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Monday, February 6, 2012

A Dream for Alice Bane

by Liz Zuercher

Tuesday Night

“You can wash the damn dishes in the sink,” Harold Bane said.

All Alice had said was that the dishwasher was broken, that the water wasn’t draining right and could he take a look at it when he had a chance. She should have known not to bother her husband when he was sitting at his desk, rifling through his papers, sharpening his pencils. That meant he was getting ready to pay the farm bills and she knew better than to even come in the room. She backed out of the den, saying she was sorry, she hadn’t meant to bother him.

“Shut the door behind you,” he growled.

She obeyed and went back to the kitchen to finish up the dishes and wipe down the counters. She straightened the chairs at the kitchen table, making sure the one closest to the door was pushed in as far as it could go so Harold wouldn’t run into it when he came in to get a can of beer later on. With everything in order Alice turned out the light, picked up her cherry Coke and went to the family room to watch her reality shows. She liked “Dancing With the Stars” and “American Idol”, but their seasons were over. Now she was getting into “America’s Got Talent”. She switched on the TV and sat in her recliner, settling in for the evening.

Wednesday Morning

After she got Harold off to the fields and cleaned up the breakfast dishes, Alice read her horoscope in the Chronicle.

Time to make a change, it said, to fulfill your dreams. That stumped her. What were her dreams? When you got to be in your late sixties what was there to dream about? The only dream she’d ever had was to get married and raise a houseful of children. She was on track with that until her first baby, Charlie, died in his crib. Harold was so distraught that he swore never to have another child, and that was the end of that.

Last night she had listened to a big fat man with an innocent face tell the judges on “America’s Got Talent” that he always dreamed of having a singing career. He worked for the Postal Service and he sang in his mail truck on his rural route. He told himself one day that he had to go for it – chase his dream – and now here he was, living his dream. The judges said let’s hear you sing, and the music started – opera music. When he opened his mouth, it was like Pavarotti was singing and Alice wondered if the mailman was lip-syncing. But the usually grim judges were in tears and the audience was crying, then leaping to their feet applauding.

She should have a dream, Alice thought, something to work toward, to expand her horizons. But right now she had a more pressing issue. She had to decide what to take to the First Christian Church Women’s Missionary Society meeting at Ida’s that night.

She wanted something new and different, so she leafed through the cookbook she’d bought from the Methodist Ladies Auxiliary. She wondered if it would be considered blasphemy for her to have supported the Methodists by buying this cookbook. There was a longstanding rivalry between the Methodists and the First Christians, which sometimes got a little heated, with people turning their backs on one another or trying to convert a member from one congregation to the other. Alice could never quite figure that out. They were all Christians, weren’t they? Jesus for the First Christians was the same Jesus the Methodists worshipped. For heaven’s sake, what was all the fuss about? Even the recipes were the same, she noticed, as she closed the cookbook and decided to go with the strawberry bread recipe her cousin in Iowa had sent her.

Wednesday Night

A few early evening stars peeked through a thin layer of wispy clouds as she drove to town for the Missionary meeting at Ida’s house. All day she’d tried to think of a dream for herself and she had decided she was a pretty dull, ordinary person who didn’t have a talent to make her shine like a star. She couldn’t sing, except for an off-key “Holy, Holy, Holy” in church. She couldn’t dance. She couldn’t paint. As a girl she played piano, and the teacher said she had promise. But now the old spinet gathered dust in the front room. Harold complained of the mistakes when she played, so she’d eventually given it up. The only talent she could come up with was her baking. She made the best cinnamon rolls and pies and cakes and cookies in town – everyone said so – but how could she make a dream out of that?

She pulled up in front of Ida’s house and sat for a while looking at the not-so-starry sky before she picked up her strawberry bread from the passenger seat and went into Ida’s for the Missionary meeting. She hoped everyone would like this new recipe. She had a reputation to maintain after all.

At the back of the room Helen Murphy was arranging all the goodies on a table covered with a pink flowered tablecloth. The way she acted you’d think she was the hostess instead of Ida. But that was Helen, always trying to be something she wasn’t. The “home made” pecan pie she’d brought was a fake, too. Alice could tell a Food for Less pecan pie anywhere, even reheated in a fancy glass pie dish on a sterling silver trivet.

Alice unwrapped her plate of strawberry bread and put it next to Helen’s pie.

“What’s that?” Helen asked, as if Alice had put a pile of dung down on the table.

“Strawberry bread, fresh out of the oven,” Alice said. “What did you bring?” she asked Helen, even though she knew exactly what she’d brought and where she’d bought it.

“This pecan pie, also fresh from the oven,” Helen replied.

“Make it yourself?” Alice said, looking Helen straight in the eye.

Helen looked straight back at Alice and said, “You bet.”

“I’d love the recipe,” Alice said, just to see what Helen would say.

“Oh, I couldn’t,” Helen replied. “It’s an old family secret.”

Alice smiled sweetly and said, “Well, we wouldn’t want to let those family secrets out of the bag.” But all she could think of was how big a liar Helen Murphy was, and how she hoped no one would eat her pie. Not a very charitable thought for a Missionary meeting, but Alice couldn’t help it.

The program for the evening was a presentation by EllaMay Roloff’s niece, Jessica, who was just back from a mission in Haiti to rebuild an orphanage destroyed in the earthquake. Everyone filled their plates with goodies and sat down to watch the video Jessica had brought about the project.

“Parents are desperate for their children to be taken care of,” the narrator said. “They line up for blocks to leave their babies at the orphanage. We don’t have enough room for all of them.”

Little black children stood holding bowls almost as big as they were, waiting for aid workers to scoop food into the bowls.

Alice put her fork down. Nothing tasted very good to her anymore, not even her strawberry bread. The babies and toddlers and the forlorn parents gazed out at her from the television screen. She felt tears well up as she thought about all those parents giving up their babies. That was just the saddest thing she’d ever heard.

When the video was over Jessica made a plea for donations of money or clothing.

“God has called me to help these children,” she said. “Anything you can give is appreciated.”

The meeting wrapped up after that, without the usual exchange of gossip. Alice left the rest of the strawberry bread with Ida and didn’t even bother to look at Helen’s pie to see how much had been eaten. It didn’t really seem to matter after all.

The house was dark when Alice got home at 9:30. She stood at the kitchen sink for a while and looked out at the starry sky and the glint of moonlight on the grain bin. All those people in Haiti without a home or food for their babies must dream of being in a place like this, of being able to eat strawberry bread or store-bought pie anytime they wanted, of being able to care for their children. She felt a wave of guilt and decided that if she had to be stuck without a dream, there could be way worse places to be stuck. She resolved to count her blessings.

Thursday Morning

The day’s horoscope said not to try too hard, to be patient and take a step at a time toward the goal. Alice was mulling that over while she cleaned the front room. She still didn’t know what her goal was, but she was thinking that maybe if she just did one little thing different it would be like taking a step forward. If she could go forward with something – anything - maybe she would see the goal once she got closer to it.

This was on her mind as she dusted the old spinet. She lifted the keyboard cover and ran the dust rag over the keys, listening to the random clinking sounds she made. Before she knew it she was sitting down with her hands poised in position to play “Solfeggietto”, the piece she always used to play first because she knew it by heart. She was rusty, and she hit some sour notes, but as she gained confidence, her hands glided more easily over the keys. She felt good, like she did indeed still have promise.

Monday, January 30, 2012

First Love

by Susan Matthewson


Georgie fell in love for the very first time in Mrs. Wilfley’s third-grade class at Troy Hill Elementary on the first day of school in September. She also learned a lesson about boys that she was too young to know she’d learned at that time, but that she’d use to her advantage later on.


She was just eight years old that first day of school, but by the time she turned 13 she would have learned that lesson so well that it would make her one of the most popular girls at Troy Hill High. But on this day, September 7, 1961 that was all far in the future. Georgie was very much tangled up in the present, nervous about her new teacher and who would be in her class.

The school bell rang, and the children raced for the front door like a swarm of hungry puppies. They scrambled, jumped and tumbled up the stairs, nudging each other here and there, yelping and squealing. They squeezed through the big double wide front doors five and six at a time. In the tumult, Georgie stumbled on a step and dropped her lunchbox, which burst open and popped out the carefully wrapped sandwich and big red apple her mother had packed for her.

Georgie grabbed at the sandwich and stuffed it back in the box, struggling to keep her balance amid the hustling, bustling students, but the apple bounced once and started to roll down the stairs. Trying to keep an eye on it through a forest of knee socks and sneakers, she yelled out, “Hey, stop that apple, someone!” She was about to give up on it and let herself be swept along by the scampering children when a little boy bounced up beside her holding the apple, plopped it into her lunch box, grabbed her arm, and rushed up the stairs with her.

Once in the doors, Georgie and her apple rescuer stopped for a minute to catch their breath, wondering where Mrs. Wilfley’s third-grade room was. They turned to each other then and said at the same time, “Where is the class…”. Both stopped in shock at the same moment as they looked at each other face to face for the first time. The surprise left both of them staring, mouths agape. Missing one front upper tooth, red-haired, freckle-faced, blue-eyed Georgie gazed thunderstruck at a male version of herself—a red-haired, freckle-faced, blue-eyed boy, also eight and also missing one front lateral incisor.

It was love at first sight for Georgie. She stood rooted to the floor in a daze. But the boy shook his head as if to chase away a bad dream and took off down the hall, yelling, “The poster says Mrs. Wilfley, Room 115.” He seemed totally unaware that a Great Moment had just occurred as Huckleberry Finn and Pippi Longstocking came face to face under the big ceiling clock in the front hall of Troy Hill Elementary.

Georgie raced down the hall, skittered through the door of Room 115 right behind him, plopped into the desk beside him, and melted into her very first romantic obsession. Her heart raced, her breath gasped, and her eyes flashed their very first fetching flirty glance at the object of her affections who was paying not one bit of attention to her.

Mrs. Wilfley began the roll call as the students settled down. “Children,” she said if you have a nickname you prefer instead of the full names listed on the attendance roll, please call it out after you say ‘Here.’”

Not knowing her love’s name, Georgie listened closely to hear the name he answered to. “Gerard Evans,” Mrs. Wilfley called out.

“Here,” said the most beautiful red-haired boy in the world. “Please call me Gerry.”

Georgie sat impatiently through the morning tasks associated with the first day of school—the assigning of cubby holes for belongings, seat assignments, announcements, rules of the classroom, etc. She couldn’t wait for the first recess because she was determined to mark Gerry as hers from the very first day.

At recess, she followed Gerry to the playground, tagging right behind him, as he and Ted Bondi headed for the tetherball pole. The other girls were gathered at the swings or the teeter totters, where they giggled and whispered. But Georgie ignored them and took a stance by the tetherball court as Gerry and Ted began a game.

Gerry glanced over at her. “What are you doing?” he asked. “There are no girls in this game. Just boys. The girls are over at the swings; you should go over there,” he said firmly, but without rancor.

“I just wanted to know where you’re from.” Georgie asked. “You didn’t go to school here last year, at least I don’t remember you at all.”

“I just moved here this summer,” he said as he reared back, hit the tetherball with his fist, and sent it flying around the pole. “You better go over there with the girls. You can’t play in this game.”

“Who says?” Georgie challenged. “And why not?”

“I say,” responded Gerry, “because girls can’t hit the ball hard enough. They’re too easy.”

“I can hit the ball plenty hard; you just wait and see. I’m not leaving.”

Ted then jeered back, “Go on, Georgie. Go over with the girls. This is boys only.”

“I am not leaving,” repeated Georgie. “I want to play tetherball and you’ll see I can play just as good as you. You have to let me. It’s only fair.”

“Oh, yeah,” Billy said. “Whatcha gonna do? Go tell the teacher like a tattletale?”

Georgie crossed her arms across her chest, and with a defiant look, said, “No, I’m not going to tell the teacher. I’m just going to wait here for my turn.”

The two boys continued their game and ignored Georgie until she decided to make it impossible for them to ignore her. She started cheering them on, calling out “Good shot, Ted,” and “Way to go, Gerry.” She clapped her hands, whistled through her teeth, and jumped up and down. Though she was focused on Gerry, she cheered Ted when he made a good shot, too. Before long the boys were competing as much for Georgie’s attention as they were to win the game. Unaware of the effect that Georgie’s cheering and compliments were having, they picked up the pace and intensity of the game until both boys were sweating and breathing hard. Finally, with one big powerful hit at the ball, Gerry pushed it up and away over Ted’s head and the tether wrapped around the pole before Ted could hit it back.

Georgie stood up and clapped. “Great game. You guys are really good. But I promise I can hit the ball hard. Come on, give me a chance. Who knows, I think I could win. We’ll never know unless you let me try.”

Georgie’s enthusiasm and energy had softened the boys’ attitudes, but the suggestion that she might be able beat either one of them decided the matter. That was an outcome that could not be left in doubt.

“Okay,” said Gerry. “I’ll play you once and then Ted will play you once, but that’s all. Got it?”

So, with a little feminine psychology she didn’t even know she knew, Georgie weaseled her way into the tetherball game and grabbed the attention of both boys. While Georgie played against Gerry, Ted stood on the sidelines and cheered. But he didn’t cheer for Gerry; he cheered for Georgie. Gerry won the game fairly, but kept his word and let Georgie play Ted. He cheered for Georgie, too.

Although she couldn’t really define it, Georgie knew that something had shifted since the boys first attempted to chase her away. Somehow she had become the center of the boys’ attention and the tetherball had become just an object the two boys used to impress her. It would be a few more years before she’d completely figure it out, but she learned right then that she liked being the center of attention…more specifically she liked being the center of boys’ attention with the emphasis on boys in the plural.

Georgie stayed in love with Gerry Evans until Christmas. Then like all first loves, it was a perfect love until it wasn’t. At Christmas, Ted gave her a turtle in a terrarium. She named the turtle Gerry and fell in love with Ted.







Monday, January 23, 2012

A Heart and Brain Trying to Break Free

by Nancy Grossman-Samuel

I can dispel words from my brain quite quickly, but not many of them are worthy of being reread even by me, no less hoisted upon the unsuspecting eyes of strangers and friends. Friends might be a little more forgiving, but strangers – well, it’s their prerogative to dislike, criticize, and demand their time back.

How do good writers do it anyway? How do they get and then allow their ideas to spill from brain to fingers to keyboard or paper and pen?

I am so jealous. I want wonderful ideas. I want to come up with poignant conversations between characters that will change the course of history – or at least my own life, but I hesitate to begin. The voices stop me. I start, erase, start and delete some more.

I move to the piano, but that’s little better, mostly I just bang along. If only I could play a Chopin Nocturne like Arthur Rubinstein or Yuja Wang I would never leave my piano. I would play all day and all night. I would annoy the too close neighbors, but then, if I were that good, they might even enjoy it. But to WRITE the nocturnes. I am in awe. I am in awe of creativity.

I go back to the other keyboard and Pandora accompanies my attempt to put my thoughts on paper but she forces me out of my chair and away from the keyboard where words are my for now enemy and encourages my body to move. So I oblige and start to dance. I piroet and leap up and down my empty hallway. One of my cats sticks its head out of a door and I sway toward him like a leaf being blown by the wind. He tilts his head; he thinks I'm good; he is enjoying it; I am enjoying it. I continue to float up and down the hallway to the strains of Telemann. I stand on toes, move my ancient limbs as the music demands. I become self aware and am glad that only my cats are here to enjoy the spectacle of me.

Creativity – it’s so important. So fulfilling. If I could just allow myself to experience and express without the judgments and feelings of frustration then at least I could entertain myself. And what is more joyful then feeling filled by the happiness of having created something that at least I enjoy – even if no one else ever will?

It’s child-like - creating just for the fun of creating. Expressing for the fun of expressing and not caring a whit for others’ opinions. When did others’ opinions become my gods and rules and guides? When did I kill my own internal guidance that tells me what I enjoy whether or not anyone else does? How do I get it back? How can I loose myself from the shackles of the god of opinion? I think there is no higher calling, nothing more important than learning to listen to the beat of my own heart and to experience and express from that.

But for now, I share the ramblings of a heart and brain beginning to break free.

Monday, January 16, 2012

Santa Ana, 9/8/94

by Susan Cameron

I wrote this in 1998 (I think!) about an incident in 1994. I still like it. :)
(And I'm glad Santa Ana has calmed down tremendously compared to back then).


I fling my bulletproof vest on the chair and open my first beer.
We worked the war zone on Third Street tonight.
My adrenaline's still pumping, nerves jumping,
heart thumping, body ready for flight or fight;
Genghis Khan would get his ass capped if he rolled up here.

Kafka couldn't invent this place. Teenage killers roam
while their parents cower trembling behind window bars.
Their bullets play with babies: "Tag, you're hit!"
And that's it. Tiny coffins, processions of beat-up cars
head to the graveyard to take the innocents home.

This story is as old as time, as old as Cain and Abel,
as old as I feel right now. But Attila the Homeboy is young.
He rips through flesh and crunches bone, a predator high on
testosterone and unconcerned with right or wrong.
There's no guilt or redemption in this fable.

So off we went to war again -- blue suits versus black,
shirts and skins -- to make the world safe; another story
you've heard before. The players change but the game
stays the same. We busted a hundred and got some glory;
but they'll make bail, and they'll be back.

Susan Cameron, copyright 1998