Singles

A small dust cloud jumped up over a far distant hill, working its way across the flat, open spaces between the mesas. As I drove across western Texas, I could see such anomalies for miles, see their progress, entertained by their life cycle of generation to extinction. Such a locus for attention helped to pass the time on the long drive west.

Not that I was bored. I was fascinated. We have such an amazing country. Just the day before I careened through southern Mississippi and Louisiana on engineered roads propped up for miles well over the misty swamps and bogs beneath.

But the open expanses of the desert constituted today’s Great Show playing before my windshield. Very few signs of man marked the plain beyond a few feet from the highway. Gusts occasionally shook the vehicle.

As another dust cloud formed I watched it move towards an off-ramp in the distance. I needed to stretch. A few minutes later my Jeep followed the exit to the source of the cloud’s ire, a single structure, simple gas station at an exit, the only sign of humanity rising from the blacktop.

A child of about 8 played by the rust-stained ice machine, squatting over a pile of pebbles on well worn sandals too big for his feet, his dark brown eyes squinting through the dust swirling, his black hair whipping in a frenzy. He intently searched for some treasure, the characteristics of which only a child’s imagination could identify for certain.

After starting the gas pump and noting its slow turn, I headed inside the building, walking past the only other vehicle, a faded blue Ford pickup with tires stained brown from dirt. Well past on hills and flattops giant wind turbines stood overwatch, sentinels keeping time with an occasional distant clacking.

The shop floor’s beige tile sported brown and red streaks tracing the common footpath from the door to the restrooms to the right and the counter to the left. Shelves too close together held the same things always found in convenience stores, though without the careful order and precision of a more commercially established gas station. And there were the items more common to this part of the country, cheap blankets, Texas shot glasses, a mini-diorama of a campfire scene in a black box.

From behind the counter a woman ducked her head down below the cigarette display to get a view. Dark inkings close to her scalp and above her brown eyes admitted the lie her unkept long blond hair told, frazzled from the dry desert. I smiled. She didn’t care.

Grabbing a drink from the coolers, I brought it to the counter, handed her a couple of dollars, and waited. She never looked me in the face.

The door opened and in rushed the boy. Her expression changed to anger, brow furrowing. “Out!” she commanded. The boy looked up hurt, glanced at the door where wind used the dust to pound away, demanding entrance.

“Baño?” he asked.

“No!” she cracked, slamming my change on the counter as punctuation. He turned and left, reluctant.

“Cute boy,” I commented. She turned away, busying herself with lottery tickets.

“Not mine.”

She rolled a new set of scratch-off tickets into the dispenser. “I’ll take 2 of those, and one more water,” leaving a ten on the counter as I walked back to the cooler. By the time I returned, my change waited beside the tickets. I’ve never been one for lotteries, but it seems to fascinate some people.

“Where’s the boy come from?” I asked. Realizing she wasn’t getting rid of me until my curiosity was satisfied, she came back to where I stood.

“Don’t know. Shows up around here sometimes. Ain’t nothing but a problem. Watches the customers.”

“He ever ask for anything?

“No. Keeps to himself. Just stares at folks.” I could relate. I nodded back and walked out.

I couldn’t see the boy as I wandered to the pump, the numbers turning over far too slowly for my patience. He wasn’t over by the ice machine. But she told me what I needed to know. He was an observer, like me. I stepped to the other side of the island and sat down on the curb, drinking from the bottle of water. Children tend to come to me for some reason. Maybe it is the detachment I sometimes show, so used to being doted over as they are. He poked his head around. I raised the other water bottle towards him along with one eyebrow, an easily understood gesture. He assessed the situation; assessed my Jeep. Smart kid, especially in this world of monsters in human flesh. Perhaps it was his instincts or the Army stickers, but he rated me trustworthy.

He accepted the bottle from me and sat nearby, but not too close. I looked away as he drank. He said something that sounded like a question and ended in “soldado?”

I’m not that familiar with Spanish, but I guessed. “Si. Militar.” He nodded, smiled, and set his bottle down. From his pocket he pulled a small blue memo pad, pages disorganized in different misshapes, the spiral wires crushed to one side or another, from another pocket a cheap, capped blue pen. He flipped through several pages that had some scribbles, some letters, to a blank one, then handed me both.

I wasn’t sure what he wanted. “Firma?” he asked. “Yep, it’s pretty solid,” I replied. He looked confused. I had failed to respond appropriately. He shook his head and make a flourish with one hand as if scribbling on his palm. “Te llama?” Ah, I knew this one. I signed my name, then took a lottery ticket from my pocket along with a penny, using it to mark my place as I closed the pad, and handed it back to him.

He looked a little excited, opening the notebook, his eyes shifting between the lottery ticket and my signature, trying to take both in. I heard the click from the gas pump signaling a full tank. He sat back down and began scratching on the ticket. By the time I was done he was standing next to me, holding the ticket towards me to decipher. I read the rules. Find the 9s. He had two. $19. Not bad. I smiled, held my finger up and walked back in the store. He was already making scribbles in his notebook on the page opposite my scratch.

The clerk had gone from indifference to dislike towards me. I winked at her, walked down an aisle to where I knew there would be nail clippers, playing cards, tire pressure gauges, and just what I was looking for: a small black, hardback notebook with the word “Record” embossed in the lower corner. I grabbed it, a black pen and walked back to the counter, handing over the lottery ticket as well.

She looked at it, scanned everything, and handed me the change. “Do you have an extra rubber band or two?” I asked. She sighed and opened a drawer, shifting the contents, handing me one wide brown one and a thin red one. “Thank you.” I stuffed the change back in my pocket, pulled out my wallet and counted out enough to make $19 as I headed out the door. Tucking the six bills into the book and wrapping it with the rubber bands, I heard the woman call out, “That boy ain’t gonna be nothing but trouble.”

I looked back to her and said, “I know… he’s a writer.”

—–

A couple of weeks later I drifted back to this moment while in class. “And where else would you see the threat?” the instructor asked. We stood around a table looking at photographs and maps.

“Just here, across from these kids,” another student posited.

“Exactly,” the instructor said. “American Soldiers and Marines have a very obvious, glaring weakness in the eyes of our enemies. Children. We are easily distracted and protective. They know this. They have exploited this.”

And I thought of the little boy walking away from me after he handed me a sheet with his name scribbled on it, a sheet I unfortunately lost somewhere on the way.

I recognize the “weakness” as well. And it defines for me the nature of my enemy, for if he would exploit children in the interest of harming my Soldiers, my Marine brethren, then there is no moral gray area. And that, in turn, adds to my strength.

Making My Own Meme

and a challenge to others:

Five Things You Won’t Hear Me Say

“May I see that in a floral pattern?”

“I agree with you completely, President Obama.”

“Delectable… such rich flavor… what did you say this was? Microwave Macaroni and Cheese? I MUST get some.”

“Your honor, I have learned my lesson and from now on will obey the restraining order Miss Michelle-Gellar filed.”

“I need my own chihuahua.”

Confession

Last night, I wanted some good food. I had a guest over and I wanted her to enjoy some good food as well. More than anything I wanted flavors, and didn’t care about the blend of the flavors on the plate. My menu was not planned for highlighting a meal but several separate dishes, like going to an Art of Noise concert.

Stopping by the town butcher I saw they had in a fresh shipment of beef. They unsealed the filet and sliced off 2 steaks of beauty.

At home, I pulled out the additional components I would need, the eggs, butter, sweet potatoes, etc. and wiped out the bowl on the Kitchenaid mixer, set the water going in the double boiler, found the peppercorns and hammer to make part of the crust.

Then a walk out to the herb garden. I forgot it was winter and had been quite windy recently. The herbs were few.

I knew I shouldn’t have done it, but I walked back into the house rather than going into town.

I… used… dry tarragon in the bernaise sauce. I felt like such a savage. I might as well have been throwing stones at a running deer for a meal. I was so ashamed I almost didn’t clarify the butter. Almost.

Everything came out well, but still…

A Scene from the Past

And probably why I am considered a little too direct for civilians sometimes…

FADE IN:

INT. CONFERENCE ROOM — DAY

A number of PhD-types mill about a room as the clock ticks past 3:05. We hear BACKGROUND CHATTER mostly concerning mundane issues and rumors of major thefts from other companies. RSM sits at the table tapping his pen noting the meeting is already starting late.

DR. D
Well why don’t we get started and we can fill in the details for any latecomers.

All sit.

DR. D
I want to thank everyone for coming today and being willing participants in finding a way to address what is developing into a very serious issue here having to do with the theft of several VCRs, a mouse and a monitor.

ALL
(various voices)
Yes. I see. Oh yes. Indeed.

DR. D
Chief, I also want to thank you for being here today. Clearly we appreciate the difficulties you have with limited staffing in order to maintain what levels of security we do have. To review…

RSM
I’m sorry to interrupt, B, but before we go any further I would like to make a point, if I may, as I think it may address some of the time constraints we have with this issue as we’ve only blocked about 2 hours to meet today.

DR. D
Well… um… certainly, I guess. Go ahead.

RSM
Thanks, B.
(standing)
Lock. Your own F-ing. Doors. Thank you. I believe we are done here.

RSM leaves.

FADE OUT

Year of Craziness

Being maudlin is not my style, but it happens once in a while. This year is finally slipping away. Thank goodness. It’s been a massive year of transitions, and I’ve failed to post as often as I would like. Writing is cathartic. Perhaps part of the reason things went so crazy is that lack of catharsis.

But looking back there were some great things, too. Just not all of them:

* Headed into a New Year facing an extremely difficult time at work that eventually was mitigated into praise for my successful planning on a massive scale.

* Nearly lost my mother.

* Went to a painful Officer Candidate School where I had no contact with my mother for over a month after her surgery and even then only one call on a phone that was smuggled to me. Survived.

* Earned my commission and one of my good friends, now my Commander, pinned the bar on my chest… then honored me by punching it with full force, silencing the entire room in shock.

* Travelled a little on my own. Met a few interesting people. Connected with some really wonderful people I’ve known for years but never met before. Made some other friends even closer. Found some old friends and picked up right where we left off so many years ago.

* Loved… and had my heart bruised a couple of times, broken once. Still not quite back.

* Had a lifetime prayer suddenly answered, though not at all in the way I thought it would be.

* Returned to my young ones and elites proud of their support and even more proud of how much they excelled beyond anything I had prayed for them.

* Lost my 20-year-old battle buddy to an underaged driver.

* Took my employees to Vegas and had a complete blast.

* Chased my dreams. Came up with a couple more. Made it a little closer to getting there, though there are more twists in the road than the initial recon indicated.

* Mastered the blueberry pie.

* Took on the real responsibility of taking care of soldiers and found it one of the most rewarding things in my entire short life.

* Scrambled to the top of a very tall mountain in the desert and looked out to an uncertain future.

I’m very much done with 2008. It’s time to get a better year under way, though there is nothing truly magical about this turning over of the calendar. It’s arbitrary. It’s been adjusted forwards and back many times in the past. Too often we quickly fall back into familiar, though admittedly uncomfortable patterns.

Will the new day bringing a new year also bring a sudden new set of circumstances? Only if we make it so for ourselves. We are responsible for our own lives.

Peace to you all. May tomorrow bring you the determination of getting the most out of life and this year.

Crisis Averted

Bought a Kindle many months ago. Use it all the time. 5 books read in the last 3 days now that I have a few days off.*

* Kindle goes tits up.
* On hold for Tech support: 42 seconds.
* Went through various tests, talked with Nick, an outstanding, professional person: 2 minutes.
* Nick apologizes. Says I’m still under warranty, asks me to confirm my account info: 1 minute.
* Confirmation email arrives with return label and paid pickup slip: 1 minute.
* New Kindle on my doorstep to replace broken one: 14 hours (slept through 7 of those).

Amazon Customer Service: You Rock.

*yes, that means I’ll be posting right away, but with that good of service, I had to make the compliment public.

Cabin

I’m back in it for the holidays.

No idea where I am headed afterwards, and even if I knew, if I told you, I’d probably have to kill you. And while my readership is down, there’s still an awful lot of driving involved with that along with additional paperwork.

Memo to Television

Alright, I have a TV in my room. I’ve turned it on.

I understand why I don’t have TV at the cabin.

Every crap-product that couldn’t survive in a normal store because any potential customer would be able to touch it for some reason has to have a “but wait, there’s more… order now and get double the crap for the same price!”

And I don’t know about you, but I went from being mildly curious to completely wanting to avoid the DVD for the new Batman movie. I don’t care. I hate this movie now.

Way to go.

The TV goes off.

Winds

Storms at the cabin soothe. They shouldn’t. With so many trees so close in, the clacking and clattering combined with the power of weather beating against the windows should encourage caution.

Out here in the desert, the skies darkened yesterday evening for the first time since I’ve been here. Change came barreling over the mountain range, affecting all in its path. After some rain overnight, the wind came today. Cold wind. Cold for here, at least.

My room on post is in a solid, post World-War-era structure, concrete and cinder block. Even it shakes tonight, the wind rattling the door in its insistence to join me inside.

And yet with the difference in the sounds, the unfamiliar voices of the desert, there’s still some comfort here, so far away from home.

The transitory nature of my life used to mean wherever I was, that was my home. Now I miss my home, but I try to learn what I can from my new, temporary home.

Up Where the Air is thin

So lots has happened.

Back to work to say goodbye for now. Then back in uniform. I’m activated like my good friend… only I am turning into a little education machine. Learn, LT, learn, and learn some more.

Through several mix-ups in a computer system (and a little firm talking-to from a Lieutenant Colonel who later apologized and became quite helpful) I find myself out west. The school I was supposed to be in… we’ll, I’m not. In the meantime I was dropped into another school several days after the course started. Playing catchup.

Lots of catchup.

The bachelors’ officer quarters here are much better than the facilities I stayed in at another… ahem… post. It’s nothing outstanding, internet is slow, not enough lights to make the room visible in the evening when I need to study, but such beautiful views of them mountains just outside my door. And there’s something about how incredibly clean the room is. The bathroom looks like it was just finished… in 1950… which is really cool for us nostalgia buffs.

The biggest issue: adjusting to the altitude. During my first run I could have sworn my lungs were bleeding. They might have been if it weren’t for the fact the air out here is so dry any moisture evaporates immediately.

Will I get home for the holidays? Don’t know at this point.

Will I get to see the cabin again before the summer? No idea. I even missed the first snow of the season.

But I’ll be back there some day… and just a little bit smarter.

Smokeless Bar

Under pale neon lights people seek out the presence of other people. It’s a sadly quiet Saturday night at the on-post bar in Louisiana. A cajun bartender with frizzy red air watches over the place, a few tables with one or two patrons sitting in isolation spread across the large floor.

Behind me sits a slightly overweight soldier, hunkered tightly in front of his screen speaking into his headset as he participates in an online adventure with others across the world. The bartender asks in her gravelly, accented voice, “Any a y’all wantin a bit a pizza mebee? We can orders it up.”

This creates a small sense of camaraderie. We start to talk to each other a little, watching the same televisions.

Sports are on several screen. Another glow comes from the laptop screens around as this is the only place with Internet access. The quarters here are… lacking. Even as an officer, I do not mind sharing and I like that I am experiencing the same thing as my men. Our rooms only add to the melancholy of the place, where a mostly empty bar of quiet patrons is the happier spot.

In our rooms the showers could be thought of as “festive” in some cultures. A plain, dirty hole serves as drainage in the corner of a cement floor separated from the rest of the bathroom by a low row of bricks shows the mildew of past decades. Each of the many layers of paint reveal someone’s idea of making the space brighter, at least for that particular era’s fad in home design. From institutional mint green to turquoise to light brown to grey, each sheet flakes off in zones.

There is no phone. There is no heat. There is an air-conditioning unit in the ceiling with a sticker that warns: Danger: Contains Asbestos Fibers. Avoid Creating Dust. Cancer and Lung Disease Hazard. Seriously.

But I am here as part of a leadership team. I am learning suddenly and rapidly of my role in this unit, of all the things I need to be able to do quickly and efficiently. Actually I am having to function well above my pay grade as my immediate supervisors are all at other schools, leaving me in charge. It is a crash course for which I am ill-prepared. My commander has confidence in me, more than I have in myself.

For the time being, as I wait for documents to download, I will take a few minutes to post. It is easy to concentrate. There is very little noise other than my thoughts. And so it’s time to study.

Birthdays with Shiny Shoes

Today is Veteran’s Day. I have a different perspective on it than I did a few years ago. I don’t think I could respect the service of veteran’s any more than I used to, but I have a deeper understanding of that respect.

Yesterday was the Marine Corps Birthday. Even though we are a small Army town, there is still an even smaller holdout of Marines hidden away among our ranks. Both the Marines and the Army grunts have a lot in common, in spite of the occasional bar fight or boast. We train each other. We pound the same sands.

So our cabal of Marines threw their own small birthday remembrance yesterday. It was my honor to be of service to them. They were all either very young, under 22, or well into their 60s. No middle ground like me. They asked for a TV so they could play a message, but didn’t have any way to get the message from the internet onto a DVD.

I asked if I could maybe help with something a little more.

We held the event in a place called the “Great Hall.” It is a space completely incongruous with the rest of the 60s efficiency-built building: all-wood walls with a gothic ceiling, great stone hearth and fireplace, even a stained glass window of St. George and the dragon. I threw together a wireless sound system, high definition projection and a large, but not oversized screen. This was their special day so I even dressed all the cabling as if I were permanently installing the equipment in the room.

The refreshments bar didn’t quite have enough, so I made some calls, doled out a little cash, and had some of my guys discretely make drinks and trays of food appear without anyone knowing where they came from. That was the goal: make them the entire focus and not let them second guess whether the ceremony was somehow lacking in anything.

It is a privilege to serve along with these men and women. It is an honor to help make their special day just a little bit better.

And now that Veteran’s Day is here, even though those of us who are currently serving or veterans are generally the ones working all day today, I am proud and humbled to be among these brothers in arms.

So go out and hug a grunt or devil-dog. We won’t bite… hard…

Tense Scenes

The guy was young, big, but not overly muscled, just a natural size that comes from hard work and good genetics. His girlfriend sat quietly across from him, pretty, but not beautiful. She’s lucky.

She was young enough that the curse of beauty would not affect her. The scars and emotional impact of being a truly beautiful girl in her teens in our society now seem vicious. Far too often these girls end up in turmoil and constant pain from the psychological effects of fading beauty as they mature while thinking they truly are that unique, that special, that much better than everyone else since it is all they hear growing up.

My little mountain town has a sushi restaurant now. It is my favorite. My friend, the sushi chef from my former favorite restaurant, told me it was opening and to watch for it. Here I sat with a couple of coworkers two tables away from the couple. The owner of the restaurant is a tiny man. He is also the chef and the chief designer of the interior. As such he laid the restaurant out only slightly larger than his size. People are close together.

Though expensive it is worth it. I feel at peace here. When I walk in, if the owner’s 2-year old daughter is awake and present, she hops off her little stool and runs over for a hug. His wife smiles and goes to the kitchen to retrieve the box with my own set of chopsticks they have for me.

So I notice when the peace is disturbed.

To the side I glance and see the budding look of indifference building on the girl’s face, the kind a woman gets when she no longer is impressed by anything else you have to say because you’ve already messed up. The kind that comes when it appears that a fight is imminent and while she won’t be the one to raise her voice and start it, she is ready for it.

Their food had not yet arrived even. I watch in my periphery, still noting the conversation among my friends and the owner’s daughter coloring.

The boyfriend glances around, looking to be sure they are alone, then leans in, intense, teeth clenched, mouthing off the words he felt were so important as she looks slightly away from him, dismissive. The waiter brings their food, a truce called for a moment as they uncomfortably resume their posture. A few seconds pass. He begins eating. She remains unmoved, hands on her lap, looking down at her plate. He hands her some chopsticks. Eventually she takes them.

My friends continue on in their conversation, though I add very little. Actually, I’ve noticed in the past two years I have become much less of a participant in all conversations. It’s easier that way, though I no longer impress people with my wit or leave a bad impression with my awkwardness.

A few minutes later, the couple is back to their state of tension. He pulls off his John Deere hat and slams it on the chair next to him. She rolls her eyes then looks out the window.

I know this argument. While I’ve not heard the words, I know the events. At first my sympathy was for the girl. Not so much now, though I do keep an eye out for signs of violence.

Instead I see the hurt they care enough to cause each other. Eating small bites of food, she continues to show indifference, knowing it will anger her boyfriend even more. The more he tries to engage her, to get a reaction, the more she dismisses him. She can find someone else. So can he. Clearly they won’t be together that much longer, still young, still learning about relationships. Still learning that the point is to find someone who knows exactly what buttons to push on you and then will deliberately avoid doing so even when angry. But indifference is painful. Being ignored is the worst. Maybe I can find that one day. Maybe they can, too.

Testosterone-Laden

That’s the only word for what just happened. While I had to miss a great blog-meet with old friends, ending up in the DC area, I did have a 100% guy’s day yesterday.

After getting up late, my friends here and I went for a run. Then we watched football and grabbed some lunch that did not involve salad. Then my friends, one a hooah infantry officer, the other a right-wing conservative political lobbyist, and I went to shoot pistols and M-4s at the NRA Headquarters’ shooting range (where I am now a member), then back home for more football and gun-cleaning.

Next up, off to the Sports Bar for football, wings, and beer. Then to a more sedate evening graciously hosted at the Princess‘ place with more beer, pizza, and the UFC fights on pay-per-view. (and we were all impressed with Cote’s determination and toughness and disappointed his knee gave out in the third round.)

I think that’s about as extreme stereotypical as it can get for a Saturday without strippers or a barfight.

crack

As a kid, I grew up in central Georgia and Florida. I think that’s why I always loved the cold, moist night air of the mountains when we’d visit my great-grandmother in western Virginia. Even in the summer time, the nights would chill, humidity bubbling up from the stream. The fall was even better, giving rise to the need of wood in the cast-iron stove in the kitchen.

When I finally moved to the mountains five years ago, I reveled in the memories. Granted, I had lived in Colorado, but that is just dry cold. Arid cold.

So the last couple of nights I’ve noticed autumn hitting in full force. My trusty bulldog built several new sets of shelves down in the library for me recently. Every bit of wall space has bookshelves, except over the fireplace. Over in one corner he created a little larger a shelf where a flat-panel LCD display could go some time in the future. But for me right now, with it tucked to the side, the window looking out towards the stream to my left, the fireplace just to my right, it is a perfect writing nook.

Down in the library, though, I can still hear the fall. As the leaves change color, the woods, so thickly filled with oaks and maples, fill with what seems to be a light rain as the leaves fall in a continuous, steady pattern. However, the oak tree next to one side of the house has outgrown its limits. It is pelting me with acorns. The constant clatter on the steel roof every few minutes makes visitors jump.

I blame the squirrels.

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