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CCD Presents: Bliss Street, a Short Story by Dennis Straub

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by Dennis Straub, Winston-Salem Writers

Bliss Street

It was a couple of days after Christmas. James caught up with me. “Come on. You’ve got to see this.”

It was another overcast day. It neither felt or had the hush of snow. The temperature was probably somewhere in the twenties. I was glad I had on my my winter coat, a sweater, and a turtleneck. I wished I had on better gloves and socks. I wondered how James could stand it in just jeans and his leather jacket. Then again he could have on long johns and I’d never know.

He lead me past the school to a neighborhood full of used car dealerships, garages and industrial shops I couldn’t identify. There was the smell of metal in the air. It was bitter in my nose and on my tongue. The air was full of the whir of sanders and grinders. In the background there was the higher pitched sound of metal being shaped, and the bang of hammering. As we walked on, I could smell paint that made me slightly light headed.

The sidewalks weren’t shoveled everywhere here, and the snow was grey. Not just the black of car exhaust at the corners and along the curbs. Even on what little grass there was the snow looked dingy.

We passed a body shop. There was an Afro-American man lounging in front of the shop. “City Paint and Body” the sign read. He was tall and I could tell even through the winter clothes that he had lots of muscles.

“Hey, James, who’s the skirt?” He called.

I took a step closer to James.

“Fuck you, Luther.” He called back.

We passed a convenience store and turned a corner. We went through a neighborhood of row houses. They were brick. Most were orange, not red. Some had been painted white. The brickwork was chipped in places and there were missing shingles on a lot of the roofs. Some had empty planters on the porch with an inch or two of snow in them.

There was the bass of rap that overpowered the words. There were children playing and babies crying. Someone was yelling. Further down the block I could smell spices. It reminded me that I’d only had yogurt for breakfast.

I heard the double blast from a train horn. We turned another corner. Here was a single block of houses. They were almost all shades of grey from blue grey to off white. The one at the far end of the block was a faded pink. It seemed that every house we passed had peeling paint or warped boards on their porch. Two had broken windows covered with cardboard. One had all the windows covered in plastic. There was no sound of children playing here; no music, no yelling, only a sullen silence. There was a vague hint of diesel and metal in the air.

He led me to a house a little more than half way down the block. The paint was peeling on the porch posts and the porch itself needed painted. It was starting to rot too.

He stepped onto the front porch and motioned for me to be quiet. The door was unlocked. He started to go in. I pulled him back. “We’re not breaking into somebody’s house.” I hissed.

He shook himself free. “This is where I live, dumb ass.” He whispered. “Now come on.”

His house? I’d known James since I’d moved here. He’d never talked about where he lived. I never thought he take me to meet his family. He never talked about them. Now, here I was. I followed him in.

It was quiet. It didn’t smell dirty, though it didn’t look particularly clean. The stairs going up were right in front of us. They were bare, well worn dark wood. The living room was to the right. I could hear a TV playing. James peered around the corner and then headed up the stairs.

The bathroom was to the right. James opened the door to the left.

The room was a mess! The floor was covered with dirty clothes, papers and a few books. The trash can was overflowing. The closet door was open and I could see jeans coming off of hangers. There was already a pair on the closet floor along with a couple of shirts. At least it didn’t smell.

He kicked things aside to find clear spots on the floor. I followed him tip toe over to the bed. There was an X Box sitting on it. It was brand new!

“I’ve wanted one of these.” I told him. “You got this for Christmas?” He nodded. “You know they’re about five hundred bucks.”

“I didn’t know they were that much.” He said. It was almost a whisper.

He had a TV on the desk. It was only a 24”, but it looked new too.

“Did you get that for Christmas too?”

He shook his head. “That was my birthday present.”

I caressed the X Box. “Come on. Let’s play.”

He shook his head. “I haven’t got it hooked up yet.”

“I can help you.”

“You?”

“Yeah, me. I had one before… Before I had to move. It didn’t survive the trip.” I said with a catch in my throat.

He smiled. “Okay. Let’s do it.”

The hard part was finding a place to plug it in. Once I’d found an outlet, it was pretty easy. I guess it took about twenty minutes and we were ready to play.

He put in the latest Call of Duty. He started to play, but he only had the one controller, so I was left watching. He’d died in about fifteen minutes.

“You haven’t played much. Have you?”

He handed me the controller. “Think you can do better?”

I lasted for about twenty. My heart wasn’t in it. I’d never learned to like first person shooter games. “Let’s play something else. What do ya’ got?”

He frowned. “This is all it came with.” He looked disappointed.

“It’s still a great Christmas present. You’ll get more.”

“When?” He mumbled.

“Come on. Try again.”

Where the hell have you been?” We heard a male voice growl from downstairs before he could get started.

“Damn! I thought he’d gone to work.”

“What the hell do you think I’m doing, you bastard. Somebody’s gotta make some money so the kids have something to eat.” Came a female voice.

“Damn you bitch…” The man began in reply. He was cut off by the sound of glass breaking.

I was stunned. I’d heard of arguments like this, but I never thought I’d hear one. Was that James’ parents? And this sounded like an old argument.

James threw the controller down, and nearly kicked it. He opened the window and stepped onto the roof. “Come on.” He said.

I climbed after him. My shoes were slick. I started slipping on the ice. James grabbed me and pushed me in the direction of a waiting tree limb. I caught it and managed to hold on. I looked back and started to thank him.

He cut me off. “You take the stairs. I’ll take the express elevator.”

He walked down to the edge of the roof as if it was something he did all the time. Then again, maybe it was. He grabbed the gutter and swung down. I heard the metal start to protest as it supported his weight. It set my teeth on edge. He grabbed one of the posts and slid down to the porch. Then he jumped to the ground. I stood in amazement. He’d even managed to close his window.

Now that I looked, I saw there was a set of boards that made a ladder on the side of the tree. I climbed down as fast as I could without slipping.

When I reached the ground, James was seething. “Every year, my Dad spends big bucks on Christmas presents for me and my sisters. So, every year after Christmas he gets laid off cause he drives dump truck. See? But while he’s not working, he doesn’t do anything! He just sits in front of the television waiting for the phone to ring. So the bills pile up, and every year mom decides to go to work. So they have this huge fight, and it goes on and on and it doesn’t solve anything.”

He just stood there for a moment, his fists clenched, his eyes blinking and his breath steaming. “I wish…” He began. He stuffed his hands in his pockets. “I don’t know what I wish.” and stalked out of his backyard.

“Come on. I’ll get you home.”

He walked in the opposite direction from the way we’d come in. At the end of the block, the street dead ended and the cross street dead ended at a set of railroad tracks. He headed down the tracks. I stopped and looked at the street sign. It, read “Bliss Street.”

 

Dennis Straub is a transplant to Winston-Salem and has lived in North Carolina since the ’70’s. He has several novels in progress, and is seeking an agent. He is a regular at Winston-Salem Writers Open Mic Night. This is his second piece published since several in college.

Founded in 2005, Winston-Salem Writers is a group of writers who write fiction, non-fiction, plays and poetry, and who care about the art and craft of writing. They offer programs, workshops, critique groups, open mic nights, contests and writers’ nights out for both beginning writers and published authors. For more information, click HERE.

 

 

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Arts & Entertainment

CCD Presents: Poetry by Peter Venable

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Winston-Salem Writers||Peter Venable

The Hour Before

At Blackwater Baptist cemetery,

behind the loose-shingled steeple

a massive cedar shades                                

lichen-capped tombstones

bent askew by centuries

of blistering heat and pitiless ice

as I wait beneath, bough-shaded,

 

for the service under a blue tent

some seventy feet away where her body

rests in its wooden cocoon.

 

Dragonflies surf heatwaves

as sweat soaks my collar and tie.

 

Strange

how spacetime curves into that

black hole singularity

under the coffin,

 

and how the vision of her smiling face—

beatific—beams through the tears to come.

 

 

5 a.m.

From the deck

I sense a million tiny eyes probe mine

behind silhouettes of trees and shrubs.

 

The dank air whirls with spirals of light

and a crescent moon blushes

under dawn’s pink ruffles.

 

 

Spooning

Spooning submerged granola

under strawberry yogurt

in a wine glass is like—nothing! 

Any simile profanes.

 

Spooning granola

under strawberry yogurt

is pure metaphor—transporting me,

spoonful after spoonful

 

as I shut my eyelids

 

munching, slurping, tasting, swallowing

 

until I scrape up the last crunch

 

and lick

 

the last

 

pink

 

drop.

 

Peter Venable has written both free and metric verse for over fifty years. He has been published in Prairie Messenger, Torrid Literature Journal, Third Wednesday, Windhover – A Journal of Christian Literature, Flying South 2016, and others. He is a member of the Winston Salem Writers. Visit him at petervenable.com

Founded in 2005, Winston-Salem Writers is a group of writers who write fiction, non-fiction, plays and poetry, and who care about the art and craft of writing. They offer programs, workshops, critique groups, open mic nights, contests and writers’ nights out for both beginning writers and published authors. For more information, click HERE.

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Arts & Entertainment

Celebrate Historic Preservation Month with events around the county

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Historic Preservation Month is being observed in May with lectures, walking and trolley tours of historic sites, the unveiling of two new local historic markers and more.

Events began May 2 with the first of four guided “Trail Mix” walking tours in Bethania with a trek along Bethania’s historic Orchard Trail. This trail walk will be repeated May 13 at 9 a.m. Trail walks along the Reuter trail are scheduled for May 16 at 1 p.m. and May 27 at 9 a.m.

The Forsyth County Historic Resources Commission will unveil a historic marker at 3 p.m. May 7 for the Samuel and Sarah Stauber Farm at 6085 Bethania-Tobaccoville Road. A historic marker about the Brothers Spring and the African School in what is now Happy Hill Park will be unveiled at 1 p.m. May 20 at the park. The unveiling will be followed by a tour of the Happy Hill neighborhood by Cheryl Harry, the director of African-American programming for Old Salem.

On May 18, the Commission and the Black History Archives of Winston-Salem will host a trolley tour of the historic residences along East 14th Street. Trolley tours will also be held May 20 along the old streetcar routes in Winston-Salem, and of the expanded Old Salem National Historic Landmark.

And on May 25, the Commission will hold an architectural tour of downtown Winston-Salem at noon, beginning at Mission Pizza Napoletana, 707 N. Trade St.

Also on May 25, Preservation Forsyth will present its 2017 Preservation Awards at 6:30 p.m. at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, 520 Summit St. Margaret Smith, a retired Wake Forest University professor, will be the featured speaker.

Also during Historic Preservation Month:

  • Old Salem will hold “lunch and learn” programs at noon on Wednesdays in May in the James A. Gray Auditorium in the Old Salem Visitors Center, 900 Old Salem Road.
  • Historic Preservation Month Event in Clemmons May 6th and 13th from 8:30a.m. – 12 noon at the Clemmons Village Hall (3715 Clemmons Road) Learn about the history of E. T. Clemmons “Hattie Butner” stagecoach at open houses in the village hall (taking place at the same time as the Village of Clemmons Farmer’s Market.)
  • MESDA, 924 S. Main St., will hold a program on the evolving “period” room at 2 p.m. May 12. Admission is $20.
  • The Kernersville Historic Preservation Society will hold a tour of St. Paul’s pre-Civil War black cemetery at 6 p.m. May 15 at 711 S. Main St., Kernersville; and on May 23 Korner’s Folly, 413 S. Main St., Kernersville, will present Benjamin Briggs, the executive director of Preservation Greensboro, speaking on historic preservation at 6:30 p.m. Admission is $5.
  • Soprano Laura Ingram Semilian will sing songs from the 1800s at 6:30 p.m. May 16 at the Walkertown Branch Library, 2969 Main St., Walkertown.
  • Reynolda House Museum of American Art will host a free tour of the Reynolda House grounds and gardens at 2 p.m. May 19.
  • The Rural Hall Historic Train Depot and Railroad Museum will hold an open house and family day from 11:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. May 20 at 8170 Depot St., Rural Hall; and the Rural Hall Historical Museum will hold an open house from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. May 20 at 145 Bethania St., Rural Hall.
  • Bethania will host a lunch and learn on “Bethania: Wachovia’s First Planned Community,” at noon May 31 at the Bethania Visitors Center, 5393 Ham Horton Lane, Bethania.
  • Salem College will host presentations by its historic preservation and public history students at 6 p.m. May 9 in the Club Dining Room of the Refectory, 601 S. Church St.

For more information about Historic Preservation Month events go to CityofWS.org/HRC or contact Michelle McCullough at 336-747-7063.

To view a downloadable calendar of events, click HERE.

Historic Preservation Month activities are presented and coordinated by Preservation Month Partners, a collaboration of the Forsyth County Historic Resources Commission, Old Salem Museums & Gardens, Preservation Forsyth, Reynolda House Museum of American Art and the Town of Bethania.

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Arts & Entertainment

CCD Presents: Swept Away! Jimmy Pro Washes Out In Terlingua Creek by William C. Crawford

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by William C. Crawford || Winston-Salem Writers

 

Swept Away! Jimmy Pro Washes Out In Terlingua Creek

A wash-off in the Big Bend Country of Texas may closely resemble an arroyo in neighboring New Mexico. Both are ephemeral streams carrying big water only during winter storms and monsoon season.

The terms are often used interchangeably in the American Southwest. As water wears away geoforms, a deep gully forms from the fast moving current. Some of these irregular fissures are elevated with proper names. Terlingua Creek in Brewster County, Texas falls into this category. But hey! I am getting ahead of myself.

Jimmy Pro runs a mythical tourist agency dubbed OzQuest. I and a couple of other friends are his only real clients. Jimmy huddles at his fading computer in Sydney and churns out resos and itineraries. When I least expect it, an email pops up alerting me to an impending photo shoot at a venue where I really didn’t expect to go.

We have been friends for 50 years now since our Army days as journalists. In some ways, we may have peaked in 1970 as young writers at Fort Hood for the Armored Sentinel. I was arrested for consorting with antiwar protestor, actress Jane Fonda. Jimmy Pro blew the lid off improper command influence as the Green Machine prosecuted My Lai perpetrator, Sgt. David Mitchell. On weekends we shot laconic monochrome photos of derelict CenTex railroad depots.

Somehow, decades later, this crazy journey evolved into something of substance. Jimmy coughed up OzQuest and we started rambling about on offbeat photoshoots to El Paso, Death Valley, the Nevada mining country, and even Gotham City.

Late one afternoon a few years ago as we stared into cold cans of Tecate in a dated Motel 6, we conjured up a name for our tediously obsessive, throwback photography. Forensic Foraging was born, and we attempted to stave off the mounting modern wave of techno driven, digital photography.

We rediscovered New York photographer, Stephen Shore, who decades before had helped to popularize color photography. We venerated his minimalist approach. He too was a wanderer who found Texas. His famous Amarillo Postcards fit snuggly into our favored West Texas motif.

We recently landed up in Study Butte, Texas late one January afternoon. Just say Stooody Butte! We hoped to shoot the wild border country of the Big Bend, along the Rio Grande. OzQuest had booked us into the Chisos Mining Company, a funky 1950’s décor lodge which intersected perfectly with Jimmy’s spartan travel tastes.

Study Butte is the home of the Terlingua ghost town set in heavily mountainous desert. It features remote getaways and famous chili cook-offs. The most prominent feature is a played out mercury mine which left the earth in perpetual upheaval with arresting, gaping pock holes ringed by dark brown, grooved piles of tailings.

Will Study was once mine superintendent here. Today, snowbirds, in near million dollar RV’s, populate local campgrounds in search of the warm winter sun. Their license plates indicate they hail from snow country – Iowa, Minnesota and Nebraska.

Brewster County is the largest county in Texas. Big enough to swallow up Connecticut with room to spare. Ronny Dodson is the smooth drawling sheriff here. He charms local voters over breakfast at a packed buzzing beehive diner. But his larger than life, Big Bend credo often clashes with intrusive, outside values. A big court case brought by pesky liberals forced removal of tiny crosses from his sheriff’s cruisers.

Ronny often blasts the preachy Texas media by saying “there is no border security problem in the Big Bend.” That’s because traffic back and forth over the border runs unfettered by the law on a daily basis. Jimmy Pro is mesmerized by the Sheriff whom he knows a bit from his previous sojourns here. They have a history of swilling very early morning coffee and solving complex problems.

One afternoon we decided to forage Terlingua Creek which bisects the lunar mercury mine site. The water was low and the well-polished creek stones provided a dry foothold. Jimmy led the way upstream in brilliant winter sunshine. Soon 100 foot, craggy bluffs soared overhead. The creek bent slightly northwest and Jimmy cooed excitedly as we grabbed some imposing images in the magnificent winter light.

Off on the creek bank framed horizon, some unexpected black clouds flirted with 7,000 foot peaks. Far above us, but out of sight, squatters’ dogs yapped happily in the ghost town. Squealing children attested to the families who were living rent free in long abandoned, stone miners’ cabins. An incongruous audio track squeezed into the mix. Barely audible across many miles, we almost failed to hear faint thunder even as we shot the sun bathed bluffs above us.

Jimmy Pro squinted through his camera viewfinder. He was isolating curious formations etched in the cliffs. The walls laced with traces of mercury, saltpeter, and even a bit of silver, were popping out in front of his lens. He suddenly lowered his camera and said matter-of-factly, “The damn water is coming up!” And it was, now four inches instead of two. My feet were suddenly getting wet inside my low cut hiking boots.

Now Jimmy Pro is a seasoned trekker in Australia’s quixotic outback. A light bulb suddenly exploded deep in his brain. “Crawdaddy! Big water is coming down through here from that mountain storm!” he screeched. But 100 foot bluffs blocked our lateral escape. A faint gurgling rumble cascaded south into our little canyon.

Things then turned into shit in a hurry when we tried to quickly retrace our steps to the bridge where we left our rental car. Terlingua Creek was suddenly a berserk washing machine tumbling us end over end. I caught a glimpse of Jimmy for only an instant as his backpack bobbed into view as I spun momentarily to the surface. A silly thought crossed my racing mind. Forensic Foraging can be dangerous.

We bobbed quickly down to the bridge more than a mile away. Jimmy tried to plaster his drenched body against the concrete abutment to arrest his journey. I was still midstream in the full grip of the now raging current. I flashed straight under the bridge and looked back to see bubbling brown water scrape Jimmy off his concrete finger hold.

My feet no longer touched bottom! We were in a severe desert flash flood. The sun still shone brightly and I saw patches of blue sky overhead as I tumbled toward the distant Rio Grande. Somehow the current swept Jimmy past me, and the steep terrain began to flatten out. The creek banks were now only three feet high with scrub shrubs projecting out over the raging torrent.

I traded upside down for right side up. In what I could imagine was only a terrified apparition, I observed a solitary figure hanging out from a stout shrub on the bank. Then I noticed a white cowboy hat above an outstretched arm. Jimmy grabbed the proffered hand under the white hat. I knew this might be my last chance. I mustered a little strength and swam straight for Jimmy.

My body inverted and corrected at least twice! Suddenly, I slammed into Jimmy dead on. I bear hugged for dear life. A familiar rich baritone voice out of a Marlboro commercial calmly intoned. “I think you boys should stop right here.” Even in my panic, I instantly recognized Sheriff Ronny Dodson under his trademark white hat. He had one big hand on Jimmy Pro and his other was squeezing that stout shrub. A big, brown uniformed deputy was back up on the bank reaching to grab his boss.

Now remember, Jimmy and Ronny had history. On Jimmy’s previous forays to Brewster County they sipped steaming coffee and unraveled world problems at the now defunct barbecue truck operated by Cosmic Cathy, a local icon.

As the sheriff wrapped our shivering bodies into some of his handy space blankets, the deputy helped us toward the nearby cruiser. As I slid shakily along the back fender, I noticed a small cross now faintly painted over because of an unwelcomed lawsuit. I placed my index finger lightly on the cross and gave silent thanks. Screw the ACLU! When you are in deep shit down in the wild Big Bend, then Sheriff Ronny Dodson dispatched by God is probably the only help coming.

AFTER

A few days later we returned to the safety of El Paso. As we often do, we were snorting afternoon Tecates in The Tap, voted the best local dive bar for nine years in a row. Lingering mud and grit still infested every orifice of our aging bodies. I allowed as how my chronic hemorrhoids probably soaked up a toxic dose of mercury poisoning during our downstream ride. “Well Crawdaddy,” opined Jimmy Pro dryly, “might just be that they will be falling off, that is, if you live.”

Some 30 days after our washout, Sheriff Ronny Dodson opened a large, flat FedEx package. The sender’s address said Jimmy Pro. A framed 36×18 photo of a blood red sunrise over Study Butte appeared. Just a thank you from a serious shooter who respects law and order down on the Big Bend. Sheriff Dodson immediately began clearing wall space behind his desk.

 

William C. Crawford is a a writer & photographer based in Winston-Salem. He recently published his first book, a memoir. He developed Forensic Foraging, a modern photography technique. He is also working on a new mode of literary presentation which combines flash fiction and photography.
Founded in 2005, Winston-Salem Writers is a group of writers who write fiction, non-fiction, plays and poetry, and who care about the art and craft of writing. They offer programs, workshops, critique groups, open mic nights, contests and writers’ nights out for both beginning writers and published authors. For more information, click HERE.

 

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