Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 16

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 16

My first class at Snead State Community College was Monday night February the 11th, three days before Valentine’s day.  Ever since Dean Naylor had contacted me shortly after I moved back to Boaz I couldn’t understand why Stella Gillman’s transfer to Wake Forest hadn’t been better planned.  Why hadn’t she moved during the Christmas holidays?  Why wait until nearly six weeks of the new semester had passed?

It didn’t take long for me to find out.  I arrived an hour before class was to begin. I was straightening the twenty or so desks when Dean Naylor walked in.  The classroom was almost directly across from his office.

“Good evening Walt”

“Hello, Dean Naylor.” I said walking over to shake his hand.

“I figured you for an early bird.  Do you have a few minutes to talk?”

“Sure.” I said. He sat down in a student’s desk right in front of my over-sized oak desk and motioned for me to sit in my teacher’s chair.

“I thought I would give you a little more insight into your students.  I know you’ve reviewed each of their work products from the files Stella left.”

“Before you go on would you mind answering a question?”  I asked.

“Not at all.  At least I’ll try.”

“Why didn’t Stella transfer during Christmas, at the end of a semester?  I assume this would have been a better transition for both Snead and Wake Forest?”

“In a perfect world, you are correct.  Stella’s job opportunity at a major college wasn’t the primary factor that precipitated her move.  I think it was New Year’s Day, may have been either a day before or after, her father took a turn for the worse.  I think I mentioned to you that he has terminal cancer.  Stella hadn’t been back from her holiday visit a week when she received the call from her mother stating her father had contracted pneumonia and was in the hospital.  Stella returned to Winston-Salem the next day.  After she arrived and assessed the situation, she called me and said she would be back soon but could miss at least a week.”

“I’m jumping ahead, but how on earth did she snag the Wake Forest job?”  I asked.

“I was just about to get to that.”

“Sorry.”

“No problem.  It was a miracle of sorts.  If you believe in miracles.  Personally, I don’t but that’s another story.  It seems the Dean of Wake Forest, Michele Gillespie, is a caring and compassionate woman.  She volunteers at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center on the weekends in their chaplaincy program.  Ms. Gillespie dropped by Mr. Gillman’s hospital room.  By the way, Stella has never married.  At some point during the visit, Ms. Gillespie mentioned the college.  When she was leaving, Stella’s mother stated that Stella was a stenographer professor. 

I’ll let you figure out the rest.”

“That doesn’t seem to explain why Stella was still here teaching last Thursday.”

“Gosh, you’re right.  I almost forgot why I came here.”  Dean Naylor said opening the notebook he had brought with him.

“Please give this to Valentina Garza.” He said handing me an official-looking certificate.  “She already has the large framed version.  It was given to her at the ceremony held last week in the auditorium.  I’m speaking of the Alabama Community College Stenographic Competition.  Ms. Garza, your student, is the winner of this State-wide award.  Stella stayed to coach Valentina through the competition.”

“That’s classic hallmark.  Stella and Ms. Garza must have been especially close.”  I said.

“Yes and no.  It didn’t really matter if they had a close relationship or not.  This exemplifies true Stella.  But, they were in fact close.  Last year, Valentina lost her best friend, a cousin, Esmeralda

Andres.”

“What happened?”  I asked.

“I’m a little surprised you haven’t heard.  Esmeralda was abducted and sold.  Apparently, it was sex trafficking.  A few days after she went missing, it was learned that she was in Stockholm, Sweden and had died in a tragic fall from a bridge.  This devastated Valentina.  Stella loved and counseled Valentina, enabling her to win the State stenography championship.”  Naylor said.

“I can now make more sense of why Stella stayed.  I’m sure it was tough on her to be away from her father.  She must be a woman of deep character.”

“She is.  We hated to lose her.  Walt, you have some mighty big shoes to fill.  I see we are running out of time.  I wanted to talk with you about each of your students.  They will be here shortly, most of them come early.  But, in the few minutes we have left me tell you about Felicia Shea.”

“Okay.”

“She is Belinda Olinger’s granddaughter.  Her step grandfather is

Frankie Olinger.  Surely, you have heard of him.  He and his twin brother

Freddie own Sand Mountain Tire and Muffler.”

“I know Frankie much better than I want to.  He and I were at Boaz High School together.  Did you say he had a twin brother?  I don’t remember that.”

“I’ve heard Freddie failed a year, maybe eighth grade, so they were not in the same class.”  Naylor said.

“Now, I remember.  Strange that memory was so deep.”

“Quite frankly, pardon the partial pun, it wouldn’t be too bad if both twins were forgotten, but please don’t repeat me on that.”

“I won’t.”

“Back to Felicia.  She is also a rising star.  She came in third in the competition.  She’s very bright, was the Valedictorian at Boaz High School, graduating, I believe, in 2014.  She started here in the Fall of 2016.  After high school, she spent a couple of years in mission’s work, traveling all over the country.  Here’s the reason I wanted to talk with you.  I’m afraid she is too devoted to Frankie.  What I really mean is she is too devoted to his political philosophy.”

“What’s that, even though I think I know.”  I said.

“One word, Kane.  Enough said.” 

“Another word I wished we could forget.”  I added.

“Right.  So, mix Christian Fundamentalism with Kanism and you can only imagine what you get.  To her credit, Felicia seems extremely capable of compartmentalizing her life.  But, Felicia needs a Stella in her life, if you know what I mean.  Someone who will be brutally honest with her, while, at the same time, showing her genuine

compassion and understanding.”

“She must be doing something right to win third place and to be in her fourth stenography class.”  I said.

“Like I said, she is extremely bright.  I think you will see she is a natural.  I believe the only reason she didn’t win the championship had something to do with Frankie.  I’ve heard some rumors, but I’ll leave it to that.”

“Hello Dean Naylor.” Two students said almost simultaneously as they walked into the room.”

“Good evening Amanda and Michael.”  Dean Naylor said standing up, shaking Michael’s hand and hugging Amanda.

“Walt, this is Michael Kendrick and Amanda Hartley, two students with brilliant futures.”  Naylor turned back to me and said, “And this is Walt Shepherd, your new instructor.  He too is brilliant.”

The two students smiled and shook my hand and said they were glad to meet me.  I replied with a similar greeting.

“Now, I must go. Amanda and Michael, you are in good and competent hands.  I believe you two and your other four classmates, have been gifted a once-in-life opportunity.  Don’t squander it.”  Dean Naylor said as he was backing up toward the door.

I waved my hand at him as though I was saying, ‘the BS is getting deep in here. Go.’

He nearly backed into four other students as they turned into the doorway from the hall.

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 15

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 15

After Mother’s funeral I kept driving.  I wasn’t ready to go home and be alone.  After nearly an hour of circling back and forth across Boaz, not sure why I didn’t opt for country-driving, I turned on Industrial Blvd., and headed to The Reporter.

Claire was standing beside the receptionist when I walked in.  Sweet and homely Claire led me back to a sometimes sweet and always beautiful Regina.  She was frowning when she looked up and saw my face.

“What’s wrong with you?”

“I will never forgive myself.  I absolutely forgot your Mother’s funeral.  How could I do that?”  Regina said coming over and wrapping me in her arms.

“Don’t fret.  Forgetfulness pursues age, and honey you are aging fast.”

“You seem jolly for a man who just buried the most important woman in his life.  Ever.”

“Dear, do you mind if we change the subject.  I’ve spent the past several hours around folks who believe my mother is now walking streets of gold in the high and holy Heaven.”

“Okay, let’s sit.”  Regina said peeking my cheek and pulling me over to her round table in the back corner of her office. Do you mind if I run something by you?”

“Always and forever, I am listening to your every word.”  I said feeling romantic for some strange reason.

“You recall me describing my phone call with big sister a while back.  I think mine and her heated conversation was the Tuesday morning after Kip Brewer was shot.”

“I remember you two had a pretty rough scrape.”

“That conversation boiled up in my mind a couple of nights ago when I was tossing and turning, half-awake, and half-asleep.  I’ll call it a dream of sorts.  And, get this.  You kept appearing, you and your steno machine.  Is that funny or what?”  Regina said straightening her a-little too-tight black dress.

“Not at all.  I was there to record, exactly record, you’re every word.  Truly, I brought my magic machine that, once I’m properly wired, enables me to hear your thoughts.  I was there to make sure today you have full awareness of the exact words you used to describe my aging, but manly physique.”

“What are you smoking Walt Shepherd?”

“Back to your dream, before you forget.”  I said, entranced, as always, by her blue eyes.

“Here’s my idea.  The Boaz Stenographer, every week, on Saturday, in The Reporter.”  She said, scanning a page in an-unfolded magazine, probably The New Yorker.

“That makes perfect sense.”

“I want to have a weekly column written by a different person every week.  It will be, hopefully, from a cross-section of the Boaz community.  Think with me here.  Belinda got upset with me for reporting what happened at the Town Hall meeting at the Bevill Center.  I only reported the facts.  Earlier, when I first moved back home, she and I had had a very direct conversation about my role here at The Reporter.  I carefully described my duty to report the news, even if it stepped on toes.  Any reasonable person could understand my words.”

“I’m not sure I’m exactly following you.”  I said sitting up straighter in my chair.

“Spoken words are more easily forgotten than written words, for obvious reasons.  Your job as a stenographer is to accurately record what you hear.  Correct?”

“Correct.”  I said mimicking recording ‘correct’ on a steno machine.

“Oh, Walt, don’t be cute.  Seriously, let’s talk specifics.  What if The Reporter had a standing invitation, one printed in all three weekly editions, to the Boaz community, to listen for a sentence, or two, maybe three, you know, a statement, from someone, either in person or on TV, Radio, YouTube, etc.  Something of importance.  Now to an example. 

One night you are watching Fox News.”

I couldn’t resist so I interrupted Regina, “oh dear, give me a break.”

“Shut-up and listen.  I thought you were an expert listener.”

“I am.  Go on.”

“Okay, you’re watching Fox News and you see a clip of an interview or a speech by President Kane.  You hear him make a statement, let’s say he said, ‘I know more about ISIS than all my Generals,’ or some stupid shit like that.  You make note of the exact statement.  Before the newspaper’s deadline for the week, you write out whatever you want about the statement, hopefully there are a few folks around here that will have something to say about such a dastardly statement than, ‘Kane is brilliant.’  Once you’ve drafted, say, a 300-word piece, you email that to The Reporter.  We will review all submissions and choose one.

“I love your idea.  Can I tell you why?”

“Well, of course, doofus.”

“For one, it starts a conversation.  It also, assuming you guys here at The Reporter select diversely, creates a conversation of multiple thoughts and opinions.  In sum, The Boaz Stenographer will report, accurately with great hope, relevant news.  But, let me warn you.”  I said.

“Okay, I’m listening, I’ll even record you.”  Regina said picking up a pencil and reaching for a yellow pad from the middle of the table.

“If the weekly editorial is remotely controversial, and I cannot see why The Reporter would choose anything else, you, The Reporter, will create a tsunami response. How do you plan on handling that?”  I asked.

“I see what you are saying.  Do you think we need to create, your word, a vehicle allowing folks to react?  Facebook and their commenting method comes to mind.”

“Seems to me that the community’s response, better put, knowing the community’s response, would be helpful to The Reporter.  Otherwise, you will only know what the fringe things, the ones who will call in and leave you dirty messages, that type thing.”

“I agree, now that you say it, we need the ability to capture the response to the weekly edition of The Boaz Stenographer.  I’ll talk with our tech department to determine whether it best to use the newspaper’s Facebook Page, or our website.

“Another thing, if you are still listening and still interested in my thoughts.” I said.

“Ready my man, thought you were just all talk and no action.”

“How about we save that conversation to tonight.  Yes, that’s a date invite.” I said.

“Probably, Tuesday nights are not so bad.  I can be free by seven. 

That okay?”

“Perfect.  I’m cooking your dinner.  Come straight to Shepherd’s Cove and wear that dress.”  I said smiling oh so slightly at the gorgeous Regina.

“Back to business.  Did you have another thought concerning

The Boaz Stenographer?”

“Yes, I’m thinking the newspaper’s editor, might want to print her own opinion on the matter.  Why not write it the following Tuesday, assuming the Stenographer’s piece was printed on Saturday.”

“I like that.  I also recall, from my dream, the true meaning of The Boaz Stenographer.  Each person, everyone who writes in, will be a stenographer.  Because they are supposed to be accurately recording what they heard.”  Regina said.

“Well duh.  I got that a while ago.  Sorry about that.  Seriously, I love your idea.  But, I have one request.”

“Here we go.  Walt always wants something.”

“Will I have an equal chance of being published?”

“Absolutely.  That assumes, you have something relevant to report.  Now, get out of here.  I have a powerful mouthpiece to run.”  Regina said reaching over and squeezing my right hand.

We both stood and enjoyed, well, I did at least, a long hug and embrace.  When I barely slide my hand down onto her right hip, she pushed me away.

“You’re about to start something you can’t finish old boy.  Now leave.”

I walked out smiling.

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 14

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 14

It had been six years since my Father’s funeral.  That was the last time I was in a church environment like I had grown up in at Second Baptist Church.  I had attended this small and highly charismatic church for the first fourteen years of my life, before joining First Baptist Church of Christ.  A few days ago, at Mom’s funeral, I could hardly believe the changes in me and in the preacher.  It was as though it was four different people.  The Walt Shepherd I was then and now.  The Duane Wilkins he was then and now.

Mother’s death was surprising, totally unexpected.  She always said she would live to a hundred, even with her Parkinson’s.  It didn’t happen that way.

After Dad’s death in 2012, Mother continued to live in her own home.  She missed my Dad, her husband of over sixty years, but adjusted relatively well to widowhood.  She continued to live alone, work in her flowers, and drive her own car to the beauty shop, the grocery store, and to church.  Until the end of 2014.  Her Parkinson’s jumped to its next stage and by April 2015 she had a caretaker coming five days per week.  She quit driving, and except for twenty hours per week, continued living alone.  Her mobility steadily spiraled downward and by September 2015 she had moved into an assisted living facility.  Almost three years later, July 8th, she was taken by ambulance to the ER at the local hospital.  The diagnosis was double pneumonia.  Nine days later, she died in Room 333, on the Hospital’s third floor, with me, alone, by her side.

Mother and I had always been close.  Especially, when I was growing up and living at home.  We remained relatively close after I graduated high school, spent a year at Snead State, and moved to Charlottesville, Virginia to attend the University.  After graduating from the University of Virginia in 1976, I lived and worked in Maryland and Washington, D.C for forty-one years.  The last thirty-five of that was spent as a White House stenographer.  Obviously, that hadn’t ended well.  After returning home to Boaz I had not visited my dear sweet mother like I should have.  I will have to live with these regrets.

My stenographic career taught me to be a pretty good listener. A truly accomplished stenographer doesn’t have to look at his steno-machine to accurately record every word spoken.  This ability kept me from getting bored.  The accomplished stenographer can look at the witness or whoever is speaking the words the stenographer is recording verbatim.  The skill of observation doesn’t produce words to record, but it does convey signs, ticks, twitches, and other tells that evidence whether the person is verbalizing the truth.  I never claimed to be anything but a lay person when it came to reading body language, but I did know I was an expert at hearing every spoken word.

The problems started long before the Preacher stood at the podium, behind Mother’s casket, and while facing my family and the rest of the folks attending her funeral sitting quietly and respectively in the chapel’s pews.

It wasn’t a surprise that Mother’s funeral was difficult for me.  I had been subconsciously aware of the strong likelihood for weeks, maybe months.  My Mother was a devout Christian.  In the South, this typically means a diehard Fundamentalist.  Mother was typical.  She believed the Bible was the inerrant, infallible Word of God, not actually written by God, but fully inspired by God.  It seems, the Bible writers, the scribes, were the first stenographers.

To say everyone in the South, more particularly, everyone in and around Boaz, Alabama, is a Christian Fundamentalist would accurately be an overstatement, but not by much.  In these parts, what I call Bible talk, is more natural than breathing.  The only time I had ever heard someone speak otherwise was during my high school years.  My Biology teacher, Dr. Ayers, was from Chicago and someway had not become infected during the four years I knew her.

On Monday at 10:00 a.m., my sister, DeeDee, her husband

Kevin, and I had met with Mitt McCoy at McCoy’s Funeral Home in Boaz to plan Mother’s funeral and pick-out her casket.  I dreaded this meeting knowing what I would have to deal with.  My predictions were accurate, except for my confusion whether the gates were golden or pearly.

After we arrived, and Mitt gathered us into a small conference room, it didn’t take long for me to learn DeeDee already had the whole thing choreographed.  Unsurprisingly, it wasn’t primarily about our dear Mother.  It was about showing off her kids and grandkids.  Jana, her daughter, was an awesome gospel singer and would play three of her songs.  For some reason it was important to note that Joshua, DeeDee’s thirteen-year-old grandson, was an aspiring musician and would be playing guitar in the background.  Mitt and I learned several sentences more about how Joshua was self-taught.  Something about him knowing all the chords.  DeeDee’s grief someway inspired her to request Joshua be given prominent footage in the printed bulletin.

Jalen, DeeDee’s son, also had been assigned a front-and-center role in Mother’s funeral.  Apparently, two years ago, Mother had shared with Jalen her desire that he read a poem at her funeral.  As the story unfolded, I learned that during a Sunday afternoon visit Mother told Jalen about the poem.  Seems she didn’t have a copy of it herself.  I guess she had heard it somewhere, not sure where since she wasn’t a computer user, no internet, didn’t go anywhere, and only watched TV.  Jalen took notes about a young mother with her children heading off on a journey, up and down the hills and valleys.  All along the way she taught them about life, the need for perseverance and for God, mainly God.  At the conference table I didn’t quite follow brother-in-law Kevin’s paraphrase, but somehow the young mother introduces her children to God.  At the end of the journey the kids are perfect, the mother is old, and the road is ending.  As the children fade into the background the old woman now sees the Golden Gates ahead and is home.  

For some reason, unsurprising as it was, I sat silent contemplating those gates.  I had always heard they were ‘pearly gates.’  Could Temple Bailey’s “Parable of Motherhood” have gotten it wrong?  Were the pearly gates golden?  Even more confusing?  Pearl is white.  But, what do I know?  We hadn’t even seen the caskets yet and it was a little over twenty-five hours before Mother’s funeral would begin, but here I was under attack by logic and reason.  My mind raced to the question: how do these folks know this stuff?  First, I saw a huge conference center where the controversy had been decided.  Half the crowd espoused the golden gate hypothesis (many of this group likely referred to it as either a theory or fact).  The other half, the pearly gate hypothesis.  I would have enjoyed the debate, how each side had laid out its arguments.  The evidence would have been real, not just interpretations from the Bible.  The scientific process would have been rigidly followed.  Much data would have been gathered in support of the winner.  No doubt, Ms. Bailey was there, and it was there she learned the gates were golden.

I kept my gate thoughts to myself, but I did have a few questions after DeeDee had provided Mitt with ten times more information on the three songs Jala would sing, via recording, and the long poem Jalen would read from the podium.  Since college I had been cost conscious.  It probably came about from the two courses in Accounting I took to nail down my major.  After the four of us had gone to the ‘Show Room,’ that’s truly what Mitt called it, and picked out a ‘beautiful casket,’ that’s truly what DeeDee called it, Mitt left us alone back in the conference room.  In less than ten minutes he was back with the verdict.  He was

carrying a legal-size sheet of paper. It was our “STATEMENT OF FUNERAL GOODS AND SERVICES SELECTED.”  I ignored the

word ‘SELECTED,’ hoping our little union topped the hill and was gaining momentum toward the finish line.

Mitt was the master salesman.  In truth, he was the master bullshitter.  He was quick to point out the great deal we were getting.  In the ‘A’ section, “Charges for Service Selected,” (I ignored the missing ‘s’ on ‘Service’ and the entire word ‘Selected’) if we had to pay for them separately the total for all the services that Mitt had attached a price, we would pay $6,150.  But, if we choose the “Traditional Funeral Service Grouping,” our cost (for these services) would only be $3,995.  I understood what he was saying.  I sat still and silent waiting for my heart, even my mind, to send waves of joy and peace and excitement flooding over my soul.  After a minute of waiting and ignoring Mitt’s continued talking, I posed a question.  “Mitt, I assume your little grouping includes something for each of the ten items you have listed and priced.  As DeeDee has told you, we are not having any graveside service.  I see $365.00 included for “Flower Van.”  Did you include any amount for that in your discounted grouping price?”  He simply answered no.  

I had other questions about the other nine-line items.  Here are Mitt’s numbers he had typed in:

Service of Funeral Dir/Staff           $1,975.00

Embalming                                         835.00

Cosmetology, Dressing, Casketing      285.00

Floral Service                                      100.00

Visitation at Funeral Home                 495.00

Funeral at Chapel                                600.00

Transfer of Remains to F.H.               395.00

Hearse                                                450.00

Grave Set Up                                      650.00.

Even with a $2,155.00 ‘grouping’ discount, I was horrified.  And, this was just a little more than a third of the total bill.  After adding in the cost of the casket, an O.B.C (Mitt’s term. It stands for outer burial container.  Note, it doesn’t say vault.  They are much more expensive), $400.00 for Hillcrest Cemetery to ‘open the grave,’ and $27.00 for three death certificates, the total came to $10,302.00.  After my DeeDee gave me her best, ‘this is all about Mother so shut up look,’ I kept quiet.  But, it was very difficult for me not to ask why Mitt’s “Grave Set Up’ charge for $650.00 didn’t include the cost of digging Mother’s grave. 

What got my dander up more than anything was the $235.00 for the little rose-colored register book.  It was pretty, but not that pretty.  To me, it clearly illustrated how salesman Mitt, the loving, kind, and respectful funeral home owner and director, had no problem at all, no shame at all, to gouge us in our most vulnerable moment.

I’m pretty good at knowing when I don’t know something.  I know nothing about doing the tango, even though I once got interested in taking lessons after a meeting in the Rose Garden between President Obama and Mexico’s President discussing how to better manage illegal immigration.  The latter President had brought his thirty-five-year-old daughter to stand in for his wife who had broken a leg playing tennis.  As the two Presidents chit-chatted, Carlota, asked me if I could do the tango.  Why she asked me that I will never know.

In the McCoy’s conference room, I also recognized I didn’t know anything about funerals, planning them, or analyzing them.  Six years ago, when my Father died, DeeDee and Kevin, without me, sat in the same conference room and danced with Mr. Mitt.  Now, it seems, I hadn’t posed a single good question.  It appeared obvious, funerals are a lot like church, Southern Baptist church.  You sit in the pew, listen to the preacher, and don’t ask questions.  Have faith and shut-up.  No questions allowed.

DeeDee signed a check from Mother’s account, Mitt squeezed in the big number, and we walked outside, me trying to get away from an overly effusive Mitt McCoy.

Mother’s funeral was Tuesday morning.  At 10:00 a.m., the family was given, what the Funeral Home called, a private viewing.  There were thirteen of us, including Mother’s first cousin.

I must admit, Mother looked good.  It was a strange statement, especially someone saying, “Oh my, she looks so good.”  How can anyone look good when she is dead?  However, for me, my statement was relative.  It was relative to how I had seen her Sunday night in the hospital shortly after she had passed away.  There she was the perfect example of true death.  Now, at the funeral home, laying in her $3,650 mahogany casket (or was it imitation mahogany?) she looked like she was simply sleeping.  Her hair was perfectly styled.  She wore her glasses, the grayish-blue jacket with silk blouse she supposedly requested, and the large gold locket my father had given her on their Fiftieth Wedding Anniversary.  I could have sworn I detected a slight smile.

My statement was the only one I heard and agreed with.  The one that gave me the most trouble was from mother’s first cousin Darla, “she went to sleep and woke up in Heaven.”  After she just blurted this out after I hugged her neck, she continued, “the last thing your Mother told me when I saw her the last time, Sunday morning, was she wanted to just go to sleep and wake up in Heaven.  And, that very night, she did.”

Darla no doubt meant this for my good.  She wanted to comfort me during my time of grief.  And, I truly was grieving.  Mother was and always had been a dear, dear friend.  In my earlier years, no doubt, she was the best friend I had and could ever hope to have.  She, along with my Dad, took care of my basic needs, the need for food, clothing, and shelter.  But, unlike Dad, Mother attended to my emotional and spiritual needs.  She knew the inner me because she tried to get inside my head and my heart.  It was Mother, and no one else, even though not agreeing with my decision, who gave me permission to pursue my own truth.  It was Mother, and no one else, who suffered alongside me when others, especially fellow church members, criticized me for questioning their beliefs.

Once again, I had to ask myself.  How does Darla know this stuff?  Why does she believe it is true?  My first thought, it was her faith.  Then, I asked, where does her brand of faith come from?  Surely, her faith is different from a devout Muslim’s faith.  To me, logically, it had to root itself in the traditions she grew up in.  Which meant, brainwashing, not to say that all traditions are alike.  But, around Boaz, where ninety-nine percent of all humans, to some degree, live, breathe, and eat Christianity, Darla never had a chance.   The saying is true, from the cradle to the grave, God is everywhere.  Darla, like virtually every other person I’ve known from this area, probably never intensely read or heard a single article or speech that laid out the problems with the Bible or the preciseness of science, things that clearly contradicted the Christian religion.

‘Go to sleep and wake up in Heaven.’  It is absurd for any rational human being to believe this is true.  Science says this is impossible.  Science has long concluded that when a person dies, his brain dies.  It simply stops functioning.  If there is any movement, motion, activity in the brain at all, the person is still alive.  He is not dead.  Death is a natural event.  Of course, Christians would disagree.  They would also argue that Mother’s trip from earth to Heaven was not natural at all, that it was a supernatural journey.  Many of these folks would be more than happy to describe every step of the journey, even going further to lay out how Mother’s body, for now, will return to the dust, but some day, be transformed into a new body.  

I have long held to the science argument. There is no evidence there is a soul.  There is even less evidence that the mind is anything other than a natural organ, like the lungs or the heart.  Outside the Bible, there is no evidence there is even a Heaven.  The word evidence is greatly misused here.  All true Biblical scholars know the Bible is man-made.  Even if there is some type of Being out there somewhere, there is little proof this Being could speak Hebrew and Aramaic.  It is even less likely he, she, or it, had Mother a mansion waiting for her in Heaven.

Science invaded Room 333 at Marshall Medical Center South on Sunday night.  It was science at work, while God was absent, during the thirty minutes I spent with Mother after she died and after the nurses got her cleaned up and redressed.  I admit, she looked at peace.  Much more so than the last ten minutes of her life, with me by her side, watching her struggle for breath and life.  As she lay peacefully on her hospital bed I walked the room and talked with her.  “Mother, don’t leave me.”  No response.  “Mother, where are you?”  No response.  “Mother, what is going on with you right now?”  No response.  The questions continued. 

The same responses continued.  I cried.  I held her hand.  I kissed her forehead.  I repeated my sojourn.  Why?  Because, I didn’t want to leave.  I didn’t want to give her body over the McCoy’s Funeral Home.  I wanted to stay forever with my friend, my Mother, the most loving and generous person I had ever known.  

But, she was dead.  Her life was over.  Science said it.  I saw it.  Standing the last time beside her casket I said my goodbye, kissed her forehead, and walked away to an empty corner to cry like a baby.  There I found peace, and agreement with a statement DeeDee had made that earlier I had shunned.  When she said it, “She is better off.  She is no longer in pain,” my sister meant Mother was in Heaven, in a place where there is no pain.  DeeDee’s words were accurate, she just gave them the wrong meaning.  I agreed that again, science was correct.  Mother was no longer in any pain, for her life had ended, her heart and mind had simply stopped working.  For this, I was thankful.

After our thirty-minute private, family viewing, we greeted Mother’s friends and neighbors in what the Funeral Home dubbed a public viewing.

There were four members of Mother’s Sunday School Class at

First Baptist that came with warm condolences, all sharing with me their “she’s in a better place,” and “I’m praying for you” speeches.  I smiled and thanked them for coming.

I couldn’t help but think about how the leadership of First Baptist Church of Christ had treated Mother.  She had been a member since sometime in the 70’s and had always been a staunch tither.  Around the end of 2014, Mother’s Parkinson’s took a turn for the worse, causing her to stop driving.  Her cousin Darla came for her every Sunday until the middle of 2016.  After that, she simply could not manage herself even with a walker.  Sunday, July 10th, 2016 was the last time she could attend a service.

As far as I know, the pastor, the associate pastor, Mother’s assigned deacon, or for that matter, any other First Baptist deacon, had ever visited Mother at home or in the hospital.  I know for a fact that none of these folks, what I refer to as the leadership of First Baptist Church of Christ, visited her during her final nine-day battle at Marshall

Medical Center North, nor did they attend the public viewing or

Mother’s funeral.  This was not at all surprising to me.  Quite the contrary, it is exactly what one would expect if he believes Christianity is a myth, that it is simply a ‘glorified’ social club.

Mother was never very visible.  She was one who shunned attention.  She came, sit silently, humbly slid her tithe envelope into the offering plate, and went home.  Mother was not part of a prominent family.  If she was important at all to the church, it was for the few dollars she contributed.  

To many, it will be unfair of me to be so critical.  My worry is that I will not be critical enough.  I found a recent church newsletter among Mother’s things at Brookdale Assisted Living.  In it, I noted the pastor refers to himself as “Dr.”  To me, Dr. refers to either a medical doctor or someone who has earned their PhD.  It is improper for one to use this label if he only has a Master of Divinity degree.  Assuming, Pastor Tillman could legitimately use this identifier, I wondered where he had earned his doctorate?  I guessed it was of the mail-order type.  A real Ph.D. is an exceptionally difficult challenge, normally taking three to six years, minimum, to obtain.  The ultimate pinnacle of this process is the dissertation.  I wondered what new knowledge was produced by Pastor Tillman’s pinnacle work.  I allowed my mind to stray, considering the very legitimacy of a degree of religion of any sort.  To me, there should be no higher degrees offered in a field of study that is make-believe.  I compared a doctorate in Christian Theology, say, in New Testament studies, to be about on the par with earning a PhD in the Scientology of Santa Claus.      

Of course, where Pastor Warren Tillman has a legitimate doctorate or not wasn’t what bothered me.  It was his and his deacon board’s lack of care and compassion for an elderly member of First Baptist Church of Christ.  While I was part of the flock, what I today refer to as a cult, I knew how church’s operated.  Then, I always thought the churches that I was a member of cared deeply for its members.

It is much easier and gets a church much more valuable exposure to be more in the limelight with mission’s work, including missions trips.  In the two bulletins I found in Mother’s Brookdale room, Mission Montana was front and center.  I couldn’t help but cringe when I read a feature in one of the bulletins: “The key to success for [Mission Montana] will be your prayers and the working of the Holy Spirit.  Will you commit to pray for these students and chaperones (sic) every day from now until our trip is over?”

No doubt, many accepted this challenge and prayed and prayed and prayed.  I found it analogous to the praying the four sweet ladies from Mother’s Sunday School class had promised for me.  I knew all these prayers would equally accomplish just as much as the “working of the Holy Spirit.”   Equally accomplishing nothing.

Throughout the remainder of this hour-long public viewing I spoke with several other well-meaning folks.  I had no doubt each of them was deeply, deeply indoctrinated into the Christian cult.  I truly couldn’t blame them.  That’s the heart of indoctrination—they don’t know they are being duped.  If I had to bet, most of these folks had never critically explored the merits of their beliefs.  They were just like I had once been, listening carefully to what the preachers and Sunday School teachers said, and believing they knew what they were talking about.  I continued listening and believing, even when contrary evidence was all around.

As Mitt McCoy directed everyone to take a seat, readying themselves for Mother’s 11:00 a.m. funeral service, I was thankful she couldn’t read my thoughts, or see the bewilderment reflected across my face.  My silence was working in my favor.  Otherwise, if I had responded critically and broadly to all of Mother’s well-wishers, I probably wouldn’t be allowed to remain in the Chapel for the formal service.  

It was a long service.  Too long.  Jala sang Finally Home

Jalen shared a story, “A Parable of Motherhood,” that Mother had told him she wanted him to read at her funeral.  This was followed by a second song by Jala, If You Could See Me Now.  Finally, Pastor Wilkins took the stand and spent ten minutes summarizing Mother’s life and twenty-five minutes presenting an evangelistic sermon.  I think I did quite well to hold in my frustration and impatience.  After Pastor Duane wound down, Jala sung the final song, Sweet Beulah Land.  The entire service could be summarized well with one word, superstition.

As the song ended.  I got up and walked out of the Chapel.  I had no intention of hanging around and rehearing all the Heaven-speak I had endured during the public viewing.  I was happy DeeDee hadn’t planned any type of graveside service.  

As I was walking toward my car in the parking lot, Sarah James, my high school guidance counselor, probably now in her mid-eighties, hollered at me from a bench she was sitting on under a sprawling oak tree next to where the hearses were parked.

I walked over and said hello. She kept her seat, reached out her gloved and cigarette-stained hand, and said, “Walt, I know how close you were to your mother.  She’s so much better off now.”

“I agree totally.”  I said, taking her hand in both of mine.  I thanked her for coming.

As I walked away, she said, “I’m praying for you.”

I waved one hand at her without turning around, and kept on walking, saying two things to myself, “Yes, mother is so much better off now than she was before she died, and Southern Baptist funerals perpetuate myth.”

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 13

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 13

I picked Regina up at 7:30 at the Reporter.  It was Friday night and she had called last night to offer the rain-check she had promised.  She was still at work at 10:30 p.m. finalizing the Saturday edition. 

“This is the Walt I remember.” Regina said as I opened her car door and let her step up into my Ford pickup.  “Always the gentleman.” “Thanks for remembering,” just before closing the door.

We headed to Oneonta.  We both felt we needed to maintain privacy.  I’m not sure the main reason.  I was okay with it, especially if we were going to eat BBQ.  It was a new joint on Highway 35 west of the square.  Oneonta was the county seat for Blount County.  As we turned right, I saw the football field to my left.

“You remember our eleventh-grade trip here?”  I said.

“You mean the year Oneonta beat Boaz and knocked us out of the State playoffs?”

“Yes.”

“Seems like I remember you dropping the winning touchdown pass.”  Regina said looking over at me with the bluest eyes I had ever seen.

“Let’s talk BBQ or something.  I don’t need to relive that scene.”

We arrived at a full parking lot and had to wait for nearly an hour.  We sat outside in the truck after I registered.  Seemed like the restaurant had an outdoor public-address system that would call us when they had our table.

“I hope their ribs are good.  That’s what I want.”  Regina said pulling a notepad out of her purse.

“Is our meeting on the record?”  I asked.

“No goofball, don’t you remember me being a die-hard journaler?”

“Kind of, now that you mention it.”

“It started in the ninth grade.  My grandmother told Belinda and me that she had journaled since she was a child.  She showed us a shelf in her bedroom closet that held dozens and dozens of journals of all sizes and shapes.  If you looked closely at my journals you would find only a few days that I had missed creating some type of entry.”

“So, your little black book is a journal?”

“No, this is just where I jot down my noteworthy thoughts, that’s what Grannie called them.”

“So, what’s so noteworthy right now?”  I said as Regina was scrawling something down with a short stub of a yellow pencil.

“Walt, don’t you know that journals are private?”

“Now I remember.  Nearly every night that we met in the loft of our barn you would whisper something to yourself and I would ask what you were saying.  You would say, ‘just a noteworthy thought for my journal.”

“I didn’t have enough light most nights to write my thoughts down, so I whispered it a couple of times to myself and, with each separate thought, look at a certain place to anchor my mind to later enable me to write in my journal, after I got home.  Those thoughts were private then, and they are private now.”

I looked at her and smiled.  She reached out and took my right hand sliding over next to me.  “Walton Shepherd, can I share something with you, and you promise you will keep this our secret?”

“You mean you would share something from your journal?”  I said.

“Yes and no.  Part of what I want to tell you is in a 45-year-old journal, and part has never been written because it is happening right now.”

“I wouldn’t be here if I weren’t interested in you and in everything you have to say.”

“After you broke my heart the night before we were to graduate high school, I went into a depression.  It was something I had never known.  It took me years to get over you.  From May 1972 until almost Christmas, I pretty much lived in my bedroom at home.  After a few weeks, Mother became so concerned she asked Pastor Walter to come speak with me.  He did, and I’ll never forget.  After I shared with him how you had dumped me and how I didn’t think I could hardly breathe much less go forth with my life, he said something I will never forget.  ‘Regina, God has a plan for your life.  I don’t know for sure, but that plan could still include Walt Shepherd. You just have to have faith that God knows what’s best.’  Of course, I thought he was the chief lamebrain of a church full of lamebrains.  Six weeks later, I was admitted to the Center for New Beginnings, a Christian camp Mother and Walter had found.  It was in Williamstown, Kentucky.  It was really a prison.  Someday, I’ll tell you how I escaped that brainwashed oasis.  The oasis part was true.  It was in an idealic setting in a valley with green meadows and a glorious, sparkling river.  I still have postcards in one of my journals.”

“I never realized that I hurt you so badly.”  I said taking Regina’s hand back in mine.

“I might as well tell you.  You want to know my noteworthy thought I was jotting down?”

“I do.” I said, ashamed of how horribly I had hurt someone I had cared so deeply for.

“I wrote, it seems Pastor Walter wasn’t the fool I thought he was.”

“What do you mean, exactly?”

“You’re not listening Walt.  In my deepest depression, during the darkest days of my life, he told me to have faith that God could bring you back in my life.  And now, here you are, here we are.”

Just as I put my arm around Regina’s shoulder the PA called out our number.  I pulled her closer and said, “Gina girl.”  That’s what I called her during high school.  “I have loved you since we met in ninth grade English class.  I apologize for being such a fool, for getting mesmerized by money and power.  It’s clear to see now.  Jennifer’s father got her everything she wanted.  He thought his riches could bring her happiness, and he put the con on me.  I was deceived to think that marrying into a wealthy family could overpower love.  I’m sorry I fell to that age-old temptation.”

“Let’s go try some ribs.”  Regina said shoving her butt against me.  “Open your door before we lose our table.”

During the next hour, we ate some of the best slow-smoked ribs

I had ever eaten.  The slaw, beans and homemade bread were nearly as good.  Freshly made coconut pie paralyzed our thoughts.  We drove home with hardly a word.  None were needed as I drove with my left hand on the stirring wheel and my right hand in Regina’s as she sat as close as she could.  The only thing I remember saying during our too short drive back to Boaz was that I had called Ginger and scheduled an appointment to investigate the part-time court-reporting job.  Regina’s smile showed she was pleased.

Unexpectedly, life had conspired to bring two lost souls back together.  For that, I was thankful. 

I let Regina out of my truck, gave her a quick kiss on the cheek, and watched her walk back inside the Reporter, reminded that she was ageless, still possessing the perfect young-adult figure.

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 12

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 12

Ginger Crumbley, the Rains & Associates court-reporter Regina had met at the Draper Hearing, had more on her plate than hustling from one stenographic job to another.  Since Andrew J. Kane announced his candidacy for President of the United States in May 2016, Ginger’s main role had been managing a 50-person fleet of professional stenographers. It was Ginger who made the assignments, matching the person with the best speed, accuracy, and personality, to the needs of the job.  The jobs varied greatly.  A two-lawyer two-car accident with no deaths deposition in a small firm in Moulton.  A multi-law firm medical malpractice videotaped deposition including an expert pathologist of Indian descent who struggled with the English language, particularly English diction. The assignments also included jobs inside the court system.  Rains & Associates held the contract with the Administrative Office of Courts.  Permanent stenographers, employees of the State of Alabama, those whose sole job was working for a judge, like any other employee, sometimes got sick, injured, they died or had to take maternity leave or to take care of an aging parent.  On notices sometimes less than a few hours, Ginger, on behalf of Rains & Associates, would deliver a neat and highly competent professional stenographer for a day, a week, a month, or for whatever the need demanded.

Before moving to Alabama in May 2016, Ginger lived and worked in Chicago. The 44-year-old single mother of a ten-year-old daughter worked for Chief Judge Ruben Castillo, District Court Judge for the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.  That job ended in 2008 when she was drawn away by the American Center for Constitutional Allegiance, a public-interest law firm based in Chicago. 

Some talking heads considered the Center a sister firm to the ACLU. 

Ginger’s new job, with pay and benefits, was nearly three times that of her Federal employment package.  She accepted the position mainly to better provide for her daughter, but also because of her budding attraction to Zel Peterson, the Center’s lead attorney.  It had started the first time she saw him in action.  On behalf of the Center, Zel had sued Benton Consolidated High School and the BCHS Board of Education, in

Franklin County, Illinois over a long-taught Bible class.  Zel, arguing such class was a violation of the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment, the part often referred to as creating a ‘wall of separation between church and state.’

Six weeks after accepting her new position with Zel’s public interest law firm, Ginger was surprised, pleasantly surprised, to be offered a lateral move from the Center, along with Zel, to The Constitution Foundation, a moderately liberal think tank founded by

Thaddeus Colburn and three of his fellow University of Chicago Law School professors in the year 2000 after the highly controversial Bush vs. Gore presidential election.  Zel had spent over fifteen years as lead litigator of the Center fighting Constitutional battles all over the U.S. 

The announcement by Andrew J. Kane, had seeded a dreadful thought in the mind of Mr. Colburn and his Foundation: “What if Kane became

President?”

This question then seeded the brainstorming of a plan to respond to the near-absolute certainty that such a Presidency would train-wreck the U.S. Constitution and thereby America as we knew it before such election.  It was this framework that spurred Thad to transfer Zel, and his zealous and talented stenographer, to his Foundation’s newest project: Cane Kane.

“Regina, Regina Gillan?”  Ginger said with kind affection.

“Yes, whose calling?” Regina said sitting up on the edge of her bed still feeling the effects of Brandy and Sean’s romp beneath the sheets from the Harlequin romance she was reading when she fell asleep.

“It’s Ginger Crumbley, we met at the Draper Hearing in Judge

Broadside’s courtroom last week.  I was the court reporter.”

“Oh.  Yes, I remember.” Regina said, standing and reaching for her pink robe laying across her reading chair.

“Do you have just a couple of minutes. I promise that’s all it will take.”

“I guess, but I have to shower and dress and be at the Reporter in 30 minutes.  I’m running a little late.”  Regina said.

“After the hearing, you mentioned a man you thought might be interested in some part-time court-reporting.  I hate to bother you with this, but Rains & Associates is about to kill me.  I pretty much have abandoned my daughter and wouldn’t be surprised if I were arrested for child neglect.  Sorry, I’m rambling.  Would you mind giving me his name and number?”  Ginger said with her most-polished sincerity.

“I did mention it to him, but I would prefer to ask him to call you.  I have a thing about giving out private information without permission.” Regina said, naked but with one arm through the sleeve of her bedside robe.

“I understand.  I shouldn’t have even asked.  Now, I feel horrible.  I truly feel the very same way you do.  Privacy is extremely important.”  Ginger said continuing to slather on the sincerity, adding a smarmy pinch.

“Give me your number and I’ll call Walt, uh, sorry.  Well, so much for his privacy.  I’ll ask him to call you.  I’ll even try to give him a little nudge.  He really needs more to occupy his time than teaching. 

There I go again.  What’s your number?”  

Ginger gave Regina her phone number, and nearly got effusive with the ‘sorry to wake you,’ and ‘thanks for your time’ phrases.

Twenty-five minutes later, pulling into the employee’s parking lot at the Reporter, Regina, after three attempts, left Walt a message on his cell phone to call Ginger Crumbley with Rains & Associates Court Reporting at 205-495-4954, ending her call with, “Walt, baby, I promise you this call will change your life.”   

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 11

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 11

Regina arrived at The Reporter early Tuesday morning, only the night janitor was there, and he was coming out of the rear entrance as she removed her briefcase from the backseat of her Nissan Maxima.

“Morning Miss Gillan.”

“And good morning to you Ned.” She said wanting once again to remind him he could call her Regina and abandon all the formality.  Instead she reminded herself this was the South, and nothing would change Ned’s instinct for respect and honor.

“I hope you have a nice day.” He said walking towards a big dumpster at the back of the employee parking lot, toting two huge garbage bags. “You gonna have a busy one given how the phones started

ringing at midnight.  Your article gonna be hot.”

“What do you mean Ned?”  Regina said turning with her briefcase walking towards Ned.

“All night, all over the building, ever since today’s paper hit the streets at midnight, phone buttons look like a Christmas tree.  My break time at 3:00 a.m., I always read the new edition.  I like your approach of telling things straight, but this ain’t New York City.”

“Chicago, Ned, not New York.”

“Not much difference to folks around here. No disrespect intended Miss Gillan.”

“None taken Ned.  Now, you go on home and try to get some sleep.  I’ll probably be here late again, so see you around 9:00 tonight.”

Just as Regina poured a cup of fresh coffee, thanks to Ned, she heard her phone ringing from her office down the hall.  It kept ringing as she half jogged, being careful not to spill her coffee.  On the sixth ring, she answered.

“Thanks baby sister.”  Belinda, her twin, only used this phrase and tone if she was extremely happy or upset.  For some reason, Regina knew it was the latter.

“To what do I owe this early morning surprise big sister?”

“Frankie called from Grumpy’s parking lot.  Your article has our little diner and my husband out of every sort imaginable.”

“Why is that?”  Regina asked, not intending to play dumb but to hear Belinda’s exact words and response.  It wasn’t like Regina didn’t expect an uproar.  She knew her brand of journalism would mix in Boaz, Alabama about as well as a gay bar or a black city councilman.

“People round here like Kane.  Frankie worships the man.  Your article made him, and the other members of Kane Tribe, look like idiots last Friday night at Brewer’s Town Hall.  The way I read it, seems like you are insinuating Frankie is a likely suspect in Brewer’s murder.”  Belinda said, cursing Regina without using the actual words.

“Belinda, you know I write it the way I see it.  I don’t have to tell you that my philosophy has always, well, since journalism school anyway, been to follow the facts, pursue truth no matter where it takes me.”

“But, I’m family, Frankie is family.”  Belinda’s voice calming some, Regina feeling her beginning to play another version of her victim’s card.  Big sister, as Regina often called her, was born two minutes before Regina, thus, she was the older sister.  However, Belinda always believed she got the raw end of the duo.  She always had to play second fiddle to Regina.  It was ‘baby sister’ who won the Spelling Bee eight straight years in primary school. It was ‘baby sister’ who was elected a varsity cheerleader in tenth grade.  It was ‘baby sister’ who had the best figure and dated the best-looking guys.  It was ‘baby sister’ who stole Walt Shepherd away from Belinda.

“Dear, are you forgetting our conversation we had the first week I moved back?  I thought we hashed through this every possible way.  We ended that little chat with us agreeing I had a job to do and that had nothing to do with our love and friendship.  I told you, and I meant it with all my heart, I want us to get back to how we were at the beginning of ninth grade, before, well, high school.”  Regina said now feeling the pressure to end the call, Claire had arrived and was standing in her office doorway waving her right hand back and forth across her throat, indicating Regina needed to kill her call.

“I do remember, but I didn’t realize that your job could affect my marriage, like accuse Frankie of murder.”

“Belinda, please don’t accuse me.  I in no way did that.  I simply wrote a chronology of the events that occurred Friday night after Kip and his wife arrived in Boaz at 4:30, all the way until he was found murdered early Saturday morning.  It’s not my fault that Frankie and crew made such a scene at the Bevill Center.  Surely, you’re not accusing me of that.”

“I got to go, Frankie just walked in.  Bye.”  Belinda said with a whisper, almost as though she was afraid.

As Regina listened to the dial tone, speculating the unfolding scene at her sister’s house, Claire shouted, “Regina, the call has ended.”  Regina just then realized she had Belinda on speaker phone all along.

What is it Claire?  What is so urgent?”

“Delton texted me and said Frankie Olinger was a suspect in Kip

Brewer’s murder and was about to be brought in for questioning.”

“How did he know this?”

“Well duh, you know he is our crime reporter and spends half of his time in Guntersville, hanging around the Courthouse and Sheriff’s

Department.”

“Sorry, I’m still learning everybody’s name and role around here.” Regina said, feeling nausea making an emergency landing in her gut.  

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 10

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 10

Sunday morning, patrons of Grumpy’s Diner were weaving a Kip Brewer story that was sure to land in Hollywood.  Their imaginations were ignited by an article in The Birmingham News, “Shots Heard Round the World; Second Revolution Begins?”  The two reporters introduced their story by reviewing how in the first American Revolution, the “Shot Heard Round the World,” had been fired just after dawn in Lexington, Massachusetts, the morning of the 19th of July 1775, and quickly described the Battles of Lexington and Concord and the Siege of Boston ten days later.

In the second paragraph, drawing from a New York Time’s article, the reporters, described, in detail, how U.S. Senator Ralph Evanston from Malden, Massachusetts, was found dead yesterday morning in his luxury suite at The Kendall, the oldest hotel in Boston.  His wife, Julie, had previously attended three other Town Hall meetings but this time she had stayed at home, nursing the flu.  However, the New York Time’s article did not answer the glaring question: How did the killer get inside a highly guarded and secure U.S. Senator’s room at The Kendall?

Evanston, had come out of nowhere on the national political scene.  In November 2016, he had defeated multiple-term Democratic Senator Ed Markey.  For the prior eight years Evanston served in the General Court, Massachusetts’ law-making body.  There, he had been a virtual parrot of Markey. He even heralded from Malden, Markey’s hometown, although Evanston moved to Springfield when he was thirteen.

To Kane’s base, Evanston was a true turncoat. He had ridden into office on Andrew Kane’s coattails.  It had been shocking to most Massachusetts citizens when in July 2015, Evanston had switched parties, from Democratic to Republican.  It was a gutsy move, and surprisingly, won him a U.S. Senate seat.  Kane didn’t do so well in Massachusetts, losing to Hillary Clinton by a 2 to 1 margin.

However, after arriving in D.C., it didn’t take long for Evanston to reveal his true colors. He voted against Kane’s legislation at virtually every turn.  Even worse, he appeared often on national news programs castigating the President’s ‘deplorable tweets and elementary intelligence.’  This riled nearly a third of Massachusetts’ citizens, the 33% who had voted for Kane.

The New York Times article, in its fourth paragraph, recited the Alabama shooting of U.S. Representative Kip Brewer.  The NYT was arguing for a connection between the two deaths.  Both men were discovered within a few hours of each other.  Both men had been shot, although one from a long distance and the other from close range.  Both men were, “on the wrong side of Kane.”  And, what had 75 diners stirred almost into a frenzy, was The Times’ accusation that the shooters “most likely were embedded into the growing ranks of Kane Tribe, which, up until now, was thought to be a rag-tag group mostly comprised of rednecks.  The New York Times ended its article describing how Frankie Olinger in Alabama, and Albert Lawrence in Massachusetts, had both led a near-riot at the Friday night Town Halls Kip Brewer and Ralph Evanston had held in their respective states.

The Birmingham News (TBN) elaborated mostly on Frankie Olinger and the North Alabama Chapter of Kane Tribe.  Someway, TBN had unearthed news from Kane’s inaugural weekend in January 2017 that revealed a secret-meeting of sorts between Andrew Kane, Jr. and nearly a hundred men and women who had been hand-selected by the Kane team.  Most of these were uneducated white men.  Each of them had attended a Kane event in their home-state during the election campaign.  Each of these one hundred were openly anti-Hillary, virtually, antigovernment.  And, most important to President Kane, was that each of these had openly and consistently supported him for at least six months before he won the election.  TBN had no knowledge of what took place during that inaugural weekend meeting, but it identified both Frankie Olinger and Albert Lawrence as attendees.

Vann and I arrived at Grumpy’s Diner as the crowd was dissipating.  When I saw Frankie and four of his parrots getting up from the same table I had seen them the first time Vann and I were here, I wished we had gone to McDonald’s.  We took a seat near the far-left corner, as far away from the Olinger table as possible.  This didn’t keep the five stooges from coming over, probably to invite us to church.  I must say, Frankie looked better than the last time I had seen him with his greasy coveralls.  Now, he was dressed in a pair of clean khakis, and a blue button-down shirt with a green and yellow-striped tie.  All four of them could have been members of an older, boys band.

“You boys going to church?”  Frankie said placing his left hand on Vann’s back.

“Sorry Mr. Olinger, we gave up on myths a long time ago, although, Walt here still hangs on pretty tight to Santa Claus.”  Vann said removing Frankie’s hand.

“Typical tongue from a liberal.  Anyway, know Pastor Warren and all of us at First Baptist Church of Christ, are always extending an invite to all, even to you liberal atheists.”  

“What are you teaching today, Frankie?  Civil disobedience?” I said, recalling how close Frankie and I nearly came to blows during the last time we were together here at Grumpy’s.

“God’s for it, under the right circumstances.”  Frankie said raising his chin slightly, like he was a Bible scholar.

“Vann, you and Walt ready to order?” Gloria Brown said nudging Frankie out of the way.

“See you boys later.”  Frankie said as he and his four buddies walked away.

After Gloria left, I told Vann, “please shoot me if I ever come back to this place.  Really, shoot me if I ever mention or agree to coming here.”

“I agree, seeing those clowns doesn’t do wonders for the appetite.”  Vann said pushing his chair back and reaching for The Birmingham News laying on the table closest to the window.

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 9

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 9

 

Saturday, six hours after Sean Miller had called 911, the search began.  Twenty-eight officers from an assortment of local law enforcement personnel, including Boaz, Albertville, and Guntersville police officers, Etowah and Marshall County Sheriff deputies, and FBI, and ABI (Alabama Bureau of Investigation) agents fanned out and walked south from the Brewer’s backyard, across the open pasture, and towards the tree-line a quarter of a mile away.  Information from the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences conducting Kip Brewer’s autopsy indicated he had died of a gunshot wound from a long distance.  To Marshall County Detective Darden Clarke, an average-ability shooter could have made the shot from within the front half of the pasture, the half closest to the Brewer’s back deck.  A highly-skilled shooter would have chosen the cover from within the tree line.  For two reasons.  It was a comfortable shot, and for cover.  Given Kip Brewer was a public figure with obvious enemies as well as friends, Detective Clarke concluded the shooter would more likely be a professional, therefore opting to concentrate along the entire 700-yard tree line south of the Brewer resident.  Clarke knew the shooter had to have taken his shot somewhere along this line since the contour, slope, and elevation of the pasture prevented a straight-line shot from both the east and west sides of the nearly one hundred-fifty acre pasture. 

Thursday afternoon, a Marshall County Sheriff’s deputy found one shell casing.  It was a 30-06 cartridge. It was found in clear sight but tucked slightly under the edge of a decaying oak tree 644 yards from Kip Brewer’s back deck.  The location was accessible only by foot, four-wheeler, or horseback.  It was three-quarters of a mile from the dead-end of an old logging trail that began at Highway 179 just beyond Clear Creek Snacks & Spirits. An expert at Forensics confirmed a 30-06 cartridge could not be excluded as the bullet that killed Representative Brewer.

Other than the shell casing, the crime scene offered little else.  Just over the fence from the pasture there was a man-size depression in the grass.  At the southern end of the depression the ground was semi plowed.  Likely, the shooter’s boots, while he was laying down scoping his rifle, created two, inch deep and three-inch-wide indentations.  After the depression was photographed, videotaped, and evaluated for DNA material, an FBI marksman arrived to attempt to simulate the shooting.  After less than five minutes laying with a 30-06 Springfield rifle equipped with a Leupold VX-2 3-9x40mm Rifle Scope with Duplex Reticle, Agent Tedder declared, “easy shot for an expert, assuming he could see Mr.

Brewer standing on his back deck.  Must have turned on the porch light.”

Detective Clarke was thankful for the cartridge discovery, but knew it was frighteningly little to mount an extensive investigation.  The shooter’s motive would hold the key.  Frankie Olinger appeared centerstage in Clarke’s mind.  “Damn, Olinger had declared Brewer an enemy at the Bevill Center Town Hall.  Frankie, Frankie, you are one fucking dumbass.”

Halfway during Clarke’s return trip to his office in Guntersville, sitting, waiting for a train to pass in Albertville, he said to himself.

“Maybe I’m the dumbass here.  How could Frankie Olinger have made such a shot?  The word professional and Frankie seemed to go together about as well as oil and water.  There was no doubt the shooter was an expert marksman.  As the last train car rumbled by, Clarke asked himself, “why would a professional marksman, in this case, a professional assassin, leave the one and only cartridge he had fired?”

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 8

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 8

I decided to get up early and visit Mother.  I was ashamed that I had only visited her five times during the nearly two months I had been back in Boaz.  Other than the first visit, where she did smile at me when I walked in and whispered a goodbye when I left, our visits had become routine.  I would gently knock on her door, receive no response, go in, walk-over to her sitting in your lounging chair, take her right hand, hug her, and then sit in front of her in a straight-back chair, and talk about old times, hoping and waiting for any response.  There had been none, so far.  I hoped today would be different.

I signed with the receptionist at the information desk and walked two long halls back to Mother’s room.  I lightly tapped on her door and heard, “come in.”  I was temporarily encouraged but then realized when I opened the door that the words had come from a nurse’s aide.  Mother sat in her chair and looked at me.  No smile, but at least she had looked my way.

“Are you Harriet’s son?”

“I am.”

“Please tell her she needs to leave the air-conditioning set on at least 78 degrees.  I know it’s winter-time, but these rooms don’t know that.  I came in a few minutes ago and it was nearly 90 degrees in here.  If you click over to Heat, the thermostat doesn’t work, and it thinks you want to boil.  If you click over to Cool and turn down the thermostat to

78 degrees or below, the unit will keep the room temperature comfortable.  These old units need throwing away.”

“I’ll remind her when I leave. Would you be so kind, along with your team-mates, to look in on Mother?  By the way, when is Brookdale going to address the heating and air-conditioning issue?”

“We’ll try.  We have a full-house right now.  Talk to the Director about your last question.”  The aide said walking towards the door. “Don’t forget to remind her.  Her getting too hot and breathing all this stale air can cause pneumonia.  She doesn’t want that.”

“Me either.”  I said as the short and wide woman left Mother’s room.

I walked over to Mother, took her right hand and hugged her, this time kissing her on her forehead.  I pulled over the straight-back chair and sat down in front of her. She was dressed in a navy-blue jogging outfit, pants and top, the top being, to me, an overly thick sweatshirt.  I looked her in the eyes and saw a glimpse of my real mother for the first time since I returned from D.C.  I may have been simply imagining.  I’m not sure.  But, it seemed we were back on our back porch, sitting in the swing, that Sunday night, me at fifteen, and her at thirty-eight.

This glimpse and my mind recalling my conversation with the on-duty nurse I nearly bumped into turning down the last hallway on the way here, brought tears to my eyes.  That was an understatement.  I was crying.

The nurse had said Mother’s condition had deteriorated a great deal since she moved in nearly three years ago.  When she arrived, Mother could get up out of her chair, and with the use of her walker, get about in her room.  Now, she can barely sit up in her chair.  And, she has no power to move herself at all.  The nurse said that aides transfer her from her bed to her walker, from her walker to her chair, from her chair to the bathroom, even though Mother now wears diapers.  Also, she said that Mother’s near inability to speak was common for

Parkinson’s patients in the disease’s final stage—something about how it affects the throat muscles.  The biggest shocker came when the nurse said that Mother’s days here may be limited.  When the first of two things happen, inability to swallow, or when she can no longer sit up in her chair, will be the time she must transfer to a nursing home.  The nurse said Brookdale, like all other assisted living facilities, is not equipped to deal with either of these problems.  These issues require skilled nursing care, the type care provided only by a nursing home.

I took out my handkerchief and dabbed my eyes.  It took me a few minutes to suppress my crying.  This alone, that is, my crying, troubled me.  I wasn’t the crying type.  All my experience told me this.  However, I was now dealing with a whole new experience.  One, that broke my heart.  Seeing my dear mother, broken by Parkinson’s, broke my heart.

When I could finally see Mother again, she was half-pointing towards an end-table beside her chair.  There was a half-folded sheet of paper with my name written on it.

“Mom, do you want the sheet of paper?”  I asked feeling more tears about to surface.

She nodded her head, forward and back up just a little.

I took the paper and handed it towards her.  She moved her head sideways back and forth just a little.

“Do you want me to look at it?”

Another affirmative nod, which was hardly a nod at all but I knew her response wasn’t a ‘no.’

I opened the sheet and immediately recognized DeeDee’s handwriting.  It was the same that had printed my name on the outside of the paper, but I hadn’t even thought to question it.  

“Mother, I assume you want me to read this.  Is that correct?” Another affirmative nod.

DeeDee introduced what was to follow by saying that Mother had asked her to write all this down.  I glanced down to the bottom of the sheet and it was signed, “Harriett Shepherd, by DeeDee.”  Written beside her signature was the date, February 10, 2018.  It was now February 25th.

Basically, Mother’s message to me was short and simple, stay open-minded about God.  Apparently, Mother had shared with DeeDee several events that had taken place during my youth, including that infamous meeting on the back porch when I was fifteen.  Another one was the talk we had in my room after I came in at 3:00 a.m., the morning after I graduated from Boaz High School.  That meeting included her having the two of us kneel beside my bed and her praying a rather lengthy prayer which included her pleading God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit, to gift me with what she called, ‘Walt’s Damascus Road unveiling.’  At the bottom of the sheet, DeeDee had written.  “Walt, Mother had me help her get down on her knees beside her chair to pray (it took two aides to help her back up after she finished).  These are her exact words, no paraphrasing, ‘Lord, open Walt’s eyes, show him your face, please

God, give me a sign before I die.”

I reread the note and looked back up at Mother.  Now, she was the one with tears.

“Mother, you know I love you and have always respected your beliefs.  For years now, I have had a closed mind when it came to God, but I promise you, right here, right now, I’ll change that.  I’m going to be looking for that sign you talked about.  I am going to be wholly open to having my Damascus Road unveiling.”

The tears kept rolling down Mother’s cheeks.

“Mother, please believe we are back on the porch having just finished the two-hour talk we had when I was fifteen.”

Until lunchtime around 11:30, I talked, and Mother listened, slightly nodding up and down, or sideways.  At first, I shared with her the significant moments in our relationship.  My tears almost erupted when I realized the huge gap between a host of wonderful moments growing up, and now, nearly a half-century later.  While I was in college I called Mother every week.  Since leaving Charlottesville in 1976, our contact had been very sporadic, maybe eight to ten times per year.  I realized here, now, how I had broken Mother’s heart, the one person primarily responsible for my life.  

When an aide came in with Mother’s lunch tray she told me she needed my space.  I asked her to give me just a moment.  I knelt down in front of Mother, reached over, with tears in my eyes, kissed her on both cheeks, bowed my head and prayed, ‘Lord, oh Jesus, I want to hear from you.  And please, take care of my Mother.’

I squeezed Mother’s hands and stood with a flush-red wet and sloppy face.  She slowly raised her head and smiled.  I could barely breathe out the words.  “Goodbye Mother, my Queen.”  I turned and walked out of her room and down the two long hallways contemplating my next visit could be at Mother’s bedside in a nursing home.    

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Stenographer, Chapter 7

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Stenographer, written in 2018, is my fourth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

Walt Shepherd, a 35 year veteran of the White House’s stenographic team, is fired by President Andrew Kane for refusing to lie.

Walt returns to his hometown of Boaz, Alabama and renews his relationship with Regina Gillan, his high school sweetheart, who he had ditched right before graduation to marry the daughter of a prominent local businessman.  Regina has recently moved back to Boaz after forty years in Chicago working at the Tribune.  She is now editor of the Sand Mountain Reporter, a local newspaper.

Walt and Regina’s relationship transforms into a once in life love at the same time they are being immersed in a growing local and national divide between Democrats and traditional Republicans, and extremist Republicans (known as Kanites) who are becoming more dogmatic about the revolution that began during President Kanes campaign.

Walt accepts two part-time jobs.  One as a stenography instructor at Snead State Community College in Boaz, and one as an itinerant stenographer with Rains & Associates out of Birmingham.

Walt later learns the owner of Rains & Associates  is also one of five men who created the Constitution Foundation and is involved in a sinister plot to destroy President Kane, but is using an unorthodox method to achieve its objective.  The Foundation is doing everything it can to prevent President Kane from being reelected in 2020, and is scheming to initiate a civil war that will hopefully restore allegiance to the U.S. Constitution.

While Walt is writing a book, The Coming Civil War, he is, unwittingly, gathering key information for the Constitution Foundation.

Will Walt discover a connection between the Foundation  and the deaths of three U.S. Congressmen in time to save his relationship with Regina, prevent President Kane from being reelected as the defacto head of a Christian theocracy, and the eruption of a civil war that could destroy the Nation ?

Chapter 7

Kip Brewer was the U.S. Congressman from Alabama’s Forth Congressional District.  This district covered Dekalb, Etowah, and Marshall Counties, and ten other counties stretching westward to the Mississippi line.  Kip lived with his wife of twenty-seven years in Boaz, west of town in the Red Apple Community.  When he was not in Washington, D.C., or traveling in other parts of his district one would find him mending fences or remodeling the one-hundred-year-old barn his great-grandfather had built in 1919 after returning from World War I six months earlier.

Kip was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1996 filling the seat of 15-term Tom Bevill.  Kip had served ever since.  He was a member of the Republican Party, a non-active member of the nonactive Tea Party Caucus, and one of only a handful of Republicans outspoken against President Andrew Kane.  Kip’s opposition wasn’t so much against Kane’s policy ideas, but against his manners and methods.  Kip believed the President of the United States, the most powerful man in the world, should conduct himself always with honor, humility, and respect.  To Kip, there was never a time the President is justified in calling names like a drunken sailor.  The full truth be known, in the center of his rationality, Kip believed Kane was wholly incompetent to serve as President.

Four hours earlier Kip and his wife Darla returned from a Town Hall meeting at the Bevill Center at Snead State Community College.  It was their last stop from a thirteen-county tour that began two weeks ago on Valentine’s Day in the northwest Alabama city of Tuscumbia.  The Bevill Center meeting had gone well, at first, with difficult but respectful questions from a well-mannered audience including thirty members of the Etowah County Democratic Party who grilled Representative Brewer on whether the Republican Party had any plans of confronting President Kane on his conduct and his involvement with the Russian attack on the 2016 Presidential election.

The meeting got ugly when Kip wholeheartedly agreed with the Democratic group.  Shouting started in the back rows on the far-right side under the balcony.  Frankie Olinger stood up and without microphone, thundered above everyone, “you Rino, don’t you know Kane is God’s man to drain the swamp.  I elected him, we elected him, to get rid of all you talk and no action puppets. You better get on board the Kane wagon or get run over.  The Revolution has started.  You’re the enemy and enemies get killed.”

It seemed every member of Frankie’s gang was present and spoke out.  He was the outspoken leader of the local chapter of Kane Tribe, a grassroots organization that sprung-up in early 2016 after Kane’s train began gaining steam.  The shouting for and against got louder and louder.  The opposition was mainly from the Etowah County

Democratic Party.  The other 600 attendees joined in as Frankie’s group approached the front and attempted to mount the stage.  It took fifteen Boaz police officers and thirty cans of pepper spray to squelch the uprising.  In the middle of the storm, Kip’s secret service team pulled him out the back exit and transported him home.

At 2:30 a.m. Kip eased out of bed, frustrated over the outburst at the Town Hall and frustrated he couldn’t go back to sleep.  He tipped toed into the kitchen and made a pot of coffee.  As it percolated, he recalled meeting Frankie Olinger in 1997 during his first campaign.  Kip’s father, a banker, had done business with Frankie and his father, helping them build a new building for Sand Mountain Tire & Battery, their automotive repair business.  Frankie had supported Kip’s initial efforts to get elected, even sponsoring a three-month radio campaign at WQSB.  Kip poured a large cup of coffee and walked outside on the back deck, flipping on the light as he stepped out into the cold and near-moonless night.  

He stood by the railing and looked out towards the old barn. He was beginning to think he would never complete the remodeling he had started in 2002, at the end of his third term in the House.  Kip started to sit down but as he turned he caught a glimpse of a light in the distance.  It was five or six hundred yards east of and beyond the barn.  It was at the edge of the woods that started along the edge of the pasture.  His mind convinced him it was some odd reflection of the moon, or possibly the aftereffects of a campfire built by a group of teenagers hanging out at the creek, though it seemed too early and too cold for that.  

Kip never heard the shot.  Just as he was sitting his coffee cup on the top rail at the back of the deck, the bullet arrived.  It’s sound trailing by only milliseconds.  The bullet’s impact exploded the mind of one of only a handful of men who stood between a Constitutional crisis, and the most narcissistic man Americans had ever sent to the Oval Office.  Kip Brewer, already dead, collapsed into a pool of brains and blood. In less than a minute Sean Miller with the Secret Service was on the deck with Kip calling 911, and radioing his team-mates to, under no circumstances, allow Darla to come outside.