Rain
The rain is falling steadily this wet
afternoon in Jacksonville Beach as I shuffle across a huge empty lot,
a few acres that separate the motel where I am staying from the Winn
Dixie plaza where there is hot deli food and beer and also a little
rum, a little rum for a wet Sunday in a town where it seems to rain
all the time. I am sniffling and making strange sounds with my
throat because I have had some odd sinus infection for a month now
and I am getting used to being a sap head and it rains a lot in
Jacksonville, Florida.
Raptor!
A beautiful red-tail hawk of some
considerable size dive bombs the retention pond as I pass by; it is
a big hawk and it lights in a dead tree next to the pond and shakes
the rain from its feathers and cocks its head to look me over and I
pause, here in the rain, to admire this wild raptor living here in
this field. There is a homeless camp nearby with a soggy sleeping
bag and a cold fire pit that only seems to make things worse and I
turn and shuffle away. There is rum and beer and hot deli-cooked
barbecue ribs and baked beans ahead.. As I cross the field I turn
and look back at the hawk and he is still there.
Peaceful Easy Feeling, Interrupted
There was time in my life when, (still
living in my old house near the beach after Number Two departed the
premises), when I would be awakened every morning by cooing doves,
love doves, I think; they would be there in the big cedar tree that
sheltered the back patio where I could also hear the sound of the
waves crashing on the beach and they were a pair, always there,
always there...myself, no longer a pair, was somehow comforted by the
cooing of the doves and I was happy for them. I was alone, then, but
at least I had the doves.
Then one day, sitting in the sunshine
on my back porch, sun-stunned and beer-soaked, there was a violent
fluttering overhead and one of the doves landed throat-ripped at the
base of the tree. I looked up and there it was, a fierce hawk on the
lowest branch (only feet away) from where I sat. The hawk was
glaring at me and looking down at the dead dove and I mentally willed
the murderer to swoop down to claim its prize so I could wreak
hateful vengeance on this intruder, this killer...
But the hawk flew away and I went over
to the dove and picked it up. I didn't know what to do. It was
dead. I took it out to the wild palmetto thicket behind my property
and laid it under a small palm growing there. I didn't know what to
do. It seemed then that the reality of my life crashed straight into
me and I was alone, now, alone like the other dove and I knew that
tomorrow that other dove would be alone in the cedar tree and I was
also alone, now.
Sweet Adaline
This damnable Jacksonville rain dampens
the world and I am tired. We have worked twenty days in a row and I
am beginning to wonder when it will end. The clerk at the liquor
store looks like maybe he was once in a barber shop quartet and his
jolliness fails to change my mind about the rain but I appreciate his
effort. I trundle back across the wet field with my food and drink
and there he is, the hawk, there he is and I am glad to see him. I
don't know why.
As I step into my room I suddenly think
about my brother. I was leaving a liquor store in sunny St.
Petersburg one afternoon over a decade ago, smiling about some witty
remark I had made to the guy behind the counter. I heard a voice say
“There's my brother, smiling in the sunshine.” I have told this
story before but I don't care. Every time I see a hawk I remember my
brother and that moment in the sun and I don't know why. They are
not connected, as far as I know; hawks, I mean, and my brother. But
I had those doves once and a hawk took one of them away and made me
more aware of my loss and sorrow and for some reason hawks make me
think of my lost brother and this rain, this damnable rain makes me
something of a brother to that hawk here today, in the rain.
I Am, After All, A Cyclist
What does any of this have to do with
bicycles, with two wheels, with the long road? Well, nothing; and
everything. Out there, sleek and tight-wrapped in our road clothes
(our plumage of destruction) we are each (in our way) hawks. We fly
swiftly and with gentle malice along our swift trails and we are
raptors, of a sort; we roadies, we fast-runners...not the mountain
crowd, today, I mean lean bicycles and dedicated suffering and joy on
the tarmac and flying is our business and yeah, I have somehow lost
my way and my road bike has been gathering dust in the corner, with a
flat tire.
My brother has been gone for many years
now and I never did learn why. But when I went to pick up the stuff
he left behind out on the balcony of his lonely apartment there was a
beat up old ten speed. It was a thing he learned from me, I
remember, to always keep a ten speed handy. I never quite knew why
but I always had one and so did he, my little brother.
And Finally...
This damnable rain makes for these
times of sweet melancholy and I am not sorry for the dove, the lost
dove nor for my lost brother; this is the way of the world and it is
how it should be, I think. But I will soon enough begin to get my
road bike back up strong and hawk-like and she will get gears and I
will clothe myself in proper garb and I will once again take to the
road, the long road of the far rides and once again pursue the
answers that I seek; maybe there on the long road I can resume my
search for the hawk and the dove and the answer to all of this, this
rain and a hawk in the rain and the job of the long rider.
Whispering Pines Trailer Park and Weather Report
March 4, 2014
Whispering Pines Trailer Park and Weather Report
March 4, 2014