Tuesday, April 7, 2020

Update on My Friend

An update on my friend from this morning:

Me: Have you noticed how nobody ever asks “how is Coke doing?” It’s always...”Is Pepsi ok?”

Her: one face palm emoji

Me: I’m reading a horror story in Braille. Something bad is going to happen...I can just feel it.

Her: That is absolutely horrible...horrible.

Me: “Officer, are you crying while writing me a ticket?” 
        Cop: “It’s a...moving violation.”

Her: three face palm emojis...enough!!

So yeah...she’s doing fine.


14




Jack hardly recognized her. She looked only vaguely like the woman in the flats and Michelin Man coat but almost exactly as he remembered her from The Hedges. It was as if she had been dragged through an L.L.Bean outlet directly into a hair salon and delivered fresh to his table. She wore new, stylish clothes, a fleece jacket, and proper boots, and her hair was shorter and cut close around her face. She looked ten years younger, and she smiled broadly when she introduced herself.

“Hello there,” she started, looking past Liz. “I decided to take your advice. If I’m going to go hiking around here, I need the right gear.”

Jack was transfixed, eyes wide, mouth ajar, without the slightest clue what to say. Liz was equally surprised. Who the hell was this woman? 

“Uh . . . Dad? Do you two know each other?”

Jack roused himself sufficiently enough to attempt an answer. “I’m sorry, Lizthis is someone I met over at Camden Hills Park down by the picnic tables on Pine Run. She’s here on vacation. Never been to Maine before. She didn’t have the right shoes . . . I’m sorry, I don’t recall your name . . .”

“That’s because I didn’t give it to you.”

Liz looked on with a bewildered half smile on her face. 

Suddenly, cigarette lady stuck out her hand, first to Liz and then to Jack. “I’m Carolyn.”

Jack recovered and finished the introductions. “My name is Jack, and this is my daughter, Elizabeth.” 

Liz managed a quick smile while correcting her father: “I’m Liz.”

“Sorry for the interruption, but I noticed you sitting over here, so I thought I would thank you for the great advice. This really is a beautiful place. I think I might stay for a bit longer than I originally planned.”

A silence (to Liz, interminable) settled in as Jack and Carolyn exchanged awkward smiles. 

Abruptly, Carolyn perked up and apologized again for the intrusion. “Nice to meet you, Liz. Thanks again . . . ” Then she turned on her heels and disappeared through the doors and down Center Street.

Liz stared at her father across the table with bemused confusion. “So . . . you’ve met someone?”

Jack’s eyes snapped back from their close inspection of Carolyn’s exit back to his daughter, who was trying to hold back a smile.

“Certainly not! I didn’t even know her name. I wouldn’t exactly call that meeting someone.”

“Maybe not,” Liz conceded, “but she certainly met you.”

The ride back to the cabin was largely quiet and reflective, Liz contemplating the possibility that her father would someday move on to someone new, someone not her mother, while Jack’s thoughts were alternating between the rejuvenative power of fashion and a nice haircut, and three decades of repressed guilt. Carolyn, he thought. Finally, after two decades, a name to go with the face.

After an afternoon of reading around the fireplace, Liz volunteered to make dinner. Jack watched her gliding around in the tiny kitchen, her movements so much like Evelyn’sgraceful and light, with no wasted motion. He walked up behind her and enwrapped her in a hug, telling her how proud he was of her, how much she reminded him of her mother. Liz spun around and melted into his armsthe kind of tender, unforced moment that had been missing in their relationship for so long.

Cajun pasta with blackened shrimp was Jack’s favorite meal, and, judging by the contents of the pantry and refrigerator, the only meal he planned on eating anytime soon. 

“Really, Dad? Is this the extent of your diet now? How about a vegetable every once in a while?” Liz teased.

“I won’t be here that much longer, and besides, why reinvent the wheel? I love Cajun pasta with shrimp.”

“How much longer?”

“I don’t know, maybe just a few more days. It’s been nice, actually. Having you visit was a bonus.”

Liz poured herself a glass of Pinot noir. She retrieved a cold bottle of Sam Adams from the fridge for Jack. They sat together at the small, round table in the corner by the French doors and admired the beautiful meal. Liz looked at her father, waiting for him to say the blessing. Growing up in the Rigsby home, this was the ritual before each and every meal, no matter how small or inconsequential. You fix yourself a peanut butter and jelly sandwich and a bag of chips? You better say grace, even if you’re by yourself. Evelyn had drilled it into her kids’ heads that absent a proper blessing and an appropriate dose of gratitude for their daily bread, all sorts of loathsome habits might soon overwhelm them. The key to a happy life, she would say, is a heart of gratitude and thankfulness. Take nothing for granted! 

Liz reached out to hold his handanother Rigsby family traditionand waited. After a moment of silence, she glanced up at him. His eyes were shimmering

“. . . You say it . . . ” A plea rather than a request. 

Jack had found any kind of prayer excruciating since losing Evelyn, even minor blessings like this one. It wasn’t that he’d lost his faithhe just felt so disconnected from religious pursuits. His church attendance had dropped off considerably. Being there without her felt empty and reminded him how alone he was. Church was the kind of place where they always went together, making solo trips even more painful. He found it too depressing, sensing everyone’s eyes on him and practically hearing their thoughts in his head . . . I wonder how he’s holding up? He’d decided that going to church was too much trouble, too disruptive of his mental health. The last sermon he’d heard landed heavily on his heart with a discordant thud. The preacher had read aloud from the book of Romansthe wages of sin is death.” Jack had shuddered at the idea, then become angry after applying the idea to his newly-murdered wife. What did she ever do to deserve her fucking wages? It had infuriated him, and he had never gone back. Maybe he had lost his faith.

The next morning, Liz left for the airport. Her short visit had provided her with a measure of reassurance about her father’s well-being. Although he wasn’t out of the woods by any means, Liz found him more upbeat than she’d expected, closer to the man that she had always known. In her parting words, she pointed out that Evelyn would not have wanted him to pine away for her the rest of his life, that at some point he would need to find someone new to share his life with and that this was a good and proper thing. She had surprised herself with her own words. It had not occurred to her that her father might be happier if he found someone else until she’d watched him stare at Carolyn as she walked away from their table at the Café. There wasn’t lust in his eyes, but rather, a longing for something that he had lost . . . a best friend, a partner, someone to do life with. Her father had always been the most generous man she knew, but now that famous generosity had no beloved beneficiary. 

Jack returned to the house and pondered a series of troubling questions. He thought mostly about Carolyn’s transformed reappearance. The woman he had encountered in the park had seemed mysterious and possibly dangerous. When he had finally recognized who she was in a subliminal flash at the lake, he felt a surge of fear, followed rapidly by guilt—the nagging shame of betrayal after twenty-six years. He had been repulsed by her in that moment, angry at her appearance. How the hell had she found him in the first place? They hadn’t even known each other’s names. Nearly thirty years had passed, for God’s sake!

But then she had stepped out of the darkness and into the light at the Café. He had seen her in full, noticed her eyes . . . beautiful and haunting. Her hair, soft and playful around her face, made her appear much less dangerousmore like someone he could see himself with. It had embarrassed him at the table when a mental replay of their fevered sexual encounter had flashed across his mind as she shook Liz’s hand. What was the matter with him? Twenty-six years later, and the images of that night still shone in his mind in brilliant living color. 

Was her reappearance merely a function of random chance? Why here, in Maine? Why now? Was this the reason he had been drawn to travel here in Aprilsome divine hand stirring the cosmic pot? On further reflection, he decided that he better leave the Almighty out of this, the Holy Creator of the Universe not likely involved in the serendipitous reunion of two adulterers.

It had to be random chance. No other explanation held up to scrutiny. She didn’t know his name . . . how could she possibly have tracked a total stranger to this time and this place? The odds were outrageous. No, this had to be one of those bizarre, unexplainable turns in the road. To overthink it might lead to some sort of existential crisis, which would quickly freeze into paralysis. Jack had decided to stop overthinking. He was determined to find this Carolyn again, to tell her that he remembers her . . .  everything about her. 

It had grown colder. Jack found his heavier jacket, walked out on the deck, and watched a pair of loons crest the water twenty feet from the end of the dock. The lake was still as glass. The mid-morning wind hadn’t started to blow. All he could hear was the soft sound of loons slipping back underwater. 

Jack slipped his kayak into the silky water.





 

                                                                      15





“Dad has a girlfriend,” Liz had exaggerated.

Kevin was speechless, the concept of his father with another woman entirely incomprehensible. “Wait . . . what?”

“Well, not really a . . . girlfriend. But there was this lady who came up to him at the Café and struck up a conversation. They had met hiking down by Pine Run or something, and she just walked up to our table to say hello. Although he denied it, I could tell by the way he looked at her that he was interested. It was so weird!”

Other than her encouraging report on his mental health, this tidbit had interested Kevin the most during Liz’s hour-long phone call. Kevin thought of little else the rest of the day. Once the initial surprise wore off, the practical applications of his father moving on with his life unsettled him. What’s it been, seven months? 

Kevin sat at his workstation overlooking the busy street below, trying to concentrate on the website he was designing for a new startup out westsome sleazy virtual porn company. Normally he would have declined the job out of squeamishness, but the amount of money they were willing to pay was outrageous, too good to pass up. Any guilt he might have felt for listing a porn site in his credits would be overcome by a large contribution to Habitat for Humanity or some other virtue-signaling organization. Apparently, there were mountains of cash being made around the sins of the flesh—“gold in them there hills,” so to speak. His charitable-giving plans notwithstanding, the project had stalled out. His creativity didn’t hum around such filthy graphics. Kevin never thought of himself as a prude. Angela had moved in with him, so technically they were living in sin themselves. Still, two people in love cohabitating without the proper spiritual paperwork seemed a far cry from the debauched business plan of a porn site. He had grown to regret the decision to accept the job but felt ethically bound to complete the work. The irony of his ethics fettering him to an agreement with a smut merchant felt like a cruel joke.

He had warned Angela, “Okay, . . . if you happen to see graphic nudity on one of these screens over the next few weeks, don’t freak out. I’m not cheating on you . . . I’m making a small fortune.” She hadn’t laughed at his deflection, making him feel even worse. The image of his mother came to mind, and he wondered what she would think of him if she knew about his latest client.

Angela walked through the door with a bag of groceries, looking like a runway model, full of bright energy and unbridled optimism. Kevin swiveled his chair around to face her. 

“You’re never going to believe what happened to me today.”

Angela set the bag on the counter and blurted out, “What? You found that moral compass you misplaced, came to your senses, and told Screwtape.com to literally stick it up their ass?”

It was the single most surprising thing Kevin had learned about her since they had started living together. The love of his life had a brutal, searing wit. Normally fastidious with her words, she would occasionally let fly a flaming rejoinder like this one. Kevin felt the burn.

“Uh . . . no. Not yet, at least. No, I got a call from Liz. She’s back home and called to fill me in on how Dad is doing. Apparently . . . Dad may have met someone!”

“Are you kidding? That’s great! Isn’t it?”

“I don’t know . . . maybe.”

Angela walked over, pulled up a chair, and sat next to him. She had an almost comical power to draw out even his most carefully hidden thoughts. It was some sort of Jedi mind trick, Kevin had decided, an unfair advantage endowed upon her by the gods. How could he ever win an argument with this woman if he was denied secrets?

“No, I’ve always known that at some point Dad would move on and find someone. He’s not the sort of man who would do well on his own. It’s just that I hadn’t thought it would be this soon. Seven months, Angela. Don’t you think that’s awfully quick, considering . . . ”

“Considering what? That Evelyn was murdered? What difference does that make? Listen, if Liz came back from finally seeing him and thinks he’s better, that’s good news, right?”

“I didn’t say she said he was doing better.”

“You didn’t have to. If you lead with, ‘Dad may have met someone’ . . . I already know he’s better. I’m thinking that the Rigsby men are on a roll.”




                                                                           * * *




Starla stood in front of the full-length mirror back in her room at the Tidal Beach Inn. It had been a productive morning. It was dumb, blind luck running into Jack at the Caféyet another serendipitous encounter between them. Everything seemed to be working out perfectly. Meeting his daughter had been a surprise, but not an unhappy one. She looks just like her mother, Starla thought as she gazed at her new reflection in the mirror.

It had been years since she had lavished so much care, time, and money on her personal appearance. But if she was going to stand a ghost of a chance with a man like Jack Rigsby, she needed to start caring about how she looked. It was already paying dividends. She had noticed every path taken by Jack’s eyes once he realized it was her. As she left, she could feel his stare. When she had first seen her reflection after the shopping binge and the makeover, it had taken her breath away. This was a Starla she had forgotten ever existedsomeone capable of turning the occasional head. Nobody was ever going to mistake her for a movie star, but she was much more than the bedraggled wreck she had allowed herself to become. She finally looked good, and for the first time in years, it mattered. 

She carefully removed the fork from her purse and placed it in the plastic bag, wrapped it in toilet paper, and addressed the FedEx box to Maxwell Johnson, Esq. She had patiently waited until they were done with their meal, biding her time in a dimly-lit corner. When she made her introduction, she had amazed herself by how easily and calmly she’d slipped the fork off the tablecloth with her left hand while reaching to shake Liz’s hand with her right. It was as if she were born for this sort of thingthe cloak and dagger part, at leastthe misdirection. 

The nagging problem that Starla Deloplane now faced was determining exactly what she was doing. Each encounter with Jack had only served to confuse the endgame. She was drawn to him. She could see the pain in his eyes. His was the pain of grieving the innocent, while hers was grief for the guilty. But at the end of the day, pain was pain. Starla recognized it well enough when she saw it, and Jack’s pain shrouded his face like a death shadow. It had moved her. That wasn’t part of the plan. She, too, had been stirred by their first encounter in the park. He had aged, grown a bit thicker, but men like Jack never fully shed the physical magnetism they were born with. The flash of recognition, followed swiftly by the memory of his naked body over hers, had startled her. She’d quickly recovered, returned to the job at hand, asking him, What’s the difference between talking to yourself and thinking out loud?

His rambling, tortured answer had been endearinga man trying to justify himself to a complete stranger. He hadn’t recognized her, she could tell. But why would he? How could he? He had aged better than she had, but she couldn’t muster up any feelings of resentment. Now, today at the Café, it had clicked. She saw the glint in his eyes, the nervous batting of the eyelashes, the brief flush of color in his cheeks. She also thought she saw desire

She gathered the FedEx package in her arms and took one more look at herself in the mirror. She lingered over what she saw. Who are you, Starla? For the first time in forever, she didn’t know the answer. She didn’t know if she was out for revenge or if she was after . . . Jack.

Regardless, there was always the chance that he wouldn’t believe her. If so, she would need irrefutable proof. She slid the package into the heavy metal door of the FedEx box at the end of the street and walked back into town.



                                                                            * * *



Halfway across the lake, Jack let his paddle rest as the kayak drifted along the surface. He closed his eyes for a moment like Evelyn always did, allowing his mind to drift along with him. He thought of her, the hours she would spend out on this lake, alone with her thoughts. It occurred to him that his wife never had a nihilistic bone in her body. Everything was always good news. There was no bad news . . . just opportunities for growth. No matter how garbled and disjointed the material world became around her, she clung to her simple understanding of what she called God’s infinite mercy. Some would dismiss Evelyn Rigsby’s worldview as part merry optimism, part naïve isolation. Indeed, Evelyn had been effectively isolated from much of the world’s evil and dysfunction because of her marriage to Jack and the resulting affluence that their flourishing financial success had ensured. But Jack thought it was more than that . . . it was just her character. She was the most optimistic person he had ever known. Sometimes when the two of them were out kayaking together early in the morning, after a long period of silence, he would hear her singing softly to herself . . .

This is my father’s world

And to my listening ears, 

All nature sings, and round me rings 

The music of the spheres.


This is my father’s world

He shines in all that’s fair. 

In the rustling grass, I hear him pass

He speaks to me everywhere.


This is my father’s world

Oh, let me never forget

That though the wrong seems oft so strong,

God is the ruler yet . . . 


He could almost hear her soft alto voice. He lingered in the moment as long as he was able, but soon the oppressing guilt of his betrayal choked out her voice. What would his confession have done to her notion of God’s infinite mercy? For years he had told himself the comforting story that he withheld it from her to protect her innocence. But now that she’d been taken from him, he found that he regretted it more than any single thing . . . the fact that he had denied her the truth, that he had not been brave enough to trust that their love for each other was deep enough to survive it. He wasn’t protecting her; he was protecting his own understanding of the world and his place in it as the virtuous, faithful, and loving husband and father. But now between them laid a great chasm. It was too late for confessions. He had kept the greatest secret of his life from herher knowledge of exactly what kind of man she had married was forever imperfect, slanted by Jack’s timid selfishness, his giant thumb on the scale of justice. What a coward I was, Jack thought as the loons began to call. 

He listened to the unique warble, its haunting echo ringing out from the tall pines along the edge of the water. It was getting colder. The afternoon sun was sinking fast in the western sky. Jack turned his kayak toward home. Finally, the still afternoon had produced a breeze. As he paddled into the freshened current, he scolded himself for the self-flagellation. She was gone. There wasn’t anything he could do about it now. It was time to let it all gothe good with the bad.

As he rounded the last cove before Loon Magic, he saw Carolyn standing at the end of his dock.








Monday, April 6, 2020

Crazy People Are The Best People

Everyone is reacting differently to the pandemic of 2020. I know people who think this whole thing is an overblown media creation, while others are hunkering down in the fetal position in the corner. Most everyone else is somewhere in the middle, alternating between despair and optimism, frustration and acceptance, irritability and kindness. 

Then...there’s my friend, Denise Roy.

Denise is my first and only Tempest groupie. Out of nowhere one day several years ago I received a letter in the mail from this crazy lady in North Carolina explaining how she had found my blog and become a huge fan, thanking me for brightening her day and making her laugh. We soon became fast friends and eventually, Denise volunteered to edit the book I wrote about my parents called Finishing Well. Turns out, Denise was a stickler for proper punctuation and grammar and what not. Anyway, she often reads my blogs and sends me a text pointing out all of my dangling modifiers. 

Ok. So Denise has a rather unique outlook on life. She is hysterically funny in an often unintentional way. Relentlessly positive and self aware, she isn’t afraid to make fun of people...especially herself. She’s that person at the office who takes it upon herself to lighten the mood. Yes...she’s the one at the North Carolina Department of Revenue—a decidedly un-funny place—who is in charge of the Elf on the Shelf plague during Christmas.

The other day I asked her how work was going with all this Coronavirus mess. She shared that everyone was working from home, that all day she went from one video conference to another from the comfort of her home. They were deadly dull affairs and the whole video-call thing was starting to get on her nerves. Then, in an extraneous moment she made the crack that maybe she would “liven things up” at some point. Did she ever!!

For the rest of the week she sent me pictures of herself in various hilarious get-ups that she prepared for maximum shock value for the entertainment of her coworkers. She has given me permission to share them with her fellow Tempest readers:



This, ladies and gentlemen, is why the Coronavirus will never destroy us. People like Denise Roy remind us that the indomitable human spirit will prevail. No matter how long this drags on, no matter how claustrophobic we become, even on days when the news is dark...there will always be plenty of Denise Roy’s out there reminding all of us to take a deep breath, take each day as it comes and find something to smile about.

Denise, you are the best!




Saturday, April 4, 2020

My Wonderful Virtual Birthday

My first ever virtual birthday was a fabulous success due primarily to the creative ministrations of my amazing wife. A short list of the day’s activities follows:

- Birthday or no birthday, a trip to the office had to be made. I had one appointment and some paperwork to complete. Doug came in around 9:30, made several insensitive remarks about my advancing age, then gave me a box of golf balls to assuage his guilt.

- Came home around 10:30 and spent the following hour or so cutting grass and putzing around in the yard, one of my favorite pastimes especially on such a gorgeous day.

- Pam fixed me a delicious lunch after which she presented me with my first present:


Not one, but two swivel/rocking/gliding deck chairs for our deck...and the best part is—assembly required. A present and a project. Brilliant!

- Then I start getting texts and calls from friends throughout the afternoon. Most of them include tasteless remarks describing the state of my physical decrepitude. Many of them come in the form of Dad Jokes far below the quality that I have become accustomed to but, what would you expect from a bunch of amateurs?

- Pam makes me a cappuccino brownie birthday cake. The 1 is a concession to the times, since the blowing out of 62 candles may have triggered an asthmatic episode.




- Then we sent a video to the kids reassuring them all that we are in full compliance to all of the latest CDC recommendations:


- After a fabulous dinner of what has become our Coronavirus Friday tradition...Wong’s Tacos...my wife disappeared upstairs to prepare my next present. No no...this is a family blog...but when she was ready, I was instructed to sit down in my recliner in the upstairs den. When I opened my eyes my new 52inch screen was full of the opening screen shot to a 30 minute video that she had spent most of the day constructing. It featured practically everyone I know and love. Everyone had recorded a message for me for my birthday. There were songs, poems, tributes and even a super funny tour of all available senior living facilities in the area by my former friend, Chip Hewette! Pam had sent out an email to all of these people asking them to submit a video for inclusion and this was the result. Suffice it to say that I have the best family and finest group of friends anyone could possibly ask for.

Thank you all. From the bottom of my heart...thank you.








Friday, April 3, 2020

The Long Wait

A lot on my mind this morning. For one thing, I don’t think that this, my 62nd birthday, will be forgotten anytime soon...2020 being the year of The Long Wait. On the other hand, considering the state of decline into which my memory has fallen, perhaps it will all be forgotten by Christmas! It will be strange without family on my birthday. I miss my sisters. I miss my brother. I miss my kids. Sure, I see their faces on the computer screens, but what I really want to do is embrace them, hug their necks. But I live in Virginia. It may be a while.

I miss the noise and clamor of my office. The new normal there is two or three at a time, for short stints. We’ve taken to group texting, but my particular style of trash-talking banter doesn't translate well in that medium. 

I miss my church. I miss the people, the crowd on Sunday mornings, the sound and smell of it. I miss the message. I watch it on Livestream but it feels different, muted somehow. David and Pete look immobilized and awkward, strangely tethered to some invisible thing.

I miss the thing that I have never spent one second thinking about until the past four weeks...my liberty. I miss the freedom of movement, the possibility for whimsy, the spur of the moment decision to run over to Yen Ching for dinner. The new restrictions feel oppressive to me, because as an American, any restrictions on my freedom of movement and association would feel oppressive. As a nation we don’t do restrictions well in general, and these lockdown quarantines specifically. But, we are all going to have to learn how to quickly. Lives are depending on it.

But, there’s one thing I don’t miss...the bland anonymity of my neighborhood. Something marvelous is happening here, and not just here, I think. Suddenly, the group of streets where my house sits doesn’t feel the same way as it did before. It has been transformed into a community. Don’t misunderstand. It’s not like it was a horrible place to live before...not at all. I think that in America we have become insular. We each live in our bunkered homes. There is so much to distract us inside...entertainment, communication tools, etc..sometimes we don’t venture outside as much as we did when I was younger. Now, all of that has changed. All of us have bored of the four walls, the screens have lost some of their magnetism. We are now turning our attentions outward. A couple of examples:

We are blessed with wonderful neighbors next door, a young couple with three adorable kids all under the age of 10. Our bedroom window looks across the way to the oldest child’s bedroom window. Pam decided to post notes in our window to send the kids messages. Yesterday it was a question: Tomorrow is Mr. Doug’s birthday. How old do you think he is? Their answers were priceless:


Pam replied, of course, by awarding Kennedy a “star” for being the closest guess, forever the teacher:


Then, we get an email from someone in the neighborhood suggesting the idea of a scavenger hunt. Since everyone is out walking and riding bikes like never before, why don’t we all put a stuffed animal in one of our windows for the kids to find. 80% of the homes in Wythe Trace have complied. Here’s Pam’s display:




When the histories of the Coronavirus are written, much will be made of the politics of it, the economics, the deaths, the disruptions to society great and small. But, hopefully there will be something else. Maybe they will write about how it drew us closer to our neighbors. Perhaps someone will write about how we became more outward, less insular, more caring about the people across the street. I can already feel the difference when I turn off of Pump road onto Hazel Tree Drive. Its the strongest it has ever been...I’m home.









Wednesday, April 1, 2020

How Was My Day, You Ask?

Here’s how my day went...

Woke up from a fitful night’s sleep to find the Asian markets in the toilet and our futures in the tank. Screwed on the bravest face I could muster and headed in to the office for a busy morning of two more of these virtual annual reviews via FaceTime. As you can imagine everyone’s nerves are frayed in the midst of this mess and as a result I thought it wise to forego the hijinks, asshattery and juvenile tomfoolery that I have always been associated with on this day, April 1st. It was with a heavy heart, but honestly, I just wasn’t up for it this year. In between appointments I received a text from an unknown out of area number, specifically—1-202-869-5140. I immediately think...Great, some D.C. wholesaler...

Caller: Hello, Douglas. Please reply to confirm that you are the writer of the blog The Tempest.

Me: Yes.

Caller: I represent a marketing conglomerate in the Washington, D.C. area. We track blogs that are gaining followers and page views at accelerated percentages. My Company is interested in advertising on The Tempest. Is this something you would consider?

Me: No.

At this point I figure something is odd because although he was right about The Tempest; it is gaining followers and page views, nobody in their right mind would ever admit that they work for a “marketing conglomerate”...but nevertheless, I didn’t delete the text. He persisted...

Caller: We are sorry to hear this. Is there anything we can do to make this a more appealing offer for you? Our bloggers tend to earn a minimum of $100 a month

Ok, now I’m annoyed. How cheap does this dude think I am that he can dangle a whopping $100 in front of me to close the deal??

Me: Sure, write me a check for $10,000 and publish my book.

Caller: We could potentially work with a publisher to make that happen if social media promotions for your book included ads for some of our products.

Me: ....Your products??

Caller: Here are just a few of our current priority clients...

Roto-Wipe Personal Cleansing Wheel


Nap Sack: Take a nap anywhere, anytime!


Caller: We also thought that given your age bracket and target audience, these would be a good fit as well...

Poo-Trap for dog owners


Sock Sandals


THONGIES



At this point, I figured this had to be one of my many deranged friends with a twisted sense of humor, granted, a long list, but several candidates leapt to mind...Tom Allen, Dean Horger. But then the big reveal:

Caller: Happy April Fool’s Day from your brilliant and snarky daughter!!

A mixture of surprise and great pride came over me that my oldest child went to all of the trouble to pull this one off. An instant classic. But my day wasn’t over. My wife was up to no good as well, having spent much of the morning rummaging through the attic looking for my stash of 500 ping pong balls which I have employed on multiple occasions to great effect at the office over the years. After a long and brisk walk I went to brew a cup of coffee....


Poor Lucy shot up the stairs faster than a speeding comet when ping pong balls began their noisy cascade from above. Pam got me. I suppose it’s just as well that I was the victim this year. I desperately needed the distraction. 

However, I feel obliged to remind everyone that next year, Coronavirus or no Coronavirus...I will be back and I intend to loose the dogs of prankster hell on my world!!










Tuesday, March 31, 2020

June 10!!??

 June 10. Wait...what?

I watched our Governor’s press conference yesterday. Ralph Northam. You remember him, right? He’s the guy who just yesterday it seems was two seconds away from busting out a moonwalk move during another presser. Yeah, that Ralph Northam. Anyway, now he’s the gravely serious doctor/governor announcing that his stay at home suggestion of last week now carries the force of law and its violation now classifies as a Class 1 misdemeanor. Apparently, Virginia’s beaches were packed like sardines over the weekend by our State’s idiots, prompting the Governor’s action. I listened to the presser but I didn’t hear about June 10 until an hour or so later. This happens with me a lot. My mind wanders, I get easily distracted and I miss stuff. It must have happened during the Q and A afterwards. By that time, no telling where my head was. So yeah...this stay at home, shelter in place, quarantine, lockdown thing is on thru June 10th.

On the bright side, it has more caveats, codicils and escape hatches than Donald and Melania’s pre-nup. It’s not a real lockdown, but close enough for government work. And that close enough is enough to give me grave concerns...about my sanity around, oh, let’s say May 15. Who am I kidding, by the middle of April I’ll be a basket case.

In my house, Pam and I are having two completely different reactions to all this. Pam has found this entire experience incredibly freeing. Last night she mentioned to me that for the first time in her life she doesn’t feel the pressure of...lists. These are the lists she keeps in her head and on paper of all the things she needs to accomplish, both short term and long term, both real and imagined. There are things she has to do and things she needs to do. Then there are things she should do, and things she doesn’t have time to do and consequently feels guilty for neglecting. Suddenly, she is free from it all. She feels lighter, more in control of her new, slower, less packed to the gills life.

I have a different set of issues. I run a business and like most other businesses it is diminished. I feel a great deal of pressure and responsibility for my clients. For the first time in 37 years I am being temporarily forced off the treadmill of production. Instead of doing business, I am now concentrated almost exclusively on preserving business...a completely different experience for me and one that I am having difficulty adjusting to. It’s like I have been playing offense all of my life and suddenly now I’m asked to become a defensive specialist. It’s disconcerting, to say the very least. For me there is absolutely nothing freeing about any of this. It feels oppressive and heavy. I hate the sound of the words “lockdown” and “Stay at home” coming out of the mouths of politicians directed at me, a free citizen of a Republic. I chafe at being ordered about this way. I worry about the sudden disappearance of liberty, the panic-induced evisceration of the Bill of Rights in the name of public safety, and worry about how easily these new governmental powers will be relinquished when the threat is passed.

For now, at least, I am willing to comply with each edict that comes down, because I consider myself a patriot and someone who cares about the greater good of what is best for everyone else, not just me. But, don’t kid yourself. I am a free American man and I take liberty very seriously. I will keep a sharp eye peeled for opportunist in government and business who might seek to consolidate power during a crisis. I will obey and comply as long as I am convinced that the orders are genuinely and scientifically conceived, and executed fairly and without bias. 

But, let this serve as a warning to any government official or CEO...my antenna are up and fully functioning. If I detect any politics or profiteering in any of this, if I catch a whiff of bullshit in the air, my continued cooperation ends.


Monday, March 30, 2020

Design Flaw?

So now this social distancing business will endure through April 30, we’re told. Might last longer than that. Darker rumors swirl. I understand it, the medical necessity of it, but I sure hope that the cure doesn’t end up being worse than the disease. But that is a problem for people far above my pay grade. I can only keep my hands busy with the task in front of me. In the meantime, I have a bone to pick with the Creator of the Universe, to wit...



What the heck is the meaning of this?? Every year its the same thing. It has literally been over two months since every other leafy tree has shed its leaves. It’s always these pathetic spindly oaks that hold out. The bottom branches hold on to their ugly, shriveled brown leaves like Scrooge McDuck holds on to his money. You cut your grass, it looks beautiful for less than 24 hours, then you wake up and the entire yard is covered with crunchy dead leaves and yet there are still more clinging to the tree. I mean, I hate to second guess the Almighty but doesn’t this qualify as a design flaw? More importantly, why does this irritate me so? Am I the only one who is disturbed by this phenomenon? Probably. 


7


Kevin parallel parked his Toyota Camry into the space on Miller Street directly in front of his townhouse with the practiced skill of someone who had lived downtown his entire adult life. The kind of money he was making meant he could live anywhere, but Kevin Rigsby wasn’t fond of change, so he still lived in the same townhouse he had rented with three others guys for three of the six years it took him to graduate from college. Once his buddies had all moved out, he had approached the landlord with an offer to buy the place, an idea which practically everyone he knew, especially his sister, had thought idiotic. Why in God’s name would you want to live in the same place you lived with three slobs from college? everyone had asked. It’s going to cost you at least ten grand to fumigate the place! But Kevin was persistent and finally prevailed with the landlord. And even Liz had to admit that once the place was his, he fixed it up quite nicely. But all the upgrades in the world wouldn’t change the fact that it was an old building in a sketchy part of town. 
During her first visit after Kevin finished the renovations, Liz had been shocked at what he had done to the place, knocking out almost every separating wall on the main floor to form one giant room that contained his kitchen, dining room, living room, and bedroom, all in one open space. There were no doors anywhere except the one that closed off the bathroom, thank God, she had thought during the tour. The other two floors of the house were virtually uninhabitable save for one guest room he had minimally appointed with a water bed, one yardsale night stand, and a flimsy chest of drawers from a thrift store down the street. All the other rooms functioned essentially as storage for all the minutiae he had accumulated over the quarter century of his life. Liz had noticed that no photographs or artwork adorned any of the walls. She added this troubling oddity to her long list of worries about her brother.
Kevin had been a computer geek since he was old enough to know what a computer and a geek were, and it started to pay off during his otherwise unfortunate college experience. He began making money buying and selling junk online, then discovered web design almost by accident when he stumbled into a chatroom of like-minded geeks. One thing led to another, and suddenly he found himself making six figures as a freelance web designerwork he realized could be done from anywhere with an Internet connection. But once Kevin finally earned his degree, he decided to stay put in Lexington. Within six months most of his college friends had moved away, and his family had begun incessantly badgering him to move back to Virginia. He had countered with the perfectly reasonable argument that he was making plenty of money, so he could fly home as often as he liked. Why, therefore, should he upend everything familiar to move back someplace he hadn’t lived in over six years? His parents had eventually stopped their pleadings, but his sister had persisted unrelentingly. He had finally slowed her advance with, Okay, sisI’ll move back when you move back.
Kevin threw his jacket on the arm of the sofa, passing his unmade bed on the way to the kitchen. He made a quick stop at his desk, positioned to look out over the street. To the casual observer, this setup looked like the secure location of some rogue CIA operation, with three big screens, two keyboards, and a host of metal storage containers stacked randomly on the expansive work surface. He tapped out a series of letters and numbers on one of the keyboards, then walked back towards the kitchen. By the time he had twisted the top off his beer, the aggrieved voice of Tom Petty and his Heartbreakers filled his house with the travails of unrequited love.
He sat down at his desk and saw fifty unread email messages, all less than a day old. He marked the important ones to read later, picked up his cell phone and checked for texts from Angela. There were at least a dozen. In the minds of most, particularly Liz, Angela would technically qualify as his girlfriend. They had been seeing each other for several months, getting along reasonably well and enjoying each other’s company. But Kevin had no intention of informing Liz until he was absolutely sure it was an actual relationship, and with each passing day, she was beginning to annoy him more and more. It was mostly little things: the incessant texting, her inability to resist picking up after him around the house, her relentless optimism. But she was beautiful and engaginga combination Kevin had thought himself unable to hope for in one person. Half the time he couldn’t believe his luck. He felt like the beneficiary of some grand cosmic mistake, and soon God would stop being distracted by man’s inhumanity long enough to realize his error, and she would be gone.
Although he would never admit it to anyone, Kevin had turned into a Facebook junkie. He had resisted the siren call of most social media platforms but found himself opening a Facebook account to learn as much as he could about Angela. She was a huge fan and had insisted that he would love it if he gave it a try. She had been right. He now opened his page and began browsing through his notifications. As usual, Angela dominated. Here was a picture she had posted of the two of them having drinks at O’Toole’s, and there she was commenting on something he had posted a few days ago. He looked at the smiling face of her profile picture. God, she was beautiful!
He had met her on one of the worst nights of his life. He had just flown back into town after the worst Christmas imaginable. His dad had been a complete mess. Liz and David were overcompensating with forced cheerfulness. It had been a dark, emotionally menacing week, even worse than September. At least then everyone was free to fall apart. Three months later at Christmas, nobody knew how to breathe around each other. Kevin had felt powerless and inadequate as both a son and a brother. When he landed back in Lexington, it dawned on him that it was almost New Year’s Eve, his lifelong least favorite day of the year. After this realization, he had driven straight to O’Toole’s to drink, the prospect of going back to his empty house seemed out of the question.
He saw her the minute he walked in. She was sitting in a booth with two other girlstwo of the most plain, featureless females he had ever seen. Angela’s striking beauty seemed magnified by the proximity. He felt a bit guilty for thinking such thoughts. He was sure that these two girls were perfectly lovely human beings, and to punish them for not measuring up to this Hollywood angel was misogyny at its most piggish. Still . . . he settled in a booth across the aisle and tried not to stare. After an hour or so and several strong drinks, the girls looked close to calling it a night. Kevin had watched them walking toward the door, Angela hugging each of them and sending them on their way, then looked on in amazement as this stunning woman glided across the aisle to his booth, dropping herself in the seat across from him.
“Hello, I’m Angela . . . and you have been checking me out for over an hour now. Is there anything I can help you with?”
Kevin had actually started to feel drunk, but her miraculous appearance in his lonely booth sobered him up like a gallon of black coffee. 
“No, actually, I haven’t been checking you out for the past hour,” he had managed to say. “But, your two friends? Now, I have to admit . . . I might have been checking them out a little.”
It had been the most out-of-character, incongruous sentence he had ever spoken. Angela’s face had gone blank, as if she couldn’t believe what he had just said to her. For a moment, Kevin wasn’t sure whether she might suddenly slap him. But then, almost magically, her face relit with radiance, and she burst out laughing. Two hours later, he had a date for New Years. 
The problem with Angela was simple enough: he didn’t deserve her. Here was this beautiful, smart, well-adjusted woman with a promising future and a shining personality, free from any of the creeping darkness of his own. What did she possibly see in him? One night, he had asked.
“Well, for one thing, you’re adorable. But I guess what keeps me coming back is . . .”. She had paused dramatically, choosing her words with great care. “. . . I think you need me.”
“So, you’re saying I’m needy?”
“Well, maybe. Ha! I know that’s usually a negative thing, but from the first time I saw you at O’Toole’s, you looked a bit lost . . . adorable, but lost.”
Kevin had quickly changed the subject, worried that if they continued with this sort of examination, Angela might discover just how right she was. He had told her nothing about his family, but with each passing day the subject was becoming harder and harder to stonewall.
He flipped through her texts and read the last one: We need to talk. Then one from Liz: You see that email from Dad? We need to talk.
Kevin rubbed his unshaven face in his hands. The two most consequential women in his life both needed to have a word with him. Great.