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    The Orange & Blue Drive-In

    Previous Page Next Page

      August 1967

      (one leg off a yellow and red grasshopper)

      August 3rd Morgan walked the two miles

      from the courthouse to the drive-in

      refused to take a ride in spite of the heat

      Timmy sat on the bottom step that led up to his apartment

      Ozzie and Harriet bit one leg off a yellow and red grasshopper

      they found in a small clump of grass

      It hopped sideways trying to get away

      Timmy stood up when he saw Morgan approach

      pulled the keys out of his pocket and held them out

      ‘The money’s in the cash box in the apartment

      the new films are in the projection room’

      Morgan had not shaved his black-rimmed glasses

      slid down his nose when he looked at Timmy

      ‘I’m sure everything’s okay’

      He was tired the words were soft

      Timmy spoke rapidly

      ‘My friends and my sister helped me

      I paid them cash out of the box

      We’re out of 7UP’

      Morgan looked at Timmy squinted

      ‘I’m sure it’s all ok Penney’s been ordered to stay away

      I’m sorry Timmy I don’t think she’ll be coming back’

      Timmy looked into his eyes

      The skin drooped in a sad fold under the black rims

      of the glasses as Morgan exhaled ‘I’m sorry about Rundi’

      He did not expect Morgan’s sadness

      and began to recognize his own tired feelings

      as his own lingering sadness

      Morgan did not want to let go

      Timmy was the only one waiting for him

      ‘Will you keep working with me’

      Timmy nodded and put the keys in Morgan’s hands

      (Cronkite answered him)

      Morgan invited Timmy to dinner before

      work and added commentary

      to the TV news as they ate

      as if in a conversation with Walter Cronkite

      ‘Today’s military action in Vietnam . . .’

      ‘All the predictions of World War III

      are going to come true in your lifetime . . .’

      Morgan stopped and stared at Timmy

      Timmy remembered playing war games with Gary and David

      ‘Houari Boumediene of Algeria was in Moscow meeting with the Soviets

      on their intentions toward the Arabs’

      Israel destroyed the Arab armies

      the Arabs no doubt will plot revenge

      Morgan described bomb shelter plans from Popular Mechanix

      and worried that he threw the magazine away

      He stopped faced Timmy ‘What are you going to do

      In three years you will be eligible for the draft

      and they could ship you off to Vietnam

      or Lebanon maybe Germany to stand guard at the Berlin Wall’

      Timmy looked at him lost not knowing

      if there was a choice in that list that he could make

      The future used to seem so far away

      and now Timmy felt alone in a different way

      The time was compressing his memory

      of the fire in Rundi’s shop It was put out so fast

      it didn’t have a chance to burn

      ‘Israel assured the US they would provide humanitarian treatment

      for all Palestinian refugees in the occupied territories’

      The drone of the news faded

      ‘I have two new films coming Timmy

      a little different’ They were silent a few moments

      Timmy unsure what to say ‘The Sound of Music with Julie Andrews and

      Arrivederci, Baby! with Tony Curtis’ Morgan closed his eyes

      He continued the words soft and quiet mixed with the news report

      ‘Syria blames Egypt for the Arab defeat in the Six-Day War with Israel . . .’

      Morgan’s voice harmonized with the news

      ‘I had a dream last night My wife set down the plates

      and silverware on a table told me how I

      would provide the food She let me cut myself up

      destroying myself on empty plates breaking apart

      and melting like ice She invited my friends to dinner

      to discuss my clothes my money She asked me

      to be open and to share my thoughts on watching myself . . .’

      Cronkite answered him

      ‘The South African Paliament voted to extend

      the detention of Robert Sobukwe’

      (the mosquitoes drove them inside)

      Morgan turned off the TV walked with Timmy

      to the stairs that led up to the projection room

      and gave him the flyers previewing the new movies

      The fading evening light was dropping shadows

      across the colors of the landscape

      Later Timmy pulled The Endless Summer

      out of the film canister He liked the music

      and it brought a rowdy crowd to the drive-in for two nights

      Cars with surf racks surfboards and guys that sat

      on the roof of their cars until the mosquitoes drove them inside

      Car radios were cranked up higher than the regular crowd

      and the bleach blonde hair of boys and girls

      walking to the concession stand glowed in the dark

      He threaded the film into the projector

      and sat down on the floor his back

      against the cool gray concrete block

      and looked at the blue images

      of waves on the glass window

      He read about the Von Trapps who sang their way across Vienna

      and into the mountains to escape Nazis and how Tony Curtis married

      then murdered his wives Two different escape plans

      Gary and David climbed the stairs and opened the door

      called Timmy They found him with his eyes closed

      David ignored the closed eyes ‘We came to tell you about Jimi Hendrix

      He set his guitar on fire burned his hands’

      Timmy looked at his own hands

      healed from the glass cuts and the burns

      ‘When’ he asked

      Gary shrugged ‘We just read about it tonight’

      (the void in the cavity of his chest)

      On August 6th

      Timmy waited to hear from Penney

      He fell asleep lying on the floor

      His dream was long silent yet everyone around

      the operating table seemed to know what was being done

      A masked surgeon entered picked up a blade

      from a metal tray draped with a blue towel

      He cut from the top of the sternum straight down to Timmy’s navel

      He sat the knife back on the blue towel

      The surgeon’s fingers were pink his nails

      clean but bloody He turned and walked away

      The crowd around the table came in closer the surgical masks

      covered everything but their eyes

      Timmy blinked and each person turned to another

      nodded their heads in approval The surgeon came back

      and looked into his ice blue eyes Everyone moved back

      He reached down and pulled apart Timmy’s chest

      like a magician opening a box He turned and left

      The crowd came closer A pulse filled Timmy’s ears like a distant drum

      The people looked at each other again looked in his chest

      nodded and pulled back The light overhead dimmed

      each person untied the white strings dropped the green surgical masks

      and Timmy recognized his father his mother Marie Greg Morgan

      and Penney who reached into the open box of his chest

      Timmy felt the pressure choke him She lifted out his heart

      a veined blue and red muscle with a light that pulsed in the center

    &nbsp
    ; Penney wiped the blood away and held it up

      for everyone to see and they turned to each other and nodded

      their lips pressed into tight lines She held the heart

      in her arms like a baby

      Timmy gasped as air filled the void in the cavity of his chest

      and he sunk inward drifted away from the circle of faces

      Their eyes went blank lips disappeared

      fluid darkness covered him and he opened his eyes

      the paneling in his room gray in the morning light

      (he lived here because he worked here)

      Penney called Morgan from Marie’s

      told him she was going to leave for a trip to Chicago

      He wanted to ask her why she had to have Timmy for a lover

      but he was afraid to ask There were a few moments of silence

      and then as if he asked she said very softly

      ‘Daddy I was so frustrated I was

      always living with you and mother

      never on my own I couldn’t figure out how to break away from my life

      Then I just wanted to go back go back to being a girl

      where I was innocent where I was young and free

      where even if I was wrong things would be okay’

      He hung up the phone and went to the apartment window

      looked out at the ragged edge of Hawthorne Road

      the asphalt gray from wear the y-shaped seed heads of Bahia grass

      on the roadside waved in the light afternoon breeze

      Beyond the pines were the remnants of farmland

      abandoned junk cars trash dumped on the side of dirt roads

      Poor white families stuck in place planting seeds in sandy soil

      incapable of growing anything but the weakest crops

      Each spring he watched squash rot in the fields

      saw black men lean over with their fishing poles at Newnan’s Lake

      catching Bream and Bass the diet of families too poor

      to raise chickens or pigs

      Manero’s Restaurant and his drive-in

      the only businesses east of town with a semblance

      of financial liquidity Maybe Rundi’s shop had been

      He couldn’t tell if people ever bought enough

      at the auctions or not Half the people attending went

      to be entertained

      because they didn’t own televisions

      Morgan looked down at his legs

      He lived here because he worked here

      (everyone’s wish)

      Timmy walked across Hawthorne Road

      his boots scraped at the gravel

      Timmy wanted Penney and he hurt after he felt

      his mother’s cold touch his longing

      grew like a vine tightening on a tree trunk

      and he walked to Marie’s house

      He remembered how he sat in front of Rundi’s store

      Penney’s face was red and confused

      She sat in the back seat of the police car

      her hair down obedient to the sudden command of the police

      she stared at Timmy almost asking for help

      Timmy lost the calm he had when he watched Morgan

      shoot out the windows of the police cars

      he was ashamed and frustrated

      not knowing what to do except look for Penney

      he wanted her to understand He went to her to explain

      The sweat in his boots made walking like sloshing through mud

      Marie didn’t work never had Morgan always took care

      of the family and he still did She was home

      when she saw Timmy standing in the street outside her house

      She walked out ‘Leave here Just leave There is no use

      coming around here’

      Timmy felt the urge to obey but stood still

      ‘Is Penney here’

      Marie stopped at the edge of the road

      ‘Never mind Just leave she is not allowed to see you’

      ‘Tell her I asked’ He looked at the gray chain link fence

      avoided Marie’s eyes

      ‘I’ll do no such thing’

      He stood feet firm and spreading his toes

      inside his boots when Marie walked back inside

      Timmy walked into the trees in the yard

      across from the house and stood in the grass

      He pulled up a stem of Bahia grass chewed

      on the faint lemon taste in the fiber

      then walked back to his room

      feeling everyone’s wish that he would forget

      (the falling motion)

      Timmy’s feet hurt his boots were too small

      and Morgan was depressed still talked only about politics

      They went through the same procedure

      every night to open the drive-in

      Ozzie and Harriet seemed to miss Penney

      whined and sniffed around the concession stand

      Morgan ordered a new series of movies

      He became infatuated with Liz Taylor

      Cleopatra Cat on a Hot Tin Roof he added Richard Burton

      in The Night of the Iguana Strange but Timmy liked them

      better than the westerns also better than Peyton Place

      or The Long, Hot Summer but the drive-in crowd dwindled

      Drink sales were up so were the heat and mosquitoes

      The summer rain and heat felt ominous to Morgan

      and he became obsessed with the weather

      Morgan liked Frank Sinatra wanted free love

      and was still puzzled by the Berlin Wall

      He retreated to the block walls of his apartment

      and kept out the world except for Timmy

      His endless one-sided conversation never stopped politics and war

      One Friday afternoon Timmy found Morgan asleep

      the TV on his breath increasingly shallow the world squeezing him

      He sat down on the couch closed his eyes

      and opened them hoping to see something different

      but the room was the same shaded glow from the setting sun

      He got up looked out the apartment window

      The red lettering Closed on Wednesday

      clashed with the orange trim on the sign

      He turned back to the TV

      ‘The riots on 12th Street in Detroit are over

      Forty people are dead more than a thousand injured

      and 7000 were arrested in one of the worst riots in US history’

      Timmy wanted to know why this happened

      He looked at Morgan sleeping thought

      he really didn’t know any more than his father did

      he didn’t have a clue what to do about it

      How many people would die like Rundi

      He played again in his head the falling motion

      but now he imagined he saw the sharp glass slice through Rundi

      and pierce the blood vessel next to his kidney

      and the blood flowed out of him like a water out of a spigot

      that couldn’t be turned off

      Morgan had bought the guns in case it all showed up on his doorstep

      Timmy couldn’t fault him for that

      The voice on the TV in the background

      and in entertainment news ‘EMI Records reported strong sales

      of the new Beatles album Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band’

      (the true reflection of the God in her)

      August 26th Timmy slept in late

      wore the clothes from the day before

      A knock on the door ‘Timmy let me talk’

      When he opened the door Timmy saw Saira’s dark eyes

      scouring the floor

      The room was clean the bed only slightly creased

      and she wondered if Timmy had slept on the floor

      ‘You are ok’ Timmy nodded ‘What has happened to the lady’

      ‘She went to Chicago’ Timmy looked across
    the street

      the green GTO vivid in his memory

      Saira walked to the bed and sat down

      looked up at Timmy she sensed his longing for Penney

      His shoulders were rigid the skin on his arms pink

      the blonde hair barely visible She coughed

      ‘The world is perfect Timmy just the way God wants it

      Just the way it needs to be for us to learn to love only God’

      Timmy listened his eyes glanced down at Saira as he spoke

      ‘And I am not supposed to love Penney’

      She flinched wanted to hold her thoughts about God

      in front of Timmy in the best way She waited

      then spoke slowly evenly ‘Only when you can bow down and love

      the true reflection of the God in her no matter what she does’

      The English words were still strange to Saira

      Should she have said Goddess

      Timmy was confused at the idea of loving God

      How many people died in Detroit Newark

      There was the God of Greg interfering vengeful fighting and burning

      He faced Saira squarely ‘I ache in my body for Penney

      and I don’t know what to do about it

      My mother . . . she was fifteen when I was born

      She’s no help neither is my father’

      Timmy was confused unable to hold on to an idea

      before the next thought rushed in and pushed it out

      Saira smiled ‘In my country children marry

      at an even younger age arranged by parents

      with no thought of manhood womanhood or love

      just privilege and wealth It is not a better system

      Don’t try to be too much too soon

      already you know how things can be hard

      but you know and what you know is important’

      Timmy imagined his mother holding him

      realized he wanted comfort

      He was afraid to be afraid and hurt

      He stood across from Saira

      Where does this kind of God fit in with Penney

      Timmy listened to the explanation

      the reason always something a little beyond his reach

      He was alone His eyes filled with tears

      and he walked out of the room to the storefront

      Dust white flecks light shadows surrounded him

      he looked across the street Morgan painted the fence

      behind the ticket kiosk blue He fought back

      Rundi was passive yet he made his way around

      put things back moved on without a fight without resistance

      never looked for revenge

      Saira did not say a word to Timmy about damage to the store

      yet Timmy knew it was the turmoil in his life

      that caused the broken glass the burned rug

      and the unspeakable silence of Rundi’s death

      Why didn’t Saira blame him

      There was a tenderness in Saira that he did not see in his mother

      Her grief must be so much more and he tried to imagine her grief

      He felt pushed around inside his own skin

      forced into strange shapes something wanted him

      to see the world differently

      (just as soon have died)

      Marie despised her dependence on Greg

      more than her need for Morgan

      Morgan continued to defy her attempts at reconciliation and control

      She saw Morgan as a caricature who waved guns at the life around him

      Why did she continue to hold on

      Her disdain for guns and dogs

      deepened when Penney whined over the phone

      that she missed Ozzie and Harriet

      How could Penney whine She was free to roam the country

      Marie realized after Penney left the distance to Morgan

      was harder to cross She cut Morgan off from all communication

      and information about her life

      hoped he would long to know something about her

      something to pull him to her But Morgan did not respond

      to her intentions Marie let go of the thin line of connection

      that held them and it fell slack as he drifted away

      In church Marie wished for Greg’s humiliation

      thought it would make him leave her alone

      But she could not let go She asked him to help her

      deal with Penney and Morgan and instead he went to the police

      She would just as soon have died herself

      Marie secretly prayed for John to challenge Greg

      for John’s autistic concentration

      to hammer Greg’s self-righteous indignation

      with the power of the Prophets

      The adult Sunday school class dissolved

      Greg couldn’t deal with John’s memory

      of every Bible passage and he forbid

      his attendance at the Sunday services

      (right between the eyes)

      Timmy turned on the light looked at his room

      it was roughly the same size as the projection room at the drive-in

      The chain on the overhead light was swinging

      I know I’m lost he said to himself No one else seems to know

      maybe Rundi did Everyone else just sees me going out

      on my own and they seem to think I should like being so free

      Burying the dog Sex with Penney The police Morgan’s guns

      Dinner with Rundi Greg His mother and father

      what were the last words they said to him

      Nothing important It was an emptiness he did not understand

      They were just present going through the motions

      Julie was pregnant At one time he wanted Melissa

      but now he avoided her He could not remember thinking so much

      about people and not knowing anyone not knowing himself

      Morgan was out there fighting back

      somehow preoccupied with world war

      Timmy liked Morgan’s fire Saira’s steadiness

      and wanted that too He opened his eyes

      He walked out the shop door walked west on Hawthorne Road

      toward University Avenue and the center of Gainesville

      He thought about Gary and David but decided to go alone

      His steps were like drops of water that echoed in a well

      the bottom of his feet felt raw his socks slid into the front of his boots

      Cars would surge through traffic lights

      the side streets were filled with dark corners

      An orange caboose sat on railroad tracks next to Waldo Road

      Lumber wired together sat in bundles stacked on flat cars

      Gainesville slowed at night a crawling pulse that sought home

      pushed away from the loneliness of any darkness

      pushed light and dark out to a perimeter where Timmy walked

      just beyond sight in the shadows

      In the grass lawn next to Florida Field Timmy stopped

      took off his boots his jeans clung to his legs

      his t-shirt damp with sweat He leaned up against a pine tree

      the night breeze chilled him

      The stadium was silent He squeezed through the metal gate

      at the north end zone climbed to the top of the east stands

      and laid down on a wooden bleacher

      He woke from a restless sleep to a gray sky

      He looked east toward the drive-in and the sun was a hot orange

      liquid circle just below clouds he wanted to hop in a car and leave

      He made some silent vows

      He would not be like his father

      not like Morgan and not like Rundi

      He started back to 23rd Street through the university campus

      hitched a ride home with a college student headed to the beach

      More cars appeared each minute

      Timmy appreciate
    d the silent ride

      not having to explain himself and decided

      he no longer needed an explanation

      His chest heaved with a deep breath

      his own stomach churned hungry

      He heard the gears grind in the mixers at the concrete plant

      on Depot Road white stone slid down metal troughs

      trucks thumped across the railroad tracks

      The motion and noise around him were sluggish

      To the northwest the white stone of the Seagle Building

      stood above the trees

      In his room before Saira arrived to open the shop

      Timmy remembered his dream of lying on the operating table

      He was tired with a hole in his chest as wide as his shoulders the

      length of his ribs . . . his loneliness . . . he fell and all he could feel

      was the falling When he opened his eyes again the chain hanging

      from the light over his bed had stopped swinging

      and pointed at him right between the eyes

      (we did not say goodbye)

      Timmy got up walked to the front door

      Saira was about to put her key in the lock

      and Timmy pulled the door open

      ‘The answer is always right there Timmy waiting for you’

      Timmy looked at her the brown skin on her face sagged

      in a sad way but there was a light in her brown eyes

      She stood for a moment and looked at Timmy’s eyes

      and laughed ‘Good Morning’

      He noticed how her laugh ended quickly

      as she passed how her shoulders curved forward

      and as he stood at the edge of the road he looked back

      watched her shadow pass back and forth behind the windows

      Timmy headed over to Morgan’s apartment

      As he climbed the stairs he heard ‘Come on in I’m here’

      Water ran in the sink the refrigerator door was open

      Ozzie and Harriet had their front paws on the shelf

      their noses sniffed out the milk carton

      Timmy pushed them out of the way and closed the door

      The dogs looked up at him and he saw through their eyes

      for a moment They were happy

      to be alive just sure of the next meal

      Morgan sat at the dining room table

      the newspaper leaned against a cereal box

      a bowl of cereal hovered under his chin

      He looked up at Timmy his eyes bulged behind his glasses

      ‘Penney gave me a letter for you’

      He pointed with his spoon at an envelope

      Dear Timmy We did not say goodbye

      but this is best Some day we can meet and talk

      but not now Love Penney

      His eyes burned as he looked at the words

      Love and Penney Without knowing why he felt Penney

      was being true to him and loyal Somehow it made him feel

      a little stronger She didn’t ask him to be anything

      didn’t promise him anything they just came together

      a strange coming together he could not understand

      He knew he was still hurting and it made him feel tired

      Morgan put down his bowl ‘I’m sorry Timmy’

      (the world walked through those doors)

      Morgan read the paper every morning at breakfast

      the way film rolled over the lens of a projector

      Timmy sat at the table and heard the click of the reel

      He remembered Morgan staring down at him

      from the apartment window Now he knew

      the stare was not just for him It was easier to sit

      in the background of Morgan’s thought

      Penney drove from Chicago to California

      sent postcards to Timmy and Morgan

      from stops along Route 66

      Timmy saw the newspaper headline

      with the total dead for the week in Vietnam 532

      There was a picture of Barry Goldwater in Arizona

      He wore black-rimmed glasses like Morgan

      Morgan looked up from the paper when Timmy grabbed a piece of toast

      ‘They are calling this the Summer of Love Imagine the destruction

      the riots the wars in Vietnam and the Middle East’ He paused

      Timmy waited curious then nodded thought of Penney

      signing her note Love Penney

      Morgan sighed ‘I guess love can be destructive’

      Timmy got up looked out the apartment window

      at the small window of his room at the back of Rundi’s store

      and realized how much of the world walked through those doors

      and into his room It even made the local newspaper

      He remembered one of the names he saw in the guest book

      at the funeral home John Willingham

      (what he let in that place)

      Friday night Melissa came

      to the door of the projection room

      Timmy was checking Morgan’s film set-up

      before he turned on the projectors

      The film reels turned slowly

      Timmy’s fingers pushed them

      gently snapped the plastic film into the reel

      He turned on the projector bulb

      and a cylinder of light formed in the air

      between the lens and the window

      Melissa watched his steady movements

      smooth pressures controlled pulls

      easy turns and twists knobs buttons

      switches levers locks She remained at the door

      All of the momentum that carried her to this point

      the phone call to Marie the prodding from Greg

      the pleasure of seeing Penney taken away was gone

      The realization how Marie and Greg used her

      was slow to come her mind so locked

      on getting Penney out of the way

      She stood with her hand on the door window

      and began rubbing the glass to smudge her fingerprints

      The floor in the projection room disappeared

      into a pool of black and Timmy was like a shadow

      that moved inside a box that locked her out

      The doorknob vanished in the dark she turned

      and walked away and each step behind her

      vanished on her way home

      Timmy turned on the projector

      fed the film in front of the lens

      and a brown hue filled the cylinder of light

      then a gray wash of color

      In the drive-in the dome lights in cars flickered out

      doors closed

      Saira he felt her presence even though he barely knew her

      One dinner with Rundi Under the surface

      of her expression he thought he saw trembling

      how could she not tremble

      He shook as if he was cold

      The image of Saira’s eyes blended into Rundi’s

      brown eyes her full cheek became part of his smile

      He missed them Penney Rundi

      and he felt the emptiness of another loss

      he could not identify and he knew

      he had to be careful what he let in that place

      Timmy watched

      on the screen numbers counted down

      10—9—8—7—6

      and the hollow sound of music echoed between cars

      ###END###

     
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