Jim neglected his work. There were other, more pressing
manuscripts to read. Stork wanted Jim to peruse a kiss-and-tell
unauthorized biography of actor Warren Beatty. Jim got as far as
chapter six. The work was filled with name-dropping and innuendo.
Allegations of sex, like allegations of breathing. The sex was
intended to shock, rather than to titillate. Tabloid style, not
porn style. Was anyone actually shocked by this stuff anymore?
Don't people have lives? Jim had thrown it down in disgust and
was loathe to return to it. Who writes this bullshit? Worse yet,
who would read it? If they weren't paid to do so, that is. What
was most disconcerting was the fact that this trash had already
been approved for publication. Jim's assignment was to pre-edit it
for logical errors. As if publishing this garbage wasn't a logical
error! Jim would be looking for inconsistencies: a grammar
teacher saying "ain't", a Sikh character smoking, someone getting
up at ten and arriving to work at nine, that sort of thing. As
soon as Jim was finished Stork's lawyers would check it for legal
exposure. Then there would be the final edit, checking the style
and grammar. Someone else would do that.
Stork also wanted Jim to evaluate another submission. Judging
from what he had read so far this one was a sci-fi shoot-em-up.
Jim was one of the few male readers Stork had. They always steered
all of their blood-and-guts epics his way. Because of the paucity
of male readers Jim's opinion carried a lot of weight with these
submissions. The writer had no credentials but the writing style
was impressive. Jim would likely suggest that this one would make
a better movie than book. Perhaps the writer should start
rewriting it as a screenplay. Stork had a lot of dealings with
movie producers. Often they would publish such a book and not
distribute it aggressively--except within the movie industry. The
idea was to establish a stake in its movie rights or to benefit
from the film's popularity to publish a second edition.
From all appearances this second submission would do very well
at the box office. It followed a tried-and-true revenge theme.
Bad guys kill a peaceful man's wife and family, turning him into a
killing machine. The usual Death Wish nonsense, complete with a
marksman good guy and experienced murderers that can't shoot
straight. The police spend more time looking for the vigilante
than his family's killers. Lest a cliche be forgotten, the plot
even had a kind-hearted prostitute being sliced up between the time
she phones the hero and meets him, the good guy escaping from
capture and a corrupt politician orchestrating the sale of
narcotics to school children. The movie would be a sure-fire
winner. Having already made up his mind about it, he was having
a difficult time getting motivated to finish reading it.
Jim stared down at the two binders in front of him as he sat
beside the pond. If nothing else, these manuscripts were new and
different. The dictionary was an impressive piece in its own
right. An English dictionary takes generations of committees to
accomplish. This LOOP dictionary was completed by one single
author. Of course, the structure and simplicity of LOOP must have
helped. Grandpa once claimed that in LOOP a person could express
ten times the number of thoughts and shades of meaning in one tenth
the verbiage. It was not an outlandish exaggeration. Jim counted
the number of definitions on one page and multiplied by the number
of pages. From this he calculated that LOOP had only six thousand
words. Each word, however, had fifteen different contexts, each
with its own unique meaning. And ideas were much easier to express
in LOOP than in English.
The dictionary contained a few entries that Jim had never
heard before. Holaka meant "tribalogamy"--defined as a form of
marriage involving one woman sharing several interchangeable
husbands within a closed society. Jim could have used a more
complete definition. It certainly sounded like an interesting
concept. What was even more interesting was that its passive form
denoted sexual willingness while its aggressive form spoke of
extreme sexual excitation. Horniness. Hmm, no wonder Grandpa
never used this word around him! But who would bother to create
such a root word? Especially in a language that had so few?
Muntaka was another strange word. The definition read:
"collective action after informed debate; roughly, direct
democracy". What raised Jim's eyebrows was the fact that its
passive voice meant "anarchy" while its aggressive form referred to
"despotism, fascism, tyranny". Odd that direct democracy should be
placed halfway between anarchy and fascism. Jim was more familiar
with kimaka, or "proxy representation; roughly, representative
democracy". That word's passive form described professional or
legal representation where the person being represented might be
unaware of the intricacies of the process. Its active voice,
kimakakoi, alluded to a mouthpiece, "front man" or apologist.
Political candidates on television often used what would be called
a kimakakoi to attack their opponents without seeming mean-
spirited themselves.
One word had always baffled Jim: cintaka, "individualism".
The active voice meant "freedom" while the passive voice translated
to "loneliness". Jim could not see why liberty and solitude should
be linked in this way.
Jim grinned at the attempts to translate some LOOP words.
Bentaka, for example, could never be expressed in such a crude
language as English. "Predestined collective enlightenment,
development, progress; very roughly, a path to paradise". A good
try, he thought. Jim's eyes narrowed as he studied the bottom
three lines of the page. Here was something of interest: the
elements of bentaka were listed below its definition. These five
constituent parts included levels of development based upon fear,
hope, discovery, thought and godhood. Bentaka was one of the
very few words that had their elemental cases explicitly spelled
out. Why had the author singled out this obscure word? Jim had
heard his grandfather use it on occasion, but only in the fear-
based, hope-based and god-like cases.
The text was getting more and more difficult to read as the
light faded. This would be a moonless night. Egyptian darkness
fell like a stone. Twilight was perfunctory, like a starving
family dispensing with grace before eating. Where had the day gone?
Jim dropped the binders on the ground beside him and closed
his eyes. A lot of questions were trudging through the quagmire of
his mind. He rolled over onto his left side along the waterline of
the pond. His right hand groped forward, dipping into the water.
Underground springs kept this water cool even in the hottest
weather. The skin on his hand tingled in water that was often
frozen at this time of year. A few moments later a warm current
flowed past his hand.
"Hello!"
Jim leapt to his feet. Who the hell was that? He stared back
toward the house and then up the driveway. Was someone visiting
him at this time of night? Apparently not. Jim peered
apprehensively around him. His gaze scoured the shrubs around the
pond. Trees on the far side were nothing more than dark shapes on
a black background. But how could anyone approach from the woods?
The underbrush would have alerted him. He had heard no snap of
twigs or crunch of moss. The voice had sounded very close--
frighteningly so. Jim stood silent for a moment, listening
carefully for movement.
"Who's there?" he shouted. No response. He picked up some
rocks and threw them into the bushes, hoping to flush whoever might
be there. Again, no reaction.
Obviously, someone was pulling a prank on him, playing
"knickey-knackey-nine-doors" with his mind. Jim settled on a plan.
He lay down again along the shoreline and placed his hand back into
the water, posing as he had been when he had heard the sound. This
time, though, his eyes--and ears--were wide open. He concentrated
his attention on the trees across the pond.
Suddenly his right hand felt something in the water! Jim
refocused his gaze downward. Hundreds of one-inch-round jelly-like
glowing cells were congregating around his hand, like leeches
sensing warm blood.
"Roast shit!" he screamed, recoiling at the sight. He jumped
to his feet and dashed to his truck. Quick! Open the door.
There! Lock the damned doors. Click, click. Good, locked. He
reached into his pocket and groped for the keys. The keys! Where
the hell were his keys? Damn! He had left them hanging on the
mantle of the fireplace. In the house. The house. The house was
only twenty feet from the truck. But should he risk it?
Jim gaped out into the darkness. He held his breath and
listened for any sound. Nothing. Gathering his courage he flung
the door of the truck open and sprinted into the house. A towel
hung from the counter near the kitchen sink. He grabbed it and
began wiping his hand dry. Out, damned spot! Jim snatched up his
keys from the mantle. He reopened the front door, half expecting
to see an inbred hillbilly with a chain saw standing there to greet
him. No one there. He ran to the truck. Closed and locked its
doors. Inserted the key in the ignition. Please, start! The
truck's engine turned over once but did not catch. He tried again.
Same result.
"Start, you son of a bitch," he cursed. Apparently, someone
or something was listening. The engine sprang to life. Jim
decided to forego any warm up period, slamming the truck into gear.
It lurched forward. Jim matted the gas pedal, stalling the truck
in the process.
"Screaming snake shit!" he swore, retrying the starter. Once
more the engine roared into action. Jim took a deep breath,
determined to follow a more deliberate course of action. He revved
the engine twice before putting the truck in gear. This time he
coasted forward and cautiously depressed the gas pedal.
He felt immense relief as soon as he turned out of his driveway
and onto the road. Now, if he could only catch his breath and get
his heart rate back down to double digits...
Jim knew the road well. He steered by dead reckoning until it
occurred to him to turn on his headlights. Ahh, much better!
Dirt and gravel flew in every direction as the truck sped down
the road. Potholes and bumps caused it to buck and dip like a
bronco. Jim gripped the steering wheel tightly to stay in control.
The right angle turn near Horton's farm posed a problem. He hit
the ditch and rode up the opposite bank. This incline allowed him
to complete the turn and return to the road. Moments later he
turned onto the paved highway leading to Gopher Brook.
He was on the road only a couple of minutes when a flashing
red light appeared in the rear view mirror. Police! His first
reaction was to flee; maybe he could shake the cops on one of the
backroads. In the horror movies the authorities are always minions
of the monster. His second reaction was to glance down at his
spedometer. Mind racing, he calculated the fine for the speeding
ticket he would get. He'd be paying off the national debt single-
handedly. His third reaction was the same as his first.
Finally, some vestige of sanity reigned as Jim reined in his
steed. Once at a full stop he rolled down the window, praying
that it wouldn't be one of the highway patrol. Those people were
merciless. Rejects from the Gestapo.
The officer shone a flashlight on Jim's face, blinding him in
the process.
"Jim? Is that you?"
Finally, a lucky break. It was John Tait, Jim's high school
and poker buddy. There was some hope that Tait would not try to
recoup his life-long poker losses in one fell swoop.
"Jim, I clocked you at--"
"Yeah, I know," Jim agreed, "I know."
Officer Tait became John Tait, studying his friend with
concern.
"Jimmy, what's the matter. You look like you've just seen a
ghost."
"Yeah, I know," Jim sputtered again, "I know."
"Jimmy boy, settle down," calmed Tait. "Get a hold of
yourself. Tell me what's going on."
"Tait, you wouldn't believe the bullshit I just saw!"
"What? What was it?"
Jim collected himself. What could he say here? If he
reported what he'd seen they'd toss him in a mental hospital and
throw away the key.
"Uh, a transport truck was following me," Jim lied.
"A transport truck?" asked Tait, wondering why this had scared
his friend silly. Jim understood his friend's confusion.
"Yeah, a transport truck," reiterated Jim, "on my ass for
fifteen minutes. But..but there was no driver!"
Officer Tait looked down the road behind them. He had come
from the opposite direction; no such truck had passed him. Again,
Jim picked up on his friend's thoughts.
"Uh, I think I gave him the slip near Corbeil Corner," fibbed
Jim.
"Well, I'll go and check it out. Jim, you don't look so good.
Maybe you should go to Kelly's," advised Tait, mentioning the
tavern in Gopher Brook, "and have a stiff drink. Calm your
nerves."
This seemed like a good idea. Jim thanked his friend for the
suggestion. The lawman straightened up and thought about what Jim
might have seen. Perhaps the phantom driver was a very small
person--too small to be seen over the dash. Maybe the driver was
anxious but unable to pass Jim's truck on such a narrow stretch of
the highway. Officer Tait muttered something about an impatient
midget teamster, got back into his cruiser and drove north.
The irony of a policeman advising a driver to stop for a drink
was lost on Jim as he turned into Kelly's Place. He recognized
most of the cars parked outside. Kevin Morley's red Camaro.
Barbara Julian's old blue Chevy. Steve Unger's Toyota, red since
he had had it painted. There were few surprises in Gopher Brook, fewer
still in Kelly's. Jim pictured the scene inside. Barbara would be
drinking herself silly before trying her luck with one of the male
patrons. Steve would be making jokes about his staff and customers
at the restaurant. Kevin, undoubtedly, would be regaling anyone
who would listen with inside stories about local and national
politicians.
Jim had not been in Kelly's since Grandpa had died. There
were too many men there. He could accept the sympathies of his
female friends. But it was far more difficult for him to accept
the condolences of men. Worse, there was the chance that one of locals
would drink enough to give voice to his real feelings about Grandpa.
That might be trouble.
As he entered Kelly's Jim spotted Barbara in front of the
jukebox, nursing a screwdriver as she swayed to the sounds of "Rock
On". Morley was ensconced at a table on the far side of the room,
away from the jukebox and doorway. Carol Collins, one of the
English teachers at Gopher High, and another woman were sitting at
the table with Kevin. They were discussing the federal elections
due that fall. Kevin was pontificating about how liberal flower
children from the sixties gave birth to conservative Alex Keaton
yuppies who, in turn, raised left wing environmentalists. Seated
at the table closest to the bar Frank Ward, Karl Meissner and a
couple of other men were discussing "family values", which they
defined as "Leave It To Beaver" with few variations. These men had
little regard for single-parent families. Jim always found it
strange that these people placed so little value on half of the
families in the country. They certainly didn't have any use for
the McGuire family!
When Frank spotted Jim he pointedly changed the subject to the
decline of Christian values, as reflected in the disappearance of
school prayer.
Sex, politics and religion. Jim sat by himself at a table in
the middle of the room. All he wanted was a drink.
Genny Baker knew her customers well, sizing Jim up at a
glance. She reasoned that if he were in a talking mood he would
have joined Kevin or Barbara. She even knew that he would not
want her to mention his grandfather; sympathy could wait for a
subsequent visit. Genny was an old pro.
Jim considered Scotch but asked for a beer. Genny went to the
bar and returned, her plate carrying two draft beers. She place
one in front of him. Jim downed it in one gulp and then turned
around to request another. He found Genny still standing there,
anticipating this quick re-order. The second draft was for him.
Genny knew her customers well.
Jim laughed nervously.
"You look spooked," she observed.
"I was," Jim confessed, "but...I'm okay now. Thanks, Gen,
you're a prize." Jim reached over and grabbed his next draft.
He relaxed and sipped at his drink. Genny retreated to the
bar and dumped his first glass into the dishwater.
When "Rock On" finished Jim found another woman standing
behind him. The perfume was different. Barbara's.
"Jimmy," she said solemnly, "I haven't seen you since...since
your grandfather died. I'm very sorry..."
Jim nodded his appreciation for these sentiments.
"Can I sit down?" she asked politely.
"Uh, sure. Of course," he replied, pushing the chair beside
him back. Barbara took the seat and set her vodka and orange juice
down on the table. There was an uncomfortable moment of silence
before she re-opened the conversation.
"I remember once when Alice Swanson was calling me down at
Marco's. Your grampa came in just as she was telling everyone what
she thought of me. Calling me all sorts of things. I thought it
was jealousy talking, myself. Alice couldn't get lucky on a flat-
top. You should have seen him, Jim. You should've been there. He
was great! He fixed that sow with his eyes until she stopped
yapping and looked back at him. I still remember what he said. He
spoke real calm. You know the way he talked when he was serious.
Very calm. Sort of British, you know? He told her: `Please,
don't confuse inadequacy with virtue.' I'm not sure what he was
talking about but I remember the look on Alice's face. Coulda
knocked her over with a feather. I thought she was gonna keel over
with a heart attack. Hell, I even felt sorry for her for a second.
Only for a second, mind you. I hated that cow! Still do, of
course."
Jim smiled at the story. It was vintage Jason McGuire. Alice
had never been one of Grandpa's biggest fans. The old man had born
her no malice. In fact, he never gave her much thought. She was
just another loyal member of Reverend Carter's flock.
"It's nice to see you smile again," continued Barbara. "I
haven't seen that since Sarah--"
"I don't want to talk about Sarah!" Jim pre-empted sharply.
Barbara flinched at her friend's change of mood. She'd had
more than enough experience with men to know when to leave them
alone.
"Uh, of course, Jim," she said as she stood up. "Listen, I
better be on my way."
Jim shook his head and placed his hand on her forearm.
"I'm sorry, Barb. Didn't mean to snap at you. I'm just a
little jumpy right now. Had a rough day. Please, don't leave on
my account."
Barbara studied him before deciding to take her seat again.
She knew that Jim was not easily excited; something serious must
have happened to make him so nervous.
"Is something bothering you, Jim?"
"No. Well, nothing worth mentioning. Someone pulled a prank
on me. Pissed me off, that's all."
Barbara stared down at her drink. Now it was Jim's turn to
study her. The two of them had grown up together. As children
there was not much contact; little boys rarely play with little
girls. Puberty jump-started their friendship. Barb had matured
physically very early. She was having difficulty dealing with the
attention she got from older boys. Couldn't talk to parents or
teachers about it. After all, what did grown-ups know about love
or sex?
"Every generation thinks that it has discovered love,"
Grandpa had once teased him.
Other girls her age had been no help to young Barb. Many of
her girl friends resented her for these developments. Those that
were not resentful tended to be just as confused as Barb. She
needed to go to the source. She needed a boy to explain the
attitudes of the other boys. Enter Jim. He was her age but had
not reached puberty yet. Jim offered her advice on what to do to
encourage or discourage attention from various older boys. Often
he was simply passing on counsel from his grandfather. He was
very reluctant at first. After all, a twelve year boy has a lot of
words to describe romance and none of them are flattering. But a
year or two later Jim needed the same help to understand girls.
Barbara did not have a brother, Jim no sister. The two acted as
windows into worlds that the other could never comprehend. The
friendship blossomed naturally during high school.
Since high school the two saw each other only occasionally.
They might meet at a local event, in a store or, most likely, here
at Kelly's.
On this night a thought came to Jim that he had never
considered before. Why had he never gone out with Barb? After
all, she had been quite pretty in school. Granted, the years had
etched a hard road on her features since then. Makeup covered the
lines but nothing covered the makeup. In her early years Barb
fended off most of the advances. When the offers dried up she
started making a few advances of her own. The transition from
defence to offence was difficult and not one that the locals
accepted easily. Other women had little good to say about the
process. They used expressions like "slut", "tramp" and "town
pump". The men of Gopher Brook were much less overt, preferring
not to bite the hand that fed them. Instead, they would laugh
knowingly and derisively at the mention of her name. These people
had long since decided that sex was inherently evil and the efforts
of a free-spirited "tart" like Barbara Julian would change nothing.
But, for Jim, sex with Barb seemed...incestuous. He couldn't
fathom why the thought had occured to him.
Night after night Barb would show up at Kelly's, hoping to
find someone to keep her company. The search had never been easy
in such a small community; it was getting harder and harder with
the passing of years. Growing old alone was no fun in Gopher
Brook.
"You say `growing old'. I say `growing'," Grandpa had once
told Jim. Again, a memory of the old man had intruded on Jim's
thoughts.
"Barb," he asked, "why do you spend so much time here?"
"What?" she gagged.
The question had been far too direct.
"I mean, there's nothing much here. Same old faces. Same old
songs on the jukebox. Drinks are cheaper at home. No T.V. here."
"So what are you doing here?" she riposted. It was a good
question.
"Me, I'm just...getting away for the night. I, uh, don't come
here very often. For me, it's a change. For you, it's the same.
You know what I mean?"
Barb nodded. She understood perfectly well. Jim's life had
always been at home. Hers was here. Still, she didn't have a
quick-and-easy answer. She thought about it for a few minutes. By
the time she responded Jim had forgotten why he'd ever posed the
question.
"I suppose I could stay at home and watch T.V. But I'd rather
be here. If I'm here there's always a chance. Can't fish without
a line in the water, you know? I mean, sure, I could probably
spend my time visiting the rest of my family. Playing Auntie
Barbara to all my nieces and nephews. But Auntie Barbara isn't
quite ready to quit being a woman yet. Auntie Barbara wants a
man."
Jim chuckled at the lusty tone in her voice. Obviously,
Barbara Julian was still very much alive. Not unlike Sarah...
"You know, Jim, you're not the only one who had a grandfather,"
continued Barb, switching tracks. "My grandpa lived in Tennessee.
Died long before I was born. He owned a light bulb factory. Made
fancy ones. Custom made, sometimes. Business was good. Problem
was, my grandpa was a little ahead of his time--kinda like yours,
now that I think about it. Grampa used to hire the best workers
he could find. Problem was, some of them were black. His white
workers didn't like that. They wanted him to hire only white people.
He said no. They told him if he didn't get rid of the blacks they'd
all quit. He showed 'em the door. They told him there'd be hell to
pay. He knew the people who were threatening him. Knew they weren't
bluffing. Real assholes, you know? So Grampa packed up his wife and
kids--including my dad--and shipped them up here. He knew that that
kind of shit didn't go on here. He could have sold the place or hired
a manager and headed up here too. But he stayed in Tennessee.
Stubborn old fart, I guess.
"Well, from what my dad told me, they came for gramps. Bunch
of apes with clubs. Broke into his house one night. Started
beating him to death. My dad heard about it from the trial. Two
of the murderers were charged with assault. Assault, no less!
They called him a `nigger-lover', and killing nigger-lovers wasn't
a very serious crime. Hell, some of the locals probably figured it
was a community service.
"Anyway, one of the guys who killed Grampa talked to the
papers later. My dad kept a scrapbook and showed me the clippings.
This guy said that just before they started with their clubs he had
asked Grampa a question. Why hadn't the old man gone north with
his family. Didn't he take the threats seriously?
"Apparently, Grandpa looked at these assholes and said: `I'm
here because any place else would be hiding.'"
Barb peered up from her glass as she finished her story. She
looked Jim in the eye.
"I guess that's why I'm here."
The allegory's effect on Jim was slow in coming. A grin began
to spread across his lips.
"Barb, do you remember when we were at Gopher High and I had
that thing for Liz Baker?"
Barbara put her hand up to her mouth and started sniggering.
"Remember how I was too scared to ask her out? Remember
that?"
Barbara's snigger grew to a guffaw.
"Remember when I came to you and asked you if I should ask her
out? I was scared shitless. You told me not to worry. You said
she had told you that she had a crush on me. Remember that?
You said it would be `smooth sailing'. `Smooth sailing,' you
said."
Barbara was giggling uncontrollably now.
"Fucking liar!" shouted Jim in mock rage. His voice was
drowned out by the sound of Barb slouching in her chair, clutching
her stomach and howling.
"I breezed up to her and asked her out to a movie. She looked
at me like I was a Martian and said `Shove off, creep!'"
Gasping for breath Barbara stood up, adjusted her chair and
sat down again. Tears of laughter streamed down her face.
"Yeah, sorry about that one, Jimmy," she snorted, trying to
regain her composure.
"Yeah, I'll just bet you are," cracked Jim. "But, you know,
I learned a few things from that. I learned a lot about Liz Baker,
for one thing. But I also learned that being rejected wasn't as
scary afterwards as beforehand. Wasn't so terrible. I never asked
Liz out again but I wasn't as scared to ask other girls out."
People in the bar stopped what they were doing and stared over
at Jim and Barb, wondering what the commotion was about. Jim
lowered his voice.
"In a funny way you helped me then. And you've done it again.
I just want you to know that I'm grateful. In fact, let me buy the
next round."
Genny brought another screwdriver and Jim's third draft. Barb
and Jim spent the next half hour sipping their drinks and chatting.
Barb's relatives. Jim's work. Local gossip. Some stories from
high schools days, embellished slightly over the years.
Frank Ward swaggered over to their table, clutching a bottle
of beer in his hand. Barb saw him before Jim did. She winced as
Frank positioned himself square in front of them.
"Well, well, what have we got here?" wondered Frank, loud
enough for everyone in the bar to hear. "Two pillars of our
community? I think not! Read any good books lately, Jim? Read
the Good Book lately, Jim? I think not!"
Frank was playing to his friends back at his table. The
audience there was very appreciative, giggling at Frank's
performance. Conversation stopped at Kevin's table, where he and
the women stared incredulously at Ward. Kevin would have loved to
get involved but Frank's uncle, Burt Ward, owned half of the Gopher
Gazette...
"And Barbara Julian," continued Frank. "Is it true you're
enterin' a convent? Takin' a vow of chastity? I think not!"
Frank's buddies were snorting and wheezing with laughter now.
But Frank was only warming up.
"Hey, Jim, I thought you was s'pposed to be a writer. How
come I ain't heard about any of your books lately."
Frank was hardly a literary authority. He would have trouble
reading a turn signal.
Jim and Barb did not try to respond until Frank was finished.
He and she turned to each other and then back to Frank. In unison
they shrieked "Shove off, creep!" before collapsing in hysterics.
Kevin and his friends grabbed their guts, leaned back in their
chairs and laughed with them. People at other tables were chiming
in, shaking their heads at Ward.
Genny saw the potential for trouble and cut in front of Frank.
She declared a "happy hour", offering half-priced drinks if
everyone would take their seats. Liquor licencing board rules, she
said. Can't serve drinks to patrons unless they sit down. Frank
hesitated for a moment, but backed down when everyone in the room--
including those at his own table--bellowed at him to sit down.
Gopher Brookers were hard to intimidate but easy to bribe.
Jim declined a fourth drink, deciding to call it a night. He
had somewhere to go and something to do. He paid his bar tab and
offered Barb a ride home, knowing that her car sat outside. She
might not pass a breathalyzer test. No thanks, Jim. Barb wanted
to stay a little longer, basking in the glow of the moment.
The ride back home was a much more deliberate venture than the
flight into town. Slower. All four tires on the ground. Arriving
home, Jim parked his truck in his driveway and strode through the
coal-black night to the pond's edge. He sat down cross-legged,
took a deep breath and shoved his hand into the water. In seconds
he felt the warmth again.
"Jim!" said the voice, "we thought we had scared you off. We
didn't know whether you'd ever come back!"
"Hey, I came back because this is my home," he explained
defiantly. "Any place else would be hiding."
On to Chapter 8
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