The manhood
of a nation
marching in the breeze
Chasing what
the dead have wrought
taunting its reprieve
Caught within the voices
of forgotten
yesterdays
The winds of war
but nine days off
— as mothers kneel to pray
(Dreamsleep: May, 2024)
The manhood
of a nation
marching in the breeze
Chasing what
the dead have wrought
taunting its reprieve
Caught within the voices
of forgotten
yesterdays
The winds of war
but nine days off
— as mothers kneel to pray
(Dreamsleep: May, 2024)
Chapter 13: An Uncertain Trail
Cutty was once again headed down a trail with an uncertain end. He didn’t feel good about the riders ahead or what their true intentions were. Jimmy had said: “They are probably cowboys from the Bar Circle T Ranch,” but he had only been guessing.
He charged up the rapidly darkening trail…
The only thing he was sure of was that he was forever duty-bound to a code that had taken him captive so very long ago. It never mattered the circumstance or the odds of success. When her voice called—and his honor was once again at risk—everything else became subservient to his sense of duty.
It had first called his name in Central Park over twenty years ago. He had been hunting pirates behind a pond, on the east side of the park, when the message was first handed down. It was delivered in the scream of a young girl coming out of a small cave on the far side of the pond.
As the bats flew out of the cave, all of the other boys ran. Cutty never wavered, as he covered his head and charged. Inside, was a defenseless seven-year-old girl who had wandered away from her nanny. Cutty covered her with his jacket and led her back outside. As the other boy’s heckled and jeered, he never stopped or even looked their way. That young girl’s name was Miss Shepperd, but Cutty had heard the nanny call her Destiny—Destiny Shepperd.
Cutty was now riding his five-year-old horse at a full gallop and the white sweat from the horse’s withers had covered his trousers. His knowledge of tracking was enough to tell him that the shoe prints were becoming more pronounced the further west he rode. He was gaining on them.
Five miles later, there was less distance between the front and rear hoof prints of the riders ahead. They had slowed down. They were now either cantering or walking their horses. Cutty decided to get off and walk his horse until he was sure. He knew his horse could use the rest, and he needed the quiet to be able to hear what might be up ahead.
He walked for twenty minutes, as the tracks in front of him became fresher and fresher. There was no doubt in his mind that the riders ahead of him were walking their horses too.
It was now late into the evening, and he thought he heard voices coming out of the trees ahead. As he edged closer, he could smell wood smoke and hear the sounds of a fire. Cutty knew the other mounts would smell his horse in the night air before he got much closer. He decided to tie his horse to a tree thirty feet off the trail. He had learned from the Gurkhas in Nepal how to move soundlessly through the brush. He held his sword close against his body, as he advanced through the dark.
The trail started to enter a deep ravine. At the bottom, he could see five horses all tied together. Fifty yards past the horses was a raging fire. These men were not worried about being seen. Cutty listened for voices as he moved past the horses. The sounds that he heard in the night air were emboldened with inebriation.
These Men Were All Drinking
“Good,” Cutty said to himself. “A drunken adversary is only half the threat that he is when sober. This adjusts the odds a little more in my favor.” Still, Cutty wasn’t going to take anything for granted. Five drunken cowboys, if that’s what they were, could still be a lot for him to handle.
He checked the cylinder of his Colt .45 to make sure it was fully loaded. He didn’t want to repeat the mistake he had made when rescuing Adrian on that hill in Portugal. After chasing the Basque Assassin, Bakar, through the hills above Lisbon, he had forgotten to reload after shooting at him and several of his men.
He was sorry now that he hadn’t asked Jimmy for his Colt, Model M1902. It would have given him eight rounds in case the six in his Colt .45 were not enough. The Colonel had always told him that, … “In direct confrontations, there is very little chance to reload. Most fights are over by then.”
The M1902 was a semi-automatic pistol developed by John Browning for Colt in 1902. It was an improvement on an earlier design. The military version had a square and lengthened grip frame allowing it to carry an additional round in the magazine. It fired eight rounds of .38 ACP from its six-inch barrel.
With his Colt .45’s capacity of only six rounds, Cutty would have to be deadly accurate with each shot.
DEADLY ACCURATE IS WHAT HE HAD BEEN BEFORE!
As he came out of the woods and passed by the horses, he tried to move quietly so as not to startle them and give himself away.
The lead stallion whinnied as Cutty brushed by him in the dark. The noise was loud enough to arouse two of the men and they came to investigate. Cutty moved further off into the shadows until the men were satisfied that the horse had only been reacting to a small animal in the brush. The two wobbly figures mumbled to each other as they walked back to the fire…
“We’ll teach that filthy redskin a lesson about wandering this far off of the reservation,” the bigger of the two said. “His body will only strengthen our story about the missing cattle. When we get done with this running iron he’ll wish we had killed him when we killed his horse.”
All five men were now seated again around the fire and passing two bottles of whisky back and forth. There was no sign of Not-Many-Prisoners anywhere. Cutty said a prayer that he was still alive. Based on what the one cowboy had just said, he was pretty sure that he was.
But Where ?
A running-iron was a free-handed branding tool that allowed the cowboy to create a design of his choice on the animal with its hot glowing tip. Unlike the forged designs of most branding irons, the running-iron allowed the brander to change, or go over, an existing design making it a favorite tool of rustlers throughout the west.
Cutty circled around the ravine to get closer to the fire. The five men had continued to drink, and their words got louder as their attention span’s diminished. As the sparks danced in mock adoration …
Cutty Started To Plan
Chapter 14: Right Toward The Fire
He looked down at the gleaming brass on his blouse. As an afterthought before leaving home, he had stuffed it into his satchel. He wasn’t sure why, but he thought that maybe—just maybe—it would be useful in some way. The buttons were now alive in the distant glow from the firelight. They would appear as multiple sets of eyes coming out of the dark.
Cutty looked intently at the five men as they continued to pass the two bottles around. Their faces were greasy and unwashed, and they sat with a demeanor that gave away their intentions. They were among the lowest of men …
These Men Hadn’t Seen A Washtub In Over A Year
Cutty remembered back again to his cowboy friends in Abilene and Dodge City—they looked nothing like this. They had been righteous and straight, and their posture and speech only reinforced their true makeup. They were nothing if not respectful of those around them and totally dedicated to their craft. Cutty appreciated that. Their loyalty to the ranches they worked for equated to his unwavering commitment to a life of duty and honor.
Those Men All ‘”Rode For The Brand”
He had developed a kinship and brotherhood with those cow hands back in Kansas, and he had made himself a promise to one day go back and visit them again. He knew as he made that promise to himself, going back was something he had never been able to do before. He hoped this time it would be different.
“All right, who’s going first?” Cutty heard from the cowboy seated at the far end of the fire. “Who wants to put the first mark on that filthy redskin?”
“I’ll do it, Jack,” said a man seated ten feet to his left. “I’m going to burn a dark groove right between his two beady eyes.”
“OK, Pete; you and Bill go get that stinking Piegan.”
At this point, Cutty had not seen Not-Many-Prisoners, but he knew he had to be close. The two men walked toward where the horses were tied and within five minutes were back. Each man had Not-Many-Prisoners by an arm, and the Piegan Elder was slumped forward and struggling to walk.
Cutty Had Walked Right Past Him
“I don’t think he liked being tied to that horse, Jack. He about pitched a fit when we cut the ropes and took him down. Bill gave him a good jolt to the head with his Peacemaker to get him to behave. I don’t think he’ll give us any more trouble.”
“Good, you and Bill tie him to those two small cottonwoods over by the water. Then we can let the real fun begin.”
Some Of These Outlaws Were Carrying Colt .45’s
Cutty couldn’t believe that he had walked right by Not-Many-Prisoners when he had entered the ravine. “How could I have missed him so close in the dark?”
Not-Many-Prisoners had been tied cross-saddle to the biggest of the five horses. It had been the fourth one back as Cutty passed by in the dark. After tying him to the saddle, the outlaws had covered him with a canvas tarp making him impossible to see. It also made it almost impossible for him to breathe.
Not-Many-Prisoners was lucky to be alive. Had Cutty been able to see and untie him, it would now be two against five and they would still have had the element of surprise working for them.
“I wonder if Not-Many-Prisoners knows I’m here? He may have heard me as I walked by, especially when that lead horse whinnied, and has kept quiet to protect me. Or, he may have been in such rough shape, that he missed me entirely.”
Cutty wasn’t sure of Not-Many-Prisoner’s mindset but he was sure of one thing …he didn’t have much time. As the vile, and now drunk, outlaws tied Not-Many-Prisoners to the cottonwoods, Cutty hurried back to the horses.
He quickly and quietly untied them from each other—he needed to make a statement. The cowboys were still drunk, and a drunken man’s imagination often gets the better of him. He was hesitant to do it, but he felt he had no other choice…
He Unholstered His Colt
Chapter 15: A Different Brand Of Justice
The horses had been bound together with a technique that Cutty had never seen before. They had all been tied to a forty-inch branch that allowed them to move freely and graze without getting tangled. It lowered down as they fed and then rose when their heads straightened back up.
Cutty vowed to remember this for the future. It provided for both security and a limited amount of mobility. It had been invented by the Cheyenne and was used extensively throughout the southern plains. The Colonel had been right when he said: “The Native Americans are noted for their prowess in stealth and tactics.”
Cutty untied the horses from the branch, and—with three of the reins in his right hand and two in his left—started to walk them slowly toward the fire.
He knew his next move would be costly, but he needed to create as big a diversion as he could. It would only leave five shots in his Colt, but the effect would be worth the bullet, at least that’s what he hoped.
He Reminded Himself About Hoping Again
The Colonel had warned Cutty repeatedly about hoping. “Wishing for a certain outcome is not worth the mental effort you will put forth. Keep your attention focused on the task at hand. That will afford you the best chance of success.”
Cutty slapped the lead stallion on its rump as he fired his Colt up into the night sky. At the report of the gunshot, all five horses took off toward the fire like they were being chased by the underworld god, Hades. Entering the mouth of the ravine, there was not enough room for them to go around and avoid the fire.
They Charged Straight Through
The horses charged across the fire as the five cowboys looked on in drunken horror. There was smoke and flying embers everywhere. Two of the cowboys at the far end stood up and tried to run but were trampled by the horses before getting very far. The lead cowboy, Jack, managed to get to his gun before leveling it in Cutty’s direction and firing.
Cutty redrew his Colt while dropping to one knee. He sighted his big .45 and fired before Jack could get off a second round. The bullet went straight through Jack’s right shoulder causing him to drop the big Peacemaker as he fell back away from the now-scattered fire.
Cutty picked up Jack’s gun and ran toward where Not-Many-Prisoners was tied. As he cut his restraints, he handed him Jack’s gun saying: “There are five shots left in the cylinder. Here’s six more rounds in case you run out.”
They both turned to face the startled cowboys who were now crawling through the dirt trying to make sense of it all. With a KIAI that none of these rustlers had ever heard before, Cutty advanced. One by one, he grabbed the men and threw them face down onto the dark ground. He then yelled to Not-Many-Prisoners: “Tie them up with their hands behind their backs. I’ll tie the one that I shot after I check on his wound.”
The KIAI Had Been For Not-Many-Prisoners Benefit
Cutty checked on Jack’s shoulder. It was bleeding profusely, but it was a clean wound and the bullet missed any bone or cartilage as it passed through. Cutty grabbed the bandana from around Jack’s neck, dirty as it was, and wrapped his shoulder. “This will help to stop the bleeding,” Cutty said. “Keep pressure on it with your other hand. It’s better than you deserve, but you might just live if you keep it from bleeding out before you get to a doctor.”
Jack had been staring at Cutty’s blouse as he doctored his wound. “So, you some kinda government agent?” Jack asked, as Cutty started to walk away.
“I’m a Major in the United States Army here to investigate charges that rustling has been taking place on government land. I can see now that the rumors have been true. In addition, you were getting ready to commit capital murder. I am ordering you, and your men, to stay here until my detachment comes back to pick you up.
If you’re not here when they arrive, they will hunt you down like the wild dogs that you are. I need to get this Indian Scout back to headquarters. We know who you work for and what you’ve been doing.”
“You Are All Under Military Arrest”
Cutty tied Jack’s right hand to the top of his other arm. He knew he had just stretched the truth, but he wasn’t above doing that if a man’s life hung in the balance. He looked across the scattered but still burning embers.
Not-Many-Prisoners had a look on his face that Cutty had not seen from any of the Piegan Elders before. El Cristo had been the first to look at him that way when he had mortally wounded his son, Elligretto, in Seville. His expression transcended the present moment—as it acknowledged Cutty’s immortal warrior spirit.
Not-Many-Prisoners ran into the darkness in the direction that the horses had just gone. In less than ten minutes he was back with all five of them in tow. “How was he able to find them in the dark and to have done it so quickly?” Cutty wondered.
Horses, when frightened or startled, will often run for miles without stopping. He was sure when he fired that shot from his big Colt, those five had been both. The Colonel’s assessment about Native Americans—a breed of men Cutty had only met once before in Abilene—rang true again tonight.
At West Point, Jimmy had been masked in eastern tradition hiding the best parts of himself.
Cutty Jumped On The First Horse As He Yelled
Stalking every dream
calling me from sleep
A Yeti of the frozen night
I drove the pitons deep
Climbing over hope
belaying every wish
The tracks it leaves — perdition bound
to wander in the mist
(Haverford Pennsylvania: May, 2024)
There was a loud KNOCK on the rectory’s back door.
Father Frank Kerin had been sitting at the rectory’s kitchen table reading the newspaper. He was a young priest having just finished seminary only last June. It was a late August Sunday afternoon, and he had just come back from visiting the sick at the local hospital. He was totally engrossed in the sports section of the paper when he heard it again.
This time the knocking was louder and more persistent. The housekeeper did not work Sundays, and Father Frank was alone in the big house.
He got up and walked through the kitchen to the enclosed back porch where the door was located. Looking through the venetian blinds he could see that the person knocking was a woman. As he opened the outer door, he could also see that she was quite large, appeared to be in her mid-sixties, and she was holding something rolled up in her right hand. She had a menacing look on her face and Father Frank thought to himself … I hope she doesn’t hit me with that.
Father Frank opened the screen door and greeted the woman. She said: “My name is Florence Atterbury and I’m looking for Father Greenlee.” Father Frank then introduced himself: “Hello Madam, my name is Father Frank Kerin and I’m new to the parish. I just graduated from Seminary in Cincinnati Ohio and have only been in Rosemont (Pa.) for a few short weeks. Father Greenlee is out for the day, is there anything I can help you with?”
The woman stood in the doorway for a long silent moment looking down at the floor. When she finally did look up at Father Frank, she said: “Father, I think I’d like to sit down.” Father Frank escorted the woman back into the kitchen and sat her down at the table. He then asked her if she would like something to drink. Mrs. Atterbury said: “No thank you”and laid the newspaper she was carrying out on the kitchen table.
It was opened to section C, and the lead article was about the abuses of drinking and smoking in America. The editor was linking both with many of the maladies that plagued our country and was trying to connect the effects of drinking and smoking to lives of total ruin and debauchery. There were pictures in the article of men in Philadelphia’s bowery, and women in a local nightclub, with cigarettes between their fingers and a cocktail in their other hand.
The caption underneath said, ‘The Beginnings Of A Dead End Life.’
Mrs. Atterbury said she was livid and upset over the fundraiser that the church had just held in the school auditorium. Beer and wine had been served, and men — and some women —were seen smoking outside the front doors where the event was taking place. She also said, that “anyone with half a brain knows that once you start smoking it leads to alcohol and then most likely to harder drugs and possibly even to a life of crime. Your life is ultimately ruined and beyond saving and you are eventually condemned to a life outside the Church.”
The good woman went on for over ninety minutes lamenting the ramifications that a life involving tobacco and alcohol would entail. She also said that she was “going to put her foot down with Father Greenlee about future events at the parish and that no alcohol should ever be served.” When Father Frank explained to Mrs. Atterbury that there was wine at the Last Supper, and it was turned into the blood of Christ, she just said: “Father, really, that was just for God himself and the Apostles. You don’t really think that applies to the rest of us, do you?” Father Frank took one more shot at explaining to her the story of the Wedding Feast Of Cana, but again, it fell on deaf ears.
Mrs. Atterbury finally got up and as she left she pointed her big index finger right at the middle of Father Frank’s chest.
“Father, you mind my words, this smoking and drinking are going to undo all the good work my women’s auxiliary has done for the past twenty years. If it continues to go unchecked, it will spread through our elementary school and ruin every child in it. It only takes one bad apple you know …”
As Mrs. Atterbury walked out the back door, Father Frank thanked her for coming. He then walked slowly back into the kitchen and opened the refrigerator door. After taking out a bottle of Budweiser he sat down, lit up a Chesterfield, and leaned back in his chair. He just couldn’t help but wonder …
What Was Hell Going To Be Like?
The woman in the blue Chevy said: “Just five dollars please,” as I pumped two more dollars of Sunoco 260 into the aging four door sedan. As she paid me and then left, I looked at the Croton Chronograph Watch on my wrist that I had gone into hock for last fall. 5:15, SHOOT!!!, I only had 45 minutes to jump on my bike and make it the fifteen miles back to West Philadelphia to class.
I was taking night courses at St Joseph’s College (St Joseph’s University now), and my first class started at 6:00 p.m. Why? I asked myself again did I always cut it so close? Deep inside I knew the answer, but I told myself it was because I was a good employee. I had been pumping gas and renting U-Haul Trucks at an Arco gas station in North Hills Pa. for the past two years. The station was open till 6 p.m. every day, and it seemed I never got out of there until after 5.
It was owned by a good friend of mine, Bob, whom I had met in Ocean City New Jersey while living in the rooming house that he and his wife Pat owned at 14th street and Asbury Ave. Every day at five o’clock, Bob would yell out to me on the gas island — “time to leave!” He knew how long the ride was back to school during rush hour and that I never seemed to get out by 5.
The real answer as to why I was always late was that I liked the challenge. I loved the ride through the small section of Fairmount Park and then the river town of Manayunk always trying to get back to my apartment at 54th and Woodland Ave in the Overbrook section of Philadelphia before six. 54th and Woodland was right across the street from St Joe’s, and I would literally race into the driveway in front of my apartment house, drop the bike’s kickstand run inside to change and then head for class. Many times, I would not even change out of my Arco jumper (uniform) before heading over to campus. I often didn’t have the time. I wondered what some of the other people, especially girls, must have thought of the strange aroma that I brought to the class on the nights when I didn’t change.
To Their Credit, No One Ever Complained
I had always secretly wanted to road-race motorcycles, and this twenty-minute ride both to and from work every day gave me a chance to indulge my fantasy. Tonight, I would be cutting it very close and not even have time to stop at my apartment. I would have to park under the tree in front of my classroom building and run up the stairs to the third floor and do it all before six o’clock. It was an advanced Philosophy class, Ethics and Morality, and the professor, Dr. Larry McKinnon closed the doors promptly at six. If you were late, you didn’t get in — no exceptions!
I raced through the park on Bells Mill Road and hit the cobblestone hills of Manayunk with 15 minutes still left on my watch. I then raced up City Line Ave and caught only one red light as I saw the lights of 54th and City Line straight ahead. The light was yellow as I leaned over hard and made the left turn on 54thSt. I raced up past the basketball arena and turned right on Woodland Ave. I would normally have gone straight a half block to my apartment, but I had cut it too close and didn’t have the time. I pulled up in front of the Villiger Building, chained my bike to the tree I always used, and ran for the stairway door around back by the track.
This building had no elevator, so it was up two flights of stairs to the top floor and then left down the hall to where my classroom was the one farthest on the right.
As I rushed through the back door of Villiger, the first flight of stairs was blocked. An elderly man with a Gulf Oil Hat on was struggling to pull his son in a wheelchair up the 26 stairs. He had the entire stairway blocked, and I had less than two minutes to get by him and into McKinnon’s class. His son in the wheelchair was in really bad shape. He was in a total body brace that went clear to his head, and as he looked down at me, I heard him say: “Hey Moose, grab the front, and we’ll both make it to McKinnon’s class before he shuts the door.”
With that, I grabbed the small front wheels and lifted, as we both carried the wheelchair up the two flights of stairs to the third floor. We entered the hallway just as Dr. McKinnon was shutting the door. The kid in the wheelchair yelled out, “Wait for us Doc” as we raced for the closing door. I took the handles of the chair away from his dad and pushed the chair inside. We had made it but not any too soon.
I wondered to myself if McKinnon would have denied entry to this kid who had been stricken with polio if he had arrived just two minutes later. It would have taken at least that long if his dad had tackled those stairs alone. I parked his wheelchair next to my desk on the far left as the professor started his lecture. When it was over, I pushed his wheelchair outside to where his dad was waiting.
“Ed Hudak,” his father said, “and this is my son Eddie. Thanks so much for helping us up the stairs. I got out of work late and had to race home to the Northeast section of Philadelphia, pick Eddie up, and then race back down here to get him to class.” Mr. Hudak worked at the Gulf Oil Refinery in South Philadelphia. To leave work at four o’clock and get all the way up to the Northeast, pick up his crippled son, and then race back down to West Philadelphia made the little twenty-minute jaunt that I did every day seem like child’s play.
His son Eddie then asked me where my next class was. “Dr Marshall’s ‘Rational Psychology,’ I told him” as he said, “mine too, you can push me over there and my dad can go to the student union and get something to eat and rest for a while.” School had only started last week, and somehow I had missed seeing this crippled kid in both of my classes. He told me he had seen me though because of the strange jumper I had on and the helmet I carried into class. When he told his father about me his dad said: “That kid must work in a gas station and be paying for school himself. Cut him some slack if he doesn’t look real presentable on those days when he’s late.”
Eddie and I finished both classes together and I got ready to push him back outside. As we passed the vending machines on the first floor, I told him that this was where I usually stopped to have dinner before going home. He asked me, “What’s your favorite?” and I told him, “the Dinty Moore beef stew.” The machine had three different varieties and that was usually all I had until breakfast the next day. Eddie said he would like to wait while I ate and that his father would be fine outside for a few more minutes. He seemed to know something about our new relationship that would take quite a bit longer for me to discover and sort out.
Eddie Always Seemed To ‘Just Know’
I asked Eddie what his major was, and he said Literature, and that he had been a student here for almost six years. Again, I wondered, how could I have missed him in that wheelchair with someone always pushing him to where he needed to go? I hoped I hadn’t refused to see him in his diminished condition with my eyes always looking away. These kinds of things always bothered me, and I was squeamish around handicapped people, especially children. My mother had volunteered at the St. Edmond’s Home For Crippled Children in Rosemont for many years, but I was still uncomfortable when I saw those kids, not much younger than I was, in wheelchairs and leg braces.
Eddie’s Condition Was Much Worse
The only thing handicapped about Eddie was his body. His mind and spirit were stronger than any five, so-called, normal people. His father had made sure of that. His dad had been racing from work to home and then to school for almost six years devoting whatever spare time he had to what his son wanted to accomplish. He would drop Eddie off at class and then, most nights, go sleep in his car in the school parking lot. Many nights, the temperature in that parking lot was below freezing, but this sixty-year-old man NEVER complained.
Who Was Really Handicapped, Eddie Or Me?
As much as I marveled at how well Eddie did in spite of being disabled, his father amazed me even more. He was like so many heroes that we never hear about standing off in the shadows so that someone else can thrive. After I finished my stew, I pushed Eddie outside to where his dad was waiting. He shook my hand and said: “Son, without your help tonight, we’d have really been in a terrible fix.”
He Called Me “Son”
As I watched him wheel Eddie back toward their car in the parking lot, I pushed my long hair back and pulled my helmet over my head. The chinstrap I left unbuckled on these short rides because it always got tangled in my beard. I rode the two short blocks back to my apartment with the sight of Eddie and his dad burned into the front of my psyche. I knew I had witnessed something special tonight, I just didn’t know yet how special it truly was or would then become.
Now, I had an entirely new reason for getting to school on time. I was not going to let that diminutive older man pull that wheelchair up those stairs one more time — not if I could help it. I was never late again for the rest of that semester, as Eddie and I became fast friends with he and his dad even visiting my apartment on more than one occasion. I became a real master at pulling that sled of his up the stairs, and we often got help from other male students as we made the climb.
Eddie told me in confidence one day that I had been good for his dad. I thought he was referring to the physical exertion I had save him, and Eddie said: “No, it’s more than that. My dad has never liked anyone with long hair and a beard, and he told my mother the other night that you were the first. He then went on to say that maybe it was just hair and that he shouldn’t let things like that bother him anymore.” I was both flattered and gratified that he saw something in me, something that I still may not have seen in myself.
Mr. Hudak had been a World War 2 veteran and participated as a Chaplain’s Assistant in such major conflicts as D-Day and The Battle Of The Bulge. His Jeep had sunk in deep water during the D-Day landing, and he and the Chaplain had to swim two hundred yards to shore amidst enemy fire. He was a great man in the tradition of all great men who provide unselfish and heroic service while asking for nothing in return. In many ways, I secretly wished that he had been my dad too.
My father had also been in World War 2 as a Marine and fought many engagements in the South Pacific. He was a hero to me, but the difference between my father and Mr. Hudak was, my dad loved me, but he didn’t seem interested in my life now. He didn’t approve of my studying Philosophy, and he couldn’t understand why I hadn’t chosen a more conventional career path like the sons of so many of his friends.
In Ways I Couldn’t Understand, I Think I Embarrassed My Father
What my dad didn’t know was, that underneath the long hair and beard, my beliefs were a little to the right of Attila The Hun. Unfortunately, we never had a serious conversation where he could have discovered that.
The semester finally came to an end and the Christmas holidays were now upon us. It was cold weather to be riding a motorcycle but, when that’s all you have. then that’s what you ride. On the last day of class before break, Mr. Hudak pulled me aside. “My wife Marge and I are having a little party next Saturday night, and we’d like you to come.” Everything inside me was trying to find an excuse not to go, but all I was capable of was shaking my head yes and thanking this great man for the kind invitation.
It wasn’t that I didn’t want to meet his family. It was that I literally had nothing to wear and only the motorcycle to get me there. My entire wardrobe consisted of two pairs of jeans, three t-shirts, and one beige fisherman’s knit sweater that I had bought at a local discount store. I still hadn’t worn the sweater, and the tags were still on it. I kept telling myself I was saving it for a special occasion. Well, what could be more special than meeting Mr. Hudak’s family. The afternoon of the party I removed the tags from the sweater and ran down to the Laundromat and washed my newest jeans.
Eddie had told me that the get together would start around seven, but I could arrive anytime I wanted. As I pulled the motorcycle up in front of their brick row house, I looked for a place to park the bike where it wouldn’t stand out. I already looked like a child of the sixties, and the motorcycle would only give them something else to focus on that might be misleading.
My fears were totally unfounded as I walked through the front door. Mr. Hudak greeted me warmly, as Eddie yelled out in a voice all could hear: “My buddy Kurt’s here.” My buddy Kurt! Those words have stayed with me and have provided sustenance during times when I thought my life was tough. All I had to do in those moments was think of Eddie and what he and his family had been through, and my pity party for myself ended almost quicker than it began.
“My Buddy Kurt’s Here”
No sooner did I wave to Eddie than Mrs. Hudak came bouncing out of the kitchen. Literally bouncing! This tiny woman of 5’1’’ came bounding across the dining room floor and immediately reached up and threw both of her arms around my neck. She squeezed hard and it felt good. It was real and she wanted me to know that. Eddie had also explained to me how physically strong his mother was. It was the result of having to carry him up and down two flights of stairs from his bedroom to their recreation room in the basement below. She did this several times a day.
I don’t know how high the heat was set to in their house that night, but I had never felt so warm — or accepted. To an outsider like me it even looked like love, which I was to find out shortly is exactly what it was. I wanted to take my heavy sweater off, but I had nothing on underneath but an old t-shirt. Mrs. Hudak’s name was Marge, and she was from an old Irish family named McCarty. When she first saw me earlier, after I had removed my jacket, she said: “What a lovely sweater, shorin it tis.”
It Felt Like Love
I spent that night getting to know everyone, and in no time felt like one of the family. At ten o’clock the guests started to leave and Marge took me into the kitchen. “Can you stay a little while longer, because at eleven there is someone who I want you to meet?” I said sure, as she fed me more cake and cookies telling me that they were baked special by the evening’s mystery guest.
At eleven fifteen the front door opened with an “I’m home,” coming from a young woman’s voice. As I stood up, a flash of white turned the corner and entered the kitchen. There in her finest nurse’s regalia, stood Eddie’s younger sister, Kathryn, who had just finished the evening shift at Nazareth Hospital in North Philadelphia.
“WOW, WAS SHE SOMETHING,” is all I could hear myself saying as she took her first look at me. “So, this is the guy I’ve heard so much about huh,” she said as she walked to the refrigerator. “Based on my brother’s description, I thought you would have been at least ten feet tall.” Mildly sarcastic for sure, but I was smitten right away.
Later, I heard her on the phone with someone who sounded like her boyfriend. They seemed to be fighting, and I sensed from the look on her dad’s face that they weren’t crazy about him either. He said: “I hope it’s over,” and in less than a minute Kathryn came into the living room with tears in her eyes. As she ran up the stairs to her bedroom, you could hear her say, “What A Jerk!” I prayed she wasn’t referring to me.
Her mother ran up the stairs after her but before she did, she asked me not to leave. Ten minutes later she came back downstairs and said: “You haven’t finished your cookies and cake in the kitchen.”
Marge was right, and I really wanted to finish them, but I was now starting to feel uncomfortable and in the middle of something that wasn’t for me to see or hear. Not wanting to seem rude, I followed her back to the kitchen table and sat down as she refilled my glass with milk. “So, what are your plans for the holidays,” she asked, as I wolfed down the sweets.
“Oh, nothing much,” I said, “just schoolwork and my job at the gas station.” “And how about New Year’s Eve she asked?” “Oh, nothing planned, probably just go see my grandparents and then watch the ball drop on TV in my apartment if I make it till twelve”. “Why don’t you ask Kathryn out?” she said, as her eyes twinkled? I thought I must have been hearing things and looked baffled, so she repeated it again…
Why Don’t You Ask Kathryn Out?
This kindly woman, from this great family, was suggesting that I take their pride and joy daughter, Kathyrn, out for New Year’s Eve. I didn’t know what to say. “Why don’t you think about it? I’ll bet the two of you would have fun. I think based on tonight she is now free for New Year’s Eve too.”
I was literally in shock and not prepared for this. I had recently broken up with a long-term girlfriend who I had dated all through high school and college. I had convinced myself that I needed a break from girls for a while, and now here I was faced with dating Mr. Hudak’s only daughter. In a few minutes, Marge walked out of the kitchen and Kathryn walked back in. She was now dressed in her pajamas and robe. If I had been smitten before, I was totally taken now.
I knew the first thing I said might be my last, so after a long pause I uttered: “So, I hear you’re not doing anything for New Years Eve?” Not the best ice breaker as she yelled out to her mother: “Mommmmm, what did you tell him.” Her mother didn’t answer. I said again: “Kathy, please don’t take it the wrong way, I don’t have a date for New Year’s either.” She looked at me for what seemed like an eternity, that in reality lasted for just a few seconds, before saying: “And just where do you propose we should go, Mr. Wonderful?” Thank God I had an answer.
The Ice Had Broken
“Zaberers,” I said: “They’re open twenty-four hours. They have dinner and dancing and then a big show right after midnight.” “Zaberers, huh,” she said, as she looked at me once more. “All right, you can pick me up at eight.” With that, I didn’t want to push my luck. I thanked her parents for the wonderful evening and wanted to say good night to Eddie, but he had already gone to bed. That was what Marge was doing on her second trip upstairs — what a woman!!!
What A Woman Indeed!
Kathy and I had a great time on that first date on New Years Eve. All we really talked about was her father and about how hard he had struggled to keep the family together and how lucky he was to have found a woman like Marge who was the love of his life.
Kathy and I were engaged to be married just nine weeks later on March 5th,, and then married that fall on September 22nd 1974. I was now a real part of the family that I had admired from afar. Kathy and I had two children, and Marge and Ed were the best grandparents that two kids could ever have hoped for. They were lucky enough to see both of their grandchildren grow into adulthood and attend their college graduations. They were also able to proudly attend the wedding of their oldest grandchild, our daughter Melissa.
We lost Ed Hudak, my father-in-law, my guardian, and my friend, last December, and the world has been a little less bright with only the memory of him here now. In many ways, he was the best of what we are all still trying to become, and his spirit remains inside us during the times of our greatest need.
For me though, I’ll never forget the time of our first meeting. That late September afternoon when I looked up those stairs at St Joe’s and not a word needed to be said. Here was a Saint of a man doing what real men do and doing it quietly. With humble dignity, his spirit reached out to me that day and filled an empty place inside of me with his love.
Now, forty years later, that same spirit occupies a bigger and bigger place in my life. From somewhere deep inside my soul it continues to live on, and I know for as long as I can remember — it will never let me go.
And I Called Him … ‘The Chief’
The mind
its own place
be it heaven
or hell
The soul
but a bucket
to empty
or fill
Goya
a madman
DaVinci
extolled
Sharing
a genius
they fought
to control
Bleed out
the poison
death waits
to reclaim
Or memory
gets buried
and darkness
— remains
(Dreamsleep: May, 2024)
The coach signaled timeout and called the team to the sidelines. There were eight minutes left in the biggest game of their lives, and they would be playing for three minutes with a severe disadvantage. They had committed a succession of penalties within a span of less than 60 seconds, and they would now be playing without three men on the field. In lacrosse this is referred to as ‘Man Down.’
Usually it’s only ‘One Man Down,’ or at the most, ‘Two Men Down,’ but few watching that day had ever seen a team go ‘Three Men Down.’ This meant that their star goalie T.J. Braxton was only going to have three defenders in front of him instead of the usual six.
T.J. had been playing great, but he now had to play for two minutes with three men missing in front of him and then the third minute still missing one. It was going to seem like an eternity. The coach looked over at T.J. and he was standing off to the side by himself not wanting to either look or talk to anyone during the intermission. The coach understood this behavior because he had been a goalie himself and decided to leave T.J. alone — totally immersed within his own thoughts.
As they did the cheer to break the huddle, it was for their goalie …”1, 2, 3, Go T.J.” What would happen now brought more pressure than any goalie should ever have to withstand. Even going just ‘One Man Down’ would in many cases result in a goal for the other team. Going ‘Two Men Down’ almost ensures the other team a goal, and anything beyond that just puts your goalie at the mercy of the shooters on the other team.
And Tonight There Would Be No Mercy To Be Found
T.J. already had 18 saves up to this point with only half a quarter left to play in regulation. Saves are when a goalie either blocks or deflects an offensive shot from the other team. He had only let in three goals all game, and the score was tied at 3-3.
Pennhurst was a powerful public school with large and fast athletes. They had not been playing lacrosse as long as T.J.’s private (all-boys) school, Haverland Academy, but their natural athletic ability and inner toughness were making up for any experience lost.
T.J. would have to defend his goal missing three men in front of him for two minutes and then missing one man for the next sixty seconds. It was his team’s possession coming out of the timeout, and it was all they could do being so shorthanded to even get the ball across the mid-field line. The coach’s tactic was not to shoot the ball now but to stall and to try and take as much time off the clock as they could until they could get more players back on the field. T.J. stood rock solid in the center of the ‘crease’ in front of his goal and looked squarely at the goalie at the other end of the field. The ‘crease’ was the large circle surrounding the goal that no offensive player from the other team could enter. He seemed to not be following the ball and his coach wondered what was going on inside his head.
Playing goalie is 80% mental, and he was hoping his star goalie wasn’t going to have a melt down when his team needed him the most. T.J. would normally be very active inside his own goal shouting instructions to the defensemen in front of him and trying to best position them for the oncoming attack.
Something ‘Seemed’ Different Tonight
T.J. had entered a new zone, one that he had never been in before, and one that only he could understand. As Haverland’s lead attackman charged the opposing goal, the ball fell out of his stick. It was immediately picked up by the opposing goalie and ‘cleared’ to a midfielder standing outside and to his left. The midfielder made one more pass to an attackman, and the ball was coming T.J.’s way with only three defenders in front of him to help stop the charge. The ball was again passed to one of their senior captains and their strongest midfielder.
He juked left as he faked a pass and then as he cradled the ball wildly, he headed straight toward T.J. in the goal. When he got within fifteen feet of the goal he stopped, set his feet, and with a violent and twisting motion fired an overhand shot across his right shoulder at the ground two feet in front of where T.J. now stood.
T.J. was now eighteen and a half and had been playing goalie since he was seven years old. He had seen and defended almost every kind of shot and from every angle in those eleven years. He had just never had to do it before with almost no defense in front of him. As the shot left the midfielders stick, T.J. reacted. He took two steps forward and was able to scoop the ball out of the air at ankle height before it was able to bounce off the ground. Bounce shots were more difficult to save, and his accumulated instinct and experience allowed him to get this one and at least for now keep the score tied at 3-3.
T.J. ran behind his own goal toward the end line. With the ball in his stick he was trying to take time off the clock. Only one opposing player chased him, and he was able to do a 180-degree spin, avoid that player, and run back out in front of his goal. He then cleared the ball, the entire length of the field, to a midfielder standing in the far left corner. T.J.’s team had the ball within thirty feet of the opposing goal with only two minutes left to run in penalty time.
T.J.’s offense decided it was time to step up and play big. They managed to take a full minute off the clock with uncanny passing until the referee finally called stalling and gave the ball back to the other side.
As the ball came back in T.J’s direction, two of his penalized players retook the field. They were now playing with only a ‘one man down’ disadvantage and for only sixty more seconds.
The opposing team set up in a perimeter in front of his goal passing the ball from man to man and then behind T.J.’s goal in an attempt to unbalance a still weakened defense. As the ball went behind the net, T.J. rotated inside the crease never taking his eye off the ball. He thought they were setting him up for something sneaky because his fundamental blocking skills on normal shots were so strong. More than anything he didn’t want to give up a cheap goal, and he wouldn’t have to wait long to find out that his suspicions had been correct.
As they passed the ball back and forth behind his goal, an attackman turned and tried to lob the ball over the back of the goal, and T.J.’s stick, to an opposing midfielder who was charging the front of the goal from about twenty-five-feet away. They were hoping to catch T.J. mesmerized in what was going on behind the net and then reverse field and go in the one direction no one ever expected — over the back of the goal.
It didn’t work! As the ball left the midfielders stick, T.J. jumped high in the air and intercepted the pass in the shooting strings of his goalie stick. He then spun around and ran directly to the out of bounds line to his right. It was beyond the defensive box, and he stood there waiting for someone to challenge him. He was again trying to take precious seconds off the clock to get his team back to full strength. Although a goalie, T.J. was the fastest player on his team and that speed was like money in the bank to a team that was struggling and in trouble with time running out.
He managed to get the penalty down to twenty two seconds before he finally dished the ball off to another long stick defender and then quickly moved back in front of his goal. That defensemen got across midfield just before another penalty would have occurred for not advancing the ball. With only seventeen seconds left on the penalty, the offense passed the ball to the four corners looking for a man who was ‘hot’ (open) who could take the shot and finally break the tie. With only three seconds left in the penalty their best attackman, John Erasmus, took the ball in his stick and with his left hand fired a side angle shot at the right side of the goal. It was a great shot, but their goalie made a heroic save. He was also a senior and had transferred into Pennhurst two years ago from a Lacrosse powerhouse school in northern Maryland.
With both teams now at full strength, the ball went back and forth for the final five minutes with very few shots taken at either end. The ones that were taken were weak and from great distance, and both goalies easily picked them up and started the ball going the other way. Each shot was critical now because the game was tied with time running out. Possession was more important than losing the ball to the other team by taking a poor shot. As the lights shone brightly high above the scoreboard, time ran out in regulation. The game would now go to sudden death overtime, and it would become about the strength of the face-off men and how hot each goalie was going to be.
It Was Now About The Face-Off Man And The Goalies
In sudden death, the first team to score wins! No second chances here it’s do or die time, and everything is amped up to an entirely new level. Many times, the winner of the face off at midfield wins the game because everything is geared towards that one shot, and the pressure on the opposing goalie is tremendous. Unless the goalie can isolate himself in a ‘zone of invincibility,’ the chances of blocking a shot in overtime due to a lost face off are not very good. Just like in the NFL, where the coin toss often determines the winner in overtime, the face-off is like that coin toss only with skill and not luck determining the winner. T.J. thought back to all the coaches and mentors that had brought him to where he was standing tonight. They were all somewhere up in the stands, and they were all living and dying with him tonight in the goal.
T.J. Decided That Tonight It Would Be About Life
The Captains met at the middle of the field as the referee explained the rules of sudden death. All who were listening thought that the term was aptly named. They shook hands again and ran back to the huddles on their respective sidelines. Both coaches gave their overtime strategies to their teams, and they did one more cheer before retaking the field. Both face off men walked slowly toward each other at the center mid-field line and stared each other directly in the eye.
The physical disparity between the two players at mid-field was huge. Haverland’s best face off man, George Arle, was 5’6’’ tall and 160 lbs. Pennhurst’s face off man, B.J. Radford, had been an All-State quarterback on the football team and was 6’3’’ and 225 lbs. Although Lacrosse was not his primary sport, he had played it for the last four years and by anyone’s account he was a ‘stud player.’ The skill in taking face offs is unlike any other in Lacrosse. It’s more similar to recovering a fumble in football or picking up a loose five-dollar bill dropped on the floor in Penn Station in New York. It’s uncontrolled mayhem with the skill to do it only evident to those who have been there. And it’s those players who know painfully well what it takes to win the fight for the ball.
Although T.J.’s face off man George had had a good season, he always struggled against players that were that much bigger than him and usually lost the ball. The ref. positioned the ball between the two boys sticks who were both crouched down and ready at mid-field. The whistle blew, and George lost the ball as B.J. picked it up and charged right over George’s left shoulder. He was headed in a straight line right toward T.J. who was standing fixed and ready in front of his goal. B.J. passed the ball to a midfielder who kept it only a second before passing it to an attackman who was off to the right of the goal. The attackman looked to his left and faked a pass to his right. He then spun around and with all his might fired a bounce shot on an angle from the right facing side of Haverland’s goal.
T.J. stepped forward, scooped the ball up on the first bounce, and in one fluid motion flipped the ball out to a defenseman on the left perimeter. This player cradled it inside his long stick as he took off down the sideline and across midfield. The defenseman made a pass to a middie on the extreme other side of the field who then passed to an attackman. This man ran around behind the net and came out on the other side in front of the goal, shot the ball, but it went wide right. The other team was closest to the ball when it went out of bounds, so it was Pennhurst’s possession, and it was coming back T.J.’s way.
Their goalie cleared the ball left to a long stick defenseman, who in turn made a long pass directly to an attackman, and the ball was once again in the oppositions stick less than thirty feet from the goal T.J. was defending. This attackman had no intention of passing. He put his head down and charged straight ahead toward T.J. As his coach was screaming at him to pass, and it the midst of five defensive players, he fired off a shot. It came at a side angle, and, with all of the players surrounding the shooter, it was hard for T.J. to see the ball come off the kid’s stick.
When T.J. finally did see the ball, it had passed the head of his stick, and he was just able to get a piece of the ball with the bottom of his shaft. It was just enough to deflect the ball upwards and over the goal and into the chain link fence fifty feet behind the crease. On instinct alone, T.J. ran after the ball and being closest to it when it went out of bounds, he picked it up in his stick and slowly walked forward. This gave his midfielders time to transition back up to the other end of the field.
T.J. was living on borrowed time. Making one save in overtime was huge, but making two, and one with only the shaft of his stick to save it all, was stretching the limits of whatever luck the team had left. T.J. easily passed the ball to an unguarded defenseman who ‘walked’the ball up-field and then tossed it to a midfielder just in front of the offensive box.
The offensive box is the restrained and shorter ‘boxed-out’ area right in front of the goalie and where most shots are taken, and most goals are scored. The midfielder made a pass to his left to an attackman, who tried to make a long looping pass across the face of the box, but it was intercepted by one of the oppositions long stick middies and passed quickly to another midfielder as it transitioned back again towards T.J. This time the ball was coming straight at T.J., and it had taken less than five seconds to get there. His team was not set yet and this charge could be the end of it all.
T.J.’s team had been caught napping in an uncharacteristic moment of uncertainty. Pennhurst’s top midfielder again had the ball, and he was charging at T.J. who had only two players set and not the normal six in front of him to play defense.
Surprisingly to T.J., this player then made a pass to the extreme right corner and that attackman ran behind T.J.’s goal giving his defense more time to reset. This player then made a pass to the left side, and it was once again in the stick of their best midfielder, Matt Makritis. Midfielders, or Middies, as they’re often called are many times the best athletes on the team. They have to play both offense and defense and run the entire length of the field while their shift is on. Makritis was a high school All-American, and he was charging at full speed toward the left front facing side of T.J.’s goal.
T.J. Was An All-American Too!
T.J. was also an All-American and had recently been on the front cover of ‘Inside Lacrosse Magazine’ and featured as the #1 player coming out of High School Lacrosse that year. He thought to himself that all of that press would be meaningless if he allowed this shot to go in. The opposing midfielder continued toward the crease unguarded, got within ten feet of the goal, and fired point blank at T.J. No fancy bounce shots or behind the back this time. This shot was straight at T.J.’s head, and from less than ten feet away. T.J. caught the ball in the fat part of his goalie sticks net. It didn’t stay there though. The power of the shot caused it to come out of his stick, in what is referred to as a rebound, as it rolled ten or twelve feet out in front of the goal.
A second midfielder then picked up the ball, and not lifting it from the ground, fired a shot right back at T.J. This was more like a golf shot than a lacrosse shot, and T.J. struggled to see from which direction the ball was coming. As the ball came back at T.J. at a severe angle, headed toward the left backside of the net, he stretched his body out like a goalie in the NHL. Doing a full split in front of the net, he was able to get a piece of the ball with his right cleat and deflect the ball off to the left side of the goal. As the ball rolled harmlessly toward the far side of the endline, the referee blew his whistle. The first three-minute overtime period had ended.
They Had Survived Sudden Death For Three Minutes
Both teams huddled tightly with their coaches and trainers. This time though, T.J. didn’t leave the crease at all. He was leaning against the goal with his back turned to the field. It was almost as if he was talking to someone you couldn’t see and totally immersed in a world of his own. There are several times in a man’s life that define and underline not only who he is, but who he will then become. This was one of those times for T.J.
And He Knew It
Both teams wearily took the field. The pressure of an extremely tight game, and then surviving one overtime period, had taken its toll. As the face-off men bent low and readied for the ball, T.J.’s back was still facing the field. When he heard the whistle blow he spun around and it was like someone twice his 6’2’’ size was playing goalie. He seemed to fill the entire net with his presence and there was an ‘aura’ coming from him that surrounded the entire defensive end of the field.
Once again, George lost the face off to the All-State quarterback and star midfielder, B.J. Radford. This time however, the look on B.J.’s face was different. Although fairly new to Lacrosse, inside his chest beat the heart of a champion. He almost stepped on George as he picked up the ball and headed straight over the mid-field line and directly at T.J. This senior captain had no intention of passing, and he was going to ‘ice’ the game for his teammates and fans. B.J. was not known as a great shooter but more for his defensive skills. He was a great athlete though, and this charge was not to be taken lightly by anyone on the defensive end of the field.
B.J. Knew This Was His Moment
Without stopping or setting his feet, he raised his stick above his head and shot the ball toward the right corner of the net at over ninety miles an hour. T.J. saw this one all the way and caught the ball in his stick. He then ran out of the goal and passed B.J. who was still coming his way as he charged past him and headed straight down the field. T.J. was out of the defensive box and headed toward the mid-field line. He was looking at nothing in front of him except the opposing goalie who was now staring at him with an incredulous look on his face inside the opposing crease.
Everyone there that night had their mouth’s open in awe. No one expected the goalie to ever make the final break, and no one watching had ever seen a goalie possessed with such speed. The other team was in awe too and just kept watching him run. They were all guarding open men who they were sure T.J. would eventually pass the ball to.
He Didn’t Pass
When he crossed the midfield line, the fans went wild and stood up. One of his midfielders had the presence of mind to stay back behind the midfield line so that an offsides wouldn’t be called. In Lacrosse, you always need at least three men back plus the goalie in the defensive end. Once T.J. crossed midfield, one of the midfielders had to stay back.
T.J. approached the offensive box in front of their goalie with only one thing on his mind. He had been acutely watching this kid all day and he had noticed one thing. This was a fundamentally sound and ‘play up’ goalie and one would who would rise to the occasion when the heat was on. He had transferred into Pennhurst only two years ago and based on his great skill, he had gotten them this far. He had one weakness though that T.J. had observed — he couldn’t handle the off-speed shots, especially over his left shoulder.
The left shoulder is opposite the goalie stick’s head if you’re right handed. In his case, the only weakness that T.J. had seen,
other than his struggle with off-speed shots, were those directed high up and left. Like a changeup in baseball, the off-speed shot often confused the goalie’s timing and could cause him to over or under react at just the right time. T.J. continued to charge the goal.
By this time, two defensemen from Pennhurst were running from both sides to get to T.J. before he could shoot, but his speed was too much. As he approached the crease from the right side, he raised his stick above his head. He threw his lower right elbow at the goalie as if executing a shot. His stick-head never moved, but the goalie bit on the fake. He waved the head of his stick high right and then easily lobbed the ball over the Pennhurst goalie’s left shoulder. The referee blew the whistle — the game was over —and T.J.’s team had finally won.
The other goalie dropped to his knees and then put both hands on the ground in front of him. T.J. went over and picked him up saying: “You may have lost on the scoreboard tonight, but you never gave up. I’m proud to have played against you.”
Haverland had just won the State Championship, and most watching said it was the greatest goalie performance at any level that they had ever seen. T.J. was voted ‘Most Valuable Player’ of the game. In the fall, he would be off to a top 10 Lacrosse University where he would major in Criminal Justice and take his goalie skills to an even higher level.
T.J.’s coach told him after the game that you can play lacrosse for your entire lifetime and never be able to play or recreate what you just did. His future college coach, who had been in the stands watching, came down on the field and put his arm around T.J. after the game and told him the same thing. He went on to say: “T.J., I had my whole speech ready before you went into overtime. I thought I might have to come down here and tell you that although you lost — you lost really well.
T.J. Did Not Want To Believe That Losing Well Was Really Possible!
“You had made all those heroic saves throughout the game for your team, and if you had to lose, it would have been a great way to do it. The only problem with my prepared speech is that you didn’t lose. As I watched you in the goal with your back turned to the field as the second overtime period started, I said to my assistant coach Dave, who’s over talking to your folks, that our new and future goalie is in a zone that few can ever get to. He will not be scored on again tonight. Tonight, and for however long this game lasts — he is truly invincible. And I don’t believe I’ve ever used that word to describe a player before.”
Many years passed and one day T.J got an email from his old high school coach. The coach told him that once again his school, Haverland, would be playing for the State Championship and he wanted to run his pre-game speech by T.J. before his boys took the field. It was short and to the point. What he wanted to tell the boys was: “It wouldn’t be the number of players on the field but who those players were and what was coming from inside their hearts that would make all the difference.” He then went on to tell the story of T.J. in the State Championship Game that took place over ten years before.
Some of the boys had heard the story, but all were in awe listening to the emotion and passion in their coach’s voice as he retold the story again. It was like replaying that game with the current Haverland players and right before the most important game that most of them would ever play.
Haverland won the State Championship again that day and many of the boys said that it was the pre-game speech about T.J. and his team’s overtime victory that fueled their desire and commitment to make it happen. It was also a close game, and with two minutes to go the score was again tied. Five times during the game they had gone ‘one-man’ down but had only allowed one goal to be scored during those five uneven possessions by the other team. Haverland was then able to strip the ball from their opponent twice in the final two minutes and convert both into scores — ending the game at 7-5.
Along a lonely hallway in the back of Haverland’s new athletic center hangs a plaque with the story of that night so many years ago. But to T.J., and all the members of that legendary team, the thing that hangs highest — is their refusal to lose.
The possibility of being invincible would stay inside T.J. and all who were there to watch him play that night. He learned that at the end of the streak where luck ends, sometimes you have to enter that zone …
And Just ‘Will It’ To Happen.
Kurt Philip Behm
Will is the executive …
intellect advisor
Choice as a marriage
the two must condone
Committed and daunting
with guideposts of knowledge
Marching in tandem
— pursuing the truth
(Dreamsleep: April, 2024)
Chapter 1: Jack Thought It Was Laughter
Jack thought it was laughter. The wind blew so hard it actually forced his soul outside where his body would follow. It was at the clearing by the creek where he first saw it. It looked like blood as the wind laughed at the absence of his reflection in the snow. He didn’t know how to feel and for the first time in this most familiar place, he was really lost. Fear blanketed the trees and he was alone inside himself. He was now forced to deal with the result of years of living with only one eye open. He had blinded himself to something he had always denied and was confined to a place where men often become the victims of their greatest undoing.
There were no bear or wolf signs to match the lingering bad intent that was now spread all over the trail. He looked around and the colors called out to him but there was no rainbow only a prism trapping his unborn redemption inside a false red image. He moved forward slowly unsure of his direction but unable to do anything else.
Fighting this enemy would be much harder now, as fear burrowed deeper and deeper inside. The harder he fought, the harder the fight became. Inside himself, he could feel the object of his intended destruction growing stronger. In the distance a lone wolf howled — at least it sounded like a wolf. Its cry loomed high above as a mocking echo to his silence calling him in its direction as it then changed into something Jack had never heard before.
Why do men have to go on journeys such as this Jack wondered? All he saw was darkness as the tunnel bored ever deeply inside him forcing him through the whiteout to the uncertainty beyond. He wasn’t sure of anything as it howled again encircling him with its cry in the darkness. It was imploring him in his darkest places to finally do something. The far off cry was daring him to finally stop this killer, the one who was hunting in the corners of his affirmation, slaying with its fury all his hopes and dreams.
Suddenly It Stopped
If it was an animal, it had left no tracks to where the wind had been laughing in the dark. It was laughing at a joke Jack still had not heard while creating another memory of something he still had not become. Do men only hunt for something that in the end makes them less of themselves?
Jack grabbed his quiver and bow, secured his pack, and continued North up the trail.
The Red Stains In The Moonlight Beckoning Him To Follow
Chapter 2: Jack Crouched In The Darkness
Jack crouched in the darkness. The tracks looked almost human, but the only heartbeat he could hear was the one now beating inside his own chest. He’d been following these tracks for the last thirteen hours. The blood trail had now stopped, but the animal creating it hadn’t. Jack estimated the loss of blood at over four pints.
What mammal could continue in this cold after losing so much blood? Jack crested the next hill and saw something moving in the thicket seventy-five yards ahead. Instinctively, he took an arrow from his quiver and laid it loosely inside his bow. Would this finally be the moment that he would blow away the myth about the Hairy Man? Would this be the time that Jack would finally come face to face with his own manhood or would it just be a turkey or a deer hiding behind the thicket now less than thirty yards ahead?
Jack now switched from tracking to stalking mode. He lowered his body position at least two feet and tried to regulate his breathing. The movement inside the bushes had stopped, but the tracks leading to them were fresher than ever. It had snowed during the night and the tracks a mile or so back were rounded and contoured around their edges. These tracks were sharp and defined with loose snow falling down their sides as if freshly made.
The bushes moved again, and it was just then that Jack noticed it. The top of his bowstring had come undone and slid six or seven inches down from the top of the bow. Panic started to set in as Jack searched for a patch of hard snow to brace the bow against to reset the string. From the corner of his eye he now saw it. A large dark figure was stooped and hunched down in the shadows to the left of the thicket as if positioning itself and getting ready to strike.
Jack pushed and pushed on the bow trying to get it to bend. Every time he did, the bottom of the bow would slip on the wet snow and ice and the string would once again slide back down and go lax in his hand. Again and again he tried always with the same result. There was a tree just twenty feet to his right. The hard bark surface would give Jack the pressure he needed to bend the bow and force the string back up inside the notch.
The only problem with this new strategy is that Jack would have to turn his back on the thicket bush. If he were to survive this encounter, he would have to rely on just sounds, feeling, and instinct, as his vision was now turned away from the threat up ahead. Just as the bowstring snapped into place, Jack felt something large, very large, collide at high speed with his left shoulder. In a daze he was spun around and thrown face down in the snow and knocked momentarily unconscious.
When his head finally cleared, he saw the same tracks that he had been following all morning on both sides of his fallen body. They were now heading straight back in the direction from which they had come. Blood no longer accompanied these tracks, and Jack had to face the fact that maybe, just maybe, what he had been following all day would now be hunting him.
… And That There May Be More Than Just One
Chapter 3: Back Down The Trail
When Jack was able to once again walk, he headed off in the direction of the southbound tracks. He went no more than two miles down the trail when he saw a large deadfall off to his right. The logs and branches were all disturbed as if something or someone had walked right over them. Jack followed cautiously. With one arrow in his mouth, and one on his bowstring, he stepped carefully over the tracks that led around back.
It was around back that he saw the blood trail resume. It had been over two hours since he had seen any blood, and this worried him for reasons he did not yet understand. Behind the deadfall, and totally hidden from the trail he had been on, was a clear set of tracks. Something or someone was traveling or being carried or dragged behind these tracks. The blood was evident in the snow, right in the middle of the wide swath it made, at intervals of every ten feet. The blood was heavier than before. The trail had turned and now headed due West up the 15 degree incline toward the tall mountains not two miles in the distance.
What kind of animal, other than human, drags away its dying or its dead? What other animal would put itself at such risk for something in such bad shape? Wolves and bears will stand and fight to the death to defend their young, but there have never been stories or tales of them carrying off their dead and wounded. Only humans do this. But the tracks he was now following were too big to have been made by any man. There was now less than twenty minutes of daylight left and soon Jack would be alone in the dark. Being in the dark, and in search of what he didn’t know and now feared, was something that was beyond his control but not beyond his haunting imagination.
One question had been lingering in his mind and bothering Jack all day since his encounter with whatever it was that ran over him and knocked him unconscious. Why had the animal only knocked him down and not then stopped and finished the job? Jack was unconscious and totally defenseless. Why was he left alone in the woods just dazed but not seriously hurt? Why was he left alive to now ask these questions?
Jack had to decide whether to continue following the blood trail or to camp for the night. He had both a visceral and foreboding feeling that he was not only tracking the animal, or animals, ahead, but that something or someone was also following him and watching his every move. Being caught out in the dark and alone at night and trapped between what were now at least two monsters was more than Jack could stand. He decided to stop and wait two hours and watch and listen before going any further.
With loaded bow in hand, Jack started to climb a seventy-foot -high Douglas Fir that sat about ten yards off the trail. The tree offered both easy climbing and good cover once Jack was fifteen or twenty feet above the ground. He had not eaten in over twenty-four hours and now that he had stopped, his ravenous hunger started to set in. He had been eating snow all day to maintain hydration, but there was no visible food source that Jack could see in the snow. The only food he had brought with him was in the pack that was knocked from his back when the animal charged. It was nowhere to be found when Jack regained consciousness. The animal must have carried it off as it headed South and back down the trail.
The wind blew through the lowlands as it headed toward the mountains and carried with it Jack’s fear — although he knew he couldn’t turn back. Turning back was now for lesser men, one’s that would then lead lesser lives, separated once again from themselves. Before the two hours had passed, Jack again heard what he was not able to see. At least two large animals passed below him on the trail and not fifty feet from where he sat high in the tree. They were also headed West straight for the mountains that were barely visible in the quarter moon’s light. Jack could tell there were two because he could discern the differences in their breathing. In the deafening silence, their breaths were first high and then muffled then high and then muffled again. They made no other sounds, passed quickly, and were then gone. Jack decided to spend the rest of the night perched and hidden high up in the tree.
Abandoning all attempts at denial, Jack now reasoned that it was possible he had at least three and possibly four of these monsters headed in the direction that he was committed to follow. He wondered again … Had they seen, smelled, heard, or felt him up in the tree as they passed closely and quietly below? Did they know he was there and have no fear of him at all. Had their understanding trumped his in what had just happened? Jack felt a strong Deja-vu overtake the prescience of the moment and a drive stronger than ever from inside him told him that he had to go on. He felt he was being lead but by who and for what purpose he did not know.
Daylight finally broke, and Jack dropped to the ground and headed slowly West following the now wider trail as it climbed higher into the trees. There were now large tracks on top of other large tracks but one thing had not changed. Massive amounts of blood were everywhere and the blood was still wet. It took Jack until late afternoon, with dusk setting in, to climb the now steep trail to the mountain’s base.
Just beyond the tree line and in a secluded depression of the mountain to the northwest, the tracks ended. Hidden in the recess of the mountain’s crease appeared to be the entrance to a large cavern or cave. Jack walked to within a hundred yards of the cave’s entrance, crouched down, and watched for any movement or noise that might be heard. In thirty minutes, no sound or motion came from the entrance. The only thing out of the ordinary at all was the now almost totally red trail — created by the blood leading inside the cave.
Now was the real moment of decision or indecision. Now was the moment that all Jack’s life had been preparing for. Now was the time between myth and reality where the price of the discovery could be the discoverer himself. Now, it was Jack’s moment.
It Was His Time
With one life-affirming step, Jack moved towards the cave realizing that no matter what, he could not turn back. He dropped to one knee as he stepped inside the cave trying again to control his breathing as his heart tried to beat through his chest. With just small rays of moonlight coming over his shoulder from the east to guide him, Jack now crawled into the darkness his bow still in hand. He traveled not more than fifteen feet when he felt a sharp object underneath his right knee. As he looked down and let his eyes slowly adjust to the very dim light, he saw that someone or something had made a circle out of rocks about twenty-four inches in diameter — a cooking circle. He put his hand in the center but the ashes were no longer warm.
With his left knee he stepped on something hard and flat. When he reached down to pick it up he saw it was a club or a crude hammer. It had a rock attached to a shortened tree branch with vines and some mud. It was a rudimentary tool or weapon, and whoever or whatever had made it was not a bear or a wolf or anything Jack had encountered in the wild up until now.
As he continued forward his head bumped into something hard. He reached up into the darkness and realized he could now stand up, and as he did, he felt an enormous stone structure in front of him. As he felt in the dark, he could tell it was a giant boulder blocking his way over six feet wide and at least eight feet tall. Something or someone had dragged, pushed, or pulled the boulder in front of the narrowing passageway blocking further entrance to anyone who might follow. Was this done by those on the other side of this huge rock or by someone or something that was still hiding on this side? Jack pushed and pulled and shoved with all his might, but no matter what angle he chose or how hard he tried, the boulder would not move.
He could sit there and wait, but wait for what? Surely Jack thought: “Those creatures must have another entrance or exit available to them. What if they did the same thing to the cave’s outer opening?” Jack would then be trapped inside a prisoner of no known reality and unable to finish the journey that his life had set him upon. He now questioned what chance he would have had with his one small bow against creatures so endowed. He realized then that he hadn’t questioned before because the question didn’t exist. With just his bow, hunting knife, or only his bare hands, it made no difference. Jack’s spirit was powering this hunt, and in its completion, his soul would hang forever as a trophy he could truly own.
It was at this moment that Jack’s epiphany happened. What chance would he want to have against these creatures? They had outran, outwitted, outmaneuvered, and outthought Jack every step of the way. Why should he think any further pursuit would be different? With a silent prayer he backed away from the boulder with a reverence only known by those no longer in fear of death. As he walked back through the entrance of the cave and into the moonlight he stopped. He removed the arrow from the bowstring, and as he did, he heard a primordial cry calling out from the wilderness. In his thirty-seven years in the back woods he had never heard such a sound before.
And It Was Calling His Name …
Jack had counted coup on his greatest adversary, and his spirit was now free. He realized that he had finally been absorbed into the great mystery. The one that must stay the way it was — the day before — and the day before that. It was a new sense of himself that Jack would carry with him to the grave and beyond. In failing to confront the Hairy Man, Jack found himself while alone inside that dark cave surrounded by his fear and passion for something more. As he headed back down the mountain, he realized for the first time that it was not about what could be killed in the night but about what was promised with the dawn of a new rebirth … Jack never hunted again.
The Wild Man Calls From Deep Inside Where Only The Brave Can Hear
Epilogue:
Is the Wild Man only in the thickets and caves or now accepted inside your heart? What did that boulder really have locked behind it? Who really had the power to make it move? Is it a boulder we put in front of ourselves feigning entry to who we really are? These questions and more puzzled and bothered Jack as he stood alone in the dark.
Who does the Wild Man cry out to and from how far away?
How often have we heard his unanswered screams that we immediately translate into something of our own lesser choosing and something we more than anything want to control. The Wild Man is the connection to our future, present, and past. Laying dormant in our denial, he stalks the hidden trails of our hopes and dreams, leaving blood for us to follow on the one’s that we are most afraid to walk.
Shedding his blood for the misguided, he suffers in our attempt to pretend he isn’t there. The only part of us that was, is, and always will be, is that which he carries inside. He dies because it is something he cannot keep. He lives only by giving us back to ourselves usually at our greatest moments of fear and indecision. He hides away on a dark mountaintop waiting for us to walk the trail of our own darkness, freeing us during our greatest moments of doubt, then allowing us to turn around and walk back into the light.
Who was it really that was being dragged up that mountain bleeding — and dying of unrecognition?
What Jack had always believed in was the source of his fear. Tonight, he was at the crossroads of his destiny and all creation. The choice on this night to not believe would have in its undoing — left nothing of Jack.
Before, in always choosing between what to believe and not who, or who to believe and not what, Jack lived his life in the dichotomy of a false existence. Tonight, that dividing line was erased.
The Wild Man lives inside us all! In exposing the lie that more protection offers us safety, Jack finally found himself. No longer doomed to search endlessly through the deep snow, he was free to marvel in the connection of all that surrounded him.
I wish the same for you!
Recognize and release the Wild Man you hide inside. Refasten the eternal connection between what you fear and who you were meant to be.
Kurt Philip Behm
July 15th, 2010
Poet’s sleep
with their memories
to hate or to love
Voices unanswered
the night’s
turtledove
Darkness remembers
what daylight
forgets
As dreamers
reenter
— what twilight begets
(Dreamsleep: April, 2018)