Monday, July 25, 2016

About "Sacred Trust"

Coming Soon . . .



A group of unlikely compatriots find themselves camping together at a spot on Lake Umbagog said to have been frequented by the Indian medicine woman Moll Ockett in the early days of the American Republic. They find in short order that they have one very important thing in common  - a deep concern about a proposed private power transmission project to transport electricity from Canada to the toney suburbs of Boston, New York, Connecticut, Philadelphia and Washington D.C.

The proposal, dubbed "Granite Skyway" proposes to bring massive 150 foot towers through the most beautiful parts of a state that boasts some of the most beautiful scenery in the entire country.

The threat to the environment and the scenic beauty are only the tip of an iceberg that includes the value of homes, farms and businesses built by generations of men and women in this hardscrabble land. Already affecting life for many caught up in the mere shadow of this proposed transmission line Granite Skyway poses an existential threat to an entire way of life.

Determined to do more than shuffle papers and employ lawyers, the compatriots form a band of brothers and sisters (along with a timberwolf named Cochise and a moose named Mettalak) calling themselves "the Trust".  Armed with only their wits and a lot of heart they embark on a campaign of civil disobedience that would make Thoreau, Alinsky and Dr. King proud.

Along the way they examine many of the most important questions of our time including how America can continue to make an honored space for free speech and civil disobedience in an era of terror; how social media can help create accountability in an increasingly corporatized mega-media landscape; and, how citizens can challenge the corporate oligarchies that threaten our planet's future.

"Sacred Trust' is a vicarious, high voltage campaign to stop the Granite Skyway power transmission project and its short-sighted and greedy corporate sponsors, intent on using political muscle and money to lock up the region's energy production and distribution, short circuiting efforts to bring about an energy future based on sustainable, and renewable energy deployed through micro-grids, smart-grids and a competitive environment that makes energy more - not less -  affordable.

This book is half complete and I hope to finish it by January 1 so that the issues in the book are still relevant to similar projects actually being contemplated throughout the country. Your support in this crowd funding effort will help make it ready for publishing when it is finished. 



© Wayne D. King, 2016
Sacred Trust is a book in progress. Click here to subscribe to the email list and I'll let you know as soon as we launch the campaign.


Signup Link


SaveSave

Sunday, July 24, 2016

Sacred Trust - Chapter One

Coming Soon . . .


"Sacred Trust" 
A vicarious, high voltage adventure to stop a private power transmission project.

trust
trust noun
1 a :  assured reliance on the character, ability, strength, or truth of someone or something

1 b :  one in which confidence is placed

2a :  dependence on something future or contingent :  hope

2b :  reliance on future payment for property (as merchandise) delivered :  credit trust
>

3a :  a property interest held by one person for the benefit of another

3b :  a combination of firms or corporations formed by a legal (Though not necessariliy lawful) agreement; especially :  one that reduces or threatens to reduce competition.

Webster’s Dictionary






3c : A group of people who join together to achieve an objective, ideal or end result. (Though not necessarily lawfully).

Edward Abby’s Dictionary



"Treat the earth well: it was not given to you by your parents, it was loaned to you by your children. We do not inherit the Earth from our Ancestors, we borrow it from our Children."
Ancient Indian Proverb


Part 1 - The Trust

Chapter 1  Stonebridge

Charlie Stonebridge hadn’t been in the Thirteen Mile Woods area going on ten years now and the memories flooded over him as he drove his old Land Rover up Route 16. 

He drove the Rover as much for the necessity of space to accomodate his six foot six frame as for its ability to navigate the muddy roads and fields that were the daily habitat of an experienced wild water paddler. He could fit three boats on the roof, need be, with the paddles lashed beside them.

Now-a-days, Stonebridge bought his boats retail, but there had been a day when the only way one could find a covered boat - especially for a towering hulk - was to build it yourself.  So he had made his own boats - and a pretty good portion of his living - by building boats that the early generation of whitewater enthusiasts would use to pioneer both the sport and the territory. 

On this trip he had brought only one boat because he was going to be  leaving the Rover while he paddled and fitting extra boats into the rig was tight and an invitation to thieves. 

He passed Unity Street in Berlin, the road to the Success Pond Road and the Mahoosucs, and wondered if he would have time for a quick hike in to “the Notch”. On his left he noticed TeaBird’s Cafe - recommended to him by a friend. But he was on a mission at the moment and not inclined to stop for lunch no matter how good the food was. He headed north out of the city.     

“Bur - lin “ he rehearsed in his head as he drove on, not Berlin as they said in Germany, or anywhere else in the US for that matter.  Who could blame them he thought. Folks up here may be willing to stick with the name but they weren’t going to pronounce it the same.  Germany may be an ally now, but memories run deep and a lot of “Burlin’” boys gave their lives on the beaches of Normandy and the road to Berlin, Germany and those memories linger on. There had to be a distinction. 

“West My-lin”, he continued his line of thought, keeping a careful eye out for moose that were usually thicker than black flies right about now. It was dusk along the area of Rte 16 that some locals called Moose Alley, especially the ones associated with the Chamber of Commerce who were always looking for an angle to draw folks north of the Notches. 

Actually there was an ongoing war of words among the Chambers of Commerce in Berlin, Groveton and - from time to time Bartlett and North Conway - over the claim to the name. A visitor to the White Mountains and Great North Woods areas of New Hampshire could very easily become confused and disoriented if he or she happened to travel through all three areas in one day and stop somewhere to shoot the breeze with locals. In Colebrook, Moose Alley was a short stretch of Rte 3 just before West Stewartstown and the Canadian border where the salt-licks of the roadside sphagnum bogs offered plenty of browse early in the spring and the runoff from road salt from the previous winter made for some delectible dining, well seasoned, for the big critters.  Then there was another stretch if you stayed on Rte 3 and kept to the Northeast through Pittsburg and past the Connecticut Lakes., headwaters of the Connecticut River that formed the boundary between New Hampshire and Vermont from top to bottom. Truth be told this one - the Pittsburg Moose Alley - was probably the one with the most legitimate claim to the title by virtue of both the  density of the Moose population and the naming rights associated with longevity. 

But Stonebridge wasn’t headed for Pittsburg, though he always wanted to take a trip up there and see some of the spots associated with the Republic of Indian Stream. 

Indian Stream. Most folks, even New Hampshire natives, were unaware that in 1832  a small independent nation was established, borne of the border disputes between the French Canadians and the US Government over this fertile valley on the border of the US and Canada. 

Seems that the treaty of Paris had included some ambiguous language describing the territory in and around Indian Stream and this created a whole raft of problems for the folks in the area, not the least of which was those blood sucking tax collectors from both countries demanding payments followed closely by sheriffs enforcing tax collectors orders. 

It didn’t take very long before the three hundered or so hardy residents of the area decided that they wanted nothing to do with either the US Government or the British controlling Canada. So they formed their own Constitutional Republic. Neither the British nor the Americans - of course - recognized the validity of the Republic but that did not stop the people of Indian Stream. They created their own constitution and they set about charting their own course. 

The Indian Streamer’s were a hardscrabble bunch, didn’t have the funds to build a jailhouse in their little Republic so they took a huge potash kettle turned it over upside down in the middle of town and whenever they had need for a jail they just lifted it up and put the scawflaw under it and dropped it back down. After a day or two of sweltering days and cold nights it put the fear of God in almost anyone who was otherwise inclined to infringe on the rights of his fellow man. Yessir, frontier Justice, served up in a kettle. 

He rounded the bend coming out of Milan and for the first time got the full panorama of the dark and verdant Boreal forest with the Androscoggin river  flowing lugubriously along through it. How many times had he seen it before? Yet it still reached deep into his psyche, stirring up old memories of mist covered mornings on the river, the growing thunder of the Pontook rapids in the days before they dammed it up and turned one of the most wild and beautiful stretches of river and rapids into a twice daily amusement ride, fully dependent upon when the ideal time for power generation happened to be.  

He thought back on the days before the dam and on the tepid efforts to stop it. No one chained themselves to a gate or locked arms across the road to prevent the trucks from bringing in the turbines. And now here it was, not especially  magnificent as an engineering feat, certainly not any Hoover Dam or Grand Cooley but a burr on the ass of a great river just the same and where once a Kayak could run the course of  the mighty river anytime day or night, now you were lucky to get a decent release once a day and you had to time everything around it just to run this stretch. It was still fun, sure. But they has strangled the wildness out of her. 

And he had just watched it happen.

John Prine blared out as he drove on. “I know a guy, he’s got a lot to loose, he’s a pretty nice fella, kinda confused, got muscles in his head, ain’t never been used. thinks he owns half this town. Start’s drinking heavy, gets a big red nose, beats his old lady with a rubber hose, takes her out to dinner and buys her new clothes, that’s the way that the world goes round.”  

He sings along. “That’s the way that the world goes round, you’re up one day, the next you’re down. It’s a half an inch a water and you think you’re gonna drown, that’s the way that the world goes round.”

Regrets were strange things. The women you lost, the friendships you failed to nurture when only a little effort would have made the difference; the fights you walked away from - good fights, fighting for justice, for wilderness, for peace, all because it would have been a little inconvenient at the time.  

Yes, Regrets were, indeed, strange things. 

Regrets, seasoned with age were the things that denied you the peace of slumber; that deep sleep that nourishes your soul, not the restive, disquieting sleep of the disappointed and the damned.     

He’d driven up here, all the way from “Yeehaw” West Virginia, looking to recapture something from his youth. Some superpower that had been sapped by everyday life ; by backyard barbecues and old spice commercials; by 9-5 work and 5-9 boredom. He had it once. They still told legends about him along the paths that he had trod.

But he wasn’t a legend in his own mind. 

He was a heaping, steaming, pile of regrets.

He was approaching the intersection of 16 and 26 in Errol and feeling a bit tired. He turned the wheels and brought the Rover to a stop in a gravel pulled-off  and closed his eyes for just a moment.

• - • - •

Dusk on the Saco River.  Mauve fading to pink against the black backdrop of the mountain silhouettes. The blue-green line of the Saco a winding swoosh through the blackness of the valley floor. 

Four townies, local thugs, stood on the bridge calling down to the canoe shelters that were scattered across a large sandbar. The canoes were turned over providing a shelter for equipment and one solid anchor for the painter lines used to hold the tarps that formed the shelters. Paddles were strategically placed as poles to maximize the space under the tarp. All told there were eight shelters scattered across the sandbar, a patchwork of bright colors, muted by the evening, with flashlights coming on and off like so many fireflies moving under the tarps.  

The boys from the camp were already half asleep in their tents, exhausted from a day of paddling and portaging and - now trying desperately to forget the hunger in their stomachs after one-by-one they had quietly buried the meal that the counselor had cooked. It was a sticky mess of rice, raisins, and some kind of mystery fish. Three things that just did not belong together in the same dish.  But if they had complained they would have been given a second helping and made to eat it and then to top it off they would have been given dish duty. So each boy surrepticiously  slipped off to a spot where they would not be seen and buried the evidence.

Even Stonebridge, the second in command of this intrepid group of 12 year-olds, was hiding in his shelter trying to avoid the cook-cum-lead-counselor. He had joined in the vast conspiracy when he came upon a boy burying his dinner and promised not to tell as long as he would dispose of Stonebridge’s as well. 

“Come on girls, we have somethin’ to show you!  Called the boys on the bridge above, thinking that they had stumbled upon a girls camp and salivating over the idea that they might be able to find some action here in a town where any girl their own age - who actually knew them - would have nothing to do with the braggards.

“We can come down there, just as easy,” called one of them. “Maybe we’ll just come on down and show ya.”

The full moon had just risen over the horizon and cast a pale yellow light down on the shelters. Causing the chatter from the locals to increase hoping to rouse the unsuspecting lovelies from their sleeping bags. 

But Stonebridge had heard enough. 

“You boys stay here”, he said, reaching for his double bitted axe (his trademark in those days). The boys obeyed his orders but couldn’t resist the temptation to peer out to watch. Stonebridge stepped from the shelter and the boys watched in awe as he raised himself up to his full six feet six inches, stark naked and holding his double bitted axe high above his head.  In his best fake falsetto he called “come on down boys, we’d just love to play with ya’ll!”

• - • - •

Stonebridge awoke and smiled at the memory of how fast those local hoods had retreated - as he turned the land rover back onto the road. 


It had been like a scene out of a Yosemite Sam cartoon, where you hear the ping and zip and see nothing but the dust of the retreat. He chuckled and half consciously uttered “Tarrrrnation!” as he turned east at the junction and headed toward Lake Umbagog. In moments he had wheeled across the bridge over the Androscoggin River and put the town of Errol - all 20 houses on the main street - in his rear view mirror, heading for Moll’s Rock.




"Sacred Trust" Published as ebook on Amazon
Available from Kindle Books
Moosewood Communications Publisher




Signup for Wayne King's eZine
"Whispering Pines"
Wind in the Maple





SaveSave
SaveSave

Thursday, June 2, 2016

Chapter 2 - Brandt and Roy

Sumac Moon


Chapter 2 
Brandt and Roy

A blood curdling scream rose up from the base of the cascade, loud enough to flush a pair of rotund spruce grouse from their low perch nearby, their flapping wings reverbrating through the woods. In reality, the scream was more a joyous celebration than a response to pain – though the temperature of the water cascading down Mahoosuc Arm delivered its fair share of pain as well; exhilarating pain, as in shocking, numbing, brain freezing, cold-ass pain. Daniel Fitzhugh Roy reached for the ball of horsetail he had gathered along the trail coming in, a lufa substitute that was very effective at removing the mud covering his calves from the boggy sections of trail skirting Speck Pond.

Daniel could have stayed at the shelter at Spec Pond but he was trying to avoid the thru-hikers - people hiking the Appalachian trail from Maine to Georgia. It wasn’t that he hated through-hikers, those peak bagging, know it all, speed freaks who had no appreciation for the journey because they were obsessed with schedules, food drops, mail stops, and the obstacles between themselves and their next camping spot . . . well maybe it was.

But he rationalized it by making the excuse that he just didn’t want to be drawn into a fight over hiking the AT as they called it. They didn’t even have time to call it the Appalachian Trail, “The AT” was their nom de plume. They were obsessed with doing everything as fast as humanly possible, though they would spend the rest of their lives torturing everyone they ever met with their tales of the trip. Dragging out every story until it consumed more time than the actual leg of the journey.

Besides, staying at the Speck Pond Shelter couldn’t compare with a quiet campsite far enough from the trail so that he would not run into any humans at all and he could just lay out his poncho and sleeping bag as long as the sky remained cloudless and the horsetail cirrus of an approaching front did not portend a coming storm.

He was just beginning to take on the grunge from the trail when she burst out of the trees at a dead run - a huge white wolf-like dog at her side. Pretty impressive as the steepness of the surrounding woods meant that she had to have descended through the birch forest at full speed, like a slalom skier weaving through the course at breakneck speed bent on a medal caliber run. Her raven hair tied in pigtails bent at angles attesting to the fact that she was halfway between launching herself upward high enough that she had time to assess the ground beneath her to land safely and launch again covering almost as much vertically as horizontally with each movement.

Her momentum carried her into the clearing at the base of Mahoosuc Cascade just as she looked up and saw his naked body glistening from the water as the droplets bursting with each contact of his skin created a glow in the late day sunlight. 


“Jesus” she exhaled, though it came out more like Jeeeessssis, bursting out of her lungs like an 18-wheeler loosing its air brakes. Trying to gather her wits and her breath at the same time she bent over, hands on her knees. “I expected a dead hiker from the sound of your scream.” I figured someone had wandered too close to the edge of the cascade and gone over.”

Roy didn’t bother trying to cover his nakedness. After all he had endured the bracing temperature to get clean and he wasn’t about to get out until he was finished washing his body, even with a stunningly beautiful woman staring at him. So he finished up and for good measure tossed his towel over his shoulder instead of wrapping it around him as he walked from under the falls. a mischeveous look on his face and a twinkle in his eyes as he brought the towel up to his head to dry his hair. “What were you figuring to do if you had been right?” he asked. “Is mouth to mouth still an option? I mean, I can roleplay if that works for you.”

Anger flashed in her eyes, “why you arrogant son of a bitch”, she said.

“You God-damned through hikers go blindly through the most beautiful mile of the Appalachian Trail with no appreciation for it, bitching and moaning about how hard it is and how long it takes you to make a mile, and then you think that everyone you meet is going to kneel down before you and worship the ground you walk on. You . . .”

“Whoa there lady,” Daniel broke in, “first, I just finished coming down off The Arm, I haven’t even hit The Notch yet, and for your information I plan to spend the entire day tomorrow reveling in the glory of the experience. I brought some orange juice to make snow cones with the snow that lies hidden deep in the caves along the trail, my camera and tripod to document the experience; and a saw , chisel and wrench just in case I'm inspired to rework the trail sign to send the through-hikers down to Success Pond Road. They will be fighting off the mosquitoes and moose along Success Pond Road for half a day before they realize that Mahoosuc Notch was the other way. That will really put a crimp in their plans and they will be complaining for the next two hundred miles about the time they lost in the Notch. “

“I’m thinking that if I do that on both ends of the Notch I’ll have the whole place to myself or at least limit it to those who know the area or can read a map. Have you hiked it before?”

The fire in her eyes had dimmed some. He clearly was not a peak-bagger as they said in the parlance. The reference came from a book she had read from her father’s prized books shelf: Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. The author had devoted pages to outlining the difference between the Zen hiker who cherished the experience of the hike and the one obsessed with reaching the summit as fast as humanly possible adding it to his or her list of statistics, never bothering to chew on a sour spray of Wood Sorrel to quench his thirst or pause, watch and listen to a White Throated Sparrow’s lonely call as it rode the sweet Balsam breeze.

The obsessive hiker was the “Peak-Bagger” and while the phenomena occurred everywhere, nowhere was it quite so transparent as it was here in the Mahoosucs, a range of Mountains running from Gorham, New Hampshire to Grafton Notch in Maine just over the border. The Mahoosucs were the last great unrestricted Mountains in New Hampshire. There were bigger mountains, like the Presidential Range and the Carter’s just to the south; and, there were mountains where limited bureaucratic restrictions allowed one to experience the old-style freedom of hiking without selling your soul to the government with use permits and fire permits and where camping restrictions created virtual cities of overnight campers at some locations. But the Mahoosucs provided high country ridge hiking, even an alpine bog or two, and relative freedom from the prying eyes of Uncle Sam’s trek police.

Though it is on the Appalachian Trail - few enough hikers trekked this way so that the range has few of the restrictions that other more prominent mountain ranges have. In the Mahoosucs, one could still camp on the summit of a peak and fall asleep to the music and dance of the spheres.

And then there is The Notch.

A one mile stretch along a relatively flat col between two peaks. Rarely more than a few hundred yards across at any one spot, Mahoosuc Notch is a geological wonder borne of the last ice age some 11,000 years ago. From the valley at the base of the Notch huge granite and diorite cliffs rise on either side, denying the sunlight from providing warmth on even a summer day except for a few precious hours; dropping their ice cleaved bones into the notch over the millenia to form a boulder and moss strewn landscape with caves that hold their icy snow from the previous winter’s snowfall well into August - creating a natural air conditioner effect even on the hottest summer day.

Hiking through Mahoosuc Notch is a slow process best done with a partner with whom you can collaborate to negotiate the challenges of boulders with passages that require one to remove a backpack and pass it through first before squeezing through or passing the backpack down from a vantage point that provides a fine view of the challenges ahead but a drop that would severely injure a hiker who fell with pack still on.

For the adventurous spirit all of this makes Mahoosuc Notch the most thrilling and memorable mile of the Appalachian trail. But to the peak bagger, who measures the experience by the speed with which he completes the mile, it is the “longest mile” the section of trail that thru-hikers dread on their approach and curse at their back.

To Daniel Fitzhugh Roy it was, therefore, the measure of a man or a woman.

Apparently that view was shared by Sasha Brandt as well, because a smile crept over her face as Roy was winding up his naked rant and she reached out her hand to introduce herself.

It seemed an odd gesture under the circumstances. . .




© Wayne D. King, 2016


"Sacred Trust" Published as ebook on Amazon
Available from Kindle Books
Moosewood Communications Publisher



Sumac Moon


Ben Franklin and the Old Man




Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Chapter 3 - Linda Levy

Cambridge, Massachusetts

Your Honor ?
Counselor . . .


Linda Levy paced nervously outside the courtroom in the Brooke Courthouse building. Boston was a great city but it was beginning to feel just a bit too close right now. She was thinking about jumping into her vintage mustang with her Northface dome tent and sleeping bag along with her climbing ropes and heading for Rattlesnake Mountain in Rumney, New Hampshire. There was nothing in the world more exhilarating than dangling 250 feet off the ground trying to beta-flash a new route. She may be pushing 50 but she could still play with the best of them.


When she was young her father would take her to the Shawangunks in New York. In those days the “Gunks” as they were called, were the premier climbing mecca in the Northeast. The  Shawangunk Ridge is a backbone that extends across three counties in New York, mostly in the Catskill Mountains. Officially it is the long easternmost edge of the Appalachian Mountain chain running from Maine to Georgia. Her father had always warned her that pronouncing the name right was the difference between being treated like you belonged and being treated like an alien in these parts so she had learned to swish her way through the word as it was intended - barely noticing the “H” and both “A’s” so it came out more akin to Shwangunk”


Understanding the importance of the correct pronunciation of Shawangunk came in handy in New Hampshire too, where a raft of Indian names usually allowed the locals to distinguish other locals from Massholes and other flatlanders. The Kancamaugus Highway was the premier test in the North Country. Locals had been pronouncing it Kank - ah - mog - us for a few hundred years but the aliens seemed to be drawn toward calling it Kank-ah-may-gus which was a dead giveaway.


In fairness the “Kank” as it was fondly called by everyone, was almost as confusing for the locals. Over the course of the past fifty years the Department of Transportation had spelled the name of the road at least three different ways on road signs. In point-of-fact, there was probably no “proper” way to spell or pronounce the word. After all, the first hundred times the word was recorded in writing - at least by a white guy -  it had probably been by some half-literate explorer or trapper or settler who couldn’t write much more than his name anyway. What was correct, what was truly right, could only have been recorded by a red hand and most of the ones in this area were without written language.


In the Shawangunk days, Rattlesnake was only a glint in the eyes of a few hardy pioneers of the sport including a fellow named George Wendall who was an old army buddy of her dad. Wendall had been trying to get her dad to make the trip to New Hampshire but with Linda in tow he always felt safer climbing where there was plenty of protection and support.

As a cop, Dad was big on protection and precaution. He had retired at 50 and his climbing continued for another few years until a fall on a particularly challenging pitch in Yosemite.  By the time dad had hung up his pitons - about the time the rest of the climbing world had switched to chocks, cams and bolted protection with the sport diverging into Traditional or “Trad” climbing and Sport Climbing, Rattlesnake was just beginning to come into its own.  Its proximity to Boston made it more appealing from a logistical point of view and in short order Linda had come to love New Hampshire. Well the Northcountry of New Hampshire at least, with striking mountains and lakes and folks that were cut from a kind of libertarian cloth whether they were conservative or progressive. She couldn’t get enough in fact and what she had quickly learned was that no matter where you came from in New Hampshire you drew your “New Hampshire identity” from the White Mountains. Rugged, individualistic, and tolerant of differences. . . a willingness to let a person live the life they chose as long as it did not impinge of the rights or others. It was kind of a corollary of the old saying that the “rights of my fist end at the edge of your jawline.”

______________________________________________________

Advertisement
______________________________________________________



Longview Cows Poster



Poster available in two sizes
Proceeds benefit "Got Lunch! Rumney"Poster Sizes
11 x 23: $39
14 x 30: $49.00
Click here
Buy this image on cards, here.

This image as an open edition fine art print, here.______________________________________________________


______________________________________________________
Advertisement
______________________________________________________




With Massachusetts just to the south and Vermont to the West providing ideological contrast, New Hampshire, for many years, had a reputation as a bastion of conservatism, but there was more to this place than met the eye. Sure there were a couple of nutty old cranks like William and Nacky Loeb who owned the only Statewide newspaper and Meldrim Thomson a governor who had suggested arming the national guard with nuclear weapons and who used a half mast flag to protest everything from foreign policy to the speakers that the University students brought to campus. Fearing, of course, that they would infect folks with new ideas.  Yet, it was also the first state in the nation to expand rights for gays and lesbians and for years it had been on the forefront of the battle for transparency in government with its “Right to Know” law requiring almost all government meetings to be open to the public and to publish their proceedings and actions.


The more time she spent in New Hampshire the more convinced she was that it might just be her spot on the porch. In the long run anyway.


Straight out of college Linda chose to follow her father into police work. As a degreed candidate she could easily have slid into an administrative job in the Boston Cop Shop but she wanted to know the feel of the streets so she chose the more traditional route of attending the academy and bearing the brunt of a force that still put their rookies through a frat-like hazing.


Women were especially subject to that hazing, though over the years that had changed. At the same time she joined the force she also enrolled in Law School to get her JD.


There were no trust funds in the Levy house so she had accepted her father’s financial help for her undergraduate degree but she knew that getting a law degree was on her. So she shopped for the best deal she could get and ended up in a continuing education law program at Boston College where most classes were held during the day which meant that her “Cop Shop” hours were the hours classically referred to as the graveyard shift, midnight to seven am.  Is was - at times - grueling when there was a required class that only met at 8am with no time for even a cat nap but somehow Linda muddled through on what turned out to be the five year plan.


She finished Law School just as she was starting to feel like a member of the squad and spent a tortured six months secretly applying for law positions while at the same time working in the Boston Police department. Finally, she accepted a job with a prestigious Boston firm where she was to do double duty, corporate law, real estate , mergers and acquisitions and - when needed - criminal law where her PD background provided the advantages of both knowing the players and knowing the game.


After another five years, try as she might, she could just not seem to get comfortable in her lawyer suit. She found herself still preferring the cop bars to the button down ones, and - while she loved the snappy repartee  of certain colleagues - she’d rather hear the banter of life-long cops who mixed cynicism with the salt and pepper of the streets and just the right dose of skepticism to create a dialect that was as comfortable as an old favorite wool coat to her. So, at almost 40, she went back to full time policing . . . back to the streets.


In truth, she’d never been happier and more comfortable in her own skin than she was now, back on the force. Though there had been a personal price. Each step that she took to get to where she was today required a period of intense focus to excel. Proving herself on the force initially and establishing herself at the firm, all of the late hours, hurried meals, meetings and homework left very little time for a social life, much less a relationship. So Linda’s longest term male relationship (aside from her father) was Maxmillian a fourteen something Maine Coon cat who was big, bad and independent as hell. Half his left ear was gone, no doubt from an alley fight in the days before some animal control officer had netted him when the neighbors started complaining that Max was interfering with their right to enjoy their new fancy condominium.  


On the day she brought him home from the shelter Max bit her. Not an auspicious start to their relationship.  So she just put out some food and water, kept the windows and doors closed and settled in for the long haul - content to wait him out. It was - as it turned out - a whole lot easier than developing a relationship with a man. Max was aloof for the first few weeks, but around week five as Linda was sitting on the couch watching Syracuse play against Duke in the final four showdown  and nibbling at a bowl of popcorn, Max casually walked across the ridge of the couch  and dropped down and nestled himself into a soft afghan draped over her lap. Before long he was purring away and Linda was stroking his head and scratching behind his ears and he clearly decided that this was better than that wonderfully dirty old alley.


Maxmillian and Linda formed a bond but Max was not particularly helpful when it came to her social life. He had a nasty habit of planting himself in a chair in the bathroom when Linda had male company and when some unsuspecting male tromped into the bathroom in the middle of the night, scratching his balls and yawning, Max would give him a quick and painful swat on his bare ass, assuring that he would be fully awake as he cowered back to bed.  If Max waited until the visitor was on his way BACK to bed the results could be even worse so Linda made it a point to warn him.


So male relationships were just not her strong suit.  She got along great with her colleagues on the force and her professional relationships were great, with one notable exception - judges - and especially young male judges. No matter what their ages judges treated her in a condescending and arrogant way, bbut the young ones seemed to be the worst. They were already condescending enough with cops as it was, but there must have been something in the water in the Boston area because young and old and everything in between they didn’t give women cops a bit of credit for having a brain.


The door to courtroom 3 swung open as a bailiff with an unusually large ring of jangling keys pulled the key out of the lock and stood back to let the crowd of people flow into the courtroom.


“Oy ye, Oy Ye! Draw near!” Came the baritone voice of a male Bailiff calling the court to order as the judge swept in. Linda noted that he was a new one. Fresh out of Law school by the looks and she guessed that his balls were pinstriped under that robe the way he carried himself. Not a hair was out of place and he had that always wet look to his hair.


She wasn’t sure how they achieved that these days. When she was little her uncle Harry used Brill Cream but she did not recall seeing ads for Brill Cream in years. Harry was on the force too and she was pretty sure that he was not actually her uncle but had never bothered to ask. That would raise the matter of her mother who had gone out for gas one evening when Linda was three and never came home. She was not the victim of foul play - in fact Linda had a pipeline to regular information about her mother from her favorite aunt - her mother’s sister - who had recently recounted her mother’s six moves back and forth between upstate New York to Southern California in the last year.


The room continued to stand in deference to the judge who was wetting his bed when most of them were already adults, until the Bailiff told them to be seated.


Linda was here to testify on a drug and weapons arrest. Just last month as she was browsing facebook she came upon a selfie taken by one James Feniwick Harrison of himself standing in front of a car trunk filled with handguns and drugs ranging from weed to heroin and oxy. Harrison lived in Boston and his mobile delivery business took him all over the greater Boston area.  


Fenewick was too cute by half because in his selfie he had covered half of the license plate for each of the three selfies. He was sure that no one could identify him, except that he had made the mistake of covering one side of the plate in one photo and the other side in the second photo, thus allowing the full reconstruction of the license plate and a no-brainer on probable cause. It was a classic in the Darwin awards category.


The bust had been clean and simple but Harrison had lawyered up and today his lawyer was attempting to quash the search of his vehicle. Today’s hearing on the motion to quash should have been a very simple matter. Should have been.
Dusk on the Rumney Town Common
CardsPostersÆ’ine Art Prints


“Massachusetts v Harrison” the bailiff called out.


The Judge recognized the defense attorney to introduce his motion.


“Your honor, we move to quash the search of Mr. Harrison’s car. The officers had no probable cause to search the vehicle and without the search there is no violation of the law.”


Jim Evers, the assistant district attorney, a tall affable fellow with a Boston accent more from the North End than the patrician Beacon Hill crowd rose to address the motion.


“Your honor, we would like to call officer Linda Levy to testify on this matter. It was officer Levy who initiated this search and she can speak to the issue of cause.”


Linda was sworn in and seated herself in the witness chair.


Evers went straight to the matter at hand.


“Officer Levy, you were the lead officer in the bust that ended with the arrest of Mr. Harrison.  Do you have any doubts that you had probable cause to make the arrest?


Levy responded, “This was probably the cleanest arrest I have ever made. You’d have to be brain dead to think otherwise.”


The Judge sneered a bit and said “I’ll be the judge of that and I do not see this as cut and dry as you appear to, officer.”


He was clearly itching for a fight.


The judge continued, “So officer, do you consider yourself an expert on search and seizure?”


Levy: Yes.


Judge (getting wound up now): So you know the law better than anyone in the courtroom.?


Levy: “Yes, it appears so. “


Judge: “More than the Court, officer?”


Evers was beginning to doubt his choice of Levy as the witness on this motion.


Levy:  “Regretfully, yes.”


Judge:  “How dare you insult the Court!”


Levy: “The record will reflect that I simply and honestly answered the Court's question.”


Judge:  “You are close to contempt. I suggest if you want to be an attorney, you attend law school, and if you can pass the bar, spend the next few decades studying the framework of the law and the Constitution.”


Levy:  “Thank you for the advice, but I have already done that.”


Judge:  “Where? On graveyard patrol (chuckling)?”


Levy:  “No, I was forced to work graveyards so I could attend classes  during the day.”


Judge: “Classes? Community college classes?”


Levy:  “No, law school classes.”


Judge:  “Stop this nonsense. If you are an attorney, I am the Duke of Earl.”


Levy:  “Should I address you as such for the rest of this proceeding?”


Judge: “I've had enough (smirking). If you can't produce a bar card in ten seconds, I will hold you in contempt. “


Levy, reaching into her pocket:  “Bailiff, please pass this to the Duke, ahhh, my apologies, the Judge.”


Judge: (Examining the bar card) "The motion to suppress is denied. Officer, you are excused. I guess you're the one I've heard about."


Levy: “May I be permanently excused from this courtroom?”


Judge: (despondent). “Call the next case.”


Within fifteen minutes Linda Levy was headed north on I93 , top down, the Boston skyline in her rearview mirror and the White Mountains on her mental radar.  Max was perched on the ledge of the back seat, wind blowing through his fur, looking content and ready for an adventure.





Earth Laughs in Flowers Poster
CardsPostersFine Art Prints



© Wayne D. King, 2016
"Sacred Trust" Published as ebook on Amazon
Available from Kindle Books
Moosewood Communications Publisher




Signup for Wayne King's eZine
"Whispering Pines"
Wind in the Maple

Tilton School chooses Sacred Trust as "Summer Community Read"

Pleased to say that The Tilton School here in NH has chosen my novel "Sacred Trust" as their "summer community read" I w...