Journeys
Words
Images
Cloud
Timothy M. Leonard's books on Goodreads
A Century Is Nothing A Century Is Nothing
ratings: 4 (avg rating 4.50)

The Language Company The Language Company
ratings: 2 (avg rating 5.00)

Subject to Change Subject to Change
ratings: 2 (avg rating 4.50)

Ice girl in Banlung Ice girl in Banlung
ratings: 2 (avg rating 4.50)

Finch's Cage Finch's Cage
ratings: 2 (avg rating 3.50)

Amazon Associate
Contact
Wednesday
Jul152009

Leaving Casablanca

Slanting light wrapped its arms around someone gathering raw unfiltered and uncensored material on their journey.

Light cut the sky, severing the white village, stone paths, Moorish brown doors, idle men, shifty eyed one armed merchants, unemployed dissatisfied immigrants surviving with poverty and despair.

As a Wandering Ghost he traversed light, space, and time near vaulted arches. He kissed everyone on both sides of their extended faces while shaking hands with everyone confirming his flight. Your exile dream vision.

All the adults were tired, wasted, beat. Moroccans walked, stopped, looked around with this hesitancy, this delay, this boarding card question.

Their visa stamp bled through their indigo robes piercing shirts, blouses and delicate woven craft work designed by millions of minimum wage children in twisted alleys without a visa. They needed a bread visa, a scrap of meat visa, a tea visa. They craved freshly cut sweet smelling green boiling tea to mix their life’s colors with dust.

They taxied down the runway as rainbows illuminated western clouds. The moon danced in cobalt blue sky. Above clouds thunderheads formed a white billowing future, all air and water,
an infinite dream machine.

Zooming over Canadian ice fields toward Seattle and heightened U.S. military airport security and stateside psychosis he wrote to Imane in Marrakech, the Red City.

“Dear Imane, - Faith in Arabic - my dearest friend in another earth orbit time zone, a Heart Space. Imagine meeting you on a train just by chance. We trust our instincts to experience the truth.

“I am flying over ice fields, Canadian white with blue water cracks, down below stretching to the northern horizon. We are above the clouds whispering winter’s knowing. Spring will find white ice melting.

“We are above frozen rivers looking for strength inside it all to flow.

“Orange and jasmine fragrances in a Marrakech courtyard welcome your eyes surrounding you with sensual delight. I am trapped inside a metal container above frozen white water. I need to jump into the cold water and scrub off old airport noise, dust, sound, people pushing their lives toward inarguable conclusions.

“Yes, I will jump down onto white ice floating to meet you on the other side of a reality where sand lies shimmering beneath the blue sky and a warrior’s life is strong.

“Spring is coming, you see small tight winter trees waiting to explode in Holland, such a pity, such a tragedy waiting to happen, this season shift as if someone put 2 and 2 together in some grand equation.

“Billy in the Spanish Sierras is 3 weeks older than before he was born which doesn’t have anything to do with this memory yet contains everything because he is a lovely boy and calm. He saved their relationship you know; Mo, the desperate English woman who cheated on her English husband after producing two lovely daughters in Graz, an old Roman village in Andalusia. She took up with Pedro, and yes, Billy’s conception and birth saved them forever.

“I will always remember watching Pedro, an old hippie turned anarchist turned leather worker, one morning when we shared breakfast. We were in his old white stone home along the back ridge of narrow tight Roman cobblestone streets below Penon Grande mountains.

“We enjoyed toast, cheese, olive oil, garlic and tomatoes. Pedro gently sliced red skin and spread each tomato seed on his brown bread.”

A defining moment. Each seed itself a small world of life and future. So small yet so significant. We never wasted anything. We weren’t poor mind you just paying attention to the details.

“Back to us. Our Marrakech train conversations were the magic of being still, hurtling past abandoned mud homes, villages where women ride donkeys miles to wells looking for blue water, children without education tend flocks, men hammer their sharp knives through mint tea while laughing with the sky.

“As we sat in Jemma space watching black hooded cobras dance you were beautiful with a fine laughter and our time together was sweeter than the smell of jasmine in the afternoon and now I see ice cracking into blue water falling from the blue sky and winter sleeps below us.

“Just as the Sahara sand blows south for the winter, ice retreats north to it’s spring and it’s austere, nothing at all, a blank white, perhaps like a huge, gigantic white blank page in an old black sketch book with a broken spine spilling watercolors, stories, poems, releasing old visions of butterflies in micro fauna extremes.

“I survived these adventures and I ramble onward and tell you now when I am in the air it’s good to be moving like standing still in the frozen river of dreams. We are a cloud of blue water dancing with white ice seeing this amazing world of ours. Specific images from these moments.

“To be precise when I grow a little weary of all the moving, all the standing silent inside the language of silence white clear and slow the smell of jasmine in the garden penetrates my heart.

“I would like to rest my head and heart there just now, just for the smell of knowing red dust, water bells, chimes, singing birds, oranges, lemons, your laughing eyes again and this is enough.”

Wednesday
Jul152009

Crow Forest

Returning to the United States of Advertising (USA) after centuries on the ground he sat down in a Crow cabin on 8,000 year old Kalapuya Indian ceremonial ground. He had a maul, a hatchet, and a double bladed axe named Laughter.

He lived inside shifting forest tides, buried beneath stoic 150 foot tall Douglas firs waving in wind, with a Fischer stove and the chopping. He worked in a room bathed in light.

The blade, edge, swinging weight, slicing through old growth, tree time rings; ferns, moss, rain, falling ladders, outhouse and the Afghan girl’s piercing green eyed image from 1984 on his wall.

Her eyes followed him everywhere.

Where he sat down spinning out his tales of control and approval ratings weaving spider webs on a loom of time. Where he rearranged mirrors to reflect everything.

He carried Omar’s palimpsest through the forest. It was a bird song, thrill immediate spring music, owls, ravens, crows, vultures circling on thermals, wild deer, ancient wisdom, shamanic visions of clarity insight and wisdom. The book gathered and collected bark leaves. A fabric of moss singing to him.

He established his refuge from the storm with simplicity, serenity and sanctuary. He lived on the edge finding shelter inside a bird’s song. He trimmed cuticles into air seeing them spiral into spring. It snowed flowers.

He looked deep into the forest of the mysterious manuscript. It was true and filled with sensory details.

He connected his narrative with Omar’s animal skins; tales, adventures, trials, tribulations, dreams, nightmares, conversations, explorations, discoveries and boredom mixed with excitement, wonder, suffering and healing energies.

People wondered and wandered, chained to the earth to pay for the freedom of their eyes. They saw through their eyes not with their eyes.

“I am an old dialect of Kalapuya tribes. I respect the spirit energies. I hear with my eyes and see with my ears. I understand your love for the spirit power guardian. I am an ancestor speaking 300 languages from our history. Now only 150 dialects remain.

“A hunting gathering people, speaking Pentian, we numbered 3,000 in 1780. We believed in nature spirits, vision quests and guardian spirits. Our shamans, called, amp a lak ya taught us how seeking, finding and following one’s spirit or dream power and singing our song was essential in community.

“I speak in tongues, in ancient dialects about love. Dialects of ancestors who lived here for 8,000 years before where you are now. In the forest near the river all animal spirits welcome you with their love. They are manifestations of your being.

“I am blessed to welcome you here. You have walked along many paths of love to reach me.

“My dirt path is narrow and smooth in places, rocky in others. I am the soil under your feet. I feel your weight, your balance - your weakness and your strength. I hear your heart beating as my ancestors pounded their ceremonial drums. I feel the tremendous surging force of your breath extend into my forest. Wind accepts your breath.

“I am everything you see, smell, taste, touch and hear. I am the oak, the fir and pine trees spread like dreams upon your outer landscape. I am your inner landscape. I see you stand silent in the forest hearing trees nudge each other. “Look,” they say, “Someone has returned.”

“I love the way you absorb the song of brown body thrush collecting moss for a nest. I am the small brown bird saying hello. I am the sweet throated song you hear without listening. At night two owls sing their distant song and their music fills your ears with mystery and love.

“I am warm spring sun on your face filtered through leaves of time. I am the spider’s web dancing with diamond points of light. I am the rough fragile texture of bark you gently remove before connecting the edge of an ax with wood. You carry me through my forest, your flame creates heat of love. I am the taste of pitch on your lips, the odor of forest in your nostrils, filling your lungs. It is sweet.

“I am the cold rain and wet snow and hot sun and four seasons. I am yellow, purple, red, blue, orange flowers from brown earth.

Language cannot be separated from who you are and where you live.

“I say this so you will remember everything in this forest. I took care of this place and now your love has the responsibility.

“Respect and dignity with mindfulness.”

Wednesday
Jul152009

I am not from here

Rumi, the Sufi poet said, “The work is to open the heart, to seek the truth and the difficulty is being human.”

What is the heart? How do we know the depth of silence in another person? How do we find the balance between sacrifices and suffering? The way of friendship is outside doctrines. As Rumi said, “We have ecstatic grief for the human condition.”

We are not from here, we are transcendent. A human being is a kind of conversation.

Wednesday
Jul152009

The Begging Bowl

In the middle of now-here a skinny naked black man dragging a shawl in blazing noon sun walked along the road at a steady pace, his black mop of hair bouncing. His eyes were on fire.

The stranger took coffee in the old Tiznit market square as Berbers in flowing blue robes meandered through his dream.

A hustler on his bike materialized out of thin air.

“Where are you going? Come have a look at my shop. Only five minutes by bike. Great prices. You don’t have to buy.”

“Why should I?”

“Great morning prices.”

One hundred years ago this guy would have been on a camel in his burnoose tending his flock out in the Sahara. He’d have been planning to invade Spain and married to a beautiful Berber girl with dark seductive eyes, had tons of kids and conquered the Iberian peninsula in his spare time. Now he was on a 50 cc imported European bike wearing castoff designer jeans with slicked black hair smiling with all his teeth, a distinctive character trait.

As a traveler used to multiple dimensions and shifting frequencies the wandering ghost was passing through the transition machine being assaulted by monosyllabic well meaning idiots taking him for a fool. Only the fool and children spoke the truth.

All the hustlers were released on parole for good behavior. They were out. They had no idea who, what, when, why, where and how he’d showed up in their jurisdiction. They lived in an inverted paradigm.

He was on assignment, a hunter gatherer of words and images.
Hunting with a singular flair, a cunning intelligence - Metis - a hybrid form.

‘Snapshot’ was a hunting word from the late 1800’s. He made them, he didn’t take them. That’s the qualitative difference. Someone once said “The best pictures are the ones in your mind.”

On one level this was true yet he enjoyed gathering material for future creative projects when he’d establish a base in a Crow forest or elsewhere with transmission potential.

He enjoyed the challenge; the patience factor, seeing before the fact, before the action occurred, before the vision manifested itself. Before, during and after the emotional rush. He knew a little premonition was a dangerous thing. It took practice. It involved human detachment and reptilian behavior.

It was a beautiful strange fascinating magical alchemy developed over years traversing the planet; becoming involved on a subtle level of intuition, trusting instincts, being the moment.

The essence of being and nothingness. A singularity of being and non being, stalking and allowing the movie to roll as action led to certain climatic instants. He isolated elements and captured them clean and simple. He tweaked reality. The emotion preceding the action was his intention.

It was the KISS philosophy and straight shooting.

A shooting star flashed across the sky shedding tears of light. He settled into a rhythm of the place, faces on film, framed for posterity. Ephemeral realities moving through passages of time and space. Sitting down, doing his work, packing up the essentials and hitting the road.

He found his comfort zone inside a zonal theory of photography. Shades of gray. Spectrums breaking down the barriers of language, attitudes, belief windows, values, perceptions and interpretations. As a physician and guardian of the visible world film was his prayer wheel and he kept it spinning.

The decisive moment where he divided time in two.

It was a pure thought with pure action. A way of life through the gateless gate.

“Infinite diversity through infinite combinations,” someone said while walking and laughing on the curvature of the earth. It was a walking meditation or kinkin in Japanese.

It didn’t matter if it was the most crowded tourist souk on the planet or a single malnourished boy under his torn plastic sheet offering him sweet green grapes. They all wanted a piece of the action. Everyone graduated with degrees in Hustling 101. It was all about survival. How the world works.

Meditating on the process of death shaped his motivation.

“The nature of my mind is the empty sky,” he said to the hustler.

“Get on,” said the biker.

He shouldered curiosity and got on the hustler’s bike. They roared out of the market, down narrow twisted streets, bumping and grinding gears through alleys, zooming along high gingerbread adobe walls, in and out of blinding sun, blasted into cool shadows and arrived at an empty shop. Full stop.

A young boy in his Tiznit silver shop took over the sales operation plying him with sweet tea and sugared words.

He tried sympathy and pity. He cajoled, he waited, he sighed, he put on his saddest face.

He tried to convince him to buy something. “Morning sale means good luck.”

“Every morning you wake up is good luck,” said his visitor.

The boy used well established emotional appeals playing the man for a sucker. His attitude was that every traveler was rich and relatively speaking tongues of dialectical materialism this was true. Especially when you consider in Morocco one person worked to support 13 and only 9% of the population had a job.

He handed him a wooden bowl.

“This is the traditional way. Put your choices in the bowl. We can discuss the price later.”

He accepted the wooden bowl and, to be polite because he was a guest in their country, wandered around a showroom looking at inlaid boxes, handled daggers with fake stones, silver rings, bracelets, bangles, beads, earrings and silver necklaces in provocative gleaming displays.

In another reality he carried his begging bowl through dirt streets in the world. It felt cool and smooth in his hands as his fingers caressed a worn oval surface.

The begging bowl had a consciousness. He remembered exchanging one denomination of printed paper money for another undetermined value of currency with a malnourished homeless child wearing blood red ragged shorts and broken sandals sticking a needle into his scrawny arm standing in the gutter of their broken down existence full of suffering and futile hope in Dhaka, Bangladesh near a sacred bull wallowing in dust.

Five million starving humans swarmed around his pedicab one day beating on fractured windows pleading for charity. He reflected the horror in his mirror.

He re-calibrated true bearings and measured his way inside third world countries thumbing open his useful ragged egalitarian existential foreign dictionary. It was full of myths, symbols, images, ideographs, pictographs, virus inoculations, sliding scales, musical interludes, sonatas, vibratos, journey notes, bleeding tomatoes, broken hearts, fried home truck stops, haiku, khata scarves, pure mirror paper, type-A negative blood donor manifests and empty wooden bowls.

Tiznit boys wanted him to fill it up. They wanted him to be greedy. They wanted to hear the sound of silver strike wood. They had great expectations of wealth based on his desire. He wanted to hit the bricks. He found one interesting bracelet and it clattered, spinning silver.

He became a Tuareg Berber. “I’ll give you 100.”

“Mister, please, the price is 350,” the boy said, being fresh out of tears, too tired to cry and the man in front of him, being Berber, used to endless patient Sahara nature, comfortable with just sitting inside the silence of being, not doing, was not fooled by fake emotions of self-pity and stayed with his last and final price.

He was a hustling mercenary 24/7 and it wasn’t his job, destiny, fate or karma to go around rescuing sellers trapped in their reality, in their expectations.

“Take it or leave it,” he said in Tamashek. The boy was shocked to hear his language, his dialect. He had no idea. They were on common territory.

Negotiation is hard work. It didn’t require extraordinary skills; just patience, determination, dedication and hard hearted basic instinct. He received one piece of silver and dissolved into a broiling sun, experiencing a metamorphosis as his ego dissolved.

The bowl reflected emptiness.

Wednesday
Jul152009

Sidi Ifni, Morocco I

The “grand taxi” in Tiznit’s hot, dry, dusty, sand choked parking lot was an old blue and yellow Benz. The lot was littered with them as drivers waited for passengers.

It was high noon. He yelled out, “Sidi Ifni!”

The local lot director left his friends in the shade of a solitary tree and gestured to a battered car in the throng of vehicles.

“Thanks.”

The driver was crashed in the back.

Knowing it might be hours, days, weeks, months, years, or centuries until they had a full load, he wandered off for bottled water and bananas. Yellow peels raised dust as he released skin from a fresh skeleton. Locals did not eat bananas in public. He wasn’t interested in local dietary protocol.

They departed Tiznit when the car was full of smiling toothless benevolent Berbers returning to stone homes far away. They zoomed through barren scrub desert, past rocky hills and distant menacing adobe fortresses.

He sat smashed between the window and a friendly French speaking young gendarme en route to his garrison in Sidi Ifni. The gendarme protected a worn crumpled green canvas satchel.

It was empty but the stories inside were real.

It’d survived invasions, foreign legions, armed bandits, salt and slave caravans moving north across the Sahara returning south with gold. It held letters to mistresses locked in harems, declarations of intrigue, suspense, tension, conflict and treaties.

It revealed bilingual conversations about moral ambiguities between characters in comedies and dramas. It revealed wild tales about distant mirages, instruction manuals for training hunting falcons, intentions, meditations, plans for aqueducts, fountains and extensive existential agricultural necessities inside tiled adobe fortresses on hilltop positions overlooking a vast emptiness of silence.

The gendarme dozed off and the stranger peeked into the bag of tricks.

It contained irrefutable evidence.

“Dear Commanding Officer of the Garrison,” began one report. "My first secret hostel was buried deep in Wicklow mountains, an old bare bones mountain hut without running water or electricity tucked up a long nearly inaccessible canyon at the base of Lugnaquilla Mountain.

"The two story house was built in 1955 and donated to An Oige by a woman doctor. The view is excellent, down a long sloping valley surrounded by mountains. To the left is a roaring 10-15’ wide river suitable for drinking and bathing, full of trout, wild water rushing and roaring downhill gathering speed trailing moss and polishing stones passing ferns, wild hedges and rock walled paths, left over from glacier activity and gravitational force of time and pressure.

It’s a small hostel catering to travelers on foot or bike with an upstairs warden sleeping room and women’s room suitable for six. The men’s room is out back with 16 bunk beds and outdoor toilets. Plenty of extra blankets and mattresses. The small intimate common room has an old fireplace and kitchen with gas cookers. Refined elegance.

"It’s a mixed bag of visitors; students, older holiday makers, city workers, mercenaries, poets, playwrights, hardy hikers and a mishmash of European and Arabic languages. I keep it open all day long, register arrivals at 5 p.m., making sure there are enough beds to go around, managed cookers, gas and toilet paper supply.

"It’s the perfect repository for extended day hikes. I explore high glens in thick forests with dark brown pine floors full of dark shadows surrounded by thousands of trickling brooks, rivers and streams cascading from mountains high near feeding deer flashing their soft golden rust brown with white markings bounding away as I stumble through soaked green moss. I traverse to Glendalough through fields and pastures and way back and beyond.

"I entertain visitors, fish the river in complete solitude, peel potatoes and carrots for stews, paint, write, discuss road adventures with vagabonds and play chess by firelight.

"Pawn takes pawn as players attempt to control the middle of the board attacking and defending positions simultaneously. It’s about position and material. We make the necessary sacrifices from the beginning game through the middle game to the end game."

Andy, a German visitor, said “India was once lost in a chess game between two kings.”

“Chess provides an outlet for hostile impulses in a non-retalitory way. The therapeutic value is enormous.”

“Chess gives me discipline, direction and power.”

“That’s the price of creativity.”

“I have recoiled from the emotional discomfort of my life through transference and make myself master of the situation through games.”

“Yes, it’s a drive for perfection and it’s irrationality.”

“Every game is a challenge I must meet.”

“Do you know Capablanca?” I asked.

“Yes, of course. His accuracy was pure position and logic. His play was accurate, tenacious, patient, with a disciplined imagination.”

“Excellent. Your move.”

I reminded him of Queen Isabela’s passion for conquest. "I suggest you read, "The Royal Game," by Stefan Zweig."

We played in the illuminated dark of night as peat fires roared up the flue. Quick moving violent storms pummeled the place.

“That’s a dangerous move,” he said as my knight escaped a pin.

“Yes, but it’s elegant.”

“We destroy ourselves eventually,” he said.

“Yes, as long as we enjoy the process. Your move.”

One clear day sitting near the river doing her nails Susan related a literary dream from a poem by Brian Merriman she was reading.

“Have you heard about the Midnight Court?”

“No,” someone said. “Tell us.”

“It’s about a fellow who falls asleep and has a dream where he’s taken before a court of women who condemn him to be punished for all the men in their knowledge. How women should have the right to marriage and sex but often meet with disappointment and rejection by men who could easily have become their lovers and husbands.”

“Sounds like a real Greek tragedy,” someone said before they jumped into the wild river after a fish fighting on a hook, line and sinker.

Another wise traveler remarked, ”Yes, for those who think, life is a comedy; for those who feel, it is a tragedy.”

Fish blood flowed downstream.

Every misty day I dragged a table outside and rolled thin parchment paper into and through my trusty old Smith Corona portable. The irony and simple joy of working under the table and on a table at the Smith. Pure simultaneous rapture. It was not a job, it was a joy because I did it in an artistic way. New paper, same machine, different day, different energies, new and improved attitudes.

One late fall day while walking down the valley enjoying moist air and kicking a rock past waterfalls in the rain with Andy on our way to check mail and have a pint two miles away, Joe Murphy, the area manager, arrived in his little dark blue Morris Minor chugging along the narrow road.

“We’re closing you down for the winter.”

“Fine. Gotta new place?”

“Yeah.”

It took thirty minutes to get the pack, word machine and Evidence sheets together. We slammed the wooden shutters closed from the inside, bolted them, turned the gas cookers off, secured the place, locked the door and left. Quick and painless.

“We need you to go to Donegal.” Murphy said driving the rocky road to Dublin, one, two, three.

“We’re having a problem up there with the locals.”

“What kind of problem?”

“It’s a big place, gets a lot of visitors. Mr. Johnson, the warden, is from somewhere in the north and married to a girl from the south. The locals don’t take kindly to him being from across the water if you know what I mean, so there’s been some trouble.”

“What kind of trouble? Is it spelled with a capital T?”

“Well, I heard someone may have spray painted some words on the house,” he said. “You’ll have to see for yourself and if so get it cleaned up will ya’? Besides, you may want to pay a visit to the neighbors. Smooth things out ya’ know.”

”Sure. What happened to the manager?”

“They left after almost three years. She has family in Mayo although I heard they went to Glasgow, London and Iceland.”

Floating images.

We evolved out of Wicklow mist covered mountains leaving the river’s long song behind us, melting our perception of primitive nature as tires hummed and reflected sound exchanging high wild rivers and mountains for overgrown suburbs full of estate houses and manicured lawns, chip shops, pubs, and the ever present church steeples of humming humanity.

Bless me father for I have traveled.

We passed Sandymount and Martello Tower where Joyce lived to swim, write and stare at his unknown future exile in Italy with silence and cunning.

“There’s Martello,” I said.

“Aye, Joyce was a strange bird,” Joe said shifting gears and hitting the gas.

“Yes. But man could he write. He said, ‘Wipe your glasses with what you know.’”

“There’s some truth in that,” Joe replied.

“Do you know what an epiphany is?”

“Sure. Isn’t it some kind of insight?”

“It’s something quickly revealed. Joyce wrote tight short scenes where something happened to a person.”

“Maybe it’s like getting hit by lightning.”

“He once commented,” I continued, “to a friend when they asked him about his daily writing after seeing Joyce was agitated.”

“’I wrote seven words today,’” Joyce said and his friend replied, “’What’s the problem then?’” and James said, “’but I don’t know what order they are supposed to be in.’” I laughed.

“I never heard that,” Joe said.

How’s that for troubled? I thought.

“I thought it rather clever of him to have a character named Dedalus,” I said. “Figured it out he did. Broke it down into the heroic manifestation of human frailty he did, Dedalus.

“You know what I think?” as the Mini blasted around corners plowing a path along asphalt, “Joyce was a great word trickster he was, like he loved language so much he invented new language. He made it up. It was consciousness without the editors, minus the critic. He left them stewing in Ireland. You know the name Dedalus? Well, if you pronounce it really slowly and enunciate it out it sounds like die day lie us, or some such thing. We die day by day. Fascinating. What do you think?”

Joe gripped his small black wheel. “It’s possible. Joyce said a lot of things.”

“Yes!” I shouted sticking my head out the window feeling sharp Irish sea wind lash my face.

I turned to Joe, changing the subject. “Yes, Chief Joseph of the Nez Pierce tribe said, “My heart is sick and tired. From where the sun now stands I will fight no more forever.”

“I never heard of him,” Joe said.

“White people discovered gold on their territory in 1863 and moved them off their land. It’s everybody’s land. That’s what the native Americans told them. We’re only caretakers of Mother Earth.

“In 1877 he tried to lead his people to a reservation in Idaho. Seven hundred warriors battled 2,000 U.S. soldiers across 1,400 miles in a beautiful tactical retreat.

“They got massacred by the white soldiers. His people froze to death near the Canadian border. They took survivors to a concentration camp in Oklahoma. It was pure genocide. On the reservations soldiers gave the Indians corn to eat and they fed it to their livestock.

“Chief Joseph was finally allowed to return to the Pacific Northwest in 1885 where he died of a broken heart.”

“I see,” Joe said when I took a breath. We traveled along the rocky road to Dublin in silence. One, two, three, four, five down the rocky road all the way to Dublin leaving them broken hearted.

The gendarme shifted in his sleep and he slipped the papers back into the green satchel.