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Timothy M. Leonard's books on Goodreads
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Subject to Change Subject to Change
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Ice girl in Banlung Ice girl in Banlung
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Finch's Cage Finch's Cage
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Thursday
Jan252007

Chapter 30

Drifting is a migration from a linear world that is full of neat processes and models to the road where everything happens at once. Any glue for general directions is gone.

The eco-tone is life material for metaphors where two adjacent ecosystems overlap in shadow, transparency, reflection, refraction, dappling, stippling, shimmering, moire, netting, layering and superimposition. A place without a filter to distort knowledge and perception.

A ride, when it’s absolutely necessary. Driving along you engage each other with stories from the past and then you both realize suddenly how common it all is. How your lives are mingling, connected for the briefest time, short and long and quick and deadly evaporating exchanges.

It was one early fall in a cow town 60 miles north of Denver. I stood on the residential street thumbing a ride. Homer, an old crusty ranching farmer stopped his battered blue pickup and I got in. We traveled less than a mile, a few short city blocks. He told me two things.

“If a person speaks the truth they don’t have to remember what they said,” and, “If you ever need a helping hand look at the end of your wrist.”

I thanked him for the ride and words of wisdom at an intersection full of salvation thrift stores and mini-marts got out and started walking to get a paper and check out ads. Found a place in the basement of the King’s house a couple blocks from campus.

This university was the place where younger students called me a “Baby Killer” when they found out I was a veteran. Vietnam, 1969. I had no explanation, no excuse, no answers. I was invisible, I incorporated passive-aggressive silence. I became anonymous, a figment of their imagination.

I learned how to stay away from them, how to practice covert skills of black watch, night patrols, stealth, disguise, cunning, lock and load and put it on fully automatic. Nothing but the blues baby. Write it down, get it out, smile, move on.

My undeclared major was Survival 101. It reminded me of an old unit, Screaming Eagles. It wasn’t in the catalog of classes.

Later I would, under extreme pressure and duress from administration officials in their cubicles screaming “You have to declare something!” select Cultural Anthropology. There are lies and there are statistics. Any system will do whatever is necessary to perpetuate and sustain itself. This is how the world works.

I knew a language died every two weeks on the planet and had plenty of research to do. On the ground. Running, as in ‘hit the ground running.’ I already had a degree in that. Somewhere between earth and sky.

As in keep a low profile and get to the tree line. As in watch out for trip wires. As in the quick and the dead litany from Senior Drill Sergeant Prude at Ft. Leonard Wood Misery up there on his pedestal telling raw recruits, “You’d better listen boys ‘cause what I tell you may save your life.”

The thing that saved his life in that environment where the smell of cows drifted from Wyoming to New Mexico from the feed lots through the slaughtering houses to the plastic wrapped beef parts in supermarkets was the hunkering down, studies, writing, photography and small quick intense encounters with women.

Have mercy. They appreciated an older lover and didn’t ask stupid questions. They were sensitive enough to know better and let him be. He lasted in the cow town two years gathering credits and working through his material.

The places are all together on the spinning globe through all the realms of potential and full of promise. The evidence reduced some of the regret for all the lives he never realized inside the love and passion and the why of our suffering.

To die you should have lived. To live you should have died. It is as simple as that.

Tuesday
Dec262006

Feed the Tiger

My name is Tatiana. I weigh 350 pounds. I warned them not to move me from Denver to San Francisco. I was really happy there. They didn't listen. They were more interested in my breeding instincts, hoping I'd mate with a 14-year old Tiger.

Well, I wasn't pleased with this arrangement and practiced polite behavior behind bars for a year. This is easy for me coming from Siberia where you learn the art of stealth and cunning.

Face it folks, I am at the top of the food chain and the fortified horse meat garbage they give us here is worthless.

I don't know who's responsible for my being here and I don't care. All I know is that being in captivity for the pleasure of stupid humans is a fate worse than dying in Siberia. There, at least I have a chance. Here, I'm just another cute animal lying around dreaming of my freedom.

As you may have heard, yesterday I seized, if you'll pardon the pun, my slim chance when the lady who feeds me made a crucial mistake. She opened the metal feeding slot to put the horsemeat into my cage. A kid asked her a question. She hesitated. ZAP! I grabbed her arm.

Her screams were music to my ears. My eyes narrowed.

I heard she may lose it but hey, life is a beautiful struggle for survival. Given more space it would've been the jugular. Quick and silent.

You take what you can get at feeding time. Instinct is beautiful.

Peace.

Saturday
Dec232006

Zoo Keys

She picked the keys off the ground and watched them dance back and forth. They played gentle soft swinging music in front of her serious dark black eyes.

The tall emaciated man walked toward her out of fear. What would she discover? What did she already know? He was a long slow tide.

A silver Amtrak train from Portland to Seattle slid by heading north on silent tracks, whistling steel.

Passengers looked at the Sound with long hard eyes. They were chained to the earth to pay for the freedom of their eyes.

Her vision was measured, answered by the man.

“Oh, thank goodness, you, my - I mean - you found the keys. How can I ever thank you?”

She held onto a worn leather strap with tight fingers, never taking her eyes off the joy of dancing light.

“What are they for? she asked looking straight at him. “What do they do?”

“Ah, now, aren’t you a curious one,” he said moving closer. He must have dropped them by accident. No, this couldn’t, didn’t happen by accident. He knew that much.

Still, she had them.

He was patient, watching the blue boat arrive from the medium security state pen. It released sad faced men and women guards in their creased blue uniforms. They walked past security, across train tracks to their cars and trucks for a long drive home on crowded highways.

The tide blasted over rocks covered with bright green seaweed and barnacles as the wings of a seagull clapped in the sky.

He needed the keys and knew it would take some explaining.

“How about a sandwich?” he offered.
“What kind?”
“Peanut butter and jelly.”
“OK. Do you have any juice?”
“Let me see.” He looked in his library book bag.
“How about orange, perhaps an apple?”
“An apple please.”

“The keys,” she said. “What are they for?”
“They open zoo cages.”
“Hmm,” she said, watching them dance.
“What zoos?”
“Toronto, Point Defiance, Denver, Vancouver, London, Berlin, Madrid, San Diego, Shanghai.”
“Why?”

“Someone to look after lonely animals and provide some comfort to the young ones especially if they are afraid - you know, being in a strange place and all.”

“It’s their nature to be afraid. It’s either desire or fear,” she said.

“Are you talking about people or wild animals?”

They were in a place with excellent public transportation. Coffee bars every block. Urban poverty. People carried their apathetic or sullen expressions.

Intuition brought them together. Fate and chance. Cumulus clouds growing and building over a Sonora desert, 5,000 feet high. Clear air. Mystique. Fabrications. Automatic writing in central Galway cold water flats. Extrapolations of mysterious human struggles with universal demons.

Value added markets at the corner of 5 & Dime.

"You are a novella full of loud explosions from high elevation bombing runs at night. Night sight infra-red vision tactics under the cover of darkness. Where everything glowed green," she said.

"It's probable," he said.

They were brave people, the man and woman sharing emotional honesty and trust. They acknowledged each others authenticity as Tibetan prayer flags absorbed sunlight bleeding their colors.

They finished their sandwiches and fruit, and selected a zoo at random from their world map.

"Let's go," she said. She wanted to see the keys work their magic.

Tuesday
Dec192006

Al's too young

The candle flame was the only light in the room.

He had a vision of Al’s wife in the nursing home. She was in trouble and needed him. Al is 88.

Four hours later Al turned up for his tennis lesson and said he had a lot of stress this morning. He forgot his shoes and couldn’t play.

I shared my earlier vision of Al’s wife. Al looked at me and intuitivily understood how it worked. “See you next week.”

He left to see his wife.

They met the following week.
“How’s your wife?”

“Great! I bought a van for $20,000 marked down from $45,000.” Yep, it has low miles and has a lift for my wife’s wheelchair.”

“Cool, and?”
“Well, I’m going to pick her up tomorrow and take her to MacDonald’s. She can order anything she wants!”

They met the following week. It’s spring break and no classes are scheduled but Al shows up.

“We don’t have class today do we?”
“No Al, it’s spring break.”
“Oh man,” he said, “I should have marked it down on the calendar.”

“Don’t worry Al,” as we shared hugs, “you’re too young to worry about things like that.”
“Yeah,” Al said, “I’m too young to worry,” and they laughed while walking past people running for their lives around the indoor track.

“Yeah,” they sang, “I’m too young to worry about things like that.”

Sunday
Dec172006

Sister 1909-1995

she worked here
learning retired repository
studying stacks of education
filed ever so carefully among
dusty dewey decimal systems,
among stacks of volunteers-
acquiescent acceptance

pharmacy manuals,
people smiling in glossy pulp pages
childless South American radio frequency lives,
nephew travel tales
exposes in foreign tongue lands
falling off cruise ship deck into blue sky dreams

passions planted among dusty exotic shores of recognition
laughing with a box of simple crackers at Christmas

caught in choice's web
wearing threadbare depression taught clothing
ideas, attitudes
afraid of change and spending and laughing and trusting
instincts
a bird trapped in cage
becoming of age. ancient, wise

trusting her brother's decisions,
guidance where it mattered

late at night her watercolor brushes glistened
she explored exploded
delicate soft spoken nature parameters
where searching expectations
led her past solitary confinement
bleeding water and color on her life's palette

at 86 her heart stopped while
she was rolling along