Tag Archives: non-fiction

Foiled by the Marathon Again

I wrote this the day after the event and I forgot to hit ‘Publish.’  Here it is, a month late.

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Yesterday my mother was discharged from the hospital.  Her next stop was going to be a therapy center in Mechanicsville.  Before going to the hospital to transport her, I rushed off to her apartment to get the clothes and essentials she would need for her stay.  It was 10:00 am.

Enter the 2012 Anthem Richmond Marathon.  This year’s half-marathon route ran right up the road her apartment sits on.  Her street was closed to all traffic and there is only one way to get in.

Flashback to 2011: The day of the 2011 Richmond Marathon my mother and I had an appointment to tour the apartment complex she subsequently moved into.  After trying to get in for over an hour, and being turned away three times by police officers and organizers who would not even speak to us other than to say, “Sir, you must move along!” we had to call the complex, reschedule for another day, and go home.

Back to 2012:  For half an hour I drove around in circles trying to get onto her road.  All side-streets feeding into it were blocked by cones and barricades.  Finally, in stress and frustration, I started moving and skirting barricades.  I turned tentatively onto Hermitage Rd. and headed toward her street.  I did not see a single runner or vehicle as I proceeded to my intersection.  I was immediately approached by a male police officer and a female race organizer.  I lowered my window.

“How did you get onto this road?” the organizer said.

“I moved a bunch of barricades.  I have to get to my mother’s place.”

“So you just disregarded the safety of the runners?!  You can’t…”

“There’s was nobody standing at the barricades for me to ask permission from.  Look, I’m going to her apartment,” I said angrily.  “My mother is going to rehab and I need to get her things.  She’s waiting for me at the hospital right now, so…”

“You need to calm down,” the officer said.

“Last year when this happened I turned around and went home.  Not this time.”

“You need to calm down,” he repeated menacingly.

“I’ll be a lot calmer when I get to her apartment.”

The organizer said something and I said something back.  The cop moved closer.  Other things were said on all sides that I can’t remember.

“Look, I apologize for being a jerk,” I said, “but last year you people wouldn’t even talk to me when I stopped at barricades.  This time I just decided I wasn’t going to take ‘no’ for an answer.  But I could’ve been nicer about it.  I’m sorry for being so tense and rude.  Really, I’m sorry.”

I think the organizer said something about watching out for runners before she stomped away.  The policeman waived me to turn and I did.

At the gate to the complex, the security guard stopped me.

“How did you get down here?” she asked.  I told her my story in brief.

“I had to park eight blocks over and walk in with my lunch and all my stuff,” she said.  “What a pain!  You’re only the third person to make it in all day.  The other two said the people at the barricades are really being assholes.”

“In my case, there was little bit of that on both sides,” I said.

A Werewolf Mystery

The basement of her parent’s house was quiet and nobody ever disturbed us there.  There were candles stuck in Chianti bottles caked in layered wax, pickle jars of upturned paint brushes, the smell of raw clay and drying canvases, gesso and pine wood walls and her father’s pipe tobacco.  She was a sculptor, her mother an art teacher, her father an executive.

Our relationship started when I was about sixteen, and getting to that basement was a great reason to take Driver’s Ed.  Our relationship lasted for most of high-school, on and off.  She went away to college white I stayed in, and that was the beginning of the end.  We wrote letters and talked on the phone once in a while, even saw each other as friends a few times after we each married other people and had kids.  But eventually the friendship fizzled.

On cold nights we’d build a fire in the basement fireplace, sit beside it on the brown and orange carpet, talk and neck.  There was always dried medium of one kind or another around the nails of her slender fingers or smudged on her jeans.  She smelled like hay and horses, musk and rose petals.  She was older than me, more mature, a better artist and far more intelligent.  To this day I have no idea what she saw in me.

On a summer night in the late seventies, after a long evening in the basement, we ventured upstairs for a snack.  It was almost midnight.  We stood in the kitchen and ate homemade yogurt with fresh blueberries on top.  A typical snack at my house was potato chips and grape soda.  Under the circumstances, homemade yogurt was mystically nourishing, a spiritual meal.

Eventually it was time to go.  In the back of the house there as a picture window facing the rear yard, and beneath it a daybed where the cat slept.  We stood in front of the window and kissed goodbye.  Her mother came in just as we broke apart.  I complimented the yogurt and thanked her for her hospitality.

In the direction of the window I sensed movement.

I turned and looked out into the yard.  The moon was nearly full in the distance.  The scene was clear, bright and rendered in silhouette.  At about forty yard’s distance there was a wood pile on the left and a piece of farm equipment on the right.  Between them was a twenty-yard expanse of neatly cut grass.  Walking slowly from behind the woodpile, from left to right, was a large dog or wolf.  In the center of the open space the thing stood up on hind legs and continued walking.  It never broke stride.  In the shape of man with a dog-like head, it then moved behind the tractor and was gone.

My girlfriend and her mother had turned to follow my eyes.  They saw it too.  We stood there talking, pointing and staring out of the window.  I’m allergic to cats but I didn’t care.  We sat on the cat’s day-bed for half an hour and waited to see if it would reappear.  It never did.

Eventually I had to go.  They turned on the flood lights and I made it nervously to my father’s old station wagon in one piece.  I climbed in and locked the doors.  When I was a mile away I opened the window and listened to the crickets and cicadas buzzing in the ditches by the road.  Watching the country turn into suburbs under headlights, I drove home in a strange mood.

Thirty years later I would stand in that basement with her sister and help dispose of her adolescent things.  That was long after her mother had died and her father had moved away; after her divorce; after she had died in a car accident along with her two daughters. The fact that she had left her entire estate to an environmental charity, and that her name would live on as a memorial fund, was little comfort.

I’ve been unable to make sense of what I saw that night.  Neither have I been able to understand the sudden and senseless death of my high school girlfriend and her two daughters.  In my head there is only a desolate array of strange and disjointed thoughts, feelings, and memories.  Everything associated with her is like the thing that walked across the grass over thirty years ago — moonlit, liminal, and unexplained.

Next Writing Project?

My view of the side table from my favorite chair

“What should my next writing project be?” he thought from the comfort of his favorite easy chair…

I know I should capitalize on the (relative) success of Ghilan and write a sequel.  But then, the free eBook Chatters on the Tide is being downloaded 7:1 over Ghilan, so maybe I should write a sequel or prequel to that one instead?  I also have a non-fiction book on calisthenics that I could knock out if I wanted to, and I haven’t submitted any non-fiction articles or short stories lately, which I could also do.

So, loyal readers, what should I do?

1. A fiction novel tying together Chatters on the Tide and Ghilan,

2. A non-fiction book on calisthenics for solo and group practice,

3. Some Non-fiction articles you’ll probably never see because nothing seems to sell, or

4. Some short stories that you’ll probably never see because they don’t fit into popular genres and they don’t sell either.