Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Blue Collar-Chapter Five: V&J Tool & Die by Rod Kackley

Blue Collar
Chapter Five: V&J Tool & Die



Jim took over the V&J Commercial Tool & Die after his dad died. He really hadn’t wanted to but that is what a good son does in metro Detroit. He carries on the blue-collar tradition.
They had worked together since he got out of high school, “Just two blue collar guys side-by-side,” his dad always said while Jim stood beside him mouthing the words.
Yet, Jim felt the same kind of pride his father had felt. It had felt good, then. It still felt good now to be blue collar and proud of it.
“Not that you could ever get my son to think that way,” Jim muttered to himself walking into the shop.
He found Mary Beth at the reception desk right where she has been for the past 35 years. She was only 16 when Jim’s father hired her and made her part of the family. Even though it seemed like every other business was firing receptionists and going to automated voice systems, Jim wouldn’t even consider that. 
“You might as well cut off my left nut as get rid of Mary Beth,” he told Thomas and Michael during what was going to become an incredibly drunken night at Jon Jon’s, Warren’s first and most famous topless bar.
“She’s family. She knows the place better than anyone and besides. She’s family.”
“So you said,” Thomas said, laughing as he drags on another cigarette. “So you said.”
Mary Beth and Jim exchanged their good mornings, and he went through the messages. Thank heavens there are more of these, he thought thumbing through the pink slips Mary Beth left in his box. 
Compliments. 
What a relief, it was to see messages from happy customers, increasing their orders. 
Jim had instituted Six Sigma manufacturing principles that helped identify problems in the shop before they became issues for customers.
And business was up. Thank God for that, Jim would have thought if he was one of the believers he had met on the other side of Michigan.
But he wasn’t.
There were years that V&J got nothing but nothing. Those were years when  Jim and Carolyn were almost driven to pray. It was known as the Great Recession everywhere but Detroit.
There it was the Detroit Depression.
As far as Virg was concerned it was the unions that wrecked V&J and Jim didn’t think he was wrong by much.
“Nobody on your side of the table believes in compromise,” Jim would say during bargaining sessions with the union rep for the small local that worked at V&J, sounding just like his dad.
“Don’t you realize this is a global society?” Jim said,  “I can send all of this work to China or Mexico and just say the hell with you.”
“You can’t do that,” said the union rep.
He and Jim might have gone to high school together, but right now they were planets apart. “You’ll wreck the community. You’ll wreck the state. You owe workers more than that.”
“And if I don’t see it your way, what then?”
“We walk.”
“And I close.”
“Who won’t compromise now?”

In the end they worked it out. Jim gave much more than he wanted. Mr. UAW felt the same way.
The difference between negotiations at V&J and the United Auto Workers union and what went on with the Big Three — General Motors, Ford and Chrysler — was the fact that everyone knew everyone.

“We all hung out in the same bars. Our wives all shopped at the same stores. Our kids all went to school together,” Virg would say in his Lazy Boy by the window. “We got along because we knew we had to get along.”

“And you know what? Sometimes they were right.”

Neither Virg nor Jim ever moved much of their work overseas.
“Why would I want to send even a dime to those people in Japan?” Virg would say. “I spent too many years waking up in the war with one of those bastards trying to kill me.”
Besides, Virg was too controlling. He couldn’t stand not to be looking over someone’s shoulder. Even the TV repairman back in the days when tubes brought the world into homes all over the world, got used to Virg’s breath on his neck.
“And he couldn’t do that when the tool makers are in Vietnam, or China, or Japan,” Jim said to Michael with a laugh and a drag on the cigarette that he thinks Carolyn doesn’t know he is smoking. “I don’t know anybody who could see that far.”

“Those unions wrecked this city as I am concerned,” as another country was heard from in the United Nations of Regal Lanes.
It was time for Michael to have his say.
Always a card-carrying member of the Teamsters Union, but never happy with the union bosses, Michael was like a Catholic who was never happy with the Pope in the Vatican. 
As a matter of fact, Michael was that, too.

“I paid dues and put money in the plate because I had too. Couldn’t work if I didn’t, and the Teamsters wouldn’t have stayed in power if they didn’t force us to pay up,” said Michael. “Won’t be able to go to heaven without the Church.”

“What about the benefits you got? Healthcare? Vacations? The work rules, all the shit Dave G. and the boys at UAW were always beating me up for,” said Jim. “Didn’t that  make you feel a little better?”

“You’re still stuck in 1972,” Michael said turning red. Jim could tell Mark’s index finger is about ready to poke him in the chest, which meant Jim was putting four fingers and a thumb together for a comeback.

“We lost all that shit,” said Michael. “Healthcare, pensions, everything gone. But you think the fat asses at Teamsters HQ are hurting? Not much. They even fucked over their own people,” he concluded slamming a fist on the bar rattling everyone’s cage.

“Language, gentleman, language,” said Pat, 85 years old if she was a day and looking more like 90 but she never missed a day behind the bar. Neither did her husband, who coincidently was named Patrick.

“The unions had to give,” said Patrick who was a dues paying member of the Detroit Police Officers Union until the day he turned in his shield, which was about two days before he got grand juried on charges of police brutality.
“They had to give, Michael. The fuckin’ Chinese and Mexicans are eatin’ our lunch. You want all the jobs should go over to those places. Christ even the fuckin’ Vietnamese are stealing our work.”

Michael had to admit that it was not 1972 anymore, but damn it. Why shouldn’t it be again? The world worked in those days.

***

Jim was continuing the debate in his mind — and Michael wasn’t doing nearly as well — when he got back to the shop.

He only put his mind at ease when Richard walked into the office following a polite tap at his open door.

Now here’s what those idiots in Washington did to our younger generation, Jim couldn’t help thinking as he rose to shake Richard’s hand, admiring the Marine Corps tattoo on his arm.

Three tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan, he comes home and gets nothing, absolutely nothing. No job. No home. No nothing. Just crap.

Jim did have trouble with escaping the 1972 thing. He realized that nostalgia is usually nothing but wistful thinking.
But Jim was among the first to also realize the Baby Boomer generation was retiring and dying faster than their children were coming to work in the factories.
Nobody wanted to work in manufacturing. Jim’s friends didn’t want their kids to work in the plants.Hey. Jim’s dad didn’t want him in the plants either.
That made sense for a while. Jobs were going overseas. Work was going to Mexico. The unions were beating up guys like Jim and guys like Jim were selling out.
Jim didn’t sell. He thought about it. He didn’t sell.
Now, he had a new problem. The work was coming back.

V&J was running two shifts a day, six days a week, something Virg prayed he would see before his dying day.
The work started coming back in 2011. Jim felt like everyone who worked in the auto supply chain on Mound and Van Dyke roads were clawing their way back from the recession, kind of like crabs will do when they are stuck in a box. They climb on top of one another, one after another and finally someone sees the light of day, even though one of the crabs always tried to pull the others down so he could get on top first.
Contracts that had gone to China, Japan, India, and Mexico were now coming his way.
“Reshoring, is what they are calling it,” Jim explained to the United Nations table at Regal Lanes. “China’s not such a great deal anymore. When you add it all up it makes more sense to get the work done here.”

Jim realized that no good deed goes unpunished, and he knows enough business history to realize it’s the unintended consequences that could be a killer.

“Reshoring is good,” he said. “But now I have new problems. Do I hire more workers? Is it time to buy that new piece of equipment? Or do I just work everyone that much harder figuring the good times are going to end again?”
Is this cyclical or systemic? That’s a discussion Jim left for the economists and his friends at the Michigan Manufacturers Association.
What Jim knew for sure was the work was coming back and he needed more people. More CNC machinists, more people who know how to make things with their hands, people who got the same kick that he did and his dad did out of just making something work.
“And if they can show up on time, give me a full eight or nine hours, and do it again the next day, I’ll be a happy man,” he said to Carolyn after pulling what would have been a double shift with overtime if Jim was union, which he was not and never would be as far as he was concerned.
He had almost given up the dream of hiring a new crew until people like Richard started knocking on his door. Military people. People he could relate to. They knew how to work. They knew that the mission came first and everything else was second. There was a trust that Jim felt with them, a two-way street of loyalty he never felt from the UAW band of brothers on the other side of the table.

“Military people are just different,” Jim said to Mary Beth while he was checking messages. “They know how to work. They come into work.”

Richard and the others didn’t know manufacturing. Jim fixed that. He opened a new company, a company that did nothing but train these guys to work in the plants.
All he did was teach them and give them a chance to prove themselves.
“Just like boot camp, right Richard?”
Richard looked up at him with his dark eyes set back under bushy eye brows and smiled through his new thick, curly beard saying in almost a whisper, “Yes sir.”
Richard did three months in Jim’s new school, another year on the floor in an apprenticeship program, and now he was supervising second shift.
I love it when a plan comes together, Jim thinks to himself, leaning back in his chair.
“New order in Jim,” said Alan V&J’s top salesman, the only one who survived the lean years. “And we need it out Friday.”
Well, that’s why they call us managers Jim said to himself as he finished off another day at his second home.

“Jim, Carolyn on two,” Mary Beth said on the intercom.
“Hey. What’s...
“Harold’s dead.”
“Damn”

Harold Thomasson had never been a close friend. But Harold was always there. Harold was like the graffiti on the walls of Warren HIgh. You never knew how it got there, but it was just always there.
“I knew he was sick,” Jim said.
“Cancer,” Carolyn said. “Monica has been posting updates on Facebook. I should have gone to the hospital to see him. Last night they put him in hospice. He died this morning.”
“He’s number nine.”
“Don’t be funny.”
“I’m not being funny. I am being morbid. Can’t you tell the difference? He is the ninth person we knew in high school to die. Actually it’s twelve if you could Larry, David and Tom; the guys who were killed in that car crash when we were in junior high.”
“Oh, right,” said Carolyn. “I never really knew them. Didn’t they steal the car?”
“Borrowed it, from auto shop. Broke right into the high school garage, got the keys of the wall and drove away.”
“I heard Larry’s head got cut off on the rear view mirror.”
“Nice. You can be morbid, too.”

Jim and Carolyn were finding out that there comes a time in every Baby Boomer’s life when he or she can see the finish line. The more friends and family who die, the brighter and closer it becomes. 
“You can either decide to race to the finish,” Jim said to Thomas. “Or you can  cut across the infield, cruise to the finish line, and save the fourth turn.”
“I know what you can do with me when I die,” said Thomas.
“I can hardly wait for this,” Michael said as he rubbed his eyes with the heel of the hand holding a burning cigarette. “What can we do with you, when you die?”
“Take my ashes, magnetize them and put ‘em in an Etch-A-Sketch,” Thomas said coming right off his stool to get his face as close as possible to Michael for the punch line.
“Did you hear that Jim, I said, ‘Put ‘em in an Etch-A-Sketch,’” Thomas said as he laughed himself breathless, wiping the tears out of his eyes.

This isn’t the first time Thomas has thought about death. There wasn’t a day that went by when he doesn’t seriously think about ending it all. He drove by a tall building and wondered what it would be like to take a jump. 
He saw rope in a hardware store and imagined turning it into the noose that ended his life. 
Once he shopped for a gun he could use. Figuring he would only need two bullets — one for him and one for his mom — Thomas tried to find something he could afford and then laughed about it the next day.
It wasn’t the idea of buying a gun to end  his life that made Thomas laugh. He found it ridiculous to be worried about affordability. 
What the fuck difference would it make? Who’s Bank of America going to call?
The only thing that slowed him down was the idea of a waiting period, a background check and taking gun safety classes.
Funny. A gun safety class before I buy a gun that I would use to kill me and my mother. Fucking funny.
Thomas couldn’t have gotten a rifle or a shotgun. No waiting for those. He could buy the rifle, some ammo, throw it all in the shopping cart, take it to the middle of the mall and start blasting away.

Thomas decided to go with the rope.



Blue Collar is a history novel in progress. New chapters will be added as quickly as possible. To start at the beginning, please click here. --Rod




Sometimes Things Break is the first novella in the St. Isidore Collection series. It tells the story of a teenage girl who is kidnapped by one of her teachers, her parents are killed and their home is burned to the ground.

What if it’s all her idea? Will she be able to control the sex-crazed high school teacher? Is he the perfect alibi or the perfect serial killer and predator?

Sometimes Things Break is available wherever books are sold including Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Books-A-Million and your favorite indie book store.


Thursday, June 12, 2014

Blue Collar: Chapter Four

Blue Collar: 
Chapter Four-Thomas



Thomas knows what it means to be alone. He has spent most of his life that way. Thomas just never has been able to get in step with everyone else. Even now.
When his friends were driving their parents’s cars, loaded with girls, to school, to their part-time jobs, to parties and back home again, Thomas was trying to figure out how to make a left-hand turn.
He would drive for miles trying to figure out how to get home with a series of right-hand turns rather than just make one left-hand turn.
Keeping a car between the ditches in the country was out of the question. Thomas kept his hands at 10-and-2, shaking, half-burnt down cigarette in his mouth, beat up Detroit Tigers hat on his head paying attention to everything that was going on around him. Unfortunately that meant he didn’t have a lot of time to figure out what was going on in front of him.
Fenders and bumpers often paid the price.
Years later Thomas admitted he had been afraid to wear glasses. Thought they made him look weak.
Maybe that’s what set Thomas back. But it could also have been all the pot he smoked.
“Doctors are saying that there is a part of the brain that doesn’t develop until you are like 19 or something and that’s the part of the brain that gives you judgement,” Jim tells Carolyn one afternoon.
“When that part of your brain doesn’t develop you are trapped with the brain of a 16-year old, and pot shuts down that development.”
“You read that where? On the Internet?”
“Don’t be so anti-technology. It’s true.”
Thomas doesn’t think about that much. He can’t afford the Internet. But he does has a lot of time to think every night watching Dancing with the Stars or whatever prime-time show his mom wants to see. Thomas has been a homebody since Stevenson Tool & Die closed three years ago. No work anywhere for someone with Thomas’ skills, which are limited to showing up for work on time every day, day in and day out, for fourteen years.
“That’s gotta count for something,” Thomas tells Jim on the day that it all ends. 
“I was there every day, sick as a dog, hangover from hell. It didn’t matter. I always showed up.”
“And you always gave at least 50 percent,” Jim reminds him.
“Yeah,”Thomas laughs with that peculiar snort that has been part of his persona since high school. He still has a Detroit Tigers hat too, just not the same hair under it.
Thomas, as always he has a burning cigarette in his hand, ready to find his mouth, as soon as he delivers his punchline.
“It’s on my resume.”
“Do you even have a resume?” Jim asks as they grab a couple of quick coffees at the McDonalds they’ve been going to since high school.
It’s on Twelve Mile, one of the arteries that has taken auto and defense factory workers and the engineers that plan their day back and forth from home to work to overtime, double-time and triple-time.
There aren’t as many cars flying by as there used to be. Jim looks out of the window, leaning back to get out of the way of Thomas’s cigarette smoke.
When did it all go wrong? 
“We were like those lobsters at Charlie V’s restaurant. Sitting in a pot of water, Charlie turning up the heat slowly. The poor things didn’t know they were cooked until they were cooked,” Jim says. “Just like us. We didn’t know it was over until it was over.”
“Too bad about Charley,” Thomas says and Jim grimaces, knowing what is coming next.
“One day he’s selling seafood. The next day his boat sinks in the FLOR-ida KEYs,” Thomas says stressing the same syllables every time he tells the joke.
Now his cigarette rim shot is ready for the punchline. Jim, too. And they say it together.
“One day Charlie V’s selling seafood, the next day he is seafood.” 
Thomas breaks up with a deep, cough and laugh sending smoke to the ceiling that drifts away, out the window just like the dreams he had in high school.
Thomas never saw himself sitting in a MacDonald’s talking to Jim about where it all went bad, how it all got away. Thomas never saw more than a day or two into the future. Okay. A day was the limit. But even if Thomas could imagine, he never would have imagined this. 
No one ever imagined this.

“So what are you going to do now?” Jim asks the question that nobody in Warren wants to hear. “What’s next?”
Thomas stares at the table top tracing a stain left by a pickle that must have fried in the sun. 
“I really don’t know. Everything has passed me by. Even before we shutdown I couldn’t keep up,” Thomas says looking up his wet, blue eyes locking onto Jim and Jim flinches a bit. This is  unusual. Thomas hardly ever looks anyone right in the eye.
“Those f-ing kids that ran their daddy’s shop just pushed me to the back. I worked the oldest machines, never got a chance at the new CNC equipment,” Thomas says. “So it’s all a mystery to me.”
Some teenagers walk into MacDonald’s laughing, joking, punching each other, playing to the girls, just like Thomas and Jim has done four decades before.
“Life’s a fucking mystery to me,” Thomas says taking another hit on his smoke. Jim notices that Thomas’s been rolling his own lately.
 “I wish I could do something to help him,” Jim tells Carolyn. He’s looking at the floor, still sitting in the Lazy Boy that he calls home most evenings. Coffee cup on the small wooden table on his right-hand side. Twenty-five years ago there would have been a cigarette slowly burning in his ashtray on the left. 
No more. 
Jim never really gave it up. 
Habit. 
Addiction.
Smoking. 
Coffin nails. 
Nobody quits for good. 
“You just quit again every day,” is how Jim explains it to Thomas and Michael one afternoon at Regal Lanes, where they learned to bowl, walking in from the parking lot where some learned to ball.
“One day you realize your car will go into reverse without a cigarette in your mouth. You also realize you are never going to lose the urge, no matter how self-righteous you get about it,” Jim concludes with a sigh that just isn’t the same without nicotine.
 Jim never really quit. Now he smokes in his mind and wishes there was a cigarette in his hand, just like Warren. It never really changed. It just wishes the tool-and-die shops would start up again and black smoke would fill the sky.
 Jim picks up a pen that was laying on the table to his left, holds it between his fingers, gives the end a flick with his thumb like he used to do with his Marlboro (box only, pack tastes different), looks at Carolyn and says, “I’m as lost as he is.”
 “Now wait a minute,” she says with that look on her face, that look that could quiet a roomful of eight-year old heathens at Sunday school if she believed in church, which Carolyn most certainly does not.
“You are not lost. You almost lost the business, but you saved it,” Carolyn says knowing that story too well.

Like many tool-and-die guys, Jim was an artist. But he was no businessman. He might have understood the math of industry, but he didn’t get he math of accounting. Even though Jim loved everything about the shop, he never bothered to do the dollars and cents to find out how much it cost to create his art.
 Carolyn helped him with that. She did more than help. She did it. Carolyn knew enough about math to explain it to high school kids. Explaining it to Jim was a different story. 
“I realize that it was time to stop teaching and start doing.” Carolyn told her best friend Sally about five years ago, right when Michigan had its foot on the lever that would open the lid on the shit can its economy was doomed to fall into.
 Carolyn worked in the shop alongside Jim. He did the industry. She did the math. Together they saved the business. Together. That’s the way it had been since community college. As far as she is concerned, that is the way it always will be.
 However, it was time to teach Jim another hard fact of life.
 “Honey, I promised to live you in good times and bad, for better or worse, in sickness and in health,” Carolyn said as she takes his face in her hands. “But, not for lunch.”
“I never promised to have lunch with you every day.”
 “It is time to stop worrying about Thomas and go to work.”
(c) 2014 Lyons Circle Publishing Inc. All Rights Reserved
Blue Collar is a serialized novel.  To read Chapter Five, click here.

Sometimes Things Break is the first novella in the St. Isidore Collection series. It tells the story of one young lover and one middle-aged lover, one with love in his heart, one with murder in her soul. 
Bree wants her parents dead. Tim wants Bree. You can see where this is going, right?
Sometimes Things Break is available wherever books are sold including Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Books-A-Million and your favorite indie book store.

For more books, articles, and essays by Rod Kackley click here or download the free Rod Kackley app through Google Play or the App Store.













Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Blue Collar: Chapter Three-Jim By Rod Kackley

Blue Collar
Chapter 3: Jim



Looking out the picture window of the house he grew up in, Jim sees the old neighborhood is as broken up as he is. It should come as no surprise. Jim and his neighborhood are the same age, just about fifty-eight years old.
The streets are cracked and crumbling. Jim along with his family, friends and neighbors, have become accustomed to bouncing their cars, trucks, and SUVs through potholes that could swallow a child. Water pipes freeze and break in the winter before the snow melts and the roads flood. A cold snap hits and it all freezes before another hot, dry summer bakes out the relief of spring.
It all used to seem so good. The lawns were greener. The houses were fresher. The people were nicer.
So it seemed.
Then again, Jim used to be able to get a hard-on whenever he wanted. Didn’t even have to think about it much. Just a wink, a nod, and his one-eyed, blind horse was ready to go
Fifty-eight years is such an awfully long time.
“Hi honey," Carolyn says, Jim's wife of all these years.
“What’s with the blanket over your lap? Feeling old today?”
"It's cold in here."
"You weren't falling asleep?"
"No, just thinking, remembering."
"Your dad?"
"Yeah."
 Jim’s dad, was the first one in the family to graduate from high school, then college after World War Two. The G.I Bill was there, why not use it? Nobody else in the family thought that way. 
“Everyone thought I should just get a job in the GM plants,” Jim remembers his father saying in the last few months of his life. Old people, Jim found out, love to tell stories toward the end. It’s like they are putting all of their books in alphabetical order on the shelf before they lay down to sleep. Forever.
“Your grandmother had been in the plants for years, ever since we moved up from Missouri. If you had our last name you had a job with Generous Motors we called it. Simple as that.”
“Why not you too?”
“I got out of there. Went to World War Two. Needed some peace and quiet,” he laughed as if he hadn’t told that joke at least five times in the past month.
His dad was on the porch, waving goodbye as Jim backed out of his driveway. It was the last time they saw each other, alive.
They always did a Michigan goodbye. Say, “So long” in the house. Go out to the porch together, say, “goodbye.” Get in the car, back out of the driveway and honk the horn.
Felt good to say goodbye like that. Pissed off the neighbor across the street too. His dad and Jim both enjoyed that.
Jim was glad they did it the last time.

A few months later, Jim was back, picking up a paper bag filled with his dad’s ashes from the crematorium. 
Heavier than I though he would be.

***
Jim sighs and gets another cup of coffee as the winter wind blows down the street where he grew up. The kids told him moving back into the house that went up the same year he was born, 1955, was really nothing but moving into a museum of his childhood. It was more than that to Jim. It was the place where he felt safe. It was home.
He’d been in Grand Rapids for more than a quarter century. It never felt like home. He had a house, but not a home. This, Warren, the Green Acres subdivision, this was home.
The auto industry was everything back when the house was built and Jim was created. If your dad didn’t work for Ford, GM, or Chrysler, the father across the street did. If it wasn’t the Big Three — they might as well have been the Only Three — that put food on the table and at least one car in the garage, it was one of the companies that made the pieces and parts that went into those cars and trucks.
It was a three-shift-a-day life in Warren. The cars and trucks, the horns, the exhaust rising into the blue sky of day, the search lights cutting through the dark sky of night to attract shoppers to the newest shopping center to open, never stopped. The traffic was always moving on Mound Road and Van Dyke, the two north-south arteries that took the fathers to work in the plants of Warren and Detroit, and then back home again.
Flash forward to the twenty-first century through 57 years of life. Traffic still moves. When the GM Tech Center’s first shift is on the move the Mound Road rumbles. 
Nothing is the same, yet nothing has changed. Not really. It is a different generation behind the wheels of those cars. They still want to raise families. They are still working for retirement and while they do that they were damn proud of what they were making.
Still, something is different.
Their confidence is gone.
The dreams are not there.
They can’t imagine their sons and daughters will have it better.

***

Back in the day, everyone had that confidence. Nobody ever imagined the good times could end. 
“Well, we did worry about The Big One,” Jim tells Carolyn, at the small breakfast nook in their Green Acres house. “Remember the nuclear attack drills we did? Hiding under our desks one week, out in the hallway sitting down, covering our heads the next.”
“Don’t forget when Russia moved those missiles into Cuba,” Carolyn says. “It stopped being a game then.”
He and Carolyn might have only been seven-years old then, but both were at the top of their class when it came to eavesdropping on the parents.
“It’s only Baby Boomers like us who remember going to the place where they designed bomb shelters to find out if we could get one in our backyard,” Jim chuckles.
“But that was just part of life.”
 “Nobody really worried about it,” Jim says. “We just lived our lives.”
Kids were everywhere in the neighborhoods. Moms, too. They were always at home. They were watching, always looking out the kitchen window or maybe the front picture window of their 800-to-900-square-foot houses that all went up the same time, the same way. Cookie-cutter houses that all looked the same on the outside, but on the inside, they were all different homes.
After breakfast and a a morning cartoon, it was out the door and into the world. Sometimes Jim would take a lunch, sometimes not. He might come home for lunch, maybe not. Mom wasn’t worried. If she wasn’t watching, someone else’s mother would be. This village called Green Acres was raising its children.
Jim and his elementary school friends would all be on bikes, Schwinn Sting Rays or Huffy bikes, pedaling as fast as they could, owning the streets riding, two or three abreast. Nobody wore a bicycle helmet back then Jim remembers. “You know why?” he tells Carolyn.
“Why honey?” she says with the tired patience of someone who knows the solution to this riddle only too well, but loves the person telling it so much that she doesn’t want to let on.
“Because they didn’t exist,” Jim laughs. “Who needed them? Not us. We had Detroit Tigers baseball caps to keep us safe.”
Well, it is true that David Trent went over the handlebars a couple of times and landed face first on the pavement, which is why everyone called him “Sidewalk Kisser,” but other than that there were no serious injuries.
So, with Tigers hats on their heads and baseball gloves on the handlebars — because you could never tell when a game would break out — off they went on another adventure.

There were not that many adventures to be had in the cozy confines of the Green Acres subdivision — and nobody but the people who built those houses could tell you why it was called Green Acres. But that is what everyone called it.
The kids all went to Green Acres Elementary School, which was parked safely inside the neighborhood, walking and or bike riding distance for everyone, and the Green Acres Shopping Center, only a walk or a bike ride away.
Still there were adventures to be had even if you had to invent them, which is what Jim and the gang were really good at doing. If nothing else, you could always stop and play a baseball game.
Kids could just ride as fast and as far as they wanted. Even if they got hungry, nobody went home until they heard the moms start calling everyone home for dinner. Then it would be time to go back. Just like when the street lights started coming back on after dinner. Time to call it a night.
“You know who brought that life to you?” Jim says to Jeremy a guy sitting beside him at the Club Chevelle. “It was brought to you by the Big Three. Wait. This is better. It was brought to you by the people who worked for the Big Three.The blue collars. And they were the ones who spent the money they made on the line for two cars every three or four years, a cottage up north, a summer vacation for their families and college for their kids. The people who spend the money, those people are the job creators, not the people who own the factories.”
“And nobody knows who owns them anymore right? It’s not like you’re going to stand behind them in line at Kroger’s.”
“You know what, else?” Jim says to Jeremy for the God knows how many times, “Some of our Dads who were in the Marines and Navy had tattoos, but not a single woman had one.”
Neither Jim nor Jeremy had done as much verification of that as was humanly possible and took the rest on faith.

There were many things nobody checked back in those days, Jim admitted to himself. It wasn’t until the neighbors started dropping dead that the kids-now-adults started finding out what was really going on in those one-story, brick and wood homes,where everyone had a doughboy swimming pool in the backyard.
“We all ate big, charbroiled steaks at least once a week,” he says. “And our dad’s were dropping like flies in the 1980s.”
“Old man Flynn did get drunk and shot up his car with a rifle,” Carolyn says. “And the Timmerman kids set a record for vandalism  inside a school building.”
“So it wasn’t perfect,” Jim said.

***

The veil was lifted high when Lillian Williams ran down the street one night  in the early 1990s wearing nothing but an old cloth nightgown screaming,”He’s going to kill us all!”

Her husband, Dan, the nicest guy in the neighborhood, had been beating her and their sons every night for the past three decades.
This was the night Jim and the rest of the neighborhood figured out why the boys never took their shirts off at the swimming pool. 
Too many bruises.

Green Acres and Warren never looked the same to Jim after that day. The veil had been lifted.
There were too many bruises.

(c) 2014 Lyons Circle Publishing Inc. All Rights Reserved

~ RK ~

Blue Collar is a serialized novel available on this blog, on Wattpad,and  in the Reading Room of the Rod Kackley app, on Google Play and the App Store.

To go to Chapter 4 on this blog, click here





Sometimes Things Break is the first novella in the St. Isidore Collection series. It tells the story of one young lover and one middle-aged lover, one with love in his heart, one with murder in her soul. 
Bree wants her parents dead. Tim wants Bree. You can see where this is going, right?
Sometimes Things Break is available wherever books are sold including Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Books-A-Million and your favorite indie book store.



For more books, articles, and essays by Rod Kackley click here or download the free Rod Kackley app through Google Play or the App Store.