The Beating...

The speeding feet in the pounding rain. The perpetual beat of a heart. Pounding blood. There is a cave in my heart.
Stepping out of the rain, into the shadows, the noise transitions from the wash of the cloudburst to the flow of your anxious blood. Then to the pounding of your heart. It's so loud. Terrifying, yet trusted.
The roar is overwhelmed by the beating. The beating of dark membranes. You have disturbed them. You are enveloped by their plethora of leather-silk wings.
Neither bird nor beast, the ostracized. Bats. After they have settled, you see the moonlight reflected in two tapetums. The truth in those eyes, is it familiar to you? Or should you be frightened? How many lives has this creature lived?
Come in, friend. Step closer, enemy. You were washed by the rain, rinsed by the darkness, dried by the wings, and clothed. By a purpose.
Am I a panther? Am I the dusk?

THE PLAN for Labels

CHARACTERS are influential people in my tales.
BROWN is tales from a span of ages.
WHITE is tales from age 0-7.
RED is tales from age 8-14.
ORANGE is tales from age 14-21.
YELLOW is tales from age 22-28.
GREEN is tales from age 29-35.
BLUE is tales from age 36-42.
INDIGO is tales from age 43-49.
PURPLE is tales from age 50-56.
BLACK is tales from age 57-63.
Grey is an insight into how these tales may be affecting me.

Labels

Saturday, March 15, 2008

SandSurfer

My good friend. He was one of a kind, and he knew it. A Government Assassin of the highest order. He was an Army Ranger that served two tours in Vietnam with the 101st Airborne before going on to compete in and win the Best of the Best. Damn right.

He could chill your blood just looking at you. But he loved his wife and kids unconditionally. A hard worker who held to his moral code with an Iron Hand until the end.

I had the privilege of working with him at the last job I held in Arizona. He was, as I told him on our second day as partners in the truck: "The only person at the this place I haven't wanted to pick up and throw out the window." He laughed: "You got some balls. Yeah. I can work with you." Eight hours a day, five days a week, three states out of fifty. We shared a lot of tough stories with each other. He was the first, and likely the last, who could understand me.

I like to imagine that if I had gone down "that route", I'd be comparable to him when I was 60. One of my two REAL-LIFE role models. They don't make men like him anymore.



You'll never be forgotten my friend, not by me (LM: 1948-2007.)

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