along with my father’s, dominated a room. But I grew quieter and quieter. Christmas Day arrived and, as to be expected, we all exchanged gifts and settled into a day and evening in front of the television watching bowl games, holiday specials, and old Christmas movies. It was easy for me to not say anything as the programs played and kept everyone entertained.

“The morning after Christmas arrived and, as usual, my dad was up before everyone preparing a huge breakfast. We awakened to the smell of eggs and bacon frying in the pan and pancakes stacked and waiting. This, along with fresh-squeezed orange juice from the oranges we had picked ourselves the day before in a grove next to the house in which my dad used to live. But I had little appetite.

“As the day wore on, we began to think of things to do that evening. We decided it would be fun to walk the mall, looking for after-Christmas bargains, followed by a movie. Later, before leaving, the early evening news came on and announced that Jack Benny had died.”

“Finally!” I said. “Finally we get to the heart of this story.”

“Yes. Yes … the heart,” Pops replied.

“We watched footage of Benny’s life and career, the others commenting on this or that program, skit, or segment for which they most remembered him. I remained silent for the most part.

“We left, went to the mall, and shopped as planned. We walked from store to store while waiting for the start time of the movie we decided to see: The Godfather II.

“I really don’t remember much about it but, it must have been a good one because everyone else was commenting on this or that about it on the drive home. This in spite of the late hour. By now, my dad noticed my silence. ‘Junior, you’re taking the death of Jack Benny awfully hard, don’t you think? You haven’t said a word since this morning.’

“‘Yeah, Dad … sure. Jack Benny was a great guy,’ I replied and pretended to concentrate on my driving.

“New Year’s Day, we bid farewell to Dad and began the long drive back to Indiana. I remained disinclined to conversation and became somewhat irritable to Judy and my family on that return trip. I know they noticed, but I am certain they just attributed it to too much time together—especially in a car. Even another stop in Austin did little to change my mood. And the weather had changed to reflect it, a dark and cloudy overcast.”

“All this because of Jack Benny’s death,” I said. “C’mon—there’s more to this story than you’re telling.”

He looked that look in my eyes again and said, “No … no, I am telling … and that’s why you’re here.”

“Excuse me, Pops, but before you get to the grand finale, I have to excuse myself.”

“Don’t run off, boy,” he said. “You need to hear this.”

I sensed his urgency and, as bored as I may have appeared, the import of what he was about to convey was not lost on me. I had no intention of running off. I returned after taking care of business to find him staring quietly at the floor. He had placed some more wood on the fire and it blazed behind him.

“In our lives—if we are lucky—there comes one love to make us forget all who came before and to whom we compare all after. Mine had come four years prior to that trip I just described. I found her where we spent that Christmas. It was in The Valley, in that town, in a high school literature class my junior year. Her name was Yvonne.”

He paused and seemed to go somewhere distant. His eyes took on a far-away look and he chose his words carefully. Later, I would realize he must have thought himself incapable of finding the words he needed to describe her.

“I don’t know why it was my good fortune to be assigned the empty seat beside her. I don’t know why I deserved the privilege, considering the culpable and circuitous path I’d taken to arrive there. Considering anything, for that matter! What right had Zhivago to Lara, except to find himself in the same room with her?”

“Huh?” I said.

He ignored me and continued, “I think the teacher introduced me to the class. I can’t remember for certain. But I know she invited me to tell the class a little about myself. Not yet seated and, in a class of and about words—gazing at Yvonne … I had none. I could not break the transfixion I felt with that dark-haired beauty across the aisle. She was like no girl I knew back home. There, we had German and Nordic queens with eyes of ice. In the north we had none with long and raven hair or eyes black as night yet soft as a warm breeze off a southern sea. Her frame was long and slender and, even under the modest schoolgirl dress she wore, I could see her body was a gift of nature meant only for young boys like me to gaze upon and dream of as they might beautiful planets in distant galaxies they would never travel to. Later I would learn it was sculpted by her love of dance. Finally, the teacher just told me to take my seat. The one next to Yvonne. My breath was taken that day and has never quite returned.”

“Dang, Pops, don’t put anymore wood on that fire cause it’s getting hot in here.”

He didn’t crack a smile. He was lost somewhere. “I was shy back then, but even so somehow I got to know her, talking in class whenever we could get away with it—before and after in the hallway.”

“When did you ask her out?” I questioned.

“I couldn’t,” he replied. “I lived six miles out of town and my dad wouldn’t let me drive the old Plymouth. It really belonged to his girlfriend, a woman that lived with us on occasion. Even had I access to a car decent enough for her to ride in, I am not certain I could have found the courage to ask her out. So in awe was I of her, my relationship was all of adoration and nothing of pursuit. Internally, worship warred with guilt. I knew I could forget the girl back home but was just as sure Yvonne would never have a real interest in an average boy like me.

“Weeks and months passed. Life with my dad wasn’t easy. His drinking led to fights and moments of embarrassment when he would show up drunk to pick me up after school. I missed my mother, brothers, and sister in ways I never thought possible when I had lived with them.

“Eventually, early in the following semester, my mom got word that Finn’s Landing High School back home agreed with her to take me back. Arrangements were made for me to withdraw from McAllen High and fly home to Indiana. Mom told me my best friend, Mike, would be along to greet me at what was then Weir Cook Airport in Indianapolis. The night before I left, all I could think of was Yvonne. That, and all the words I had so rehearsed but never had the courage to say to her. Leaving (which was something I had prayed for so long) so suddenly did not seem right. The timing seemed Shakespearean. I wondered, were the gods testing me?

“I lived off a caliche road, bordered by an irrigation ditch on one side and the orange grove I mentioned earlier on the other. Unbeknownst to me, Yvonne and another friend, Mary, drove up and down that road that night looking for me and one last chance to say good-bye. In the dark they never found me.

“Cursed fate,” I mumbled under my breath.

“The next morning, Dad got me up around four in the morning. My flight left very early, around six or six-thirty. At the airport, I said my good-byes to him and Nova, the girlfriend I affectionately referred to as ‘Deuce.’ I couldn’t help but notice the mist in his eyes. As much as he struggled in the effort, he so wanted to be a father.

“I took a deep breath and boarded the plane. Such was the hour of the morning and the size of the McAllen airport, I was about the only passenger on the plane. Perhaps, because of this, the flight attendants seated me toward the front near them. I heard the noises a ground crew makes in preparation for a plane’s departure and knew this meant we were preparing to taxi away from the gate. Just as an attendant was preparing to close it, there was something of a commotion at the main door through which we boarded. I could hear the pleading voices of what sounded like young girls. Then … there she was. Yvonne, accompanied by Mary, had somehow talked her way onto the plane. They rushed to greet me and I rose speechless from my seat. They looked like young angels coming from the darkness of that morning onto a plane they turned into a little piece of heaven. Yvonne was radiant. Her beauty was never so evident. She carried a card and, after the two of them took the seats in front of me, on their knees and facing backwards toward me, gave it to me. Nervously, I opened it and read.

“How could such a beautiful and perfect thing be happening to me just as I was preparing to leave? A million thoughts were racing through my mind at five times the speed of light. I looked at this woman-child and thought, to show up here at this hour, she must be feeling some of the same things I was feeling. Still, I could not find the courage to ask. A young, shy boy, there was a part of me that was so afraid I was flattering myself and, if I told her I loved her, she would laugh. Maybe tussle my hair or something.

“I thought of my mother and how she would take it after working so hard to get my school at home to take me back. Lack of confidence in what I wanted to believe Yvonne was trying to tell me, coupled with the anxiety and fear of hurting my mother, caused me to freeze.

“Even though I was oblivious to them at the time, I know the flight attendants clustered by the door were watching every second of our good-bye. Did they appreciate the gravity of the moment? Having let the girls on, I’m certain they must have. Were they watching, rooting for me to say, I have to get off! I’m sure they did.

“But it was all too fast to listen to my heart. Rather—not to listen—but to answer. Reluctantly, the attendants called the girls to the door, gave them a hug, and urged them through it. Waving all the way, they disappeared. The door shut, I heard the distinct sound of the cabin pressurizing and I felt the vacuum created in my heart. I clutched and read that card the entire twelve hundred miles home. Its words were innocent and few but a million were the things I read into them. I keep that card still. It’s in the trunk my mother gave me and I carted to military school and later to McAllen. The trunk lies in the big closet at home where I store my Christmas ornaments and a lifetime of photographs. I often wonder what would have happened if Yvonne and Mary had found me the night before I left. … If I had gotten off that plane. How would my life have changed? I might have raised a family of the handsomest tall children with eyes …”

His voice trailed off again as he lowered his eyes to the floor.

“You think, no—you know—you loved this girl and you never saw her again … you never told her?” I was incredulous at the thought of this.

“I saw her several times afterward. And we wrote, quite often at first. I used to live for those letters. They came in beautiful blue envelopes. Like her card, I still have every one. Suffice it to say, I never found the courage to ask if she felt the same toward me. If she did, she remained the lady she was raised to be and did not allow herself to answer questions I was not man enough to ask. The last correspondence I received from her was her wedding invitation.

“Little did my dad, Judy, Mari, or Mark know I carried that invitation with me in my suitcase that Christmas in Texas. Little did they know it was her wedding that so occupied my mind that day after Christmas 1974. The day Jack Benny died. Yvonne was married that evening while I attended the movie with my family.

“The thought of that wedding haunted me every mile of that trip to Texas. But even without Judy along, I could not have attended. That is one marriage through which I could not have held my peace. And no peace did my heart have for even one mile of the trip home.”

“And yet you held your peace for so long,” I said to him. “This is the first I have heard of any of this.”

“The sight of her being given to another would have killed me,” he resumed. “I could not have witnessed her marriage. The entire trip, until the end of the evening of the 26th, I had fantasies of crashing the wedding and, like Dustin Hoffman in The Graduate, taking the bride and escaping the church with her.”

“Wow! That was a movie? I’ll have to start watching that old stuff! … How do you think that would have gone over if you’d actually tried that?”

“Oh—her family would have strung me up for sure. Used me as a piñata.”

“I take it Yvonne was Mexican-American?”

“Yes.”

“From what I’ve read, wouldn’t that have been something of a big deal back then—if you two had stayed together, married?”

“To some people for sure. Particularly to our parents’ generation. Even to many of our own. But not to me. I knew beauty and goodness when I saw it and, when I looked at her, that’s all I saw. When it came to my brothers and sister, I knew it would be a non-issue, as it was with me. I knew my parents would come to feel the same. They might have blinked at first. Then, once they knew her, like me, they could only have loved her. The bigger problem probably would have been her family. Her mother was always very gracious to me. But good families like hers are steeped in tradition. Now … it matters not.

“The point is—I had my chance. A person makes choices and there comes a point he has to live with them. I’ve been living with that poorest of choices ever since. Countless nights for all these years, my heart has awakened me to the words, ‘Fool … fool—for having forsaken me.’”

“Damn, you make your heart sound like a monument to lost love—‘The Heart of the Unknown Lover’—like an ‘Unknown Soldier’ or something!”

“Well, that’s a bit dramatic! My heart is no tomb. Most of it has been filled with the love of my mother, your mother—my daughter—and the rest of my family. But … there is a flame that burns there.

“Once again that brings me to you. This story is really about you. Not about some old man who passed on someone he continues to believe was the love of his life. That’s the well-deserved consequence of someone not true to himself. And that is what I’m talking to you about. What I am trying to save you from.”

“First tell me—I have to know—did you never talk with Yvonne again? Surely, somehow you must have tried.”

“Thirty-one years it took me. It was around two thousand and five. We had a slow but efficient means of communicating back then. Not at all like a message from an implanted telepathic enhancement device. It was something called ‘electronic mail.’ Through it and another thing—called a website—former schoolmates were, for a fee, given the opportunity to re-connect. Through this means, I finally made contact with her.”

“You did! Well, after thirty-one years, that had to be great! What happened? Did you never get together? Surely by now you revealed your feelings to her.”

“You have to realize, she was still married to the same man who took her hand that evening after Christmas in McAllen. I knew she would be—even before I found her. Girls like her marry for life and, unless there is some unfortunate event, you generally only get one chance. One time.”

“Then what did happen?”

“We corresponded … almost on a daily basis at first. In spite of my best efforts not to do so (as I knew I no longer had the right) I revealed my feelings to her. Cryptically at first, then more openly as time passed. In a discreet manner, becoming one like herself, she confirmed the feelings had been there—the ones I had so long hoped she had held for me. Finally, it just became apparent our continued communication wasn’t fair to either of us. It was torturing me to read the words I so wanted to hear in person, from a person I so wanted to reach out and hold … to kiss the woman I had never kissed—except within my mind—and that a million times!”

“Pops!—You’re channeling Shakespeare for god’s sake!”

“She was worthy of Shakespeare.”

“You mean to tell me you never even kissed her?” I interjected. “That can’t be what I heard … you never kissed her? Not once?”

His expression was one more of sadness than embarrassment. “Not once,” he said. “Anyway,” he continued, “I said what I had always wanted to say to her. It was time to respect the choices we had made as young people. It was time to move on and leave her in peace with her family. Oh, we still acknowledged holidays and each other’s birthdays for a few years afterward. Then, I guess we just learned to be content with fond memories and dreams of what might have been and the writing stopped. Believe me, if I were writing a story—that is not the ending I would write. In fact, I wrote one last letter to her, and it was a story, really. I wrote it the old-fashioned way—on paper! The way she and I first wrote each other over sixty years ago. But I never mailed it. It’s in a brown manila envelope in the bottom of that trunk.

“Choices, son. … That’s what I’m here to talk with you about.

“I think God and nature give us only so many chances to do the right things for ourselves. They set it up and, if we are not true to the moment and ourselves, a person like the one they planned for us may never come again. Only so many chances to choose the one that’s meant for us.”

“Are you saying love is only for the young, Pops?”

“No, not at all. Hell no! Not by a long shot! Otherwise I wasted a lot of time at the rodeo long after my bones were suited for it, hoping for the best ride of my life. But the greatest opportunities for love come when we are young. Before our hearts are overridden and burdened with thoughts of bills, careers, our children, deadlines, and physical infirmities.”

“But you two weren’t just young, Pops. You were virtually children when you met! Do you really think a love that young could have turned into something truly lasting?”

“The problem is,” he answered, “because of my failure to follow my heart … to listen to it … I’ll never know. The tragedy is not that I failed to have my true love, it is that I was untrue to love and now will never know what might have been. I am cursed to wonder. Romeo and Juliet were young but you never questioned their love while reading Shakespeare.”

“Yeah. They were young all right. Real mature! So much so they killed themselves! How is that responsible?”

“Mature?—no. Responsible—certainly not! But did you ever question their love for each other? … Never!

“And now—for now—you are young. And I am asking you to question this love you have for Suzie. There are many that would tell me not to get involved—that we should not be having this conversation. But I look at you and I see myself sixty years ago—young, ambitious—so focused on your actions today you cannot see the consequences they bring tomorrow. And I don’t want you to live as I have—always looking back. And wondering. If you marry that girl, you will find your life captured by a ‘Classic Comic Book’! Don’t settle for a cliché! Be patient. Wait for the real thing. Wait for a masterpiece! She’s out there, just let your mind and heart be open to her when she comes along. You know Suzie isn’t right for you. You don’t need me to tell you that! If you thought differently, you’d have punched this old man in the mouth by now. Don’t respond to me. Don’t talk. Just stop and think for awhile.”

I did start to protest. Then, as he requested, stopped and dwelled on all that he had said. By now the fire had died down and was mostly embers glowing red in the darkened room. It was quieter outside and I could not believe we had spoken for so long without interruption. Surely Susan would be checking on me shortly.

“If you are right … if I decide that you are right—how do I get out of this? We are in it so far—the plans and everything. The dress … the cake. It’s a done deal. What do I say to her?”

(There was that look in the eye again.) “You go to her door—and I mean—you go to her door and knock on it. None of that ‘i.t.d.’-ing crap! And when she answers, you say—with the greatest sincerity—‘I’m here to save your life.’”

“That’s it! I’m here to save your life! That’s it?! What am I going to say after that? Am I supposed to just walk away or what!”

“Don’t worry about that. You may not have to say anything. Perhaps I’m giving her more credit than I should, but she’ll probably have figured out your meaning before you can think of another thing to say. Just say, ‘I’m here to save your life,’ and the rest will take care of itself.”

“Pops, you have me totally confused. Totally and completely drained and confused me.”

“Once again, I’ve said what I came to say. Now get back out there and say your thank-you’s and good-byes. I’m on my way home.”

I walked outside into the night air, much colder now. I could still hear voices coming from the site down by the river. At the top of the bank, I could see Susan talking with her girlfriends. That was good. It appeared she hadn’t even missed me.

Who would have thought we’d be burying that man a week later. All those words … and now … just silence. Life plays along to an unheard rhythm. We always kidded that his death would somehow involve pyrotechnics. We should have known the first time the story was told of that incident in his thirties when he poured five gallons of gas on a giant brush pile in his yard. His plan was to let it burn down, then roast hot dogs for all the guests at his party. Knocked him over and singed every hair on his head from twenty feet away! Almost burned the house and woods down! This time it was fatal.

Eleven or twelve years ago, back when his King Henry was a pup, Pops was walking him along the creek that runs through his fifty acres. Some beavers had dammed up the creek again and Pops was, once again, clearing it to let the water pass. On this particular day, the pup stumbled on a big fat beaver they came to refer to as “Snaggletooth.” They called him that because he was missing one of his two cutting teeth and the remaining one was chipped. That beaver must have had a harem supporting him because it didn’t seem he would be worth a hoot when it came to falling trees. But when King Henry poked his nose right in that beaver’s face, that missing tooth didn’t stop Snaggletooth from ripping a long and jagged gash in King Henry’s muzzle. Sixteen stitches later they left the vet’s office and Pops and King Henry made a pact that, one day, they would get that beaver back for what he did to “Henry.”

Ever since, until last week, they had schemed and plotted, devised and tried, but had been unsuccessful in effecting the demise of that wily rodent. Sometimes I believe it was just being together and the sheer joy of the pursuit, more than the stated objective, they enjoyed. They tried innumerable traps, lures, and “beaver calling” devices. (For the life of me, I still don’t know what sound a beaver makes. Pops never shared that secret with me. But—whatever it was—Snaggletooth wasn’t falling for it.)

BEAVER 2

One night, in a moment of liquid campground inspiration and, to the total delight of myself and numerous cousins sharing the fire with him, he wired a beaver pelt to his old barn cat and rubbed beaver scent all over him. Supposedly it was the beaver equivalent of Chanel No. 5. The scent of a beaverette in season! (This was Pop’s description—not mine.) I don’t know what that cat thought of it all, but the sight of Pops carrying a fishing net, following him around in the moonlight, must have sucked all nine of his lives right out of him. We found him dead behind the barn not long after. Pops said he was the victim of a violent inter-species love triangle! (A classic “Pops” story if ever there was one.)

Pops claimed he wanted to take Snaggletooth alive so that he could tell him to his face what a fine hat he was going to make of him. But … to no avail. (I can’t tell you how many young, less cunning beaver Pops set free over the years.) He deemed a sniper shot from a long rifle too easy. And poison—totally unsporting! And so, with the years passing and King Henry getting so old Pops thought he might never live to see the day they got their nemesis, Pops decided to ratchet the action up a notch.

Who would have thought that dynamite his brother Mark had brought home from a construction job and given him, over twenty years ago, would still be good.

I got the message from the constable. Seems the explosion was so loud they heard it two miles away at Parson’s Feed & Seed and called for someone to investigate. (They had a good idea where to look.) I was the first family member on the scene. So glad it was not my mother. From the empty crate resting on the bank of the creek, we determined that Pops and King Henry had planted the entire box of dynamite in the middle of that beaver dam. There was now a pool the size of Lake Maxinkuckee where the dam had been and debris was scattered everywhere. Pops had been blown back and down a ways from the crest of the creek bank. He lay peacefully, almost posed, looking straight up at the blue fall sky. A most unnerving but, when recollected, strangely amusing little smile curled his mouth. A six-inch piece of hickory had pierced his heart.

We loaded him into an ambulance before my mother arrived. As it pulled away, King Henry chased behind it making a sound that was less a bark than a mournful, moaning howl. I turned my head over my shoulder for one last glimpse of the scene. I swear I saw a lone beaver peering from behind some brush. I’m sure Pops would have saluted him.

Who would have thought a tale of star-crossed love which began with the death of a celebrity … would reach its near conclusion with his own. We had the funeral at Jackson’s Funeral Home in Rensselaer, his birthplace. It was the place we had the funerals of his mother and her parents—Grandpa Frank and Grandma Jessie (for whom Pops had named my mother).

Pops looked comfortable in his Irish tweed jacket. No matter the latest mortuary techniques, that undertaker (another in a long succession of Mr. Jackson’s) could not erase that wry smile from Pop’s face.

Some time before the official start of the ceremony, my mother, Jessie, approached the casket and ever so tenderly began to place something in the left inside pocket of his jacket. She paused, a look of puzzlement taking over her face, and retrieved something already there. I saw her hold it in her hand. After long and thoughtful appreciation, she turned to look at me. From the front row where I was seated, next to hers, I saw her mouth the question, “Yvonne?” (Pops had spoken of Yvonne to my mother many times. Especially when my mother was in her teens.) With a small, somewhat sad smile, I nodded and mouthed, “Yvonne.” She gently placed it, along with two other small photographs, one of herself, back in his pocket. And over his heart.

I could feel the tires crunching on the gravel beneath as the procession came to a halt near the family plot at the edge of the cemetery across the road from the park. We laid Pops to rest under the family monument which bears an inscription noting the passing of his brother, Preston (whose body was never found), and next to his mother along with Frank and Jessie.

Two weeks had passed since we put Pops to rest. Christmas break was on and I had three weeks before classes would resume. One week before my scheduled wedding.

Standing at that door, I saw my hand, as though someone else’s, knocking, of its own volition, in the slowest of motions. Susan answered the door in her robe. “I’ve come to save your life,” I said.

The next day, Mom was with me in Pop’s barn. He had left the farm to her and what was under the dusty canvas tarp to me. It, and King Henry.

Together Mom and I pulled the cover back and revealed the old bronze 1971 Chevy Camaro, just like the one Pop’s dad had given him in McAllen just before his senior year of high school. The old man was sentimental to a fault and when he saw it at an antique show in Auburn, Indiana twenty years ago, he had to have it. He’d change the oil in it once a year and take it out on the country roads around these parts. The rest of the time, it remained under the tarp like some holy shrine to youth.

I placed my electronic map, some other items, and the sandwiches my mom had given me on the driver’s seat. King Henry instinctively crawled into the passenger’s seat.

Mom and I locked our arms around each other in a long and hard embrace. Without letting go completely, gripping my arms, she gave that “oh so familiar” look into my eyes and asked, “Will you be back in time to start the new semester?”

“I don’t know, Mom … I don’t know.”

“Where are you going?”

“Well … King Henry and I will take one of the historical highways—one on which they’ll allow these antique vehicles to creep along—headed south. We’ll take our time, stopping wherever we like along the way. But we’re headed toward the Rio Grande Valley of Texas.”

She looked around me at the brown manila envelope, on the seat, under the map and sandwiches. Her eyes softened and she smiled gently.

“What will you do when you get there?”

“We’re going to find out if there is really such a thing … such a thing as ‘Raven-haired girls with eyes as black as night … and lips as soft as a warm breeze off a southern sea.’” I gave her a wink and King Henry and I were gone.

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Bard of The Woods, alias “Buck Wild” . . . road warrior and wordsmith.

“Have pen . . . will travel.”

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Trap Door To The Booby Hatch: Part I – From the Medical Archives of Don Kenton Henry . . .

TRAP DOOR TO THE BOOBY HATCH PSYCHOLOGY TODAY COVER

I was digging through an old footlocker I have carted around since a stint in military school my junior year of high school when I came across my scrap book from those prep school days. In it I found an copy of myself making the cover of Psychology Today. Seems I’m published after all. Well . . . in a dubious sort of way. The article documents another stint (or side trip) I took on the way to this life style of the rich and famous I now lead. Regardless, I thought it would make a good cover photo for my coming third installment of “Trap Door To The Booby Hatch”. What a’ ya think?
Y’all thought I made this stuff up, didn’t ya? (Well – some of ya anyway!)

The Man Behind the Curtain

Don Kenton Henry

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Thank you for your response. ✨

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Quotations By The Bard*

At first, my psychiatrist believed in Uncle Waldo . . . and then he didn’t. But I always knew he was there. And here’s the proof.

“Quotations from the Bard.”

(you don’t really think I came up with these pearls of wisdom on my own, do you?)

*(All quotes are by The Bard Of The Woods, unless otherwise noted.)

“Every bridge I burned was a National Historic Monument.” (From Venus Wore Red Ball Jets)

"If you smile, laugh, and rejoice from love, the birth of a child, sunshine, and random acts of kindness falling like manna from heaven into your life, once barren . . . then you should be writing."

“The most defining moments in one’s life are his birth. And his death. In between, what counts the most are not his wins. Or his losses. But the opportunities he took. And the ones he passed on. The girls he kissed. And the ones he wishes he had. May you live it all and regret the none of it, Junior.” – advice from “Uncle Waldo On My Front Porch”

“Life is a pool you fall into. You don’t know how deep or shallow it is. But you better swim.”

“Don’t worry. This life will end. And when it does … all your demons and dreams will end with it.” (From "Wide Awake At 3 In The Morning")

“Truth is often best received when delivered in the simplest, most innocent format possible. More often from the guy next door than the narcissistic, erudite, deeply entrenched in their ivory towers. ”From Dumbass to Genius" (By Way of A Thousand Kicks in the Ass)

“Freedom is always forged by lead. Sharp tongue, sharp pen. … And steel. Like Bowie’s knife.”(From Not The Pacifist)

“Let the wine blush–but keep a straight face when he asks you that. Everyone has a past and that’s not something you have to share if you don’t want to.” (From Princess Xanax And The Ride to Kalispell)

“A good story told well is a fine thing. A great story told well is bankable.
But a story like Shakespeare, Twain, and Hemingway told … well, that’s a gift from God, brother.”

"Have pen . . . will travel."

"And nothing was interesting, nothing. The people were restrictive and careful, all alike. And I've got to live with these fuckers for the rest of my life, I thought."
~ Charles Bukowski . . . In response, I said
"This is what went through my head during the 12 years I spent in the public school system." - The Bard

“Any fool can die. Try to live a life worth living.”

“Time is an undefeated champion. It has not even fought to a draw . . . But you still get in the ring with it and do your best to pull an upset.”

“I can’t give another inch.  . . . I’ve already given too many miles.”

“I’m a prideful son-of-a-bitch, I’ll admit that. I’ll gladly meet you half way around the world to love you like you’ve never been loved before. . . .  But I’ll be damned if I’ll cross a bridge to kiss your ass.” – The Bard

“Virtuous character is not a mistress. You take a vow to it. And no one needs to inform it of your infidelity. It is the first to know.”

“Character is like steel. It will maintain its integrity. Or it will crack under pressure. Each is nothing until tempered. Steel, by fire. Character, by choices made.”

“According to you, you grew up in a household full of geniuses. Apparently, it was so commonplace, I did not recognize yours when I saw it.” – Uncle Waldo’s “Advice From Our Front Porch”

“Only difference between me and a June colt was a colt had more sense. And I had no fence.” – (from Yester Summer Day)

“Contentment can be found when love owns the mortgage on a heart lust once leased.”

“One day we overestimate our worth . . . and all too soon we’re turned to dirt.” (from The Bard"s poem Death Comes A Horseman)

“When I read that people with high IQ’s talk to themselves more than others talk to themselves, I said to myself, ‘I told you so!'”

“A dog’s life. That’s about what I have left in me, Don.” (From Uncle Waldo’s insights into mortality dispensed from our front steps.)

“Sadly and too often . . . before there can be real peace . . . there must be real war.”

“It is apparent my heart and mind wish more years than granted by the lease on this tired and crumbling edifice they inhabit.”

“Those who take no interest in how they are governed, are destined to be governed by those who are thoroughly invested in controlling them.”

“I tried self-deprecating humor as a writing technique. But I’m not very good at it.”

“A lot of good things happen, get lost, get found “deep in the heart of Texas”. Some get left there . . . but memories of them linger on and bring a smile to those who own them.”

“I try not to embarrass myself or present company. I succeed with 50% of such.”

“I cut my nose off to shave my face.” (on straight razors)

“Since we first met, my heart times itself by the breaths you take.” (to be continued)

“Do I think I’m the smartest guy in the room? That varies from room to room.”

“Don’t use my stories, poems and words against me. That’s not very original.”

“I write in the shadow and spirit of Mark Twain and Bill Shakespeare. My greatest dream and aspiration is that they will laugh with me . . . and not laugh me out of the classroom.

"If you smile, laugh, and rejoice ...from love, the birth of a child, sunshine, and random acts of kindness falling like manna from Heaven into your life, once barren ... then you should be writing."

"The family that grave robs together ... stays together." - from the Tooth And The Fudgesicle Motif

"When the paths of our lives have run their course, some memories will endure. It is my hope that somewhere within your treasury of fondest recollections, at least one of me, of us together,shall shine among the brightest."

“This child is the apple blossom on my family tree.” (Speaking of my daughter, Jessie Remington Henry)

“If the Earth were made entirely of gold . . . gold would have no value. If every woman were right for you, Don . . . women would have no value. Hold out for the one that goes through your heart and becomes one with your soul. She’ll be worth more to your life than any amount of gold or diamonds you could ever come to call your own.” – Advice from Uncle Waldo in “Thoughts And Poems In The Key Of Love”

“As Jason pursued the Golden Fleece, the Bard’s quest to find his muse continues. And yet, some days―alone without even the Argonauts―his pen finds its way across the page. And the words it leaves in its wake take on a life of their own and carry him forward to some distant shore. A shore where he knows she listens and lies in wait.”

“In the words of a famous clown, I once had the pleasure of knowing, ‘We are all actors in a grand play. We can choose to be either happy or sad performers.’ I choose ‘happy’!” I made that clown a promise I would do my part to make people smile. Again, I hope this does that much for you.” (From “About The Bard O’ The Woods)

QUOTE AND COUNTER-QUOTE: “Don’t just embrace the crazy, sidle up next to it and lick its ear.”- Jim Wright
RESPONSE TO ABOVE: “If my acquaintances were to submit to this advice, I would be made to feel like one whose head was slathered in maple syrup and tied down in a whelping box with a dozen month, old Labrador Retrievers.

”UPON AWAKENING FROM GENERAL ANESTHESIA ON O7.31.13: “I have found the portal to the 4th dimension which allows us to go through the wormhole into another universe. Ours is not the only one. There is a parallel universe where all the characters are animated and Deputy Dawg is God.” (verbatim, as recorded in the recovery room by my ride home)

“Seems to me there is not much difference between heartburn and a broken heart. Initially, they feel almost identical. The only real difference is, there is a pill you may take for the first malady. For the second . . . the only real cure seems to be what got you sick in the first place.”

“Better to come to love to last late then love too fast lost.”

My doctor told me I needed a brain scan. Seriously. I told him, “They look in my brain, they’re gonna see Hemingway and General George S. Patton seated at a small table doin’ shots and arguing over who gets to tell me what to do next.”

“Seems to me there is not much difference between heartburn and a broken heart. Initially they feel almost identical. The only real difference is, there is a pill you may take for the first malady. For the second . . . the only real cure seems to be what got you sick in the first place.”

"If you smile, laugh, and rejoice ... from love, the birth of a child, sunshine, and random acts of kindness falling like manna from Heaven into your life, once barren ...
then you should be writing."

"You and I will never surrender willingly to age. We will always fight the good fight. However, it is healthy to know what our priorities should be as we undergo the process. Be optimistic but realistic. Make your expectations achievable. Praise yourself for looking as good as you do and doing the best you can. Let yourself off the hook for being human."

Every living creature … every beautiful movie star … to the smallest amoeba … will experience the same thing. And not all with the grace that you will." (advice to a friend)

"Call me an Old Testament kind of guy. I confess, of the two Marys. However, I'm much more drawn to that Magdalene gal."

"When the paths of our lives have run their course, some memories will endure. It is my hope that somewhere within your treasury of fondest recollections, at least one of me, of us together, shall shine among the brightest."

"I will dutifully follow my road to redemption all the way to my grave.
But there are some things there is just no accounting for . . ."

“You and I will never surrender willingly to age. We will always fight the good fight. However, it is healthy to know what our priorities should be as we undergo the process. Be optimistic but realistic. Make your expectations achievable. Praise yourself for looking as good as you do and doing the best you can. Let yourself off the hook for being human.”

“Every living creature … every beautiful movie star … to the smallest amoeba … will experience the same thing. And not all with the grace that you will.” (advice to a friend)

“When the paths of our lives have run their course, some memories will endure. It is my hope that somewhere within your treasury of fondest recollections, at least one of me, of us together, shall shine among the brightest.”

“I will dutifully follow my road to redemption all the way to my grave.
But there are some things there is just no accounting for . . .”

“Seems to me there is not much difference between heartburn and a broken heart. Initially, they feel almost identical. The only real difference is there is a pill you may take for the first malady. For the second . . . the only real cure seems to be what got you sick in the first place.”

“Better to come to love (to last) late than love (too fast than lost.”

My doctor told me I needed a brain scan. Seriously. I told him, “They look in my brain; they’re gonna see Hemingway and General George S. Patton seated at a small table doin’ shots and arguing over who gets to tell me what to do next.”

**********Comments on the passing of esteemed author Pat Conroy:“They read one quote of his that made me fist pump! It was –“One of the greatest gifts you can get as a writer is to be born into an unhappy family,” Mr. Conroy told the writer John Berendt for a Vanity Fair profile in 1995. “I could not have been born into a better one.” He added: “I don’t have to look very far for melodrama. It’s all right there.”Well, that right there practically guarantees me a Pulitzer! I have to say, I got goosebumps reading the article, which is essentially an obituary. The parallels between his father and mine are eerie. And, as loyal and maternal as she was, when my mother had to take me to the doctor for the injuries my dad had inflicted on me, it was always quietly agreed that this was a family matter and to be kept private. The doctors weren’t idiots. But they were complicit. And like Conroy’s―boy!―is my family ever going to be pissed at me when all the stories are told . . . If I get published. I am just now getting into the nitty-gritty of family life in the Henry household. Stay tuned for more gunshots, wounded boar raccoons running rampant through my grandmother’s Better Homes and Gardens Rensselaer penthouse, and castrated perverts! Woo hoo! From Navy Seabee to drug runner, Conroy’s dad had nothin’ on mine! I like to think my prose is a lot like his. I am accused of being too flowery and verbose. But it worked for him, and I think it works for me. Like him, I will be getting more inside people’s heads as I go forward. The quotes about opening the oyster and – “now you know my childhood” – freaking rocked! His characters in South of Broad were a little too effeminate for me to relate to. He was obviously a lot more liberal than I. More like my friend Bones, who sent me the article! Pat Conroy, Author of ‘The Prince of Tides’ and ‘The Great Santini,’ Dies at 70 – The New York Timeshttp://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/05/books/pat-conroy-who-wove-his-family-strife-into-novels-of-carolina-dies-at-70.htmlI think I am a little more like Conroy’s dad (incidentally named Donald!)! I laughed out loud when they asked him who read his son’s books! Mr. Conroy replied, “That’s easy: psychiatrists, homosexuals, extreme liberals, and women.” Classic! But Conroy’s use of prose went down on paper like poetry, and I loved it. He started younger and stayed on track because he had a mentor and was more disciplined than I. But I’m going to chase him.” – DKH

*(Again, all quotes are by Don Kenton Henry unless credited by name to someone else.)

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Trap Door to the Booby Hatch: Part II

TRAP DOOR TO THE BOOBY HATCH
Part II
By Don Kenton Henry

PSYCH WARD 1

Dr. Petrosky reached under his desk and a buzzer sounded in the hallway outside the door. Almost simultaneously, the door opened. A very large man, no–that’s not true. It was a cave bear–in a white lab coat–that entered the room! I am not saying he was also a hunchback but his shoulders slumped to the point he was practically dragging his knuckles. If he had stood fully erect, he would have been at least six foot four or five. And Frankenstein’s monster had nothing on this guy’s Neanderthal cranium or forearms!
He walked past me, my mother and grandfather, did an about face and stood at attention next to the doctor’s desk and between it and myself. His reptilian eyes emitted no light and made no eye contact with any of us as he stood awaiting a command. Well–I didn’t need an explanation of where this was going! I bolted from my chair and ran to the door. The movie wouldn’t be out for another six years but I had just read the book, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, by Ken Kesey, in Mr. Sims’s sophomore literature class and there was no way I was sitting still for a lobotomy! I grabbed that door knob and yanked it fast and hard with both hands but somehow the door had locked and I fell backward to floor. I jumped up just in time to avoid the grasp of Godzilla as he reached for me. “I am Mothra!” I yelled as I ran to a window and desperately attempted to open it. (For those too young to have watched Japanese monster flicks, Mothra was the grand nemesis of Godzilla.) However, this appeared to have no deterrent effect as, again, he was on me. I dodged him once more, ran behind the doctor and continued to avoid him as the others remained seated.
“I am not going to the funny farm, mom!” I yelled. “I am not crazy!” Not bearing to watch, my mother kept her face buried in her handkerchief and continued to sob. Dr. Petrosky’s face was emotionless as he calmly raised his hand signaling Lurch to cease his pursuit.
“He is not going anywhere, Bob. Prepare 10 mgs. of haloperidol.”
Bob! What the fuck kind of name is Bob for this kind of creature. Egor, at least! Ivan would have been believable but not, Bob! It’s not like he was some shop teacher, insurance salesman or the guy next door. This guy was a refugee from the set of some horror movie! And so he seemed as reached into the pocket of his lab coat, produced a syringe and proceeded to draw the contents of a small vial.
By now, I was cowering in the rear corner of the room. It seemed the only plausible escape was to dive through a window, preferably the one directly behind the doctor because it was just a few feet above the slanted roof of the front porch. If I didn’t roll off, I could then crawl to the edge and, hanging on to the rain trough, drop over the side to the ground below. It would take a flying superman type leap to crash through the window but that is exactly what I attempted as I sprang across the room and onto Dr. Petrosky’s desk. One more leap and I would crash through the glass onto the porch roof! Except that as I raised myself, my feet were on my medical chart and other papers. As I pushed off, the papers slid behind me taking my feet with them and dropping me to the desk with my upper torso and arms hanging off the back. I was in a particularly vulnerable position and the other occupants of the room, with the exception of my totally hysterical mother, took immediate advantage of it. The doctor jumped up and held my upper body below the level of the desk top by simply pushing down on my head and shoulders as my grandfather grabbed my ankles pinning my legs. All that was left for Bob to do was place one of his forty pound paws on my lower back and I was effectively subdued. No, Lurch! No! I screamed. “Stop them, mom,” I begged. With his free hand, Bob pulled my shirt tail out of my trousers, gave a sharp, downward tug on my belt, exposing a portion of my little lily white one-hundred thirty five pound ass and jammed that needle all the way to China and pushed the plunger!
“It will take about ten minutes before he begins to calm down,” explained Dr. Petrosky. “In the meantime, let’s just keep him pinned on the desk top and we should be able to transport him free of any additional restraint within half an hour.”
“Transport? Where are you transporting me!” I pleaded. “I’m not crazy! Mom, I’m not crazy! You know me, I was just kidding! I thought you all knew I was just kidding when I said all that crazy stuff! I don’t talk to Uncle Waldo! Uncle Waldo’s dead–he can’t talk! Let me go! Please don’t lock me up! I hate tight places …” But already my voice was beginning to taper off. They turned me on the desk so my head was now resting on a stack of papers, hands loosely grasping the corners of the desk. A warm, fuzzy feeling was beginning to creep into my head. My body was relaxing, going limp, melting into the desk top. I was losing my enthusiasm for the fight. I started to half sing, half mumble the words to Purple Haze by Jimmy Hendricks, ” Purple Haze was in my brain, lately things don’t seem the same, actin’ funny but I don’t know why” . . . I was drooling on the latest Journal of The American Medical Association as I crooned, “Roll me over, Lurch, so I can kiss the sky!” He just kept that mighty hand of his pressed against my back though, at this point, I was just diggin’ the tunes in my head. My mom’s sobbing began to take on the mournful wail of Janis Joplin . . . “Cry i i i . . . just a little bit harder!” I sang along. “Get down momma . . . ” And that’s the last thing I remember before looking up at the white cement ceiling.
I had the room to myself. It was approximately eight by ten feet with a single bed and chair beside it. Did I say, “room”. It was a cell. It was not padded and there were no bars on the one wire re-enforced window to the outside approximately eight feet above the floor. But, make no mistake, it was a cell. There was a door with a small window of thick glass. One could peer out but it was certainly more suitable for peering in. I grabbed my head as I rose to my feet, swooning from the after effects of the haloperidol. I tried the door. As you might guess, it was locked. There was a an audio speaker and a doorbell in the wall next to it. I pressed the black button of the bell. I heard nothing, so I pressed it again. I peered through the plate glass when suddenly those dark, deep-set eyes of a Komodo Dragon appeared inches away from mine. I jumped back so far I feel backward on to my bed. Over the speaker, I heard, “Remain seated, Henry. I’m coming in.”
I did so, a buzzer sounded, the door lock turned and Bob entered the room.
“Where am I?” I asked. For an instant I saw a slight trace of light from his eyes as he said,
“You are in the Logan’s Port State Mental Hospital.”
“What? What! You can’t keep me here! I’m not crazy!” I pleaded.
“The doctor will be in shortly to explain everything. In the meantime, he handed me a very small white paper cup with a pill in the bottom. “Take this pill,” he said and produced a small container of water with which to wash it down.
“I don’t want to. I’m not sick. I don’t need any pill!” Take it Henry or we are going to have a repeat of what went down in Dr. Petrosky’s office last evening.”
“Look, Mongo–I’m not taking that horse pill you hear me? Now let me talk to the doctor!”
He pulled the full measure of his full hulking form above me and staring down, said, “We can do this one of two ways. We can do it the easy way or we can do it the hard way, kid, but you will be taking that pill. Now are you going to comply or is this where the fun begins?”
I swished the water around in my mouth to try to eliminate the very bitter taste the pill had left. “What was that?” I asked.
“Dr. Petrosky will be in shortly,” Bob said as he exited. I heard the door lock behind him. I looked around the room. No Reader’s Digest, no Outdoor Life. Certainly no Sport’s Illustrated Swimsuit Edition. I should be sitting in Miss Newman’s French class right about now watching her shoot that little beaver as she sits atop her desk, I thought, feeling quite sorry for myself.
The buzzer sounded again and, once more, the lock turned and Dr. Petrosky entered the room. Stoic as ever, he bore no trace of a smile as he looked at me and took a seat in the chair next to the bed. My chart was in his hand and but he did not take his eyes off mine. “How are you feeling today, Don?”
“I have a headache and I want out of here, that’s how I feel! What’s going on? How long do I have to be here and what was that pill Lurch gave me, anyway?”
“The pill Bob gave you was a sedative. You are very excitable and it is natural to be anxious in these circumstances. The pill will calm you.”
“You’re doping me up! What comes next? Electro shock? A lobotomy?”
“You watch too much television, Don.”
“Television? I read about what you do to people in places like this. I’m quite well read you know.”
“What is the last book you read, Don?”
“The Electric Kook-Aid Acid Test,” I answered.
“Awe … by Tom Wolfe.”
“Yes.”
And you’re worried about what we’re giving you in here?”
“I didn’t say I did acid. I said I read the book.”
“And it’s about the travels and misadventures of Ken Kesey as he travels around the country in the Magic Bus with his band of Merry Pranksters, is it not?”
“You’ve read it?”
“The same Ken Kesey who wrote One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, correct?” he asked while flipping through my chart.
“My guess is you know that.”
“No wonder you’re scared.”
I pulled my feet onto the bed and pushed myself against the concrete wall. The pill was beginning to take effect and, he was right, I was becoming calmer by the moment. “Am I committed? How long do I have to be here?”
“You’re mother did sign commitment papers but, initially, only for observation. You presented acute psychiatric symptoms warranting emergency hospitalization in our Extended Observation Unit. The next 72 hours will be a period of stabilization and evaluation. At the end of that time, if our conclusions warrant a more long term hospitalization, your mother, as your legal guardian, will agree to that. Her main concern is that you get well. Her fear is that you will hurt yourself or someone else again.”
“I’m telling you, I’m not crazy Doctor. I never meant to hurt anyone. I was only trying to scare Schuler when I shot him! Besides, you already know he told me to do it.”
“Yes. And you also told me you were aware he didn’t think you would do it, Don. And you did it with a rifle you sawed off for concealment purposes in order to shoot out the tires of your high school rival’s team bus. Additionally, you froze a dead cat and put a burglar alarm, mistaken for a bomb, in it causing the evacuation of a Senator’s home and an entire neighborhood. Lastly, you incited a riot between the senior and sophomore class which resulted in your being severely beaten and almost resulted in your school being temporarily closed for everyone’s safety. Do you consider these things normal?”
“Normal for me . . . and Tom Sawyer or Huck Finn. It’s just Mark Twain stuff that–you know–got a little outta hand.”
“Things went a little beyond you tricking your friends into white washing a fence don’t you think?”
“Well, I don’t know. Aiding and abetting a runaway slave in pre-Civil War Missouri was a pretty big offense, don’t you think, doc?”
It was also fiction. But when you dissected a cat and re-created it as some mutant aberration straight from the Twilight Zone that was real and it certainly got the attention of the good people of Finn’s Landing. And now it has mine.”
“Gee doc, you make me sound ground-breaking. Right up there with Ken Kesey.”
“It seems to me you are the one that appears to be channeling McMurphy (the protagonist in Cuckoo’s Nest). Is he some cult hero of yours you are trying to emulate?”
“I froze that cat and shot Schuler before I even read Cuckoo’s Nest, doc. Maybe Kesey’s heard about me.”
“He wrote the Cuckoo’s Nest in ’62.”
“Does my chart tell you I did jail time in 1958 at the age of four?”
He flipped through my chart then, peering over his glasses, for the first time, his expression betrayed something beyond passive acknowledgement. It was a subtle display of perturbation and bemusement. “You’re not making a good case for your argument, Don.”

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The Time Wolf

THE TIME WOLF
By Don Kenton Henry

WOLF HOWLING 3

In the late afternoon of life, sunrise seems not so long ago
Though the morning dew is long dry upon my shoes, the joys of youth
Still shine as the sun’s soft rays upon my denying soul
And sweet memories drop in as fresh and comforting as summer rain on a hill country tin roof
And thoughts of the boy I was are fresher still

Yet sunset is nigh, and truth be known these feet are not as light and these bones the proof
That this tired tenement of flesh is no longer much a temple
In which to weather winter’s chill; alas no shelter is impenetrable
What cruel joke is this
That I no longer dance in real time as does my mind
Waltzing in three-quarter rhyme with young girls, shamelessly stealing their kiss,
Lithe and winsome–with eyes bright–their touch a thing of bliss

Nay, I no longer see the room I once entered with a countenance of confidence light up upon my entry
Gone is the swagger of the Turk once young
And will not return . . . for the time wolf is a heartless sentry

Now be I the thoroughbred whose race has run; the boxer whose bell has rung; the eve whose ball has dropped; the opera ‘s last act sung
Soon enough time’s dagger’s work be done
And no one is immune, not poor man or landed gentry
Least I that strives to live the last quarter of his day
Determined yet fruitless in keeping the midnight hour and finality at bay

And so I revel in what joys are left; kiss more and cry less
Laugh louder, love longer, dance closer; hug stronger and relish moments helping others do the same
Think more of grandpas, old dogs, summertime and homemade wine
Recall sundresses and shaved legs and ribbons in their hair
The more than one maiden fair in cut-off jeans and even less good sense than what she had to wear
Yes, all they had to give was there in frayed denim and now memory frayed in time
I close my eyes and I go back to the sublime

Before I go forward over the cold black mountain of what will be
I take each chance to remember and persist in trying to live life without a care
I leave one foot in a timeless summer past
While the other steps ever closer into winter . . . and the time wolf’s inescapable dark lair

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Excerpts from “A Phobia of Walls”

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