Just a quick note today to announce that once again, one of my stories has been accepted for publication in the Columbia Chapter of the Missouri Writers’ Guild’s annual collection of poetry and prose! “Well Versed 2020” makes it’s debut this Saturday, June 13th! My story, “The Eyes of Love” is among the entries chosen for this year’s book.
I was honored to be chosen for publication in this anthology last year (Well Versed 2019) with a story called, “The Brown Wedding Dress” a true-life depiction giving but a snippet of the great love story of my Aunt Martha and Uncle George who were married over eighty years and shared a life and love that I was privileged to witness and record.
I share more of their story this year with “The Eyes of Love” which tells of a horrifying incident that occurred shortly after they married and which, though it brought them shock, pain and responsibilities that any of us would shrink from, drew them into a greater knowledge of love’s sacrifices and brought healing to Martha’s soul.
My apologies for being so late with this announcement. It seems there’s something about keeping a five-month-old while in the midst of this kitchen remodel that keeps me from getting things done quite the way I’d like.
Further apologies for having to announce that if you’d like a copy, you will have to email me at barb@midweststoryteller.com no later than Friday, June 12. (I told you I was behind on things!) They are $11 and if you need me to ship it to you, they will be $14 if you’d like to get one directly from me. You may also respond to my Facebook announcement in the comments. They will be available on Amazon at a later date.
Mine is one of the many contributions to this anthology and I offer my congratulations to all the other contributors!
If you’d like to have get to know Martha and her family members, glimpses into their lives are found along with other family stories can be found right here on my “Laugh” page.
Sometimes,
it’s best to gather a few small things together in order to convey the idea
that there is a pattern or consistency to the matter.
If you’ll recall my recent tale of how Smuffy removed the hedge I hated with the help of our 1965 Studebaker Cruiser, you might remember Pookie’s reference to another time when he, after leaving his truck out of gear, had to remove it from the trunk of a tree after it rolled down the driveway. If you missed all that, you can bring yourself up to date with “A Studebaker in the Hand is NOT Worth Two in the Bush” here.
Smuffy
assures us that he has never been involved in a vehicular accident that was his
fault. He may add, with a blush, that
the number of vehicular accidents attributed to him while he is not even inside
the vehicle is rising to a level that borders on the ridiculous.
Again,
it is the assemblage of these events that proves my point that Smuffy and the
gearshift lever have relational difficulties and I present my case to you now
as thoroughly as if I’ve had Paul Drake on the case and Hamilton Burger itching
to object.
For a short time after Smuffy’s documented annihilation of the hedge, he managed to play along with only two strikes against him. Of course, I tried to keep him on the straight and narrow with a word of caution now and then and a helpful tutorial.
Then
came the day he asked the boss if he might borrow his truck.
We
(mostly me) had been furniture shopping for a year and a half. You know how the struggle goes – trying to
solve the dilemma of the look/the space/the price. All this could be taken care of, we
discovered, with an hour and a quarter’s drive to a small town north of
us. It took several trips to deal with
the purchase of the sofa and then came the ordeal of chairs that pleased my eye
and Smuffy’s buns and his inherited desire for high-speed rocking. (If Smuffy were head of design at any one of
the major vehicle manufacturers, they’d all have rocking seats by now.) We’d been enjoying our new sofa, but the
chair selection had dragged on.
The
folks in that family-owned furniture store were patient with us and, we were
soon to learn, would do just about anything for us. Alas, in November of 2002, the special order
chairs were ready.
Smuffy,
concerned that our short bed pickup might prove a tad skimpy, had asked his
boss for the use of his work truck for the day.
We’d become acquainted with shops and an excellent restaurant near the
furniture store, so we planned to make a day of it.
As
we could only go on Saturday, the store owner had told us that he would be out
that day and that only his wife and another female employee would be assisting
us. He wanted us to be sure we could
handle the loading of the furniture, as he didn’t want to make physical demands
on those ladies.
The
only thing that diminishes the “what might have been” in this story is the fact
that the furniture store was located on flat ground.
As
we pulled up in front, there were no parking spots available so we parked
around the corner, went in to tell them we’d arrived and ask if they had a
place to load in back. A cheery sales
lady in the brightest yellow dress and jacket ensemble I’d ever seen welcomed
us. At the time, I took it as a sign
that she had a sunny disposition. She
did. But, yellow is also the color of
warning lights.
She
informed Smuffy that double parking in front long enough to load was customary,
so he ran off to get the truck and I waited on the sidewalk with Ms. Sunshine. He circled the block and just as he rounded
the corner, the last car parked in front of the store pulled out, allowing him
to ease right in behind a mini-van and avoid having to double-park.
Smuffy, having never been known to waste a precious second, leaped out of the boss man’s truck, ran around to the back and dropped the tailgate. Ms. Sunshine seemed like the vigorous sort to me and I relented after her continued insistence that I hold the door and she help Smuffy. He climbed into the truck bed to heave while she ho’ed and together, they plunked one large box containing a chair and then the other into the back of the truck. Smuffy jumped out of the truck, gave the tailgate a good slam and joined me on the sidewalk.
Then,
the strangest thing happened. Ms.
Sunshine, as though she and the chairs had been lovers and were about to be
separated forever, threw herself over the tailgate of the truck, heaved
backward and dug her little slick-bottomed pumps into the pavement!
Yes,
the truck was rolling. I saw the
mini-van give a lurch, but, all in all, she did exert enough force against that
truckload of furniture to stop it and no damage was done.
I
still don’t know how she did it – sheer adrenaline, I suppose – but I’m glad
she did.
I
spun around to face Smuffy.
“You didn’t!” I gasped, as soon as I managed to speak.
He
raced out into the street, around the truck and threw his upper half through
the driver’s window. I saw his face turn
a vivid shade of pink as he moved the gearshift lever into “PARK”.
Some
lessons simply must be learned the hard way, I suppose – or maybe not.
We thanked our swift-thinking, fast-acting friend and I forked over the money for the chairs, wishing all the while that I had some left for a fat tip for her. Had we been double-parked…Well, I shudder to think!
As we drove away, I began to quiz Smuffy. Concerning those little symbols on the steering column, did he think “P” stood for “Probably don’t ever need to put it there?” Did he think that “D” stood for “Don’t bother to move this lever anywhere else?” Then, I informed him that if he planned on pleading with me to keep this one a secret, he was wasting his time.
Two weeks later, with the weatherman calling for another beautiful Saturday, we decided to take our pink 1958 Buick Super out on a day trip.
After dropping Pookie off to spend the day with friends, we went antiquing in a couple of quaint, historic towns, one of which had the old-fashioned town square with diagonal parking. I emphasize, at this point, that I was merely a passenger.
We
hopped out and made our way around the square, looking in all the cute little
shops. As we settled back into the car,
I fastened my seat belt while Smuffy turned the key in the ignition. Another point to emphasize here is that some
of those old classics can be started in any gear they happen to have been left
in.
As
we drove up onto the sidewalk, I wondered what all those people on the other
side of the plate glass window in front of us must be thinking. But, I must be getting used to this sort of
thing, because the only other thing I found myself thinking what a great story
this would make.
I
tried to be as respectable as possible when I informed Smuffy that this type of
thing simply must cease once and for all.
Weeks
later, we went Christmas shopping, this time in the 1965 Studebaker
Cruiser. Smuffy dropped me off at one
store and went to do some shopping on his own.
When he returned to pick me up, he apologized for taking longer than he
expected and mumbled something about being thankful that the car didn’t need
repairs during the holidays.
His explanation gave me that old, familiar feeling. He’d left the car sitting in the parking lot while he shopped. When he returned, he turned the key in the ignition and nothing happened – nothing – not even the slightest sound. Smuffy groaned inwardly as the whole discouraging scenario played out in his mind – how were we going to get home and what would he have to do and spend to fix this thing? Suddenly, his eyes were drawn to those little symbols on the steering column and there it was in good ole’ “D”. This car, thankfully, couldn’t be started in “DRIVE”.
What
a blessing that he has stopped doing this on hills!
A
certain awareness came over Smuffy after this.
Up until now, he thought he could take gearshifts or leave them as a
casual user and then came to the realization, too late, that perhaps he
couldn’t. Alas, there didn’t seem to be
a twelve-step program or rehab center geared for the transmissionally
challenged.
After
managing to stay on the wagon for a while, or at least keep the wagon
stationary, Smuffy arrived home for lunch one day wearing the look of a man who
had been humbled by trying circumstances.
It seems he’d pulled his van into the parking lot of a convenience store
as usual. He stopped, but ignored his craving
for coffee and a cinnamon roll while he finished listening to an interesting
report on the radio. He then entered the
store, grabbed his goodies and chatted with the girl who rang up his purchases.
At
this point, everyone’s attention was drawn to the scene unfolding out on the
parking lot. A man, after pulling his
truck into the parking lot and leaping out of it, began to run at break-neck
speed. As they watched, he flew to the
door of Smuffy’s rolling van, yanked the door open, jumped in and threw it into
“PARK” just as it came within a gnat’s eyelash of striking the gas pumps.
I
shook my head at Smuffy’s tale, realizing that the only thing left to do was to
put in yet another request for extra angels to be assigned to him.
The
real question remains: Can this be
inherited? And, if so, how do you know
the signs? Shortly after I had
documented this tendency in Smuffy to commit endless rolling violations, I came
to question his offspring.
From
the kitchen, I heard the most terrible banging and stomping and fussing. I rounded the corner to have Pookie inform me
that the vacuum cleaner switch was most definitely dead. She’d done everything she could think of and
the darned thing just wouldn’t come on.
As she shook it and called it names and demonstrated all this to me, I
looked at it sitting there with its cord all wound neatly around its little
prongs and I sighed.
“Is
it plugged in? You might want to check
that.”
Pookie
spent another five minutes rolling on the floor in hysterics. While pleased that, at the age where self-awareness,
lack of confidence and paralyzing embarrassment collide with one another every
five minutes, she was able to laugh at herself, I wondered if I should brush
this off entirely.
My
thoughts turned to that little laminated card in her wallet, recently given to
her by the folks at the Department of Motor Vehicles. I closed my eyes, giving thanks that there
are enough angels to go around.