A dim chandelier awakens me as I gently slip out from under
my slumber. I see my son walk with the effort of infancy towards me,
broadly smiled.
My wife speaks to me in dreamy tones; behind her a gradual
burst of first light grants her angelic. And silkin curtains breeze about
voluminous.
Nightmares of past loss and losing dissolve in the dawn as my
daughter covers my face with satin sheets, her laughter soothes me,
my ache.
I rush out open window as bird—quick lunging sweeps of
my wings to a good height. The skies swirl and churn slow, ominous,
with dark purple and gray clouds. The sun breaks through landing bold
to my chest as I perceive Newport with dove nested towers of prince and
princess. Newport rising from deep sleep serene, yet dying, crumbling
in its majesty…………..
Author unknown
That summer haunts me still, to this day. It was not
that long ago yet it feels like a whole different time entirely.
My friends and I talk about it occasionally but we seem to
lack a depth of understanding which is a little tough for us
to admit.
Some of what happened I just heard about but I have
known these people all my life, the ones it happened to and
the ones who told me. A lot of it I saw first hand. But the
ones who told me, well, this isn’t something they would lie
about.
Sometimes I forget all about it. But then I will hear a
wind chime, a simple wind chime brings it all in on me again.
A sunset will do it too but a particular sort I cannot put my
finger on. A writer friend of mine wanted to hear my
thoughts about what happened as he was considering
a novel about that summer in Newport. His exact words
were “I think the world would get a kick out of what
happened.”
He even asked me how he should write it, a style. I
wondered why on earth he would ask me that. He even
asked me how I think it should be framed. I almost got
mad at him. What do I know? But then I thought, I may
never have an opportunity like this again. So I gave it some
thought while he made coffee. When he came back in I had a
nasty little smirk for him. I told him “Do you think you could
write it as though you were looking through a kaleidoscope?
And maybe like a fairy tale, a kind of macabre one?” Because
that is the way it comes to me. Because like I said it haunts
me—to this day. He gave me a pained grin and said he’d try.
Karen Vambert
Office Manager
Union Bank
Sixth floor
PROLOGUE
Two weeks ago three young men from the state of Ohio rumbled into town, the town of Newport. They arrived in a white and grey primered 1965 Pontiac G.T.O. Just about every summer they get in enough trouble to necessitate a vacation. Unfortunately they got themselves into a lot more trouble on their cross country trip and they plan on hiding in Newport for a while. That is not a good plan.
Local police took immediate notice. The driver slid low in the seat, only his greasy long brown hair, sunglasses and conquering grin are visible. Another can barely be made out in the back seat playing the drums in the air as the music blares ‘Whaoo black Betty…ram..a..lam!….Whaoo black Betty..ram..a..lam!’ The other next to the driver sits up fairly straight with his right arm resting on the window ledge. An unfinished tattoo sculpts up his muscular arm. Wicked ensnared little creatures and a busty naked girl evolve into a skull on the meaty cap of his shoulder which transforms into an abstract series of thorny vines that envelop his neck. His expression is numb and resentful. His demeanor unapologetic. His knuckles are scared and thick as they tap on the door frame to the music.
The car is dirty but dent less and very powerful. There are two bumper stickers at the rear. One is very old, faded and says 'Disco sucks.' The other was applied last summer and says with empathy 'Support your local police.'
________________
Two of the three young men left the bar earlier with the girls they met. An hour or so later the third young man by the name of Jim made his way back to the bungalow alone but decided to stop off at a market open all night. There wasn't anything he really needed just a faint impulse to look around. He grabbed some bread, ham, mustard and one plastic knife. He unraveled his crinkled bills and laid them on the counter. He sat down on the curb outside the store by himself and made a couple of sandwiches, the serenity that has crept up on him while being in Newport was with him once again. A drowsy saltin mist carries overhead leisurely moving eastward.
Jim stood up with little effort for his body was light and easy. He began
to slowly make his way back home enjoying the gentle sparkle of the evening. Jim barely lifted his feet as he shuffled past ten feet or so of tall rose plants. There were five or six different colors and of course Jim was familiar with only about two of them. He stopped, made a quick glance around to spot if anyone may be watching, stuck his nose deep within the middle of a peach colored rose and breathed in robustly. His reaction was near that of inhaling a drug. The effect raced through his mortal body as his senses respond riotous. Jim had rarely felt better, as alive, as he did that very moment. He took another deep breath as deep as the first and the sensation intensified. As he walked on the feeling stayed with him, his senses now heightened some as though someone reached into his soul with a feather and lifted him up a notch from apathy to an honest possibility of sweet sensation by example.
Instead of making the usual left turn Jim made a right towards the beach. The telephone line above crackled and ran just like back home but the whole of him stayed in the moment. He arrived at the boardwalk as the moist saltan air wrapped itself around him. Jim stopped.
“If I take my boots off and walk to the oceans edge I may never go home." Jim thought wistfully to himself. He stepped off the concrete and sank in the sand and struggled to move through it, he laughed quietly to himself. He listened to and felt the ‘kursh kursh’ sound of the sand under his boots. Attention that he had attached way too far inward was brought out suddenly to the enthralling coastal environment. It seemed as though there was simply more of him available and present. There is an occasional sharp chill in the air and even that is welcome.
Pier lights dotted out into the immense ambient abyss and the whispered roar of waves crashing in slow voluptuous intervals assault him gently. The air in its saltin sweetness and the pungent odor of seaweed scattered on the beach blend in rapturous entanglement with wood burning in the fireplaces from the homes butted up to the sand. He spots a seagull perched on top of a lifeguard stand. The white bird with black tipped wings paying no attention to Jim as he appears transfixed on the up coming swells. "Hey there Mr. seagull, no date tonight?" The bird does not flinch or look down. "Wha cha lookin at buddy?" The young man squints out to the oceans churning and rumbling. "Well—see ya later, hope she shows up."
*This is about half of the prologue*


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