Sunday Morning Read: Five Short Stories for You

60800_10153164652440721_1610796797_nIf you enjoyed my book Fried Chicken & Wine, here are five new stories for you:

The Exile of Jimmy Evan Drake:  A small town, a fumbled ball and the ultimate payback.

Son of a Beach: What the ocean takes away, she gives back one piece at a time. Gary Drucker recovers years after Hurricane Katrina swept the Gulf Coast and his life away.

Falling from the Delta Sky: The sequel to Up in the Delta Sky and Beneath the Delta Sky. 

Riding the Train: Learning from an amazing life lived.

Dead Oak in Winter:  An old married couple discovers there is a little love left in their lives.

 

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The Exile of Jimmy Evan Drake

FootballLife in Greenwich, Mississippi revolved around two things: High school football and the Greenwich Light and Ballast Plant. One gave the town its soul — the other its heartbeat. And never in the history of the town was there a more important high school football game than this game. For the first time, the team was on the cusp of making the state playoffs. The only thing standing between them and history was the mighty Meridian Warriors.

The Greenwich Yellow Jackets warmed up in the north end zone. A cool breeze rustled the flags as the brightly dressed townspeople filled the steel stadium. Summer had long left town. Fall was the home team tonight.

The Warriors, three-touchdown favorites, played the part of Goliath. The Yellow Jackets, a small and scrappy team, stood and stared down their foe. David was ready for kickoff and their moment of destiny. The whistles tweet signaled the beginning of one of the hardest fought games in Mississippi high school football history.

Four quarters passed with both teams taking the lead. And with only 34 seconds remaining, Goliath was only ahead by a single point.

Greenwich quarterback Billy Cunningham lined up with two wide receivers and a sure-fire play up his sleeve. A short count sent the receivers downfield and found star receiver Jimmy Evan Drake wide open at the 40. The football kissed his outreached fingertips. He pulled the ball into this chest and took off like he had stolen it. 40. 30. 20. 10. He saw the end zone and knew he would be the town’s hero. Jimmy Evan’s life was about to change forever. He pulled the ball out to celebrate as he crossed the goal line and prepared to hear the crowd’s loving cheers.

But what he didn’t hear was Meridian’s safety walking him down.

The safety caught Jimmy Evan’s leg, tripping him and causing him to fumble. The ball never broke the plane and fell with a thud onto the field. Meridian’s cornerback fell on the it as time ran out. The Warriors won and moved on to win the 1985 State Championships.

Goliath had won. And David lay on the ground humiliated.

Jimmy Evan was right about one thing: His life was about to change forever — just not in the way he had hoped.

“Get off the ground, loser.” One of his teammates spat on him as he walked past.

Jimmy Evan heard the shouts from the home stands. He then heard a chorus of boos as he walked off the field. Cups flew and pelted his helmet.

“Way to blow it, Jimmy Evan!” The crowd growled.

He looked over at the hostile crowd and saw the look of disgust on their faces. Then he saw his girlfriend Julia. She had tears on her face. It was a look he’d never forget.

The next few days brought no relief. Jimmy Evan twice had been beat up in the hall between classes and now sported a black eye. Someone keyed the word “LOSER” on his family’s car. His home had been egged and threatening notes were stuck in his locker. The final blow was when his father Stan was fired from the plant. “We don’t have to give you reason Stan. But you had better tell your boy he had better learn how to run faster.”

So the whole family ran. Jimmy Evan’s dad put their house up for sale and soon, the family’s packed Oldsmobile station wagon headed out of town for the last time.

As they pulled out of the neighborhood, Jimmy Evan saw Julia in front of her house crying. His heart broke and he muttered, “I’m going to get even with this town if it is the last thing I ever do.” And with that threat, Jimmy Evan disappeared into the setting Mississippi sunset for good.

Twenty eight years later found Greenwich dirtier, smaller and poorer. Boarded up businesses lined Main Street — the town was surviving but only by a thread. NAFTA had sent the garment factory and its jobs to Mexico. The ballast plant was still open (against the odds) but rumors was that it was for sale. The family who had owned it for years had lost their patriarch and his children had no interest in owning a dusty old light plant. The townspeople walked on eggshells.

“I hear there’s going to be a town-hall meeting about the plant’s future tonight.” Brenda Stockard said as she teased Veronica Smith’s bangs. Word traveled quickly around town — information went viral in Greenwich well before the internet was invented. Signs were soon posted that read, “Ballast Plant meeting tonight at 6 p.m. at the Library and Convention Center.”

By 5:45 p.m., the room resembled a large can of sardines.

“They sold the plant today and the new owner is coming into town to reveal it’s fate.” Betty Sue Williams overhead the mayor telling the chamber president. She quickly texted the bad news to 400 of her closet friends who did the same. By 6 p.m., fear wrapped around the town like a giant boa constrictor.

A black Mercedes pulled up the front of the library and its chauffeur opened the the sole passenger’s door. Out stepped a bald man who wore a $5,000 suit and a sense of destiny. He strutted through the packed room to the podium. He took off his sunglasses and stared out at the crowd.

The room was as quiet as a tomb.

The CEO looked out at the townspeople and began to speak.

“My company, LightCorp., bought the light plant today in an all-cash deal. While we value your customers, I’m afraid we have no need for this plant. In six weeks, we will close it for good. All workers will be given severance and can apply for jobs at other LightCorp facilities.”

The town had been given its death sentence.

Grown men began to openly weep. Others stood there in stunned silence. “Noooo!!!!” a lady in the back cried. “Who are you?” A voice cried out in the back.

“Funny you should ask. You might remember me. Because I sure remember you. My name is Jimmy Evan Drake. This town ran my family out of town 28 years ago and today you are reaping what you sowed. I didn’t drop that ball on purpose. But you damn sure harassed my family. My father never could find work again and started drinking. He died in a car accident a year later. I had to skip college to work to take care of my mom and my brother. I started this company with the sole purpose of getting my revenge. And today, I have it.”

The crowd sat in stunned silence.

“Jimmy Evan?” A familiar voice cried out. Jimmy Evan looked out in the crowd and saw a woman step into the aisle.

“Jimmy Evan, that is you? No, it can’t be. The Jimmy Evan I loved would never do this.”

Jimmy Evan knew immediately who she was. He stared at her face. It was a face he had seen in his dreams for nearly 30 years. It was bony and worn. Three decades had been hard on her — tonight particularly. Tears streamed down her high cheekbones. It was at that moment something inside of him broke loose. The hatred he had been holding in his heart began to melt. He realized that his “revenge” was going to be hurting the very person he had loved the most.

“Julia?”

Jimmy Evan ran out and hugged his old girlfriend. The two former lovers held each other for what seemed like 28 years. And then he stepped back and tenderly wiped the tears from her cheek. She smiled as he walked back up to the podium.

He stood there, staring at the town he had hated for so many years and said, “I’ve had a change of heart. I forgive you for what you did. And I will keep this plant open and invest in upgrading it. Greenwich will have a future as long as I own the plant.”

The audience erupted into the loudest ovation ever.

The town of Greenwich got its chance to cheer Jimmy Evan Drake. And after 28 years in exile, he finally scored the winning touchdown.

 

 

 

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Ink Spots Blog: 8/23/13

20091199361854677801Ben Affleck will be Batman. And because of  it, I’m mad. Really mad. The earth will stop spinning and we’ll fly off into space. The internet is mad, too. You can spread the outrage like Nutella.

I know my life has been affected by it.  In fact, I plan to go home and sit and drink cheap bourbon until my body and anger are numb.  And come to think of it, I’m going to be outraged by Obamacare, the Republicans in Congress, Fluoride in the water and nosebreathers. Darn them all!

I’m going to get mad about the C.O.R.E. curriculum, gas prices and high-fructose corn syrup.  It’s a conspiracy, I tell you. A conspiracy.

I am mad. Very mad.

My day is ruined. My weekend is ruined. My life is ruined.  I’m going to tune into the TV/radio to see what other things I should be angry about.  It’s someone else’s fault. In fact, it’s always someone else’s fault. All my problems aren’t my fault.  I’ll react by yelling at my wife and kids. Just because.

Did I mention I’m mad? Well, I am.

I’m going to walk around with a face like I am sucking a lemon. Because I know my happiness depends on if my favorite sports team wins.  On how people drive. On my neighbor’s yard. The dog barking down the street.  I am going to think about all the transgressions against me.

Forget the Lord’s Prayer. I shall not forgive those pesky trespasses. I shall bask in the acid of anger.

Or not.

Sorry, I am sick of BS outrage. I can’t do it anymore. There are plenty of real things to be mad about. But instead of fussing about it, I’m just going to quietly try to fix it.  I’m going to laugh at the absurd things in life (including myself). I’m going to replace anger with life.

It’s my prayer for my life. It’s my prayer for this Friday.

 

 

 

 

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The Heartbeat of a Small Town

1236710_10153183252450721_31806038_nCars packed the side of the road. People sported bright, festive colors. Grills grilled, sending smoke wafting in the blue sky. As the August heat held its grip on the land, the heartbeat of a small Mississippi town began beating once again.

It was the start of high school football season and it was good.

Brandon visited Madison Central in a early-season match between two highly ranked titans. (#1 vs. #6 respectfully.) Parents watched nervously as cheerleaders, band members, managers and football players took the field for the first time.  Clouds glowed orange as our national anthem played.  Soon the ball was in the air.  The game had begun.  Kids played next to the stadium and walked up and down the aluminum bleachers, hoping to borrow concession money from their parents.  Long lines snaked underneath the stadium, as boosters struggled to keep up with demand.  Drinks sold out as the announcer advertised “A tasty treat.”   The play on the field was excellent, particularly for a first game. Both teams lived up to their preseason billings. Brandon emerged victorious 21-14 thanks to a fourth-quarter score.  It was a game that you hated to see either team lose.  The level of play was that good.  Brandon and Madison Central were winners in my book.

My sons and I left a little early.  They had had a great night hanging out with their friends but school’s rude early wake-up call beckoned. As we walked out,  I looked at the field and couldn’t help but think about the last time I went to a high school football game.  I was the one wearing the helmet and pads — I couldn’t help but think of my emotions as I walked off the field for the last time 28 years ago. Time has passed in a blink of an eye.

I hope the students participating yesterday hold on tightly to every moment.  Before they know it, they’ll be the parent watching from the stands and thinking of moments long, long ago. Moments like last night’s glorious game.

The heartbeat of a small town briefly matched the beat of my old heart.  And it was good.

 

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Amazing photo taken by my oldest son

Not bad for a 13-year-old with an old iPhone. He took this at the Madison Central v Brandon game in Madison, Mississippi on Thursday night around sunset.

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Ink Spots Blog: 8/22/13

20091199361854677801It’s a school morning. And getting the Ramsey family out of the house is our version of D-Day. Kids have to be woken up, showers taken, breakfast prepared and eaten, Pip the dog has to be tended to and backpacks rounded up.  Plans from the night before are enacted. The kids climb down the net into the family van and hit the shore.  And on some days, just for fun, we throw in laundry, exercise, the dishwasher and, oh yeah, the fact that my wife and I have to get ready, too.  The clock is ticking and is unforgiving. My wife’s an elementary school teacher, so she has to be at work at the crack of the crack of the crack of dawn.  It’s organized chaos — and there’s no time to lose.

I can proudly say that my six-year-old’s underwear doesn’t end up on the outside of his pants. Well, on most days.

The last three years have been chaotic.  My wife has a new job. I have several new jobs. For the two years I was on SuperTalk, she was single parenting because I was working 13 hours a day between two jobs and a freelance career.  Now, things are still as chaotic — but I have more flexibility in my schedule.  I can engage more as a parent.  My respect for single parents is immense — it takes both of my wife and I being on our A-game to get everything done.

I used to think you had to sacrifice career for family and family for career. How stupid could I have been? Now I know family is the golden thread that sews everything together.  For better or worse we’re a team.  And I know this dream team will only be together for only a short time.  So I’m going to enjoy every second of it.

I just wish I had gotten out of the house with the same color socks.

 

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SHORT STORY: A Dog’s Tail

LakeA blue deep-v fishing boat emerged from the mist and quietly glided up to the dock. Water lapped gently against the shore, making the only sound for miles.  An elderly woman with white robe, orange ski belt and impish smile tied a yellow rope to the post. An old dog wagged his tail and waited patiently.

“Why hello there old friend. It’s good to see you again.”

The dog, with gray around his muzzle, barked once and wagged his tail harder.  Dogs could see much more than people.

The lady clumsily got out of the boat, knocking her tackle box askew. “Oh drat. Stripers are running this morning. Been using a spoon. Of course, Heaven is catch and release.”

She had been dead for five years, but to her it seemed like she had been fishing for only an hour.

That particular dock along the Tennessee River was a portal between two worlds.  Locals had said that this spot, so beautiful and idyllic, seemed like Heaven. Little did they know, they were almost right.

“Is he in trouble again?”

The dog barked. But this time his tail wasn’t wagging.

She sighed. She had watched over her grandson since he was just a child. He was a good boy, a talented boy. But his heart wasn’t in the right place. He was full of anger.  The young man held onto a grudge with a death grip.

“Well, then, I guess it is up to us to save him.”  She picked up her old dog, causing him to glow slightly. “We have work to do.”  The two of them headed off to save a soul.

Patrick Karns was talented man with an eye for business and the uncanny ability to step on people on his way to the top. At the age of 30, he had started a computer software company. He had truly achieved the American Dream and then proceeded to turn into a nightmare.  His wife hated him. His kids were indifferent.  People at work feared him.  Now at the age of 45, he was like an EF-5 tornado, Patrick left nothing but destruction in his path.  He had put the word suck in success.

He sat alone, drinking a very expensive glass wine thinking lovingly of the most important person in the world: Himself.

The little dog barked at the back door.

“What do you want?”

The dog growled. “Shhh, the grandmother said. Honey catches more flies than vinegar.”

The dog barked again, this time with a smile and a tail-wag.

“OK, OK.” Patrick got up and walked over to the door. He reached down to smack the dog and when he touched the dog’s head, he clutched his heart.  Pain shot up his arm. But it wasn’t a heart attack.  It was something else. Something more powerful.

The grandmother held the dog by the tail and watched as her grandson experienced the full fury of Hell.  Demons and fire consumed his soul.  Every cell of his body felt nothing but anger and pain. He screamed as his hand was stuck to the little dog.  She reached and grabbed her grandson’s hand and pulled him back from the brink. Then she showed him a glimpse of paradise. The little dog felt a pleasant warmth surge through his little body.  It was a love indescribable in human terms.  But it was easy for a dog, though.  Kindness. Service to others. Love.

For a brief moment, Patrick saw his grandmother standing there, smiling and holding her little dog. And then she faded away.

“What was that?!?” he said to his dog. The little dog just barked and wagged his tail.  He felt the tingle in his hand where he had touched the dog’s head. It was a strange warmth that began to spread up his arm into his soul.

************************

Six months later, the small boat sailed back to the dock.  The little dog once again waited patiently. “Why hello there!” a voice called out of the mist.

The dog barked and wagged his tail.

“Yes, the fish are biting. They always bite in Heaven.  How’s our boy?”

The dog barked again and wagged his tail vigorously.

They walked back up the hill to the cabin and the grandmother was pleased at what she saw. Her grandson was a different man.

The family sat together and were playing a game.  The smartphones were in another room as they laughed and played.  He was off from work for a week to take time to start a new charity and had taken some time out of his schedule for family night.  He still was a powerful businessman, but like Ebenezer Scrooge on Christmas Day, he now took an interest in the lives of his employees. He had empowered them and in the process changed their lives for the better, too.  His wife looked over at him lovingly. Six months of counseling had provided some major breakthroughs in their marriage, too. Patrick Karns believed that the true secret of success was to have a servant’s heart.

The little dog barked at the door.

Patrick got up and opened the door. “Hey pal!” he said lovingly as the the dog stood at the door. He credited the dog for changing his life.

As he reached down to pet the dog, he thought he saw his grandmother again.  “Nah,” he said, as he went back to the game.  The dog ran back out into the yard.

The grandmother and the dog went back to the dock. As she began to untie the boat, she beckoned to the pup. “Want to go fishing with me? ” The dog barked, wagged his tail and leapt into the boat.

She said, “Hold on. We’re going to catch a boatful today.”

And on a beautiful Tennessee evening, an old lady and dog sailed gently into the mist.

 

 

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Ink Spots Blog: 8/21/13

20091199361854677801We blew the dust off my son’s Christmas present and put it in its case. I picked it and the amp up and loaded it in the back of my car.  My son sat in the front seat, eager, yet a little nervous.  We listened to Zac Brown Band’s guitarist Clay Cook’s solo album. Clay can tear up a guitar.

He first saw his teacher when we pulled into the parking lot.  Gravel crunched under the tires as my son quietly sized him up.  My son’s instructor’s a big guy with glasses and a big, bushy beard.  My son quietly introduced himself to him as we walked to the studio.

John Mark Coon is one of the most talented people I know. He’s a multiple threat guy — artist, musician, singer and family man. And when I found out from my wife’s coworker (a music teacher) that he taught lessons, I jumped at the opportunity.  He’s the kind of guy you want teaching your child.

I sat on the couch and watched my son enter a new world — the world of music. I saw him soak in John Mark’s instruction. I watched his small fingers try to pinch the notes out of the guitar.  I saw him fail, get back up and then succeed.  I smiled as my son’s eyes widened as John Mark played Stairway to Heaven. I watched a fire get lit in my child’s soul.

Last night he practiced until his fingers hurt. He played his new chord (an A) and I pulled a D harmonica out of the drawer and jammed with him.  It was ten minutes of bliss.

 

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Ink Spots Blog: 8/20/13

20091199361854677801We live in an age when you can get nearly anything cheaper at anytime thanks to the Internet.  People have choices — almost too many choices. A business can no longer thrive just because it is the only game in town. Thanks to two-day free shipping, it isn’t.

The only way a business can compete in this new world is to become an experience. 

Businesses can no longer compete because of exclusivity. Or price. Or selection. They have to compete by providing amazing customer service.  They have to give a reason for a shopper to choose them.

Every morning, I get to experience amazing customer service. 

I drink a lot of unsweetened tea.  I mean a lot.  And the last time I checked, you can pretty much buy unsweetened tea anywhere. But I buy it at the High Street Whataburger  in Jackson.  Why?  Not price. They’re actually a few cents higher than a few of their competitors (although they do have bigger cup.) And it isn’t quality.  Tea is tea.  It’s hard to screw up (but can be done). No, I buy tea at Whataburger AND I go inside for one reason: Fannie.

Fannie runs the register in the morning.  She’s usually working like crazy during the breakfast rush.  But she takes time to smile. She’s glad to see each customer. She seems like she loves life.  She provides excellent customer service.  She provides a great customer experience. All for $2.28.

We’re in a brutal era of change.  It’s time for us all to reevaluate who our customers are and how can we serve them better.  Whether it is our boss, our clients or even our families, we need to figure out how provide them a better customer experience.

Question of the day: What’s an example of a company that you feel provides a great customer experience?

 

 

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The Dead Oak in Winter

OakJack and June Barnhill’s marriage stood like a dead oak in winter. From the outside, it looked strong and mighty. But on the inside, it was brittle, twisted and rotten.  After 50 years of marriage, they sat across from each other in their home’s den, trying not to breathe the same air.  They had long passed “for better” in their relationship. Now they were smack in the middle of “for worse.”

Sarcasm replaced kindness; Angry glares stood in for loving looks.

“You can leave me, you know.”

“But that would bring you happiness.  I want to stay right here and make you completely miserable.”

“Congratulations. You’re  doing a darn good  job.”

“You know, this Ex-Lax commercial could be a short film about your life.”

“And the Preparation H one about yours.”

“Well, I did marry a pain in the…”

The cat, tired of the constant bickering, gave up and went into the other room.  Even the Grinch would have had enough of their bitterness.

Their two children, tired of being put in the middle of their parents’ feuds, moved as far away as from them as they possible could. Jack, Jr., an engineer for Boeing, lived in Everett, Washington.  Jennifer, an internal medicine doctor, lived in Maine.

They only came home once a year. If that often.

“Well, if you will excuse me, I have to clean the kitchen.  I don’t want you to touch the water. You’ll melt.”

“Sit down, martyr. If you did any work around here, the roof would collapse.”

June, 75, got out of her plaid recliner and shuffled toward the kitchen. What happened next would change their lives forever.

She entered the kitchen and collapsed.  Jack heard grizzly smack as her head hit the tile floor.

“OK, Drama Queen. You can come back now.”

But there was no response.

“June? June?!?  JUNE!”

Jack leapt to the kitchen and saw her body lying on the tile floor.  A small circle of crimson began to grow from the  gaping wound on her forehead.

Jack screamed, “OMIGOD! HELP!” He pulled the phone out of his pocket and dialed 911.  “My wife is unconscious at 98 Windchime Ct.  She fell and is bleeding! Hurry!!

It was the first time since Vietnam that he was truly afraid.

“Hold on, June. Hold on,” he cried as he tried to stop the bleeding.

Bitterness had been replaced by something even more cold — fear.

The next day later, Jack Jr. and Jennifer  arrived from the airport. They walked into the hospital  room  and found their parents together.  Their mother was on the bed unconscious; their father with his head lying across her.  The children stood in the doorway, watching with awe as their father slowly stroked their mom’s unwashed gray hair. He then raised his head and whispered loudly into her ear.

“I’m sorry for all the times I pissed you off — well, most of them.  I’m sorry for all the cold nights.  I’m sorry that we lost our way.  If you come back to me, I’ll change. I can’t live life without your insults. Life without your cranky voice would be torture. The house would be too quiet. My heart would be too empty. I had forgotten how much I loved you until now.”

He broke down and began to openly sob.

As he did, a single tear trickled down the old woman’s face.

In that Mississippi hospital room, old wounds were healed.  A marriage, cold and bitter, still had a little life left in it after all. And the dead oak in winter sprang back to life.

 

 

 

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