Friday, February 28, 2014

And now for something completely different (apologies to Monty Python)

This post has nothing to do with food or eating. I'm trying to work myself back into the field of fiction writing. My 28 day plant-eating blog was non-fiction, though not totally without B.S. This is a very short story - less than 2000 words. One of my greatest writing challenges is to tell a story without going on and on. It contains some interesting facts about suicides on the Golden Gate bridge, but a couple guys die. So read on if that doesn't seem completely off-putting. Thanks for any feedback you'd like to give. Mac

The Bridge

He glanced at me for a split second, then out into the dense, cold fog. “Don't touch me,” he warned in a subdued gasp. “I'm going to do it.”

“I won't,” I said calmly. “I'm going too.” I rested my elbows on the rough, 80 year old, pigeon shit covered concrete.

I could tell he didn't believe me. A derisive hiss issued from his tight lips, and he moved another five feet away and glanced at my shoes. I involuntarily followed his gaze, then taking in his hiking boots. He sneered and shook his head.

“What?” I asked softly.

“The people who lived mostly were wearing shoes like that,” he tilted his head.

I looked back down at my brown dress shoes, then his. “So, boots are the way to go...to be sure?”

“Whatever.” He inhaled deeply, coughed as the frigid, saturated air hit his lungs. “Fuck off, man.”

“Nope. I have some business to finish.” I looked each direction along the walkway I could see only one person, on the walkway across the bridge, six lanes away. At 6:30 on Sunday morning, the traffic was light on our side of the bridge, perhaps a few of the faithful departing their pricey Marin or Tiburon hideaways for an early mass at exclusive Grace Cathedral on Nob Hill.

I turned my back to the rail and focused on the drivers who hissed past on the wet surface, well over the posted 45 mile per hour limit. Most paid no heed to me and my uncompanionable associate. One middle aged man briefly connected with my gaze and quickly looked away, not just in the direction of his travel, but across the bridge, dismissing me as completely as possible with the back of his head, perhaps fearful of my intent and his own unwillingness to accept any kind of responsibility for my potential action. That thought amused me and I chuckled softly.

“What the fuck is your deal, man?!” My fellow diver had turned to face me, hostility or fear drying his mouth so I could hear his tongue sticking to his cheeks and the top of his mouth.

I glanced up and noticed the fog over our heads had begun to clear as the late September sunrise made its initial effort to clear the view for all the tourists who would want to view this beautiful structure, this world famous Golden Gate later today. The evaporating mist also made for a clear view of our position for the closest security camera.

As I leaned over the rail and down, the swirling of the incoming tide was becoming visible. Two hundred and twenty some feet below, I harbor seal looked up and – like the driver a moment earlier – turned his head quickly away and was gone.


“You serious about this then.” I looked at him without expression, then took a small step forward.

He stumbled as he quickly retreated and equal distance. He dropped toward the sidewalk surface and grabbed frantically for the rail. He wasn't even close yet.

He couldn't have been more than 25 years old, reasonably well groomed and tastefully attired as if on his way to stroll the shops along Fisherman's Wharf. Essentially the stereotypical Golden Gate jumper. This wasn't a whim, for me anyway. I knew about those who ventured this path before me. Over 1500 jumpers during the bridges lifetime, about one in fifty survived – though I found nothing to support the assertion that footwear played a role in that statistic. I knew the cameras were there as an effort to deter or thwart terrorist activity, not to interfere with those of us who simply wanted to take advantage of the bridge's unique attributes for abetting self destruction. While it's reported that security personnel ride bicycles and motorcycles across the bridge to quickly intercede in any nefarious activity, this was one of many walks – hopefully the last – I'd taken across the nearly mile and three quarters span during the past six months and I'd yet to see anyone who seemed to be searching for those in need of emotional a literal salvation. I learned that more people commit suicide form the Golden Gate than any other structure in the world, primarily because, other than climbing over the four foot high rail, there's nothing to prevent a successful dive to the bay below. I did note that there was an eight foot high chain link fence near the south end, ironically to prevent items (not people) from being tossed out onto Fort Point below.

“Thirty one and thirty two,” I offhandedly offered.

“What?!” The vocal agitation and volume was rising. He was getting closer.

“Whichever of us hits first will be the thirty first this year. The other...” I smiled at him, and slowly extended my hand.

He shook his head and, almost childlike, batted my hand away. “You're fucked up, dude.”

“Guess we'd both fall into that category.” I continued to face him and extended my arms out loosely at my sides.

He looked me up and down and was clearly affronted by my composure. “Don't even try...I'm going.” He lifted his right leg across the railing sat, straddling. Five feet below, a large steel support beam made a narrow perch, and he looked to be evaluating the most - safe ? - manner in which to descend to it. It would happen soon.

He was no longer looking at me. He was no longer seeing the clearing fog, the orange painted girders or the angry water. I eased a foot closer, then another foot. The second motion caught his attention and he began to lift his other leg.

I lunged forward and caught him around the chest, one arm in my grasp, the other free. He struck out at me and leaned far back along the rail. I held tight, my belly creeping onto the railing. He alternately struck out wildly at me and grasped for a hold on the railing with his free hand. I felt his body weight making an effort to drop back to the walkway.

“Not the plan!” I hissed angrily, tightening my bear hug and rolling outward toward the abyss.

“Hey, hey..!” his frantic plea spewed across the bridge.

I heard a car making a hurried stop a hundred feet past us, I held tight. A car door slammed, hurried steps.

“No!” I yelled, “Don't do it, don't jump!”

“Jesus Christ...holy shit...what the fuck!” He fought my grip with renewed, frenzied strength.

“Hold on!” The driver was making a valiant effort to gain our position.

With a final, all-out effort I pulled, twisted and held tight as we tumbled over the rail, bounced painfully off the beam and drifted out into nothing.

_____________________________________

“Mrs. Allen. I'm detective sergeant Mallone, SFPD,” he held out his badge case. “This is detective Aubrey. May we come in?”

Without a word, Victoria Allen stepped aside, her face a mask of ashen foreboding. She lead the detectives into the living room and silently motioned to a leather couch, then sat on the front edge of an fabric covered recliner, near a fireplace that burned at a low, flickering flame.

“I've never been visited by the police,” her voice was soft and even. “Has something happened in our neighborhood?”

The detectives glanced at one another and the sergeant spoke clearly. “Is your husband Larry Allen...um,” he flipped open his notebook and read, “Lawrence Chistopher Allen, 54 years old?”

“Yes...” is something wrong? She felt her stomach lurch and her jaw tighten.

“I'm afraid that I have to tell you your husband tried to save a man today and suffered fatal injuries in the process. Your husband is dead, Mrs. Allen.”

Her breath caught. The room became a flat colorless photograph with two pleading faces the only things in focus.

“Larry's...dead?” Her eyes searched theirs.

“Yes ma'am. His body has been taken to the Marin County Morgue.” He looked over to his partner. Detective Aubrey was an attractive young woman, perhaps 40 years old. “We'll need you to identify the body in the not too distant future, ma'am.”

“Why Marin? We live in San Francisco...” her voice trailed off as she recognized the absurd nature of her comment.

“Well, the Marin County coroner is in charge of all...” Detective Aubrey continued, but Victoria's brain had disconnected.

She remembered the day, nearly 31 years ago, that Larry proposed to her. She could see the brilliant colors of the huge dahlias as they paused in the garden of Golden Gate Park on that hot August afternoon. She could feel the intense thrill as they made love on a pile of blankets strewn across the floor the first night in their own house. A darkly forlorn moment caused her to tilt her head in distress and groan softly remembering when the doctor told her she could never conceive a child.

“Mrs. Allen?” She looked into detective Aubrey's sincere, brilliant green eyes as tears filled her own.

“Mrs. Allen, I'm so sorry about husband's death. I can tell you died a true hero, trying to save a young man's life on the Golden Gate bridge. Bridge security personnel saw it all on video monitors,” She paused briefly, “During Larry's effort to save the other man, they both fell from the bridge and died immediately on impact. He didn't suffer, ma'am.”

“There're some things that need to be done before you'll have to ID his remains, autopsy and...” The sergeant's voice trailed off. “Is there anyone we can call to be with you tonight, Mrs. Allen...family, close friend...?”

“No...thank you. I'll be OK.” The last syllable caught in her throat and the tears poured.

After several minutes, after two more declined offers to call someone to provide support, the detectives slowly made their way out and to their unmarked car double parked at the curb.

So many plans. They had so many plans. But they didn't plan for that...nobody plans for that. She slowly walked to a drawer in a lamp stand and withdrew a small spiral notepad. She flipped it open, thumbed through the dozens of pages of notes she'd made about treatments, interventions, long term care facilities.

Near the back of the notepad was a list, written in Larry's neat, tiny printing. There were life, home and car insurance companies and agents' names. He had heavily underlines Accidental Life Insurance. She scanned bank and credit union account numbers and balances, explanations of how to submit certified death certificates...everything in perfect order. She would be financially secure.

“Now it's just me, sweetie. Now it's just me. I'll always miss you.”

She tore out the final page, folded and secreted it under her chair cushion and tossed the notepad into the fire.