She could feel his eyes on her. The man
sitting next to Jenny on the bus was staring. She tried to ignore him but despite
herself, glanced over. He peered at her through bloodshot eyes framed by deep
wrinkles, creased more with roughness of a life abused than by the ravages of
age. He smelled.
His voice
was coarse and his words thick. ”Do you like cowboy music?” he asked.
She slumped
down in her seat and pushed her ear buds in to block him out. Jenny had been
reluctant to sit beside him. Totally creeped out, in fact. She could hear her
mother’s voice: “Serves you right! Always
running in late, expecting the whole planet to revolve around you and make room.”
She’d
heard that voice all the way to the bus station.
“You do know it leaves right on time?
They don’t wait you know. Schedules are important to most of the people on the
planet. I don’t appreciate running late like this. You have to allow for traffic,
bad weather. All sorts of things can go
wrong.” Her mother had paused to scowl over at
Jenny for a moment, gripping the steering wheel with her long fingers, her
nails perfectly painted red. Then she had
looked again at the road. “Don’t talk to anyone
on the bus. You have to be careful. Never know what you might get into.”
Jenny had
rolled her eyes and stared out the side window, watching nothing going by.
“I don’t want any police calling on my
front door about you missing or dead. Or have to bail you out of jail or something.”
Rain drops
splattered on the window, dripping slowly down in cold tears. She felt the grey
of it in the depths her soul.
Yes,
she’d left the packing to the last minute. True, she’d had to run to the bus
before the driver closed the doors, dragging her bag up the steps. She wasn’t
sure why she always cut things so close. She didn’t really do it on purpose,
but she didn’t like to be too early. It was always so awkward waiting in
places, not knowing what to say, what to do, especially where you kind of knew
people, like class, or dance school.
Sometimes it didn’t matter if you were
late, but this was a bus with a schedule. Standing there at the front, she had scanned
the crowded bus and found only one seat, and sitting in the seat right next to
it was a man who was completely and totally revolting. He looked awful. Now she wished she had
waited two hours for the next departure. As she turned and looked helplessly towards
the bus driver, his eyes caught hers briefly in the rear view mirror. He already
preoccupied with backing out of the terminal, or he would have seen the
repulsion on her face. Clearly aware of her movements, though, he called out,
“Please take your seat.” She was trapped.
She
searched again for another seat, and instead found the eyes of passengers
briefly settling on her and then quickly looking away.
Please
take your seat, she thought. Right, there’s only one seat on this friggin’ bus.
Thanks a lot. That guy is weird, disgusting, creepy. But, given no choice, she
sat down, first loading her bag into the overhead, then edging her small body
as far away from him as she could manage. The stench of stale cigarette smoke
hung about him in an invisible cloud. She
composed herself for a few minutes, straightening out her sweater, putting her wrinkled
ticket away, looking around at other passengers, fiddling with her purse. Then
to make it all worse, he had spoken to her. Ignoring him hadn’t worked. She
heard his loud raspy voice again.
”Do you like cowboy music?”
She
looked at him blankly, yanked out one ear bud and said, “Excuse me?”
This time
he leaned in towards her, and just like a well meaning teacher might to a hearing
impaired student, he said much louder and more slowly, “Do you like cowboy
music?”
Dribble escaped the corner of his mouth, catching on the greying
stubble at the edge of his lip. A waft of stale coffee and old booze came with
the words. Recoiling from the odour, she held her breath, trying not to inhale
while her mother’s words whirled around in her head:
“You’re not so special young
lady.” “If your father ever knew . . .
but he doesn’t see you every day does he?” “See what you get yourself into?”
“Cowboy
music?” This was too weird. She didn’t
want to talk to him. She really didn’t. Tattoos slithered out of the tatty collar
of his shirt, crawling up his neck to his ears. Nothing about them suggested
cowboys. They seemed to be the ends of snakes and dark blue creeping things.
She didn’t want to talk to him but got caught up in her natural tendency to
answer her elders, not to be rude.
Underneath
it all was her urge to be daring, to somehow defy her mother. “Why are your pants all ripped up in the
rear? You look like a tramp!”
She
searched for connections to what he might mean.
She asked, “You mean like those Beverly
Hillbillies? I think my great grandpa watches that.”
It was
his turn to look disgusted, “No, that’s hillbilly, blue grass, twangin’
’banjos. Why can nobody ever tune those damn things? Jeez.”
“Well, what about Rascal Flatts? They’re
country, right?”
“Who?” he
said.
“Rascal
Flatts,” she said more loudly and more slowly, just as he had, “It’s a group.“
“Never heard of ‘em.”
She was
keeping an eye on the Styrofoam cup he held precariously in his shaking hand.
Coffee vibrated dangerously close to her new tights. “And don’t come back with everything all dirty again. It’s about time
you started looking after your belongings.”
He saw
her eyeing the cup, “Don’t worry, it’s just coffee,” he gestured with it,
making little waves in the cup. “I got it at a meeting.”
She
raised an eyebrow in question. “A meeting?”
“A.A. They feel better if they give you
coffee. It’s not good, but it was hot once, a while ago. Tastes chemical sort
of, like those big urns they use. I filled up for the trip. Free hard cookies
too.” He leaned over to pull a couple of round beige cookies out of his pants
pocket and offered her one. They were edged with lint.
“Um, no,” she said. “No, thanks.”
He hummed
a little and slurped on the coffee, apparently oblivious to the noise. “Don’t
worry. I’ll try not to spill it on ya.”
“So,
what’s cowboy music then? You mean Dolly Parton? Or that other blonde one,
young, with the wavy hair. She sang “Mean. Why You Gotta Be So Mean?”
“Who?”
Jenny sighed loudly and turned away, catching
the eyes of other passengers. They were grinning in smug amusement. Look at
them, she thought. Every one of them glad it wasn’t them stuck in her place. People
suck. They felt so superior. They thought he was a creep, they thought she was
an idiot, a loser. You can’t go out
looking like that. Cover up your
front, you’re hanging out all over.
Maybe her
mother was right.
“Real
cowboy music, Roy Rogers, Gene Autry.” He paused to burp. “Scuse me.”
She held
her hand up over her face against his breath, at the last moment pretending to
scratch her nose. “Who?” she asked. There
was a pause while she searched the recesses of her memories. “Wait – Gene
Autry. I think I heard my great grandpa talking about him once at Christmas. He
wrote Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer.”
“No
kidding?” he said.
“But Rudolph
isn’t cowboy music, even though a cowboy guy sang it. Hey wait, unless it’s
Rudolph the Red Nosed Cow or something.”
She smiled, cheered by her idea. And the tune to the song started
playing in her head.
“Steer,
they’d call them steers.”
“Steer is
a male cow or something? Well, steer doesn’t rhyme either, does it? Rudolph the
Red Nosed Steer. But those guys, Roy, Gene was it? They’re old. I think they’re
dead.” She crinkled her nose as if dead was forever ago, too old to have any
meaning at all.
“Dead?” His eyebrows rose and he shook his
head in sad surprise. “That’s a shame. A damn shame.” His hand shook more
wildly, slopping coffee on his already stained pants. She pulled her thin legs
back even further.
“You’re
shaking,” she said.
“Yep.”
“Put your cup back in the holder.”
He
complied wordlessly.
"You
need a drink?”
“Hell,
ya.” There was long silence as he turned to stare out the window.
The day
was still grey but it wasn’t raining so much. The bus seemed a warm cocoon moving
down a long clear tunnel protected from the coolness outside. She remembered a
story about her grandpa giving Uncle Ronnie a stiff whiskey after a wild night
out, Uncle Ronnie felt so sick. What was weird was that Grandpa Fred didn’t
drink ever, or so they said. She’d heard that they were strict Baptists, though
she really didn’t know what that meant. She knew they didn’t dance even. She
tried to picture those old people out at a club dancing, strobe lights and all.
That was kind of amusing.
One of
the stories was that her great aunts would fight over the radio on Sundays
because one of them wanted to listen to the funny Jack Benny show, whatever
that was, and the other one insisted that the radio wasn’t allowed on Sundays. The
strict one, Gertie was it? She would stomp over and switch it off, frowning at
everyone. Who decides what good and what’s bad? She didn’t remember the radio
being mentioned in the Bible. Maybe there was Commandment 11: Thou shalt not listen to ye olde radio on
the holey daye. Specially not funney stuffe. As if.
Anyway, she hadn’t read
much of the Bible. But it sure was weird about grandpa having alcohol hidden in
his desk. People were full of surprises. You sure can’t tell by how people
look, she thought. And you sure can’t tell much by what they say.
Take her
mom. All the neighbours thought she was so wonderful, so nice. Dressed
perfectly, had a good job, did all the bake sale things. And everyone thought how
lucky she was to have that nice new husband after her first one left. How lucky
they both were. Mrs. Meyer next door had actually said that to Jenny one day.
“Oh, yea, really lucky,” she had replied. If Mrs. Meyer noticed a sarcastic
tone, she hadn’t said anything.
Beside
her, he was still staring out the window, as if concentrating; he was gripping his
knees. After a while Jenny said, “I heard that if you’re, um, used to drinking
and go without it for a while you shake. Wonder why.”
He turned
back to her, “Don’ know. Just shake that’s all.” He released his knees and looked
down at his trembling hands. “How come you know about the shakes?”
“Don’
know that either. Just do.” She had seen that same tremor in her mother’s hands
but she wasn’t going to get into it with him. It used to be just some weekends, but it was almost
every morning now. Jenny pretended not to see.
He smiled
slightly and said, “Guess there’s lots of things we don’ know.”
She took
a breath, “So, cowboy music. Name some songs.”
“Jeez, I
don’t know, there’s lots of em – “Bury Me
Not on the Lone Prairie, Cattle Call, I Ride an Old Paint.””
“Don’t know them,” she said. “How can you ride
a paint?”
He looked
at her indulgently, “It’s a horse. Painted.” And he started to sing, quietly at
first. His rich voice wove through the stillness of the bus:
I
ride an old paint, I lead an old dan,
I’m
goin’ to Montana to throw the hoolihan...
He sang
with a confidence that suggested he’d had some other life, somewhere long ago,
and though his voice was rough, he hit every note dead on pitch. He skewed the
words with a western twang, with no twinge of embarrassment. This man could sing.
“Wow,”
she said, at the end of a verse. “That’s cool! What’s a dan?”
“Horse,
prob’ly.”
“What’s a
hoolihan?”
“Hell, I
don’t know. Rope maybe.” He looked at her. ”Jeez, I bet you don’t know what all
those songs you listen to mean. Can’t even tell the words of half of ‘em. You
still like ‘em don’t cha?”
She
considered this and he started another song:
The wolves have left the country and
the long-horns are no more
And all the game worth shootin' at is gone
And it's time for me to foller, 'cause I'm only in the way
And I've got to be a-movin' -- movin' on.
And all the game worth shootin' at is gone
And it's time for me to foller, 'cause I'm only in the way
And I've got to be a-movin' -- movin' on.
He
stopped and seemed to be thinking for a moment, “Travellin’ and movin’ song –
just like us. Not settled.”
“I don’t
know that song,” she said. Not settled. Man was he right about that.
“Lots’a
people know that one, maybe you don’t know it because of the way I sang it.”
“No, you
sing just fine.” She could have said more. Like how his song seemed to come
from his toes right up through his heart, like it was so mournful and sad that
she felt like crying with the loneliness of it.
“How
about this one,” he asked.
This time tomorrow,
Reckon where I’ll be
Down in some lonesome valley
Hanging from a white oak tree.
“That one
sounds like I’ve heard it. Maybe my Grampa played it.”
“OK, let’s
cut the Grampa stuff. I may look that old and that wrinkled. I’m not really. Am
that wrinkled though.” He scrunched his face up into a mass of creases. She smiled
at that. “That song, that’s Tom Dooley. Killed somebody, got hung. Simple.”
“The
songs, they sound sad, all death and stuff.”
“Well, we are all gonna die,” he said, with optimistic
resignation.
“Yea, but they are all doom and gloom, whether
we’re gonna die or not.”
“Yeah well, maybe they are kinda down, but the
songs are all honest. Livin’ and dyin’, lovin’, cheatin’, breakin’ hearts, and
oh yeah drinkin’. Happy isn’t interesting.” He paused. “Suffering. Now that’s
interesting.” He jabbed his knee for emphasis.
“Man, am
I interesting,” she said.
He smiled
a rueful half smile. “I mean, there’s a few happy songs, but not so many. People
like the sad ones better. Gotta be right up front and honest and show the pain.”
Now I can tap a whiskey barrel
With nothing but a stick,
He tapped
a rhythm on his knee as he sang:
No one can detect me
I've got it down so slick.
He rustled
in his seat and looked over the seat to the rear of the bus. “ ‘Scuse me, need
to go to the back. Too much coffee.”
As he
stood, an image flashed in her mind of his filthy pants edging past her, his
rear crushing against her, the sour smell of unwashed body. Her stomach heaved.
Grabbing her things against her chest, she crawled out of her seat to let him
pass. He shuffled into the aisle and then stumbled towards the back, thrown off
balance by the movements of the bus.
Standing in
the aisle, she watched as he lurched along, observing the recoil of the others
as he passed by, fighting her own repulsion. As she sat back down, she closed
her eyes against her memories. There was a bed, a heavy hand clamped hard over
her mouth, the gagging smell of alcohol and cheap after shave, the roughness of
a scratchy face, the pain of fingers groping in her, the greater pain that
followed. The shame that followed, and that stayed with her. She stared out the
window seeing only greyness speeding by.
In a few
minutes she could hear him returning from the back of the bus, and she stood up
to let him in with her eyes closed tightly, trying to think of anything nice; sandy
beaches, her teddy bear. He sat for a
few minutes, humming, then turned to smile at her and started talking again.
“Nobody likes them, ya know.”
“What?”
“Love
songs. Too sappy.”
And then: “You must have lots of boyfriends.
They must be beatin’ down your door.”
Her throat constricted. She’d heard this line
before. She figured it had nothing to do with her because she knew she wasn’t
pretty but it still repulsed her. Creepy men said that kind of thing. It
usually was preceded by “A pretty girl like you.” It really meant, “I want to screw
you.” Or whatever creeps like that thought. Creepy, but still, she couldn’t
help but feel some pleasure in it. At least somebody liked her.
And then she caught herself. Eeuwghh, she thought, and tried to stop the dark
images. Sharp fingers of scrawny skeletons clawed at her. Her stomach turned. She
looked at him as her heart thumped, and she said with some hardness in her
voice, “Yea, right. Beating down my door.”
“Girl
like you can have anyone she wants. Choose careful, now. ”
“Like me?”
Her felt her voice rise, indignant. “You don’t know me. Don’t even know my
name.”
“Don’t
need to know your name. Look at you – young, pretty, travellin’ somewhere,
nervous about it, but glad to be leaving whatever it is yer leaving.”
She
raised an eyebrow, but still she was unsettled. “I’m not nervous.”
“Yeah, right.
Here you are lookin’ all around, fidgeting, lookin’ at me like I’m weird.”
“I didn’t,” she protested.
He
snorted. ”Did so. All prim there, afraid to say boo.”
“Was not.”
“But jeez you gotta be more careful, don’t
ever sit next to 'a-holes' like me! Never know what’ll happen.” He hiccupped. “‘Scuse
me.”
Never
know what’ll happen, she echoed in her head.
Jenny, the school counsellor called – it
was about your grades, something about you failing classes. Failing? Do I have
to call your father about this? Now you buckle down. I won’t have this. You are
an A scholar. I won’t accept anything less.
“Sitting
beside you? Didn’t have much choice, did I?”
He grinned
and snorted a little. “Guess not. You shoulda seen your face!” And then he
started laughing, and fell into another deep coughing fit. “Oh, God, don’t make
me laugh.” He wiped tears from his eyes. “It was like you stepped in dog shit
and the smell had just made it up to yer nose.”
She
wondered whether to tell him he really did smell a bit like dog dirt and
decided not to.
“You
okay, then? I’ll try not to be so funny,” she said.
“Anyway, we
were talking about love songs. So, ya know what love is?”
She
paused, and thought about it, searching her life for what might help her answer
and, finding nothing, said quietly, “No. No, I don’t actually.”
He raised
his chin and said with authority, “Knowing how you take your coffee.”
“Oh
jeez!” She rolled her eyes and turned
away.
“It’s the
little things.”He poked her shoulder for attention and she looked back at him,
frowning. “I mean what dick doesn’t keep track of what you take in yer coffee, Jesus.
Pardon me, ‘scuse my language.” As he went on, he held up his hand and numbered
off on his yellowed fingers, “Is it cream, sugar, or the white powder crap, or
none of the above?”
“If it’s
so important why not make it part of the wedding vows?” she said.
He gave her a mocking frowny look and went on,
“Yeah, and those things you use for banks accounts and computers and stuff.”
“Passwords?”
she asked.
“Yea, that’s it, passwords.”
“Oh boy,”
she muttered and looked down to count the eyelets on her shoes.
“Gotta
share ‘em. Shows you trust the other person.”
“Well,
I’m not sharing my passwords with anyone.” She felt panic at the thought, “It’s
the only thing I have.” She thought about her life. I have to live where I
don’t want, do things I don’t want to do.
“Yea
well, I’ve seen people split up over little things, holding doors open, knowing
what food you like, mustard on yer hot dog, whatever the hell. It all makes a
difference.”
“I’m not
even thinking about getting hooked up, and you have me splitting up over little
things like how he – or she – takes his coffee.”
“She?” He
eyed her. “I kinda doubt it.”
“Ya never
know. Maybe it would be easier.”
He went
on, “Yeah I know it’s just little things but they mean big things. But here’s a
big thing, fer example. I heard a story about this African king of Bamboo
something. His wife wanted to see hippos from her window. Story goes, he had
the tribe dig a canal from the river. Just so she could see the hippos.” He
paused and smiled widely. “She must a’ been something! Woohoo, swaying around
in one of those sarong things. A canal all the way to the bloody Niger! See, I
don’t know her name either, doesn’t mean I don’t know a lot about her.”
“Jeez, You ever think of making sense?” she
said. “First, I don’t like hippos much, big black pigs, snorting around in mud with
those huge disgusting nostrils, and not everybody has a spare tribe hanging
about waiting to dig canals. Besides, it’s bad for the environment. Did he ever
think of that?”
He
snorted, “Don’t think that was a hot topic in those days, even though it was
Africa. Hot – get it?
She
rolled her eyes.
“But I
bet he knew what she took in her guava juice or whatever it was. Probably sang her
some of those African love songs.”
“Oh yea,
those hundreds of famous African love songs,” she said. “Don’t know which one
to sing next, do ya?”
He smiled,
“Oh yeah? Here’s African Hatty for ya.” And he leaned back against the headrest
and sang:
Ah, well I mind the fatal day
When Hatty stole my heart away;
'Twas love for her controlled my will
And did cause me my wife to kill.
When Hatty stole my heart away;
'Twas love for her controlled my will
And did cause me my wife to kill.
“African
Hatty?” She shook her head. “Right.” And she was quiet for a while.
She
thought about love. There was her mother, who sometimes said she loved her, but
didn’t act like it. There was skinny Jimmy, who showed up at her locker every
day with his shy smile, innocent eyes and too many pimples. Nice enough. But
what if he knew about her, what she went through so many nights? He’d be
hanging around unnoticed at somebody else’s locker pretty quick, all wide eyed
at the terror of her.
She’d given up on her ridiculous dream of finding her one
true love like Belle did in Beauty and the Beast, except if she did find her
true love, she’d love him even if he stayed a beast, maybe especially if he
stayed a beast. You can’t tell by how someone looks. And then there was her
dream of being Cinderella, or Snow White. Perfect and pure maidens. All finding
their perfect prince. But none of those tales were her story, were they? They
just had to sleep for a long time or clean floors. That was easy.
“It’s a
bitch ain’t it?”
“Yep,”
she said.
They sat
quietly for a few moments and then he sang:
Among
the dead and wounded
Her
own true love she did find.
Sing
I am left alone,
Sing
I am left alone.
“So, why do you like country music so much?”
she asked.
“I don’t
know, it was something I could do once. Because it’s kinda like me. Lost,
finished, sad, lonely.”
She
frowned.
“Oh don’t
worry, I’m not feeling sorry for myself. That’s just the way it is. You get
used to it.” He bit on his ragged nail and then spit some out. “Besides, I was
just trying to find something to talk about to ya. You looked kinda scared.”
“Okay, maybe
I was scared. Scared of you, doofuss.”
“Me?” He
roared with a loud laughter that turned into long hacking deep coughs that
seemed to wrench his lungs. As the fit eased, he bent forward as if to spit. She
grabbed some tissues from her purse and thrust them at him. He hacked up into
them something she guessed was thick and greenish.
“Euwww,
that’s disgusting,” she said.
“See, you
should be scared of me. I’m an idiot.” He shook his head and stared grimly at
the floor.
“I bet
you weren’t always.”
“Yeah, you’re
right. I wasn’t always.” He looked up and gave her a rueful half smile. “Used
to have a life, used to have a wife – could write a song about it, couldn’t I?”
“Is it too late? I
mean once you become um - like you are,” she paused as he looked at her
sharply, “can you become an un-idiot?”
“Un-idiot? That’s a good one. Well, they say once you become
a pickle, you can’t ever be a cucumber again. I’ve probably damaged enough
brain cells to put me in line for a transplant. Bet I’m on the waiting list.”
Just like I’m damaged, she thought. But he can change and be
better. It’s much easier for him. And my mom. All they have to do is not drink.
“Why not just stop? Stop for good. People do. Maybe you
can’t be a cucumber or some other vegetable again, but so what? Be something
else. Be better.”
He glanced at her and then stared at his boots for a
while. “Yea, why not just stop? It’s not
that easy, ya know. I know too many people who can’t and . . . well, who aren’t here any more. So for
me, it’s either stop or . . .”
“Or what? Not be here any more?” Her eyes were wide. “You
wouldn’t.” She put her hand up over her mouth.
“People do. Lots of ‘em. But, anyway that’s part of what
this ride is about. Some call it a geographical cure, as if changing where you
are changes the problem. I know that don’t work but I have some good people
waiting for me. Guess we’ll be there soon.”
The bus was navigating city streets again.
“I’m really gonna try this time. But, sometimes I don’t know
why. I mean, why would the world want me in it anyway? What use is an idiot
like me?”
“But you can sing.”
“Lotsa people sing.”
“Not like you. You sing like your heart is
. . . ,“ she paused and struggled for words, “When you sing you make my heart
feel what your heart feels. “
“Jeez, my heart? I
hope not, honey. My heart is so sore.“ He paused. “But what about you?”
“Well, whatever’s eatin at you, is it gonna be better where
yer goin’?”
She looked at him, seeing
past his grizzled face, his greyish yellowy skin, and into his brown inquiring
eyes. “Ya I guess. I hope so, but it’s
only for a little while, just a break, kind of.”
“Well,
you gotta keep yer chin up.” He reached over and almost touched her. She didn’t
draw back, even though dirt rimmed his fingernails, even though he smelled, and
looked the way he looked. “One of these days it’ll be okay.”
She
stayed there, just within his reach, looking into his kind eyes.
“With us,
with us in A.A.,” he said, “It’s okay to ask for help. Maybe you can do that somewhere
too. You know, wherever they can help.”
She shook
her head, not knowing what to say.
“Whatever it is, I bet there’s someone who can
help. I’m getting’ off soon, but I’d like to know fer sure yer gonna be okay.”
“I’d like
to know that too,” she said with a small twist of her mouth.
He began
another song:
While I was in the sober it struck me
As plain as you can see
I'm doomed, I'm ruined forever
Throughout eternity
As plain as you can see
I'm doomed, I'm ruined forever
Throughout eternity
But now I'm upon my scaffold
My time's not very long
You may forget the singer,
My time's not very long
You may forget the singer,
But don’t forget the song.
“Think I will forget the song,” she said. “Kinda
doom and gloom again. But I won’t forget you.”
“Well, if
you ever want to find me, you know where to look.”
“I do?”
“Oh
sure,” he said. “Any meeting in these parts. I’ll be there.”
“But how
does it work, but who would I ask for?”
“You’ll
figure it out, but it’s Dan,” he said, “Dan the Man,” with quiet confidence, as
if things would really be okay this time. “If you just ask for some guy with
tattoos that won’t go too well. Just about everybody has tattoos. And they’d be
glad to show ya every one of ‘em, so like I said, be careful.”
The bus
drew in to stop and a few of the passengers rustled about retrieving cases and
belongings. He was slow, and the last to get moving. She stood in the aisle to
let him out.
“Take
care, young lady.” He smiled at her.
She
reached out and tweaked the sleeve of his jacket. “You too.”
When he
stepped off the bus she watched him pause to pull a cigarette pack out of his
shirt and cup his trembling hands to light up a smoke before greeting a couple
of waiting men with a handshake. He turned back toward her, waved and gave her
a thumbs up, though she knew he could see only the reflecting darkness of the glass.
She placed her hand on the coolness of the window in a quiet farewell.
Sheila
Eastman is a musician
living in Mississauga. She plays and teaches piano and five-string banjo (eee
haw) and performs in local concert bands in the percussion section hitting
things. Her writing reflects detailed observations of human behavior and her
bizarre sense of humour.
Sheila developed “Do You Like Cowboy Music” in Brian Henry's Intensive class. The story placed third in the Alice Munro Short
Story Contest. (More about the contest here.)
Sheila is also a past winner in the Mississauga Library Writing Contest, poetry
division. Publications include obscure articles on medieval music, a
monograph on a Canadian composer, articles on wildflowers, and a review of Great
Village by Mary Rose Donnelly, which you can read here.
See Brian Henry's
schedule here, including writing workshops and creative writing courses in
Kingston, Peterborough, Toronto, Mississauga, Brampton, Georgetown, Milton,
Oakville, Burlington, St. Catharines, Hamilton, Dundas, Kitchener, Guelph,
London, Woodstock, Orangeville, Newmarket, Barrie, Gravenhurst, Sudbury,
Muskoka, Peel, Halton, the GTA, Ontario and beyond.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.