The Bluesman

Smoke hung low in the old bar. He knew that tumors were being born tonight. But he didn’t care.  He was there to play the Blues. He was the opening act.

He strummed a couple of chords.  A few people stopped talking but most continued on their conversations about whatever it was that alcohol made them talk about.   He began to play his first song.

TWANG! A string broke.  He stopped and the audience stared at him. “Technical difficulties, folks.”

As he worked furiously on his guitar, he began to tell a story:

There once was a cocky young man who lived deep in the Mississippi Delta.  His voice was a gift from the angles but his attitude straight from Hell.  He’d play small juke joints every weekend but his heart was always at the next bigger place: The next big thing.  He never focused on where he was.

One day he was playing in a smoke-filled bar just like this one when an old Bluesman came in carrying a old battered guitar case.  He had a gray beard, tattered shirt and clouded eyes.  His teeth had seen better days as well. And he smelled like sweat.  The old man looked at the boy and said, “Mind if I sit in with you.”

The boy looked at the old man and scoffed, “Sure old man. ”  The old man didn’t look like much to the cocky young kid.  What would it hurt if he shared a stage with him?

The kid was good. Damn good. He played the notes as well as anyone. But experience had not allowed him to feel the notes.  His music was sterile.  His cockiness completely kept him from learning. Something not lost on the mysterious old man.

The old man got up there and started playing the blues.  Blues so blue that even angels cried. A heavy rain started falling all across the Delta when he sang his songs.  Thunder and lightning were his percussion section.  The Bluesman took all the audiences pain in the room and channelled it in his music. It was musical magic that cast its spell on everyone.

The audience sat there stunned.  The boy got up and thought, “I can top that.”

He got up on the chair and started playing.  Like I said before, his music was technically perfect. But it was sterile. It was music that was dry and barren.  The rain outside stopped and the audience got restless.

The young man finished playing and looked over at the Bluesman. He grinned a grin back and handed the young boy his guitar.

“This is yours. But first you must learn a few things. Never be afraid to learn from those who you think are lesser than you.  Everyone knows something you don’t.  Cherish where you are in the moment.  And go live your life to the fullest. Don’t be a water bug just skittering across the surface.  All your life’s experiences will flow through your music. Be sure of yourself but never be cocky. It’s a cancer on your soul.”

The Bluesman put his hand on the boy’s shoulder and the boy felt a warmth that he couldn’t explain.  The Bluesman then took the boy’s guitar and walked out of the juke joint.  The boy ran over to the window but he had faded into the inky night. It began to rain again.


The opening act finished both his story and restringing his prized guitar. It was the old battered guitar that had once belonged to the Bluesman. He looked out at the audience and smiled. He soaked in the moment. He felt the peoples’ pain. And then, the once cocky young man sang the bluest of the Blues.

And outside, it began to rain all across the Mississippi Delta.

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The landline

The old house was full of boxes.  She and her family had been packing them over the weekend. Now a huge sea of cardboard washed over the place that once had held her most precious memories.  Her parents had passed away.  And she was packing up their home.

She looked at the battered black phone on the kitchen wall. On it were stickers  — stickers with the doctor’s numbers. The police. The fire. Their favorite pizza parlor. And there were stickers with other important numbers, too. Like her numbers —  All four of them since she had been out of college.  Her cell phone was the one that was now not crossed out. She was from a different generation with her cell phone. Not her parents.  Their landline tied them to the world. And to her.  It was her safety line.

No longer would she be able to dial those familiar numbers. Like the time the elementary school nurse had called when she had the Chicken Pox. Or when her boyfriend had been mean to her and she needed to cry on her mom’s shoulder. Or when she was homesick in college. Then there was that time had the flat in the middle of the night. Dad to the rescue! Or the three times she went into labor.

No longer would she be able to dial those 10 numbers and hear the voices that brought her peace or help. No longer could she dial her parent’s phone number and hear their precious voices.

She sat on the stack of boxes for a few minutes and tried to soak it all in.  A voice broke her out of her trance. “Everything is disconnected, ma’am.  The final bill will be sent to your home. ” It was the phone guy.  Those ten numbers, her connection to her parents for over 40 years, was now officially gone.

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Saturday Free-For-All

Sorry this is late. The Cold has taken complete control.  I slept late.

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CARTOON: The Dow

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Framing the shot: Looking for good in the bad

He ran his fingers through his gray hair.  Strands spilled through his fingertips until he reached his scar. The scar that had almost cost him his life (and had taken the life of his best friend.)  Kicking Saddam out of Kuwait wasn’t the total cakewalk CNN had made it out to be.

In 1992, he put down his rifle and picked up a camera.  If he was going to shoot people, he wanted a clean conscience.  He touched his scar again: He’d seen enough death for a lifetime.

He walked through the city, looking for beauty. Beauty that normal men would never see.  Abandoned buildings. Broken glass.  A man sleeping in a corner.  Most people would just see urban decay and keep walking. Quickly. But not him.  Oh no.  This was his talent. An amazing talent given to him the moment the mortar ripped through his unit. He could now see God’s beauty in anything.

The sun peeked over the city’s skyline, chasing the shadows into the darkest of alleys.  The photographer smiled.  He remembered when the young kid came out of one of those alleys and attacked him. Apparently he was trying to steal his camera gear.  But he never quite got that far.  Poor kid.  You don’t mess with Mother Nature and you sure don’t mess with a former member of the United States Special Forces. The kid’s nose was probably healed by now. Probably.

He lifted his camera.  Looked at the broken brick and glass. Saw what he was looking for and adjusted his lens.  He waited. Waited. And nailed the shot.

The burst of the rising sun through the clouds. The red and violet cumulonimbus. The green of the random tree.  The flowing gold of the sunrise. The decaying Beaux-Arts architectural style. The vivid colors of the American flag in the distance.

The average person would have seen a city in decline. He saw a stunning image worth capturing. He knew the secret to life was looking for the good in the bad. That in every terrible situation there is an image of hope.  Life is all about how you frame the shot.

He smiled, touched his scar a third time and went looking for his next picture.

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A life raft of hope in an angry sea

The headline screams “Stock Market drops another 521 points.” Cities in Great Britain smolder from the fires set by raging thugs.  France’s banks further exasperate the economic crisis in Europe.  The national jobless rate hovers at 9.1 percent. Mississippi’s is over 10 percent. Thirty heroes die in Afghanistan. Our political leaders continue their childish bickering. The bad news continues to be crushing.  The World has gone mad.

But there is was. Like a sparkling diamond in a pile of manure, it’s a headline that caught my eye — ‘Amazing’ therapy attacks leukemia.

Yes, the world is full of bad news.  Especially when you focus on it. But there’s also good news out there.  Seek it out. It can be found. When human T-cells can be trained to not only “see” cancer cells but destroy them, that’s good news.  No, amazing news.

It’s a life raft of hope in an angry sea.

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CARTOON: Hinds County

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Thursday Free-For-All

Good morning! What’s up?

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The complete collection of my short stories

Click here to find links to all my short stories in one place.

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CARTOON: Mississippi Gold

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