Man of LaMancha


Tenderloin Sandwich as Art Miles 5420-5480 July 8



Download 0.51 Mb.
Page17/43
Date26.11.2017
Size0.51 Mb.
#34733
1   ...   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   ...   43

Tenderloin Sandwich as Art Miles 5420-5480 July 8

A Navajo sand painting’s demise is intended from the moment of its inception, and the final act of its creation is its intentional destruction. To attempt its preservation is to deny the inherent dignity and worth of its essential transient nature.

Strange thoughts perhaps as a pleasant waitress places a tenderloin sandwich in front of me at Oma’s Kitchen. Then, again, not so strange. “We’ve been talking about you.” So said Janis Ballard as I entered just a few minutes ago. Then she retired to the kitchen to prepare my sandwich.

Tripod pillars support all the small town cafes I bike to more than once—biscuits & gravy, tenderloin sandwich and homemade pie. Oma’s b&g passsed the first test last Saturday. Now for #2.

Presentation is picture perfect. The sandwich comes open-faced. The tenderloin overflows the half bun beneath on the right side of the plate. The left bun supports a red juicy tomato, a purple ringed slice of quarter-inch thick onion, pickles and lettuce of complimenting greens. The small plastic cup of creamy white salad dressing is neatly filled. The bun is fresh and soft to the touch. The surface that receives the dressing has been lightly toasted and looks to have been lightly buttered.

When fully assembled, I have to hold it in both hands and can hardly get my mouth around it. The meat is uniformly tender, its fried batter a pleasing kaki color, light and airy, but with just the right crunch. My ears give it two thumbs up. Too soon I have devoured this work of art, to which I have come, thanks to biking, with a ravenous appetite. Not to have eaten the tenderloin would have taken all meaning from its creation. Even to delay would lessen its gustatory excellence, as the meat cooled, the tomato grew warm and the lettuce lost its crisp.



Sweet Tea Miles 5500—5555 July 10

Eighty years ago a train ran here. But interurbans went the way of the dinosaur. Now this level and lightly traveled country road lures bikers. The first few miles from Ferellview are lined to either side with mature trees. Riders pass beneath overarching canopies of green, giving welcome relief from a fierce July sun.

A few new homes have sprouted in the corn and soybean fields. But the 17 miles of Interurban Road to Dearborn belie the nearness of KCI, I-29 and I-435. The rapid fading of rural America seems but a bad dream, ensconced as we are in this linear time capsule.

Half-a-dozen older women sit at a long table along the back wall at Lil Depot Café. Rich and I take a seat at a nearby table. “I’ll have a half-order of biscuits and gravy and a glass of ice tea.” I say. “Sweet tea or plain?” The waitress asks. “You have sweet tea? I’ve gone to heaven.” Rich gets a half-order of biscuits and gravy and coffee. We need more. And we go straight for test #3. I get chocolate meringue; Rich has apple. B&G gets an A; pie, a C-. It’s cold. Left over from yesterday. Or earlier.

Dearborn is mostly a ghost. Antiques. And Moore Antiques. The Lickskillet Mall sounds exciting but looks abandoned. The building across from Lil Depot has HOTEL carved in stone above a door marked LADIES ENTRANCE.

Leaving Lil Depot, we take H Highway and pass over I-29 enroute to 371. A left turn brings us quickly to New Market. Another five miles brings us to the Guy B. Park Conservation Area off to our right and a field of sunflowers, stretching their lemon pie faces to the sun.

Two cars come up behind us on our ten-mile ride into Platte City. No trucks! When you’re riding south on a state highway and all 18-wheelers are northward bound, your day on a bike could never be better.

Four spirit riders bought miles and ride with me today: John Glenski, Chris Bennet (and Margie), Eleanor Cuthbertson and Randy Jefferies. Thank you, dear friends.




Margaret Won’t Go Home Miles 5555-5605 July 12

Courage comes in many guises and is found in unexpected places. I’m here this morning at the Mill Inn for my usual biscuits and gravy. The place is packed this morning, and Margaret is busy at the grill. Last week I came later in the morning and she was working the cash register and waiting on customers at the counter. A customer commented on her versatility. “After 22 years here, I can do it all,” she said.

Her good cheer and easy manner drew us into conversation. Her husband had been sick and had several operations. They had breakfast one morning two years ago. She returned a little later and found him dead. “You never get over a shock like that,” she said.

When her shift at the Mill Inn is over, Margaret won’t go home. She works six hours at Wal-Mart. “Oh, that’s nothing. I used to have four jobs. I’ve got my health and I like people. And when your husband dies and there’s lots of bills, you have to work.” None of this is said with even a hint of complaint or self pity. More like the commander of an army still engaged in battle, expecting at any moment to see the white flag of surrender run up by the enemy.

Here’s to you Margaret Mollenbrink. I salute you. I admire you. We treasure your presence among us. You encourage and inspire us.

Tom’s Funeral Miles 5605-5635 July 13

I didn’t go to Tom’s funeral. At the appointed time for his service to begin I got on my bicycle for a solitary ride through open country. I surrendered my dream of being a minister years ago when as a college student I pastored a small church and would cry more than the bereaved when death came. Funerals leave me sad beyond redemption for days afterward.

I admired and respected Tom Bray. The exotic flowers and birds and animals he cared for set him apart from other people I know. But the way he drew people to him was breath taking to behold. Today as I ride I think of Tom. I think of another summer Sunday, June 21, 1987. I was riding my bicycle that day, enroute from Orlando to Seattle to Anaheim, when I came to Tom and Barbara’s house. Here is what I wrote about that day.

Highway 50 is crowded with Sunday afternoon lake traffic and impatient drivers as we ride from Syracuse to Knob Noster. When we arrive about five o'clock in Knob Noster, John says this has been his least pleasant day. The traffic congestion and noise took away the fun.

Tom and Barbara Bray are standing in front of the church as we pull into Knob Noster. Quick as a flash, we're at the parsonage downing iced tea and cokes, followed by a hot shower. All the Bray's bedrooms are spoken for tonight and probably for many nights to come. Tom and Barbara run Grand Central Station; people are coming and going, reveling in one another's company for the two hours we are here before we all go to the evening service.

To church at seven, Tom tells his people what I'm doing, then turns the service over to me to tell my story. From the moment I stand, I can sense the congregation with me. Knowing that causes my story to dance out of my mouth and into their hearts: I see it in their eyes and in the rapt expression on their faces. When I ask them at the end to help me figure out what is happening, they are quick to respond.

"You are being used by God," says a man near the back. Others murmur agreement.

"Do you know how uncomfortable I am with that notion?" I ask. "Who am I that God would want to use me? I could never say about myself the thing you just said. The very thought of it scares me to death. I'm deeply grateful that some see such meaning in what I'm doing.

"But I can't give it a name. Something deep inside resists. What I can tell you, what I must tell you, is that I have to ride this bicycle across the country; I have to visit with people and share with them my dream of a world where people like each other, and everyone expects good from everyone else.

"And because I expect good, I can trust people to draw their own conclusions about the meaning of what I do and why I do it. I'm trusting people to meet my needs for food and shelter. I must trust them, too, to make up their own minds about my motivation.

"Even as I ride, newspapers in every town I pass through carry stories about one television preacher laid low by a sex scandal, while another is up in a tower saying God will kill him if people don't send him eight million dollars. The ease with these two and their legions of counterparts invoke God prompts in me a reluctance I can't overcome. Not from action do I shrink, but from explaining it, from describing it in the stained glass voice so loud in our land."

After church, many people come to say kind and encouraging things to me. And it is this brief one-on-one conversation that most energizes me. To take their hand and stand close and speak quietly of things that matter deeply to us, things we can't often bring ourselves to mention, is to stand with one foot in heaven. And it is in moments like this that I find my voice for the things I cannot say to an audience. Or in a book.

Then back to the Brays for dinner. A big group is present, and as we eat and talk I feel good all over. I can feel the love. See it in faces, hear its voices. This is not a feeling I've had often in my life. But occasionally at church it happens. And the hope of it happening again is enough to keep me coming back.

Marian and Ann Morgan had arrived at the Bray's shortly after we did. They had been members of the Bray's church in Madisonville, Kentucky. "Wherever you find the Brays, you find people who love them and each other." Marian says to us all several times during the evening.

Ann mentions the Emmaus Movement and tells me I would find a ready audience for my message among them. Explaining the movement, Ann uses the word crilliso. A bell rings. Lynn! Atlanta! The four day weekend!.

So long, Tom. I’ll catch up with you somewhere down the road.




Download 0.51 Mb.

Share with your friends:
1   ...   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   ...   43




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page