Showing posts with label John Duffy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Duffy. Show all posts

Thursday, May 6, 2021

River of Life - A Short Story by John Duffy - Debut Publication. May 6, 2021


  Wide Ranging Q and A Session With John Duffy

John Duffy writes short fiction and poetry as a hobby. He studied at NUI Galway in Ireland where he completed his degree and MA. He has contributed to Abandoned Darlings, an anthology of fiction and poetry, The Georgia Straight and also to The Reading Life.

An electrician by trade, John lives in Vancouver, Canada. - author supplied data 


The first time I read a story by John Duffy it was during my read through of Abandoned Darlings, a collection of writings by the 2011 and 2012 MA in Creative Writing classes at the National University of Ireland at Galway. His story was about a very dangerous bus trip through the Andes in Bolivia.  These words sum up how I felt about Duffy's really well done story, "Death Road".


You might have seen a National Geographic Channel program about the terribly dangerous road through the Andes in Bolivia that the narrator in this story crosses in a bus ride sure to scare anyone out of their wits who is not from there.   The first person speaker in this story is an Irishman out for an adventure in the wilds of South America and he happens to hook up with a beautiful and delightful sounding "French girl of Lebanese extraction".   Some cynics say the reason the English conquered India was because they could do things and have adventures there that they could never do at home.   I think that is part of the deeper theme of this very interesting marvelously cinematic story.    


Since then I have had the  honor  of  publishing three of his original short stories as well as a wide ranging Q and A session I recommend to all interested in short stories or Irish culture to read the Q and A session, from there you can link to his stories.


Today I am very pleased and honoured that John Duffy has entrusted me to share another of his stories on The Reading Life, “River of Life”. ( John Duffy is the exclusive owner of this story. As protected by international copyright law, this story cannot be republished in any format without his permission.)


I hope to follow his work for many years 






River of life


By John Duffy


At the Chaltalan hotel the space was clean and white and the bedroom smelled like varnished walnut and cherry blossom flowers. It took a moment to recall the location and remember where I’d even come from. Deep sleep ensued throughout the night after several days travel on old busses along treacherous roads through the mountains. I went for a walk around the hotel and it was quiet enough at this place. Morning light streamed in from the bay windows lighting the tiled hallway and pictures inside the hand- made frames.

I wondered if I was the only person staying here. The receptionist lady showed me a living space where there was bread, cheese and fruit on a table. Beside the sink stood jars of tea and coffee.

‘The tour guide will be here at 11.’

‘Thank you.’

After checking in, the evening before, I put my name down for a boat tour of the Lacuma River.

Beep, Beep.

A mini-bus showed up outside with a few people in the back. The driver walked around front and introduced himself as Alejandro.

‘Let’s do this man.’

Such blind optimism for the unknown. I took a small back-pack with some clothes and a few possessions I had packed earlier and jumped in the back with the others. Alex said he was from Manchester and claimed to be a Man city fan, a true blue.



Stella and Beatrice were sisters from Holland and we spoke about Rotterdam, a city I was familiar with as I had lived there some years earlier.

‘Did you own a bicycle when you lived in Holland?’

‘Yes.’

We chatted about our travels thus far and what we expected from this journey down the Lacuma River.

After a while it was easier not to speak as we were thrown around the bus as it hit bumps and pot holes. There was a steel pole overhead so I held on to it. We went along out of town and soon we were on this dusty, dirt track and soon afterwards we were surrounded by vegetation and jungle growth of the interior. On the road again for sure.

After an hour or so we arrived at a boat launch dock by the river and climbed out of the vehicle. There were a few buildings there and some people working on boats and nets which were tied up by the river bank.

There are times, at outdoor lavatory facilities I use a foot to lower the toilet seat and that’s what happened here, except this time the seat slipped off my shoe and landed with a clatter on the toilet. There was an immediate buzzing sound overhead and I was set upon by a swarm of black wasps. There must have been a nest of them in the rafters. They flew down and attacked, dropping their payload of stingers into head and scalp primarily and when I attempted to swat them away, took more stings to the hands and arms. A vicious horror show for sure and such a searing panic I felt. The pain was sharp and spreading fast, head throbbing like never before. I ran outside and fell to my knees beside a muddy puddle of water and threw some of its contents over my head.

Mother of God.



There was a woman selling drinks and snacks at a stall nearby and I walked over to her in a daze. I don’t think I’ve ever been more attracted to Cola in my life. I bought three cans from her and slugged one of them back. I warned her of the hazard in the outhouse in my best broken Spanish.


Down at the river bank the people were loading bags onto the boat, a long wooden canoe-like vessel with an outboard engine at the back. I let Alejandro know what happened and he seemed indifferent about the incident. Shrugged his shoulders.

‘I don’t know if I should go on this trip. How long will the pain last?’ ‘Seven, eight hours,’ he replied.

I thought about it for a minute.

‘OK. I’ll go.’

We set off down river. Alejandro had another mate Ernesto to help him and once we were on our way, while his co-worker steered the boat by the engine handle at the back, Alejandro sat on the side of the vessel and picked through my hair and plucked some of the stingers out. A sound fellow he was.


It was amazing to be out and about on the meandering river, to hear the Toucan birds call and to see the macaw fly between the trees and see the water flow away from the boat in ripples, fresh water and thick vegetation along the banks of the river, deep green, and there were all these flowers wearing colours I’d never seen before.

After a while we pulled into the river bank alongside some tall trees. Alejandro stood up in the boat and made some whistling sounds. A squirrel monkey showed up at the end of a branch and then another monkey joined him. They had cute, round heads with yellow and black fur. They used their tails to swing among the branches. Slick, nimble movements. He peeled a banana and held the fruit out to the animal who promptly jumped on to the boat for a bite. Unreal. Soon there were more monkeys climbing in the

tree and before long there must have been six or seven of them jumping around inside the boat. We had a good laugh with them. Alejandro held the fruit over Beatrice and there were monkeys jumping all over her. Then he gave us some fruit to feed them.


We continued for another hour or so travelling down river. Then we came to a place where the river split in two and the anchor was dropped around this junction. Alejandro put some fishing gear together. The rig was a small block of wood with some gut wrapped around it. Towards the end of the line there were beads of shot and a piece of meat on a hook. He set up a few of these rigs and handed them around to us. I unwound the line and threw the bait into a pool by the trees. Beatrice and Alex were into some fish already and they brought them on to the boat, flapping about.

‘What are these?’ she asked.

‘Piranha,’ said Ernesto.

‘Are there any other type of fish here?’ ‘No. Just Piranha.’

I felt a bite and wrapped the line around the piece of wood and brought a fat piranha onto the boat. It had a flash of red about the gills. I took the hook out of its mouth. Alejandro had a hunter’s knife and he put the blade through the head of the fish. You could see its teeth.

‘Are we going to keep these?’ Alex asked.

‘This is supper,’ he replied.

‘Fair enough mate.’

After another hour or so moving down river we came to an area where the river was wider, the water was darker and moving more slowly. Alejandro dropped the anchor and spoke to the group,



‘Now we have come to my favourite part of the river. Here you might see some pink river dolphins. And, believe it or not, this part of the river is actually safe to swim in.’


When he said this I stripped to shorts and got ready for a dip. But I had to check with him once more before I jumped in. I had built up a certain trust in our captain at this stage of our journey so when he gave the nod I was gone front crawl up the centre of the river. While swimming I noticed a creature protrude from the water blowing air near the bank, then another further up river. Swimming with pink river dolphins. I could hardly believe it. All of my dreams of adventure were realized in a moment.

I could hear the girls calling from the boat.

‘What’s it like?’

‘It’s like this and that and ah. Jump in and find out.’

I turned over on my back to float. There were a few billowy clouds over head. Then Stella was in swimming and Alex as well, swimming around with the dolphins.

A few minutes later I felt something nibble at my leg, not a bite so much as a nibble but it was enough for me to keep swimming and make for the boat. What a lovely dip in the fresh water after all the stings and headaches. It gave a new lease of life.

We moved on again and after another hour or so on the water we approached our accommodation. Ernesto slowed the engine and turned the boat in towards the station. A plume of blue smoke rose up from the engine as it spluttered into a lower gear.

‘This is where we will stay tonight.’



There were some people waiting at the jetty to help us unload the boat. We pulled up alongside and the vessel was tied with rope. Our accommodation was a collection of cabins with a few generators hooked up outside them. There was light in the buildings and hot water which was a relief.

Later then, after we had settled in, we went for a game of football and met some local people. Not that the boys needed to be shown how to play soccer. The speed of these fellows running up the field and the passing was top drawer. Toe to big toe. The tourist team was down 4-0 after about ten minutes. Then they mixed up the teams and it was a better contest. A beautiful game.

Alex, the Man City boy is in the box, he swivels, he turns to shoot, bang, back of the net.


I was playing at midfield, threading passes through to our strikers, getting the tackles in to block the opposition runs. It was a clean game, full of skill and a load of fun.

Then later, back at base, there was something about the open fire, people’s voices nearby and the piranha roasting on the flames with the sloped forehead and teeth revealing themselves among the flickering shadows.


Alejandro went around the table with plates of salad and bread for everyone. This legend of a man. We couldn’t have done it without him.

It tasted like, well, piranha. It was A1 with a squeeze of lime.

Later, then I found a quiet spot in the trees near the hammocks as the sun was going down, watched this mosquito land on the leg of my pants, the grey stripe on its back, a healthy insect, stabilizing the ship, unleashing the lance, see if she can pierce through now, these worn combats from TK Maxx in London, Bing, felt something there alright, stay still as you can, don’t even let your heart beat, let her gorge, she’ll have a good night, flying through the trees on this concoction, down to the riverbank.



Wonder could they send a message. How are things with you? Or how I’d cheerfully tolerate the abuse just to feel your breath on my neck again.

‘Johan. You want to see something cool?’

‘Yes.’

Down to the river with Ernesto and Alex. We got into the boat and pushed it out with the oars.

Ernie had a flashlight and he pointed the light in under the braches.

‘Look. You see. The lights.’

There were little globes of light on the water. Then another set nearby.

‘Alligators.’

Their eyes above the water line, bodies lurking underneath, four or five of them swimming about through the darkness.

‘That is cool. Should we go back now?’ ‘Sure.’

Nestled under a net amongst the trees somewhere. Drifting off. Wild sounds altogether from without, an epically wild chorus of croaking and chirping sounds, headlong through the tunnel, counting breaths. Thank you for the day Lord, for the people, the silent flow of the river nearby, distant voices carried over on a cooler breeze, shadows growing taller under stars.



End 


This story is the exclusive property of John Duffy and cannot be republished in any format without his permission 



I thank John Duffy for allowing me to share his work on The Reading Life


Mel u



Sunday, January 10, 2021

Diamond Delivery -The Debut Publication of a Short Story by John Duffy


 










The first time I read a story by John Duffy it was during my read through of Abandoned Darlings, a collection of writings by the 2011 and 2012 MA in Creative Writing classes at the National University of Ireland at Galway. His story was about a very dangerous bus trip through the Andes in Bolivia.  (You can read my post on the story on the link above.). These words sum up how I felt about Duffy's really well done story, "Death Road".

You might have seen a National Geographic Channel program about the terribly dangerous road through the Andes in Bolivia that the narrator in this story crosses in a bus ride sure to scare anyone out of their wits who is not from there.   The first person speaker in this story is an Irishman out for an adventure in the wilds of South America and he happens to hook up with a beautiful and delightful sounding "French girl of Lebanese extraction".   Some cynics say the reason the English conquered India was because they could do things and have adventures there that they could never do at home.   I think that is part of the deeper theme of this very interesting marvelously cinematic story. 

Today I am very happy and honored that he has given me the oppurtunity to share another of his marvelous stories.  I have been following his work for over ten years and Will continue as long as I can.




John Duffy is from Ballina, County Mayo. He writes short fiction and poetry. John studied at NUI Galway and graduated with Master’s degree.

He lives in Vancouver, British Columbia.


Wax the board

Slip on the wetsuit 

and Cycle to the beach. 

Enter dream time.



“Diamond Delivery”

By John Duffy 



Here, this will do, she is now, a massive tube of blue, yawning, curling and dripping in front. Holy mackerel. Turn around horse. Lying down for some rapid paddle, feels like you're going nowhere, suspended, then lifted by force from underneath, rising with it, taking position, real time in slow motion, until there's a drop of about six feet underneath and you realise you're on top of the thing, balance there, surrounded, thunderous motion over the shoulder, picking up speed, carried, swept along by the force, buzz, keep going there, hopping away on the board.

Walking up the beach.

Some people kicking football. Goal.

Thanks surf sista.

You're welcome.

Back at base Jen was heating tea in a saucepan over a gas flame. A plate of butter croissants with fried eggs on the bonnet of a Chevrolet truck.

The way she could turn it on. The way she fit snugly under my chin while holding her close. The smell of her head. It must have something to do with. The oily, aromatic smell of her head.

'Fair play.'

'How was it?'

'Unbelievable.'

'Will you have tea? Warm you up.' 'Please.'

We had some clothes hanging on a line.

Snow white talking to some dwarves at the bottom of the Barents Sea. Shorts, swim suits and towels.

It could only get better from there really.

'Hello there.'

Trevin picked up his flask of steaming drink and lit a smoke. 'We got kicked out,' Jen said.

'What?'



'We made too much noise last night. We can't stay here anymore.' 'We'll find somewhere else. This place is massive. I saw the map.' He looked around.

'Where?'

'I don’t know.'

'Marie is asking at reception.'

'Ok.'

'It's so lame. We can't sing. We can't have a fire on the beach. You're making too much noise, blah, blah.'

'We were not that loud.'

"I said that and she's like, 'Well, we had some complaints from guests, so.'"

'Listen, I was the first to go to bed. I don't know what happened after that.'

'He was a funny buck Jen.'

'Oh my God. He was hilarious.'

'He's a funny bloke, for sure.'

'I was in stitches.'

'He works here doesn't he?'

'I think so.'

'He was like, the jolliest man you ever met.'

'Just laughing away the whole time. It was hard not to laugh with him.'

'It's like, contagious or something.

'Strumming the guitar afterwards and we were all singing. It was so much fun.'

'Here, it looks like we're out of fire wood.'

'That's the lot,' he said, nodding at the embers around the pit. 'I'll get some more.'

'Sounds good.'

I met Marie outside reception,

‘Hi Marie.’

'Hey, so I spoke with the owner. She gave me some flyers for parks and hotels in the area.’ ‘What about that place near Lake Lotus?’

‘Right? We could go back there.’

‘And we’re not that far from the beach.’

‘Right? This is just the start of our adventure Jay. We’re going to have a great time. No matter what.’

‘For sure we will. That’s the spirit!’

I went down the path and across the road back towards the river.



After a while, by a pathway overgrown with early summer growth, salmon berries, a totem pole figure with arms outstretched wearing a denim gardener’s outfit and cap. There was a glass house nearby, and the loveliest cuts of wood in the ditch, about four feet long, all dried out.

I heard a rustling from within the bushes.

'Hello.'

'Well?'

'Alex.'

'We were staying above.'

'How's it going here?'

'We've been here for months mate. It's the best place ever.' 'She's some spot. You can hear it from here.'

'It's the business. We go out every day. It's just the biz.' 'Class.'

There was something about this buck. I had a feeling he knew what I was going to say before I even knew the formation of the words myself. The smiley head on him. Sure enough.

'Well, he might let you stay here. I could ask him if you want. Is it just yourself?' 'I'm with girlfriend and two friends.'

'Sweet.'

'We can go there now and ask him if you want?'

'This place looks magic.'

'Just wait until you see the rest of it.'

We ran along the path through the forest and soon it became a rope bridge of sorts that led into the upper reaches of the trees and after a while we were surrounded by branches woven together with rope in places, the light was bright, sunlight through spaces, hundreds of emerald shades of light and occasionally the blueness of the sky and darker blue of the ocean further out. Just unreal. Ethereal.

We went along this bridge for about three hundred yards through the trees then down into a garden with gnomes and fountains around a lawn to a cabin built within a massive ring of old growth trees. I thought I was in a Lord of the Rings film or something else.

He knocked on the door,

'Mr. Cool. There is somebody here, wants to speak with you. Jay is here.' 'Thank you Alex.'

'Hello Jay.’

'Mr. Cool.'

‘You are most welcome to our home in the rainforest.’ 3


‘Thank you. It’s good to be here.’

He brought a bowl of soup to the table.

'You'll excuse me, I'm just at lunch.'

'No bother. I got you at a bad time.'

'Not at all. You are supposed to be here.'

'So tell me about yourself?

What brings you to us?'

'Well, I'm travelling around the island with girlfriend and another couple of friends.

We're not staying at the resort anymore.'

'Ah, yes.'

'I'm from, you know,'

'Yes, I know. My mother you see.'

'Very good.'

'So, we were wondering could we stay here. We have tents and materials.'

'Excellent.'

'So Jay. Yes! You are most welcome to stay with us. We have plots we're working on. Perhaps you could clear a space.'

'Not a problem.'

He took a call on the telephone.

'Excuse me. So. Yes, we are an eco-friendly community here aiming for full self-sufficiency within a few years.'

'Amazing.'

'It really is.'

'We grow our own food. We have a whole irrigation system in place.

We harvest rain water. We use solar panels for power. I can show you around if you'd like. 'Sounds great.'

'Well. Yes! Jay. Be sure to invite your friends over.'

'Thank you Sir. We'll see you later.'

Outside in a common area, a girl was tying plaits in another girl’s hair.

There was a girl trace painting leaves on a sheet of plywood by the bench. The venation patterns. It looked pretty cool.

There were tents, huts and shacks set up about the place.

I passed a fellow sitting on the steps of a caravan playing harmonica.

A sign in the garden read,

Lettuce live in peace.

There were rows of potatoes and other vegetables growing well in the gardens.

What a bouncy feeling leaving his place. What a legend of a man. Wait until I tell the rest of the guys about this fellow. Wait until I tell them about this place.



Back at base Jen was wearing big sunglasses, speaking on her cell phone to a hotel receptionist. Marie looked flustered. She threw a T- shirt inside her ruck sack.

'Look. It is what it is.'

'I know babe. We'll find someplace else.'

Trev put his arm around her.

'It's not the end of the world. Right?'

Then twenty minutes later we're all rolling into Cools place and there was the man himself walking along the path, dragging a block with a handful of bottle caps stuck to it. A magnet block.

'Hello. You are most welcome. It is truly amazing you are here!'

'So we can stay here, right?'

'Yes.'

'How much does it cost?'

'Well. Perhaps you could help with some general labour in return.' 'Of course.'

'Wow. It is so great you are here Jen.'

'Absolutely. Good to meet you Mr. Cool. And thank you so much.'

'Wow! Marie. You're just so. Wow!'

'Trevin. Yes! You made it.'

'Thanks Mr. Cool. You've got a big place here,' looking around.

'There is a lot of work. We always need hands. Right now we are building a floating stage. There will be seating for two hundred people over there.'

'That's in the future.'

'Yes!'

'Massage Therapy!'

Next thing he's massaging Jens shoulders and then Marie afterwards and the girls seemed unfazed and delighted, which spoke to the innocent intent behind this little ritual.

Oh yeah. It was nice after that we could relax a bit at Cools place. Dig a bit of earth out for the plots. Set up our tents.

Trevin and Marie had a big purple tent they called the Palace.

We had a standard enough tent but it did the job.

Splitting wood with an axe for the fire. We didn't have far to go for it.

Walking around the pathways, the shadows gathered round.

There were old abandoned vehicles parked up in places. A school bus with rusty old doors and the wheels taken off. A bobcat and some machinery.

I passed an old recreational vehicle covered in weeds with no wheels. It must have been there since the 1980’s. A neon sign blinking in the windscreen. Open.



Voices nearby. People coming and going.

You can check out any time you like but you can never leave.

Remember those surfing lessons in Jay Bay, South Africa from that fellow, The blondie mop,

Greased back

And a black tank top

With some words, Wu Tang.

'Turn it around man,

When you see the wave forming, When it's there,

Face the shore

Paddle hard.'

'Alright. Sound.'

'Hold the rails like this. Then jump up and

Go with the flow.'

'Ok.'

'Then listen. OK. Just Relax. Yeah man, you can totally do this. There's no competition here. Step through the water, feel the flow hard against the quads, let the toes dig into the sand, must gauge the direction of the current, walking into ocean space.’

Before he sent us out to the most shark-infested waters on the planet. We were beaten up by water.

Until you heard his words

Ringing in your ears

And you get up and ride a wave, Swimming away to catch another. Into the deepest blue,

Letting the board do the work, Ducking into the bigger waves. Pros out back,

Sitting on short boards,



Gazing over the gathering swell. Afritude.

It could take years of practice Or thirty hours.

Depends what shape you're in.

Then later, taking inspiration from Mr. Cool’s initiative we gave the girls massage around the fire. We had a few brews. Jen stood, warming her back side by the fire.

Golden-orange flames licking the wood, curling up.

Stars.

That night, the sky was thick with stars.

We watched them drop.

Then lying in the tent with her afterwards, warming her up, the depths of cold and darkness and quiet enveloped us, drifting off together, body heat in a sleeping bag, the distant rumble of the ocean carried over in waves.

Here to you Mr. Cool.

A sound fellow to meet along the way.

'What are those birds called with the blue feathers?'

'They woke me up at first light, flying through the trees about your place.' 'Those are our resident Steller’s Jay.'

Legend.

We were not the only people you helped along the way. I read the report. You made it possible for some people to live there. For decades.

Affordable living in relative harmony with nature, old school bartering system, faith in people and their skills and abilities.

You made paradise even better.

On the Pacific Rim,

Past the 49th Parallel there are many stars.

Many years later, we returned on holidays, Jen said, 'You should go surfing.

You can do it, can't you?'

Such a question.

The cold freshness of the water pervading the skin. Free floating about in the water, feet can't feel the bottom now. Turning over, swirling, twirling round, stretching limbs, so much space



further out, so much blue beyond, wonder what it's like in the deeper water, wonder what it was like for him back in 1988, starting out on his path.

The smell of salt and ocean water rushing in, each wave a different story.

This perilous, awesome beauty abounds, combinations of sounds, smells like seaweed and bull kelp nearby. So much to rediscover about the island.

The pros were busy out back, hopping about on proper waves with such skill. We watched them for hours yesterday evening, their dark shapes and silhouettes against the orange-red sun set, still at it. Swinging in a hammock with Jen. That was nice. The two of us, rolled into a hammock strung between two cedar trees. The sound of waves rushing up the beach.

A ticking clock.

We got back this summer and learned the news.

The road was dusty driving down.

A sign outside Mr. Cool’s place read,

Permanently Closed.

Multi-coloured scribbles all over it.

Here's a little scarf to wrap around yourself in heaven buddy. Big hearts travel far.


End


My best wishes to all in these Pandemic times.


Mel u







Saturday, August 24, 2019

“It’s a Tear Down” - A Short Story by John Duffy - Debut Publication


Published for The First Time Today
“It’s a Tear Down”
By John Duffy






My Q and A Session with John Duffy


John Duffy writes short fiction and poetry as a hobby. He studied at NUI Galway in Ireland where he completed his degree and MA. He has contributed to Abandoned Darlings, an anthology of fiction and poetry, The Georgia Straight and also to The Reading Life.
An electrician by trade, John lives in Vancouver, Canada. - author supplied data 

The first time I read a story by John Duffy it was during my read through of Abandoned Darlings, a collection of writings by the 2011 and 2012 MA in Creative Writing classes at the National University of Ireland at Galway. His story was about a very dangerous bus trip through the Andes in Bolivia.  These words sum up how I felt about Duffy's really well done story, "Death Road".

You might have seen a National Geographic Channel program about the terribly dangerous road through the Andes in Bolivia that the narrator in this story crosses in a bus ride sure to scare anyone out of their wits who is not from there.   The first person speaker in this story is an Irishman out for an adventure in the wilds of South America and he happens to hook up with a beautiful and delightful sounding "French girl of Lebanese extraction".   Some cynics say the reason the English conquered India was because they could do things and have adventures there that they could never do at home.   I think that is part of the deeper theme of this very interesting marvelously cinematic story.    

Since then I have had the  honor  publishing two of his original short stories as well as a wide ranging Q and A session I recommend to all interested in short stories or Irish culture to read the Q and A session, from there you can link to his stories.

Today I am very pleased and honoured that John Duffy has entrusted me to share another of his stories on The Reading Life, “it is a Tear Down Day”. ( John Duffy is the exclusive owner of this story. As protected by international copyright law, this story cannot be republished in any format without his permission.)

I hope to follow his work for many years.



“It’s a Tear Down”

A short story by John Duffy 

Another day. Count them down. Tick them off. Another day closer to pay day. Stay focused. It won’t be long now until the flight home. I’ll cozy up with Julie back in the city. We’ll walk by the lake together and chat about things that happened during our time apart. We’ll bring the dog with us and he’ll trot along beside us on the boardwalk. That will be sweet for sure. To feel the sun again and see the water sparkle across the Great lake.
I left the apartment, perished with the cold on the outskirts of Saskatoon, walked across the superstore carpark and waited for the green light to cross the highway. On the other side I joined a group of people at the bus stop. The bus pulled up and I was relieved to board and feel the heat within, took a seat by the window and drifted back to sleep. I need some action today, something to break up the monotony of this system. They’re only thoughts. Don’t worry about it. Pay no mind. The coin won’t count itself. It will be all worth it Thursday when we board the aeroplane. Remember the hot-air balloon the last time we left after takeoff. It looked like a ripened pear with yellow stripes, hanging still against the orange sunset. Shawn bought another beer from the airhostess and she brought it up the aisle. I turned around and raised the can to him. He’s a sound fellow Shawn. We just about made the flight, the two of us running through the airport terminal roaring at them to wait for us. It could be worse though. The work is handy here and the lads are sound enough. I’ll keep going for another while.
The grey-white towers and buildings of the mine came into view and the bus pulled in to the car park. The darkened masses marched and shuffled toward the gates carrying lunch pails and tools. Electricians, Scaffolders, Fitters and Iron workers. I clocked in through the turnstiles. Beep.

Beep. The heavy thump of work boots and clatter. I joined the team and we stood gathered around outside the mechanical room waiting for the brief from foreman Dan. Jessie stood with his hands behind his back. Mitch and Sal were there. Thompson and Husky. It was 6:00 AM and dark as dawn. The tunnel was lit by a string of temporary lights and it smelled like freshly poured concrete, potash and hydraulic grease. I turned up my toes inside the Baffin winter work boots. They were a lifesaver as I had previously wore regular steel toe work boots and almost lost a few toes from having wet feet during a cold snap. It was twenty-two degrees below and dropping. Saskatoon style. They’d tell you nothing about it.
‘There’s no difference between -25 and -35. You won’t notice any difference at all.’
‘Thanks Tony.’
I shook my arms to smother a sneaky draft that crept inside my layers like some ice cold lady’s fingers pressed tight, then scraping and creeping. Brain freeze. I stretched against the wall and jumped around.
Dan and his sidekick Solar showed up. The boys were well wrapped up in winter coats. Dan wore a balaclava and spoke through a small hole cut out of it.
‘Good morning boys.’
‘Saskatchewan was colder than Mars last night.’ ‘Mars?’
‘The planet Husky.’

‘Oh very good. Nice to hear you’re breaking records out here boys. Fair play. Give yourselves a hand there.’
Solar kept his hands inside his sheep-skin gloves and trench coat pockets. I figured it was my turn to lead the warm-up so I went to the centre and pulled some choice ninja stretches. Husky slipped over after a while and fell away laughing, the big red face on him.
Dan started reading from the clip board after warm up.
‘There will be a Health and Safety Meeting at 3 o’clock tomorrow in Hall C.’
‘For us?’
‘For everyone.’
‘We’ve got an armoured cable pull in the tunnels under 611 this morning. We’ll need respirators and dust suits. You can sign them out from the tool-shop on the west side.’
‘The best side.’
‘Man Dan.’
Solar shook his big serious looking head.
‘It’s warm in the tunnels but it’s dirty and dodgy with those damn belts running and you can hardly breathe with dust.’
‘Steve needs three of us in the chapel later. If anybody wants to go there, let me know before break.’
‘What’s he doing?’

‘Fire alarm inside. Ground cable outside. As far as I know.’
The chapel was an open storage facility with a high-pitched roof. The first I heard about it was at site orientation on my first day when the safety officer was speaking about tying off while working at heights.
‘Two of you can load the cable and have the cable-jacks brought to the entrance by 611. Use channel 1 for the fork lift driver.’
I played a few games of Rock, paper, scissors against Mitch. The loser would have to fill in the safety forms. He beat me on the third challenge with a slick sheet for an outstretched hand and I was fair sick afterwards.
‘You’re too predictable D man.’
He walked away with Thompson waving his hand around like a bird’s wing. ‘Give us a shout when you’re ready.’
I looked over the safety forms,
Environmental hazards.
Ergonomics hazards.
Work at height hazard.
What are we even doing here?
Activity hazards.
Access/Egress Hazards.

Personal limitations hazards.
Clear instruction provided. Distractions in the work area. Trained to use tool and perform task.
Keep the lead in your pencil young fellow. Until you’re old enough to know what to do with it. I filled in the information and went through to the process facility, past the heavy-duty motors, four-hundred horsepower beasts with runs of pipe and cable-tray overhead. The safety boy wore thin white gloves and a shiny hi-vis vest. The safety reps would normally scribble their signature and hand you back the safety booklet but this fellow took his time reading the information. The big bushy eye-brows on him.
‘What’s this e-pig?’
I leaned over his shoulder and looked at my handwriting.
‘That’s epic. It’s going to be epic.’
‘What is?’
‘The control measure we have in place as a defence mechanism against the hazard.’ ‘Where’s Mitch?’
‘I’ll have him sign it.’
‘Thanks.’

Mitch was in the Compressor house by a data panel holding a heat gun over his out stretched pants, warming his bollocks.’
‘What the heck are you at?’
‘Did you tick this for a hazard D man?’
‘They didn’t give me the option.’
‘You should try it sometime,’ the big smiley head on him looking up and down the corridor.
Later we went down dusty steel stairs below 605 and through tunnels where conveyor belts moved fresh potash along. It spilled over in places, fine white powder and red grains, still warm from the earth below. Fresh dug potash. The salty taste of it. We used shovels to dig our way through mounds which had gathered, blocking our path along the run. I could barely see Jesse and Mitch further along. They were all blended into piles of potash with coils of cable at their feet. Horsing them in. Thompson gave us a hand and sometimes we’d get a break, waiting for slack from further along the line. Speak to the crew down the radio.
‘Just waiting on Solar here boys. Hang tight.’
‘10-4.’
‘And we stayed in this old castle from the 17th century and we had some fine wine with dinner over candle light. It felt different, you know, like I’d just come from the past or something, like from another age.’
‘Of course it did. Because you were like Prince Arthur in a four poster bed afterwards you lucky man.’

‘10-4. Give us a shout when you’re ready.’
‘Copy.’
The conveyor belt trundled along and an old industrial fan rattled overhead. ‘Keep back from the emergency line there, like a good lad.’
After break I went to the chapel with Jesse and Tony.
If you lose your dog in Saskatchewan you can see him run away for three days.
We met Steve and climbed flight after flight of scaffolding steps outside the building and then climbed a ladder to the top of the chapel. Looking around there were no landmarks in any direction, vast prairie land stretched away to the shimmering horizon. Easy land for laying tracks. The train pulled a line of steel containers away from the yard. On the north side a van approached along a straight dirt road with a trail of dust swirling up behind it. She was on her way to the mine alright. There was nowhere else to go. Tony looked pale. He gripped the scaffolding rail with both hands, the back of his curly mullet raised by the wind.
‘I don’t think I can do this Steve.’
‘That’s OK. This job is not for the faint hearted.’
Steve held up the pole and Tony went down the ladder.
We stood at the apex looking out along the rooftop, a thousand feet sheer drop of grey-white canvas on either side. There were no walkways or any form of work structure in place. A catenary wire was fixed to metal rods that protruded from the rooftop and ran the length of the

building, for the convenience of those souls foolhardy enough to be out there in the first place. I felt like a soldier. A cog in the wheel of some hardened platoon, working a dangerous mission in a hostile environment, happily taking directions from Colonel Steve, putting my life on the line for some Godforsaken cause. He raised his voice over a biting wind that swept across the roof.
‘Now I’m going to tell you boys. This is a unique building. There is nothing like this structure in the whole of Canada.’
‘You might have heard,’ he continued as he nodded past us. His mustache danced as he spoke and his safety glasses looked like a pair of shades a welder might wear.
‘About the young man, who wasn’t tied off?’ ‘Yes. That was terrible altogether.’
‘That’s not going to happen again. We’re going to put every safety measure in place for this operation.’
‘That’s sound Steve. No problem.’
Jessie tightened the strap of his safety harness around his leg. The tip of his nose was red and wet.
What’s the worst that could happen? If we slipped and fell the safety harness would engage and we could pull ourselves up again. Pure heroes.
The Colonel continued,

‘Now I’m going to tell you boys. I would never give you to a job I wouldn’t do myself. And you two are going to look pretty fucking stellar with the company if you pull this off.’
‘That’s sound Steve. No problem. It should be straight forward enough. We just walk along the roof there and pull the cable with us. Terminate at each point.’
‘Well, yes. But Saskatoon wasn’t built in a day boys. We’re going to take our time with this job.’ ‘Will there be somebody watching out for us?’
‘I’ll be with you boys every step of the way. You have my word.’
‘OK. Let’s move out. One by one down the ladder. Let’s go.’
We signed out special safety harnesses with a double lanyard from the tool-shop and then went to the administration office for permits. There were blueprints spread over the counter; pencils, sharpies and empty coffee cups on the table. Tony ran back across the boneyard and burst in the door.
‘Dan. Quick.’ ‘What?’
‘It’s Steve.’
We went outside and followed him past the huts. A tiny figure scaled the rooftop of the chapel. He looked like GI Joe with loops of rope strapped to his back, moving along sideways like a crab, latching on and off to the catenary wire. He reminded me of the man who walked the tightrope between the twin towers in New York. He looked like an angel.

Stephanie, the safety lady stood beside us with her shoulders well back.
‘What the heck is he doing up there? We have no high angle rescue in place.’
‘He’s dropping rope for the cable pull.’
‘He should never have gone up there alone.’
‘He’s a hero.’
‘Well, yes. But heroes don’t always get to go home in the evening. Now do they?’ ‘Oh my God. What is he doing?’
Steve stood up and stretched back.
Dan called him on the radio.
‘Steve, call back. You’d better come back down. We’re going to do it a different way.’ ‘What? No way José. This rope is going down. I’m almost there.’
He stooped over, latched on and continued side stepping along. When he reached the last terminal he let the rope drop down the roof. We ran over and tied it to a concrete weight by the side of the building.
‘Got her Steve. It’s tied off.’
‘10-4. I’m heading back across. My legs might seize up and this radio is almost dead but I think I can make it. Have some water ready for me.’
‘Copy.’

Aftermath.
Now some people might say Steve was a reckless cowboy, jumping the gun by going off on a solo mission. And some men might say he could have done things differently. But I thought it was a thing of sublime beauty. Here was a man I could trust. A man of action, ready to lead, willing to go the extra mile without fear. My commander-in-chief and very own super hero Steve Andrews. Then I thought about Malachy the safety officer during site orientation on my first day on the job. There was a man who could tell a story.
‘What are your three rights here folks?’
‘The right to turn down unsafe work.’
‘Yes. Who said that? Put your hand up.’
‘Here’s a pen from Parker. You have the right to refuse what you believe to be unsafe work folks.’
The operation was called off and we returned the harnesses to the tool shop. Later, we were gathered around outside the lab. Husky and Tony flipped towers of penny washers from their elbows to their hands.
‘Eighteen, fucker. I’m in your head.’
‘You’re not. Here come twenty two.’
Thompson stood about six feet four. He nodded over toward the chapel.
‘I guess they’ll just have to think of a safer way of doing it. But for now. It’s a tear down.’

‘It’s a tear down.’
‘Did anyone collect their potash penny yet?’
‘You can pick them up from 208.’
‘We should head out tonight. Throw them on the ponies in town.’ ‘Sounds like a plan.’
‘She’s thirsty work.’
There’s only a few hours to go then back to the apartment. It will probably be pizza and chips and the next episode of The Wire. I’ll video call with Julie. It will be good to see her again and hear how she’s doing back in the city. Blast those ants in the bedroom. Fair weather friends. They marched all over that peace and harmony pact I put in place on Monday evening and tried to take over the place ever since. Still, it’s nice to have some company all the same.

End of story

Again, my thanks to John Duffy

Mel u




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