BOOK ONE
Sunrise and bad weather on the Prairie can be a site of sadistic beauty -- A frightening thing, like a lion loosed from its cage while the tamer sleeps. Often when the weather is bad I am restless, sitting up nights or rising early before the dawn to walk out and watch the rainfall when sleep won't come to me.
The summer nights have only just become bearable and now these Autumn storms begin to take over the skies more and more, turning the dust to mud. When it is just sweet simple rain, one can manage, but as August yields to September, the ground seems constantly soft under one's feet and the gray skies persist, blocking out sunlight and bringing on the melancholia which forbears madness.
The noise of this first great storm woke me and drew me forth to witness, my bare feet carrying me out of the shelter of home and over the sodden ground as angry confused winds blew debris hither and thither. Breaking through to look out at the oncoming dawn full of storm and chaos, I saw the wide sweeping grassland beyond the copses of trees, and above its vast expanse a violent explosion of color as the sun seemed to set the sky ablaze with a fire that consumed heaven itself. The rolling black clouds had bright wholesome sunlight cast upon their ugliness, making them all the angrier at being illumed.
In nature, a destructive force is not always evil, but to see it like that, raging against the oncoming light of day, one could not help but imagine it an evil entity with bilious pulsating clouds of yellow-grey, flexing like powerful muscles, threatening to invade every corner of the sky-world above, stamping out all the golden rays of summer sunshine and drowning us mere mortals who inhabit the land below.
Taking in this sight, I felt or imagined that such color had only once before been present in the sky. Such purple and gold and russet red mingled with the bright luminescence of the light, contrasting with the swelling darkness -- they were once the colors of blood and shot and smoke and death, mingled together in the mire at the feet of angels and demons, teeming in legions, waging war for supremacy, each over the other for some trumped-up trespass. They are something else, too. Above in this rare morning electrical storm, I see myself reflected and amplified by nature.
I fear it most because I see myself so clearly in it.
Soon, I know there will be a break in the line, between the light and dark, and it shall all begin drizzling down from the heavens to sully this mortal earth with the sinful memories of the war and waste. As the hot rain began to soak through the fabric of my nightshirt, a vengeful fever came that caused me to collapse to my knees, my fists clinched at the sky in wrath, cursing God for such an angry morning and the futility of the sunrise.
Insanity will come, I knew it then as I watched the storm blotting out the sun and I know it now. All is lost.
For though it may seem the dawn of a new day, the darkness may never surely be beaten back, the sun may only shine temporarily and when it rises higher the blackened clouds can still choke the golden nimbus of the morning.
I will once more listen to the screams and cries of battle. I shall find myself hearing them and shedding tears for the fallen as I look on through my memory's eye impotent and unable to aid in the action.
The storm will be on top of me soon; and, like a war raging, it will cause nothing good to occur until it passes. Only when it is gone, will peace return to my mind.
I fear. Oh, how I fear.
Soon a hand is there upon me and I turn to see Helen standing there, herself only wrapped in a quilt from our bed, her skin pale and wet with rain, she has missed me and come to find me here, my eyes burning hot with tears. I feel shame as she looks on me but then she kneels beside me in the mud and clasping arms around me she presses herself to me, shouting through the storm.
Her words clear, as her lips brush the hair above my ear. "You will forget," she starts to say. "You will forget."
--An excerpt from the diary of Capt. George A.H. Collins (~Undated)
Chapter One:
"But, you can't just leave like this." Rodger stood in the driveway, watching me push the last box of my things onto the pile in the back of my fastback.
I looked up at him before repositioning the cargo so that it wouldn't shift too much. This was it, this was the last time he would see me, his last shot at redemption, and those were the best words he could muster.
"You can't just leave like this.
"
"We've been through this," I said, doing my best not to sound hurtful. "I told you when we started that I wasn't sure I was going to be the one for you and, I'm sorry, I shouldn't have married you, Rodger. I know that sounds cold, but I thought it was the right thing to do at the time. You were so..." I stopped myself. "Look, we had our fun, and then we both changed. It happens. It's nothing to cry over."
I slammed the hood down on the 2+2 and walked over to him, his big goofy eyes were sad and teary.
"How have I changed?" he asked.
I looked behind him at the large boat he kept in our driveway. I looked over at the house we'd lived in now for the last two years. It was big and looked like every other house on the street.
"Maybe it's not you at all, Rodger," I said, shifting my gaze back to him. "Maybe it's what you want me to be. I'm not cut out for all this," I waved my hand at the neighborhood with three car garages and manicured front lawns. "I just..." I let the sentence fade into a shrug as I had done a million times before, and with a peck on his lips and a hug, I pulled away and walked around to the driver's side door. "You'll get over me. You're a big boy. I left the divorce papers on the kitchen counter." I opened the door, flung my lucky leather jacket into the passenger seat and climbed in. The engine roared to life and I pulled away, leaving Rodger speechless and alone in the driveway of the house.
We'd been married nine years, before it had happened. A new practice in Beverly Hills had brought money and the money had gone to Rodger's head. A new house in Brentwood, a new neighborhood, the kind of development I'd learned to despise from years of reading Chandler and Fante.
I'd never liked the reality of Los Angeles. But staying in an old building on an old street not far from Redondo Beach had helped me get by. Running along the path by the beach, watching the morning sunrise on the Pacific, smelling the air and hearing the surf, it was the highlight of almost every day for ten years.