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The Things They Dropped

This is a work of fiction. Yes, there was a Camel Shoot. Yes, interesting things happened. No, they did not happen in the manner described below.

Morocco is an opportunity for extensive tactical airlift and airdrop training in a rugged environment, similar to what aircrews might encounter in probable future conflicts.

That’s the boilerplate. In reality it’s more like spring break.

A sanctioned “good deal” in the name of combat preparation. Everyone tries to get on the Morocco deployment and snagging a spot is somewhat competitive. Fortune favors seniority on this Morocco trip. Too old to take up one of the coveted pilot’s seats on an aircrew, I am just the right rank (a mid-level field grade officer) to be in charge this year. I’m fired up. Because the alternative is pushing paper back at the air base.

Here’s how it works. Our Germany-based unit deploys four US C-130 transport aircraft to Marrakech, Morocco, once a year. We get our foot in the door with the Moroccan government by cutting a deal. We will fly out of an old Cold War bomber runway an hour north of Marrakech that the US maintains for Space Shuttle emergency landings, and train Moroccan airborne troops by parachuting them out of the back doors of our planes. When we’re not dropping Moroccans, we’re on our own.

Rumor is the Moroccan leadership forbids their own Air Force from dropping their own Army paratroopers because they are nervous that cooperation between these two branches of their military might lead to a coup. So, when our unit calls up looking for a place to do some low-level flight training (Germany has effectively banned nap-of-the-earth flight within their borders because of civilian noise complaints) the Moroccans agree. After dropping their paratroopers during the day, we can do whatever unilateral training we want in Morocco during the night. After we launch them out of our aircraft doors at night, we get the country as our personal practice range the next day. Not like we’re allowed to buzz the souks in Marrakech or scare the sheep…but you get my drift.

The whole thing is a win-win for our militaries. We can fly low and slow (a high-speed low-level for a C-130 tops out at about 270 mph) throughout the country and Morocco can hone their Army’s parachuting skills without fear of a government takeover.

You’ve got the scenario. This is the environment in which the short-lived but infamous Camel Shoot is born.

If Morocco allows us to train as close to the “edge” as anywhere we’ve ever trained, then why not a competition between these participating aircraft taking us closer to that edge and honing our flying skills? A competition that is also…how might you put it?

Fun.

They have built a similar competition back in the States for transport and tanker aircraft. Awards for the best “spot” landings (where you try to land on a target on the runway,) the most precise airdrop, the best time-on-target accuracy. This stateside event, The Rodeo, culminates with a trophy for the number one aircrew.

Our little Camel Shoot is all The Rodeo is—and more. Besides the standard contests, we add a few more: the most creative item dropped under a parachute, the most interesting radio call at airdrop slowdown (you have to slow an aircraft before you parachute a load from it—otherwise bad things happen), best bribe for the judges on the ground, and the most poetic limerick to accompany the airdrop. And so it goes.

We traditionally save the Camel Shoot for the final day of flying. Not only does this delay allow aircrews to finely hone their aviation skills to a cutting edge, but also allows time for the fliers to procure supplies. In the back of every pilot’s mind is the knowledge that the timing and precision competitions exercise the skills most relevant to preparing for future war. But I’ve talked to Camel Shoot vets before. No one goes around bragging, “I had the best time-over-target in last year’s Camel Shoot.” No, it is these sidebar competitions, the ones requiring planning, teamwork, and artistic liberty, that motivate our crews.

My deployment command ends tomorrow. The hotel staff is still smiling at me even though they are weary of the off-duty maintenance and aircrews wheeling beer through the lobby on luggage carts. Who would’ve guessed you couldn’t get a pizza delivered to your hotel in Marrakech, but if you greased the right bellhop, beer deliveries were a thing? But my airmen have kept it under control. The booze stays mostly in the room, swimming trunks stay mostly on, and officers and enlisted aren’t sleeping together. Oh wait…I’m in command. Therefore, I really have no clue about that last one. Bottom line (and knock on wood)—we’re looking like we’ll make it through this deployment OK and secure an invitation to return next year.

While the support team is packing things up at the runway, our aircrews are fighting it out in the Camel Shoot. Ignoring the obvious fact that there might be something wrong with the deployment commander judging the “best bribe” competition, I find myself as chief judge, standing on the drop zone next to my ops officer, Deke, and the RAM. RAM stands for “Raised Air Marker”—the orange aimpoint the aircrews use for their airdrop. Yes, we in the military were onto acronyms long before social media claimed the market on LMAO, ROFL, etc. If you hit the RAM, which sits in the middle of the DZ (the drop zone,) then you’ve scored a PI (point of impact)…which makes no sense because where ever your drop hits will be the point of impact, right? I digress.

The first plane is only three minutes out when we hear the radio crackle with a Muslim call to prayer, followed by the English, “CAMEL 51: slowdown, Slowdown, NOW.” Not the most politically correct broadcast our aircrew could transmit in a predominantly Muslim country, but if you haven’t figured it out, political correctness is still a nascent concept in our Air Force at this time. So kudos to CAMEL 51 for creativity. The plane looms overhead, maybe 800 feet above us, and suddenly a human figure tumbles out of the tail end of the aircraft.

I feel like my intestines are lunging up my throat.

“Someone fell,” I cry, turning to Deke. But my fellow judge just stands frozen, head tilted, mouth agape.

The small training parachute pops open and the stiff body pirouettes toward the ground at high speed. I hear a whoosh of air as Deke exhales.

“Major Cunningham. Sir, it’s just a mannequin,” he says and I let out my own whoosh of air.

The lovely lady thuds to the ground 75 yards away and we stroll over to check out our new arrival. The woman wears a hijab and lacy lingerie, a combo neither of us has seen before. I glance at Deke. Well, maybe he hasn’t seen this before. At least not on a mannequin. Our frozen lady has a Casablanca Beer strapped to her wrist with an Ace bandage and a note pinned to her brassiere. I unpin the paper and read it aloud:

            You might judge my attire odd

            Like my name, Shahrazad

            But you know what I need, Major Cunningham

            Just a quick “wham bam, thank you, ma’am.”

            You’ll find me much better than the cod

I look at Deke and he’s already laughing. I drop my hands to my knees and join him, and soon I’m laughing too hard to stand up.  

It’s a kind of flashback to the Air Force we entered: topless dancers (well, pasties) in the Officers’ Club; cigarettes in the cockpit, but no women; and calling those troublemakers in the Middle East “ragheads.” Not funny. We know we’re a better force now. Better people. But both the “brown shoe days” déjà vu and the incongruity of a partially clad poetess parachuting in to deliver us beer in the desert is too much.

“What the hell do they mean by the cod in that poem?” I choke.

“Got me,” Deke says. “I’m still trying to figure out which is harder to find in a Muslim country—lingerie or a mannequin.”

A female voice interrupts our hilarity. The next plane is coming. Roxanne, one of only five female crewmembers on this deployment, is calling CAMEL 52’s slowdown call from the copilot’s seat.

“Slower, slower…” she breathes, in as sultry a voice as I’ve heard broadcast over a military radio.

“Oh, God, right there. Uh, huh. Uh, huh.”

My eyes whip over to Deke, who has his handheld radio pressed to his ear. I turn back to the run-in course and turn up the volume on my set.

“Oh, yes. There! That’s perfect. Now slowdown…slowdown…now, baby.”

I angle my body away from Deke, hoping he won’t notice the chubber popping up in my desert flight suit. I glance over my shoulder and see him angled the other way.

“Oh my God,” I call to Deke. “Did you hear that? Like straight out of a porn movie…”

Deke shakes his head, staring at the lumbering aircraft pointed our direction.

“I’ve never seen a porn movie,” Deke deadpans. “But I don’t see anyone else beating them out for the most interesting slowdown call.”

Deke’s right about that and I check my watch to see how they are doing for time-on-target. On the one hand, I wish we had recorded the call, because a) none of us can imagine Roxanne agreeing to do it—she’s too much of a straight arrow, and 2) no one will believe us without the evidence.

But I know we can’t document certain aspects of the Camel Shoot. Tossing unauthorized material out the back end of military aircraft with dirty poems and alcohol is not a practice looked upon favorably by the higher ups. And in an Air Force where women are already outperforming men in many areas, we can’t have a recording like this—one that falls under the “old school” mentality and validates male stereotypes that we adopted in our 20s and are habits we are struggling to drop like chewing Copenhagen tobacco or smoking Marlboro cigarettes.

Time-on-target is looking pretty good—maybe just a tad late. Suddenly a flash of silver slips over the lip of the aircraft’s rear ramp. As the shape flops through the sky, I see a piece of material flapping in the slipstream and realize this load won’t land with a functioning parachute.

As it nears the ground, I shout to Deke. “It’s a fish.” He doesn’t reply. Based on its size in relation to the streaming chute, I’d guess it’s at least 30 pounds, a flatfish with eyes on one side. Of course, I can’t see its eyes from this distance, but the fish is so flat, the eyes must sit on one side or the other.

The load hits with a sound that doesn’t translate to words. Like a projectile penetrating thick flesh at high speed, the giant fish slaps the sand and disintegrates. We stroll over to the shiny remains, counting the paces from the PI. 150 yards at 3 o’clock. Not the best score.

A plastic grocery sack lays among the fish guts which I gingerly extract with my finger and thumb, trying to avoid the fish juice sheen covering the plastic. Inside, I find a package of dried seaweed and a small tube of wasabi.

“Must be the bribe,” Deke observes. “They’re bribing us with sushi.”

I shake my head. “Sashimi,” I correct him. “There’s no rice.”

I dig deeper into the bag and extract a sandwich bag protecting an index card. The limerick. I pry open the bag and hand the card to Deke. “Your turn to read.”

Deke accepts my offering and studies the writing before speaking.

            The most sensuous things are slow

            We hope you enjoyed our show

            Generations will laud

            Our parachuted cod

            You know where the trophy should go

“Nope,” Deke says, shaking his head. “No first place for them.”

“Why not?” I ask. “That slowdown call got me. I’m still all hot and bothered.”

Deke gives me a stern stare. “No one will outdo that call—you’re right about that.” He pauses, then continues. “But they were twenty seconds late, 150 yards off target, and their poem demonstrated an inexcusable lack of knowledge.”

“What do you mean? What was wrong with the limerick?”

Deke waves at the remains of the fish. “It’s not a cod, Mr. ‘It’s Sashimi, Not Sushi’ expert” Deke pauses again, then adds, “Sir,” to the end of his sentence as if he’s worried his sarcasm is going over my head. He continues. “This is, or was, a halibut. I don’t know where they found a halibut in Morocco, but this used to be one. I caught them as a kid with my grandfather in Alaska.”

I shake my head. Deke’s likely right. I’m not an expert on fish species, but I recognize the difficulty the word ‘halibut’ presents when writing a limerick. Salivate? Maui butt? I might have gone with cod too if I found myself under similar creative pressure.

Ten minutes pass before we hear the call from the last plane of the day. They’ve changed their call sign. The final aircraft is supposed to be CAMEL 53, but the radio blares with a different identification. DADDY 53. I look at Deke and he looks back at me and shrugs.

“Got to be them. Who else could it be?”

I raise my handheld to my ear, then jerk it a foot away as the slowdown call blasts.

“DADDY 53, Baaaaa…Baaaaa…Baaaaa.!”

“What the hell was that?” Deke asks.

“Sounded like a sheep,” I reply.

We look at our watches as DADDY prepares to drop. They are exactly on time, and unlike CAMEL 52 with the fish, they are perfectly aligned to account for the prevailing winds. I crane my neck and watch the load release.

“What the hell…?” I start.

“That’s not a training chute…” Deke adds.

A large crate tumbles out of the back of the plane and stabilizes under a parachute twice the size as the training chutes used by the other two planes.

I mumble, more to myself than to Deke. “They must have gotten a hold of one of the Moroccan personnel chutes. If that’s one of ours, they’re in some serious shit.”

“What’s in the crate?” Deke asks. “It’s alive.”

I arch my head further back and start shuffling to the side. The load is descending directly upon us.

“I can’t tell. But you’re right…I can see it moving. And it’s not happy.”

Some kind of animal is visible through the crudely constructed crate and its side-to-side movement is aggravating the pendulum arc of the drop. The crate swings back our direction and we scramble away. We pause as the load swings back toward the RAM marking the bullseye.

Then the RAM disappears from sight as the crate smashes into the ground. The bright orange nylon flashing reappears as the wooden crate flattens like a giant desert pancake.

Bullseye.

PI.

I scan the remnants of the crate and spot it.  The prone figure of a goat—not a sheep—laying on its side. Deke and I step closer. The goat isn’t moving. I spy a collar circling its neck with a note attached to it. The limerick. The remains of a plastic grocery sack—identical to that used by CAMEL 52—dangle from the collar. Miniature plastic bottles of Jack Daniels lay fully intact, scattered around the body of the goat.

Our bribe.

Deke and I stand about five feet away, staring at the dead goat. I think of the witch’s monkey bodyguards on The Wizard of Oz.

They killed her, I say to myself.

Deke shakes his head and kneels next to the goat. As he reaches for the note on the collar, the goat’s front leg twitches, then reflexes forward, striking Deke’s kneecap. Deke jerks away and jumps to his feet, while the goat does the same.

“Baaa!” the goat bleats…and then it bolts. Deke turns to me, shaking his head.

“Did that just happen?” he asks.

Relieved by the goat’s sudden resurrection, I’m already backtracking what led to this situation and have no time for Deke’s rhetorical question. I get DADDY 53’s new call sign now—who’s your Daddy?—but struggle to process how the aircrew acquired a goat in a foreign country. Well, not so much that, but how did my maintenance team allow them to load it on the plane? Which crewmember harbored this hostage goat last night? Most important—who cleaned up the inevitable goat shit that must have decorated that hotel room?

So, when Deke asks his question, I’m not surprised at the tinge of awe in his voice. What just happened?

Even without the benefit of hindsight. Without the knowledge that this is the last Camel Shoot. That towers will fall tomorrow. That in 48 hours we will move a battalion of Marines from Kosovo to Sigonella, Italy, where they will board helicopters to meet an aircraft carrier already steaming for the Persian Gulf. That nothing will be the same.

Even without all that, I heard the mixture of nervousness and respect in Deke’s question. The are we all going to be in deep shit for all this? mixed with can you believe what DADDY 53 just pulled off?

“Did what just happen?” I ask “Did one of our crews just drop a live animal out of the ass end of their plane, or did we just watch a goat rise from the dead?

Deke looks me straight in the eye and replies. “Neither.” He smiles, his head shaking, and points toward the splintered crate. “Can you believe they shacked it? They PI’d the son of a bitch.”

I nod at the crate, then turn in time to watch the goat dash across the runway, heading for the desert and the Atlas Mountains forming the horizon. Deke follows my gaze and steps to my side.

I open my mouth to speak, then pause. What I want to do is steal a quote. Michener. Reagan. I’m unsure where I’ve heard it, but it captures the moment. Deke and I so proud of our crews’ efforts that our chests feel like they might explode.

Where do we find such men and women?

I don’t say it.

And now, after seeing what they did next, after loving them as they flew east to fight, after losing some—how randomly they fell—in the skies and sands of Afghanistan and Iraq, after bursting with pride again at how they persevered. After all that…

I wish I’d said it.

Instead, I shade my eyes and squint at the disappearing goat.

“Those guys are some crazy-ass fuckers,” I say.

“Goat fuckers,” Deke says.

“Right,” I agree. “Crazy-ass goat fuckers.”

You’re Foolin’ Yourself If You Don’t Believe It…

I returned this morning from a Boy Scout campout on the Upper Arkansas River Valley, just north of Salida. We had eight or nine scouts with us throughout the weekend as the Angel of Shavano looked down upon us from a tad over 14,000 feet. Beautiful weekend, despite having to chip through the ice on our drinking water in the morning. 

I helped our Scoutmaster lay out an orienteering course while the Scouts hung around the campfire, swinging sticks at each other. I’m sure he assumed my 30-year military career gave me plenty of experience in this area and since the adult who had prepped the Scouts on compass use (a retired Green Beret) was out of country, he was hoping for some help.

He was right about my experience. Wrong about my aptitude.

Turns out, it had been a few years since I’d been through my aircrew survival
training refresher, and I was more than a little bit rusty. OK—lots of years.

“What’s your pace?” he asked. 

Now I’m not bad in the jogging department and usually train in the 8:10-8:40 minutes for a mile. But even as I silently nodded, I knew that wasn’t what he was talking about. 

He must have sensed my hesitation. “You know, how many paces does it take for you to go 100 meters? So we can set this course.” 

OK. It was coming back to me now. If you’re going to follow a 270-degree bearing for 150 meters, you need to know how many steps that is. “About
a 100, I guess.” 

He gave me a dubious look. “Let’s pace off a 100 and see what it looks like.” 

I started walking, taking what I figured was 39-inch steps, and stopped at 100. He pulled up next to me and shook his head. “I still got ten to go. Are you counting every step or every other step? We were taught to count every time your right foot hits the ground.” 

Shit. And so it went. By the time we pulled the compasses out, I had recovered my sense of bearing (get it?) and could shoot an azimuth. But I quickly realized that the last time I’d used a compass in this manner was
before I started using reading glasses. How can you read those tiny numbers? I was pulling out the IPhone to check my work (this, after I pulled out my GPS to check my 100 meters.) 

It all worked out. Within minutes, I had my 100-meter pace (60 steps for me) and was reviewing orienteering skills with the Scouts. By the end of the hour, the Scouts were setting up their own courses. I had fun. The Scouts had fun (not as much as swinging dead tree branches at each other, but how can you compete with that?) 

 Driving home, the scent of my two boys tea-bagging campfire and body odor throughout the Subaru, I reflected on what I had learned. 

“How to use a frikkin’ compass…again” said my dominant side (the smart ass.) 

But it was more than that. 

The first thing is that not every skill is like riding a bike. Sure, after 4,000 or so flying hours, I can keep an airplane from running into the ground. But unless I’ve been operating its flight computer for a couple hundred hours (ie practicing and training), I’m going to have a hard time getting us where we need to go and talking to who we need to talk to. The same held true for my compass skills. If I really want to be able to land navigate with magnetic north, I need to practice those skills more than once every twenty years. And before you say, “Why not just use the phone?” I’ll remind you that the freezing temperatures in the Rockies can take down IPhone and GPS batteries rather quickly. 

And reading about these skills isn’t enough. You’ve actually got to “do” the skills you think you remember, if you want to perform them at crunch time. That’s why CPR training is an annual requirement for many organizations.
Maybe it should be semi annual. Physically “doing”; whether it’s pressing a pen to paper, snowboarding, or using a lensatic compass, will burn the skill into your brain much faster and deeper than reading about it. 

Finally, exercise these skills in public. If you’ve maintained your proficiency, you may have the opportunity to teach others. And there’s no better way to hone your craft than by teaching. If you haven’t kept up with your skills, exercising that in public is the best way to ensure you’ll get it right. Most people don’t like to fail, but no one likes to fail in front of others. You’ll pay more attention, try harder, and learn better if you’re doing all this with or in front of others. 

It’s not about the compass. It’s about reviewing what you need to know and refreshing those skills. If you’re a writer, it means mixing in “Character” or “Setting” seminars with your “How to Make Your Website Sizzle” class. Going back to the basics. 

Readers of fiction should throw in some non-fiction. You had to read and analyze that stuff in your past. Have you lost those skills? 

If you’re a runner, it means getting out there for a race or group run and pushing the edges of your comfort zone. To be a better runner. 

As Tommy Shaw of Styx wrote: 

“Get up, get back on your feet. You’re the one they can’t beat and you know it…”

Thank you, General Powell

Colin Powell passed away today.

What a national treasure. 

And a personal mentor as well. General Powell probably has no memory of Air Force 2nd Lt Torrens. But I will always remain indebted to his formative role in my life. 

I met Colin Powell in the spring of 1991 on a gravel road in Iraq. My C-130 unit had deployed to Incirlik, Turkey to airdrop food and supplies to the Kurds in Northern Iraq retreating from Saddam Hussein’s post-war gas attacks on those who opposed him. Capt Stan Masters (another great American, gone too soon) was my pilot and informed me our role was to get General Powell out of the combat zone and onto a C-141 back to the States. 

“You can fly the leg out to go get him. Enjoy it because you aren’t touching the stick after he’s on the plane,” Capt Masters said to me. 

The road where Gen Powell waited was our landing strip and Capt Masters took the plane from me and put it down on brick one. “No copilot landings in a combat zone,” he said. Truth was, there was no way he was going to let his copilot jack up a landing in front of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs. We kept the engines running while the loadmaster loaded the General and his staff on board. Gen Powell stuck his head up into the cockpit and Capt Masters introduced the crew. 

“We’ve got a spot for you to get some rest in the back, General. It’s not fancy, but hopefully you can sleep,” Masters said. 

“The heck with that. I want to hear about what you all have been doing. Got any room for me up here?” Gen Powell asked. 

We all looked at each other. The Chairman wanted to sit up front with us? The flight engineer stood up from his position with a smile and Gen Powell sat in the middle of the flight deck for the remainder of the flight. 

But he didn’t sleep. After a whirlwind tour in Iraq, checking in with the joint forces controlling the humanitarian aid delivery, he spent the next hour asking our crew about what we did in the war, how many kids we had and what they were doing, and how our spouses were holding up.

Over the next thirty years, I would read all of Colin Powell’s books. My American Journey. It Worked For Me. A Soldier’s Journey. The difference between these books and others on leadership? My crew saw it in action. He was a soldier’s soldier, and he practiced what he preached. Or as he said: 

The most important thing I learned is that soldiers watch what their leaders do. You can give them classes and lecture them forever, but it is your personal example they will follow.

 He was not infallible. No person ever was. I know he must have spent the last twenty years agonizing over his role in misinterpreting intelligence that led to the coalition invasion of Iraq. But no one will convince me his intentions were political. I firmly believe he was trying to do the right thing with the information he had. 

He lived out those life’s lessons of which he wrote, even as he entered his final chapter. I have fellow veterans with stories of interaction much more interesting than mine. Capt Greg Clark flew Secretary of State Powell back into the US from South America after 9-11—one of the few flights in the air that day. Even under the stress of that terrible attack, Secretary Powell was asking the crew how they were holding up. Combat vet Anthony Maggert has a great story about helping Gen Powell change a tire on his way to Walter Reed and how they stayed in touch after their chance meeting. 

It’s these simple tales from common soldiers that touch my heart. The stories are there because of a man who never let ego get in the way of teaching young men and women how humans should talk to one another. 

And there is no more appropriate lesson in today’s world. 

Thank you, Gen Powell for your humble service to our country and bless your family. Your nation mourns your passing.

 

 

Local Woman Missing

 BY Mary Kubica  RELEASE DATE: may 18, 2021

I’m hooked on psychological thrillers. Give me Sheri Lapena, Riley Sager, Tana French in the morning and I’ll finish the book that night. But my favorite is Mary Kubica. The master of the plot twist has done it again with her new release, Local Woman Missing.

            Kubica’s style caught my attention through audiobooks. Her first person-present tense point of view is perfect for the audio medium. Put your headphones on and your three-mile jog will turn into a marathon. I’ve read half her books on audio. But the other half had me flipping traditional (well, ebook) pages faster than an audiobook on 1.5x speed.

            Long-time Kubica fans will find the structure of her seventh novel familiar. There’s an inciting incident and then she intricately weaves the story between ‘before’ chapters and ‘after’ chapters. This book centers on (surprise) a missing woman. But not just one. Days after the first disappearance, a mother and her daughter also go missing.

            Then—eleven years later—the daughter, Delilah, returns. What happened the day she disappeared? Where is her mother? And the first missing woman? As her brother, Leo observes,

“To be straight, I never thought they were going to find you. I gave that up a long time ago. In all honesty I kind of wish they hadn’t ‘cause Dad and I were getting along just fine without you.”

            It’s a wild ride, and in traditional Kubica fashion, she not only twists the plot in unpredictable directions, she turns it as well, forcing the reader to reconsider their original assumptions.

            If you find yourself just as enamored with these psychological thrillers as I am, then try Riley Sager’s Lock Every Door or AJ Finn’s Woman in the Window. Both these authors can turn a straight-forward plot on end and keep you guessing until the last page.

            Overall, a 5 out of 5 stars review. A few naysayers out there claim Mary Kubica is formulaic and predictable. I don’t know—maybe she is, but it’s interesting to note that in order to label her in that fashion you have to read all her work. I bet those critics flipped through every last page… just as quickly as I did.

The Flaming (Flamingos) Foliage Relay

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Idaho Springs to Buena Vista, Colorado. 165 miles. No problem.

Right?

Except they picked the hardest three passes for our team to traverse. 

Up the winding paved road to 11,669 feet over Guanella Pass. Then we hopped on the Colorado Trail’s single-track over Georgia Pass at 11,598 feet. A little overnight action to take Fremont Pass (11.318 feet) into Leadville. A loop around Turquoise Lake so we could touch the LT100 Ultramarathon Trail (we’re such pretenders) and then a straight shot down the Arkansas River valley to Buena Vista as the sun came up.

How did I get here? My niece works for a company up in Ft Collins and they’ve been running the Wild West Relay (Ft. Collins to Steamboat Springs) for a couple of years. With COVID this year, they were ‘running’ a little short for their first effort at the Flaming Foliage Relay. They dipped into the senior citizen category and called Uncle Cam. What a great group of folks! I’m glad they called.

Our official team name was “We Run for Swag”, but team captain Brock designed personal patches and handed them out just prior to the race. For the next 28 hours we were the Flamin’ Flamingos. There were three options for the race: In-person, Virtual, or Hybrid. We Flamingos ended up as the only Hybrid entrant as we had a couple folks recovering from COVID and other injuries that plowed it out on the treadmill back home.

We couldn’t have asked for better weather. Blue skies and upper 70’s in the day and down into the 40’s at night. The single-track scenery was the highlight but we did have to put in some highway time as well. My third leg was the 10K into my home town of Buena Vista–got to love family to greet you, cold beer at the finish, and new friends!

 

The SILENT WIFE

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Long-time Karin Slaughter fans will gobble up her latest release, The Silent Wife. The thriller continues Slaughter’s melding of two separate series: the Grant County books with medical examiner Sara Linton, and the Will Trent series with—you guessed it—GBI sleuth Will Trent. 

            My first exposure to Slaughter was through an author interview. Her comments about trying to break into the crime thriller genre in the 1990s struck a chord. As progressive as I thought those decades were, evidently publishers still considered a woman author candidly writing about mutilation, rape, and murder “in poor taste,” despite the successes of her best-selling male cohorts.

            Slaughter ignored those stale paradigms with her breakout 2001 novel, Blindsighted. Blown away by both her groundbreaking detail of a heinous murder, and by the quality of her first published novel, I immediately followed the read with her newest effort, The Silent Wife.

            Slaughter did not disappoint. Years after the events in Blindsighted, medical examiner Sara Linton teams with Slaughter’s newest protagonist, Will Trent, to investigate a prison riot and subsequent murder. An inmate who has always claimed innocence offers information on both events if Linton and Trent reopen his own murder case. He claims Sara’s dead ex-husband, police chief Will Tolliver, screwed him over years before, sending him to prison while the actual murderer continued murdering young girls.

            Slaughter pivots the story between the original murder cases and the present-day investigation, the protagonists searching for a pattern that will identify the killer who remains on the loose.

            I’ve only read two Karin Slaughter novels and argue that’s an advantage over long-term Slaughter fans.

            First, this book can stand alone outside of the series. Karin Slaughter has written 20 bestsellers that include one or both of our protagonists. I sped through this book and did not once feel that the story was confusing because I’d never read a Will Trent book before. Don’t feel you need to start from the beginning.

            Second, I suspect avid Slaughter fans take her storytelling skills for granted. I don’t. She’s got a special talent for character, plot, and gore. Her protagonists leap off the page, pursuing justice while struggling through deep flaws in themselves and their relationship with each other.

“With Will, Sara was keenly aware that she was the only woman on earth who could love him the way that he deserved to be loved.”

             The plot is fast-paced, and no suspect gets a pass until the reader rolls into the nail-biting conclusion. The gore is not gratuitous. Slaughter’s depictions of extreme violence show detailed research and she presents the scenes to the reader in a dispassionate, almost medical, manner. I’m not a gore fan, but Slaughter does it right.

            Readers looking for similar authors/titles providing the medical/crime thriller vibe that Slaughter has mastered should check out Tess Gerritsen’s Rizzoli and Isles series. You decide—start with her 2001 bestseller, The Surgeon, or the latest release, 2017’s The Bone Garden.

            I’ll rate The Silent Wife a 4.5 out of 5 stars. The acid test? I generally read two to three books at once, but when I stumble on a page-turner, the other books go to the back burner. I read The Silent Wife straight through.

A Confession: I’m tracking my pandemic days. You can count on it.

This piece was published in the Colorado Sun on 28 Jan 2021.

Colorado authors, thinkers and readers share their thoughts on living through historic times as the state fights the progress of coronavirus

Pandemic Day 312

I count.

Asked how I’m dealing with the pandemic, I rarely admit this truth. That my coping mechanism for things I can’t control is to count. To track. To schedule.

Because it sounds a little weird, don’t you think?

I remember 30 years ago, crawling into the passenger seat to drive to the grocery store with my father-in-law. He adjusted the driver’s seat, started the car, and then scribbled a note on a piece of paper he’d pulled from the cupholder in his door.

“What did we forget? Ice cream?” I asked. Looked like the grocery list to me.

Not likely. My wife’s parents were starting to forget things, but not when it came to the core essentials: ice cream, mixed nuts, and red wine.

“It’s my seat tracker,” Edward answered. “I log how many times I drive with the seat in each position. Forward. Back. Forward recline. Back recline. Up, down…you know, so I make sure and use them all equally.”

I often recall this incident to rationalize my current behavior. I share it with you to demonstrate self-awareness. I know what weird looks like.

And it’s not that I didn’t gravitate toward a routine before the pandemic. I spent 30 years and one month in the Air Force. Some of the time, I was responding with a “checked, checked, checked,” to the copilot’s checklist queries. Most of the time, I sat behind my desk (or a folding table under a tent while in the desert) and put X’s in the little boxes I’d made on my long “to-do” lists. Just a diagonal if I’d started an item but not finished it.

Not weird. Meticulous.

Then, boom. Retirement and a pandemic hit like a one-two combo. The retirement punch hadn’t been an issue. I started helping with my boys’ wrestling club, joined Chaffee County Search & Rescue, and, after a severe arm-twist, won an election for a board position on our homeowner’s association (unopposed—imagine that!). Enough involvement to keep from being one of those post-retirement heart attack statistics.

But that second punch? The pandemic? Oof! Houston, we have a problem.

It isn’t like our family feels we can’t do anything. We do tons. We hike. We climb mountains, we fixed up the camper van and use it. A lot. The problem is that at the end of the day, I pull up my news feed (which so conveniently remembers the news I tend to read) and none of that news is good. And there is nothing I can do about it.

When I worked, I felt like I had a micro influence on the rest of the world. When I retired, I felt like I had a micro influence on my community. During the pandemic? Feeling kind of powerless.

So, I count. And track. And schedule.

My 2020 day planner will surely inspire in my grandkids the same kind of strange look I initially gave my father-in-law after the “seat tracker” incident.

– 41 fishing trips—165 fish caught*

– 10 14er’s climbed

– 33 nights in the camper

– 22 Search & Rescue calls

– 15 snowshoe hikes

And the list continues. You get the point, even without me adding in our miles hiked, ping pong games, tennis matches with my wife (hard to track victories on that one…), etc.

Day planners aren’t a problem, right? But I’ve moved my 2020 data over to a spreadsheet on the computer. I’ve got 2021 set up in the same template with the same categories as last year. And a few more. Aiming to break some of 2020’s records.

So, when people ask how I’m dealing with the pandemic and all, I give them my stock answer.

“Enjoying the time with the family.”

But now you know the truth.

I count.

* Note for the game warden and math majors—most trips included my boys!

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