Sunday, August 17, 2014

***Out In The American Neon Wilderness Night- At 16 Or 68 It Never Ends- The Romantic Trials and Tribulations Of Sam Lowell-Take Two   






From The Pen Of Frank Jackman

This is the way Sam Lowell told me his sad story over several meetings at one or another of our favorite watering holes a short while back where he felt he had to get something off his chest about his latest love interest gone sour. Through his activity on our high school 50th anniversary reunion committee we had communicated and met each other several times recently and he had carried me along with his enthusiasm about the event. Got me interested in the old days, and possibly going to the reunion. And he in turn confided in me about this love problem, wanted me to write something up about it as a form of therapy or something. I am no expert on the issue of love, or maybe better having been married three times and having had numerous affairs and flings I am as clueless as he about how to deal with the subject. In any case here are my recollections of what he had to say on those sad whiskey-filled nights:    

The last time Sam Lowell saw Melinda Loring he was looking back at the headlights of her automobile veering off as dusk approached to go north on Route 133 just south of Amesbury along the New Hampshire border in the early spring of 2014.  He did not know that that glimpse would be the last, the last physical time he saw her, although given the all-out fight they had had earlier that evening including an enraged outburst by him he suspected as much. But like many things in this wicked old world of romantic relationships that would not be the last of it, although that indeed was the last physical time he saw her. There were some final shots, some last metaphysical kiss-offs before the real end. And so as Sam had muttered to himself at some point during the last not so metaphysical dust-up whether 16 or 68 years of age the romance game never gets easier. And so this story, or end of story.    

Let’s take a step back to figure out about the whys of that last headlight glance before we find out what happened after the subsequent fall and the last dust-up. Sam had been thinking about his 50th class reunion at North Adamsville High School since he had received an invitation to go to his 40th reunion back in 2004. At that time Sam had dismissed the invitation with so much hubris because then he still thought that the bad luck that had followed him for much of his life had been caused by his growing up on “the wrong side of the tracks” in North Adamsville. He told me, a number of times, that he had spent half a lifetime blaming that bad luck hometown affiliation on everything from acne to wormwood. 

 

Subsequently through some family-related deaths that took him back to the old town Sam had reconciled himself with his roots and had exhibited the first stirrings of a feeling that he might like to see some of his old classmates. In late 2013, around Thanksgiving he, at least marginally savvy on such user-friendly sites, created a Facebook  event page in order to see if anybody else on the planet knew of plans or was interested in making plans for a 50th reunion. One day, a few days after setting up the page, he got an inquiry asking what he knew about any upcoming plans.  He answered in a short note his own limited knowledge of any such plans but that his intention in setting up the page had been to seek others to help out with organizing an event if nothing had been established as yet. In that reply he had forgotten to give his name. And that is how the “girl with the pale blue eyes” came into view.  

“Who are you?” asked Melinda Loring returning his message, a name that Sam immediately remembered from his high school days although he did not know the woman personally. He shot back a blushed reply about being sorry for forgetting to include his name, gave it, and casually remarked that he had remembered from somewhere that she was a professor at a local public university in the Boston area. He asked if she was still there. She sent an immediate reply stating that no she was no longer there but that she had been and was still a professor at a state university in an adjacent state, at the University of New Hampshire, and had been for the previous twenty-five years. She also mentioned that, having access to her Magnet, her class of 1964 yearbook, she had looked up his class photo, and said he was “very handsome.”

 

Naturally any guy from six to sixty would have to seriously consider anybody, any female in Sam’s, who throws that unanticipated, unsolicited comment a man’s way especially since she sent her class photo back as well. That got them started on what would be a blizzard of e-mails over the next several weeks.  

 

During the early stages of their correspondence Sam told Melinda that his previous knowledge of her had been perked a few years earlier when he had as part of his reconciliation with the old home town looked up and found his old high school running and running around buddy Brad Badger through a school-related Internet site and he had gone over to Brad’s house in Newton to look at his Magnet and talk over old times.

 Sam, having had a few drinks that night and feeling expansive, related the following story to Brad and which he subsequently related in an e-mail to Melinda to her delight if disbelief. It seems that in his junior year at North Adamsville Sam had noticed Melinda around school (they later confirmed they had had no classes together, although having been in the same junior high and high schools for five years or so they agreed that they must have run into each other or been in the same room sometime if only the auditorium, gym or cafeteria) and had an interest in meeting her after seeing her around a few times.

Of course in high school, at least back then, maybe now too, a guy didn’t just go up to a girl and start making his moves. He got “intelligence,” found out if she had a guy already, stuff like that. Usually this information was gathered in the boys “lav” (especially the Monday morning before school session when all the “hot” news of the weekend was discussed) but in this case since Sam was a trackman this happened after school in the boys’ locker room where he inquired of two guys he knew who knew her what she was like. Both agreed instantly that she was a “fox” but told him to forget it because she was “unapproachable.” Meaning low-rent raggedy guys like Sam forget it. Meaning, as well, that Sam as is almost always true with the young just moved on to his fantasy next best thing. And so they did not meet then. Melinda said she laughed when he related that story to her and in their further exchanges related lots of information to Sam about what she was really going through back then with an extraordinary tough family life with an abusive father and passive mother, lots of low self-esteem, and other problems too intimate to detail in an e-mail. 

Frankly, after the first few exchanges Sam had been more than a little intrigued with Melinda, intrigued enough to think about further discovery.  And as it turned out Melinda had been as well. They discovered they both had much in common academically, professionally, politically and personally. I won’t go into the specifics of those “things in common” because in looking over my notes from Sam that would take more time than necessary to make the point.

A point necessary to make though since it contributed to the fall  was Sam’s “relationship” status which he introduced to Melinda after an initial blizzard of e-mails and phone calls:

 

“Hi Melinda –Well we have been on a roller-coaster so far and we have not even met in person yet. That is what is so surreal about this whole thing that had developed between us. That business from last night about me tracking your record down got me thinking though. Kind of has forced my hand about something that I had intended to bring up tomorrow when we meet in person for the first time as the first order of business to clear the air and give our friendship a proper footing. I was struck by the way you said you have been honest with me and that got me motivated to write this now instead of waiting until tomorrow. I have, unlike you, not always been honest in the past. For example, not to brag or anything like that but to deal with the honesty question, a couple of times way back I have had five girlfriends at one time so there was no way I could be honest and juggle all that. So I was lying to beat the band. I have gotten better and tried to be honest with you and have been doing so. But sometimes you can be honest and still omit things and that is what this e-mail is about. I take it as something that we will work through as we go along and I hope you agree.

 

You know as well as I do that we both carry a lot of baggage, busted marriages, affairs, and so forth. On the other hand we are both old enough to have whatever level of friendship we want from just friends to an affair because we both as far as I know have no ties that would prohibit that, neither of us is married. And even if we did in this day in age we could still have whatever relationship we wanted. As long as we both have our eyes open and know the score. That “know the score” part is what I want to talk about. It is nothing bad but it is a complication. And even if we decide to be just friends it is part of what is unfolding. I have decided to do the rest of this as a narrative so here goes.

Up until a few weeks ago for the past ten years or so since the end of my last serious relationship I was just rolling along writing, doing legal work, doing politics, playing golf and all the rest. Doing all of that while living in the same house as the woman that was my last serious romantic relationship, Laura, who is still my closest woman friend. I have known her for over twenty- five years and about twenty years ago we bought this modest house in Whelan. As time went on though we had, as couples will, our problems until about ten years ago we decided that it wasn’t working. But we both wanted to keep the house and be friends. I won’t go into all of that now but you can ask me about it. So that is what we did. And nothing wrong with that people make such arrangements all the time. And so time moved on. I did my thing-she did hers and we do things together. For example we still go out to Saratoga to Laura’s family for Thanksgiving and Christmas since I don’t have family that way. Stuff like that. At some level we have deep affection for each other but it is just easier and more comfortable to be friends.         

 

Then out of the blue you came along. You know how we “met” and all so I don’t need to go into that but what happened is that I was not sure where we were heading (at one point if anywhere) and so I made a point of keeping that information to myself. Remember I made a point about just concentrating on us and not on other baggage stuff. Part of it obviously is that if we were not going anywhere then such information didn’t matter and if we were then that would just be an awkward situation that we would deal with. That is what a lot of my concern about expectations, the way we have met and all of that has been about. I have told Laura about you in general terms (the only way to put it since we still have not met) and since this whole thing has been topsy-turvy that is where things stand right now.

 

If all of this seems like too much then so be it-but as for me I still say forward- if you don’t that is okay and we can work on some other way to be friends. I think we both strongly want to be friends and should be damn it if that is what we want. Later Sam”         

 

The tipping point for both of them, the piece of information exchanged that startled, hell, flabbergasted them both, made them think for a moment that destiny’s wings beckoned, made them think their flame thing might be written in the stars was an event that occurred when they were nine. Here is what I wrote at the time when Sam told me the story (after he told me that he was “smitten” with Melinda  and I begged him to be cool, be cool for Laura’s sake although I had always had an abiding interest in her, if she ever fell off of Sam’s wagon. Laura never did, damn, she never did.):

“Now you have to know a little bit about Sam Lowell, about his attitudes toward things like mysticism, fate, kismet, the unknown and all of that to appreciate that he does not truck with any of that stuff. He fancies himself a man of science, or at least of there being rational explanations for things and this is why the information that he imparted to me baffled him. Me, I am more agnostic about such things but this one did have me scratching my head a little so I might as well get to it: 

“The year 2014 will be a milestone for Sam (and the same for me as well) marking the 50th anniversary of his graduation from high school,  North Adamsville High School. For a whole number of reasons that should not detain us here Sam had been looking forward to that event for a couple of years in the expectation of going to his class reunion. He had never gone to any before for those whole bunch of reasons. Moreover he had actively attempted to put himself into the mix by setting up a class reunion event on Facebook.  What he was doing at that point was making an ad hoc attempt to enlist fellow classmates to help organize the reunion.  He got the usual early sparse response and then the response that triggers this sketch already mentioned.

A woman, Melinda Loring, a fellow classmate commented that she was interested in helping out but due her professional career commitments would not be able to do much. Also she lived up in New Hampshire and since the reunion would be held in Massachusetts that too would be a barrier. In any case Sam, looking to find some kindred help, began a blizzard of e-mail traffic with her. It seems that this Melinda was what they now call “hot” back in the day, a real looker, as a look at her yearbook picture testified to that Sam had forwarded to me, a fresh dewy “girl next door”- type who wore cashmere sweaters and who by popular opinion (boys’ locker room after sports’ practices opinion) was “unapproachable.” In any case Sam had seen her around school but that was about it.   

Well some things change in this wicked old world, some things are not eternally etched in stone and Melinda like all of us from the Generation of ’68  has learned a thing or two, had been through her share of ups and downs and survived to tell about it. Naturally Sam was all ears to hear about this life if for no other reason that he could say that he had actually talked to her, even at a fifty year remove, for some such reason which only Sam is privy to. And so the blizzard of e-mails continued (her almost as crazy as him to write, write, write).

One exchange, the one that matters here, involved the question of where they had gone to elementary school, she to Adamsville North and he to Adamsville South. That Adamsville South response by Sam brought out the fact that Melinda’s mother, Margaret, had been a swimming instructor down at the Adamsville South Beach during the 1950s summers and had during her career there saved a drowning boy. Melinda, nine at the time, had been present at the event.

Sam said he had flipped out when he heard that information. See, and I remember him telling me one time about his love of the ocean but fear of it, fear to go too far out when swimming because he had almost drowned when he was nine down at the Adamsville South Beach one summer. Typical boy story: as the ocean was rising he had spied a log, an abandoned telephone pole, and had grabbed onto it. He drifted out for a while and then, as he said sheepishly, he realized he had gone too far but instead of holding onto the log he decided to try and swim for shore. Not a good swimmer and just too far out he started going down. His brother who was on the shore called for help and the swimming instructor came out and saved him in a nick of time.

So what lesson did Sam draw from that today. Anything about fate, karma, or just plain good luck. No. He told Melinda that since they had already “met” maybe they should get together and discuss the matter more fully. And guess what, she agreed. Jesus.”               

A couple more cell-phone calls and another round of e-mails got this pair to setting up the meeting in person, having a “date” like some hormonally-driven teen-agers. (Sam could not remember who suggested the idea first but neither flinched at that possibility.) They both admitted to nervousness as they planned to meet in Portsmouth up in New Hampshire at a restaurant that she had selected (he was to be at a legal conference in Maine and that locale was the closest convenient city for both of them). Needless to say they hit it off remarkably well.

 

And Sam, with two divorces under his belt and that also untold number of liaisons, was also in his less lucid moments thinking along some just such lines as an affair with Melinda, maybe more. Except. Oh yeah, except here is where it got tricky, where Sam’s calculations sort of misfired. Sam was, as he learned as they went along, ah, “married,” had been “married” for many years to Laura, although for a number of years past they had been living as “roommates.” Roommate meaning separate beds, mostly separate lives, and most definitely no sex. That hard little fact, that “marriage” fact, a fact that I kept mentioning to him as he got deeper into the human sink of Melinda. Naturally he would not listen at that point.  Although not because, and it can face the light of day now, I secretly, secretly then, wished that Sam would leave Laura, Laura who had disturbed my dreams for years. We later discussed this situation after Sam’s fever over Melinda had broken. Sam said he knew of my feelings for Laura, had known for years and acknowledged that if things had gone differently with Melinda he would have wished me well in my pursuit of Laura.

Naturally, or maybe not so naturally for the senior set, for  people in their sixties, and supposedly beyond sexual desire as they dote on grandchildren, gardening, golfing or whatever, the question of sleeping together, staying overnight together came up after several dates. Sam as part of his professional duties often went to Maine on legal business and so he suggested that they, he and Melinda, meet at a hotel a mutual distance between them and they did one Friday afternoon in frigid January. Melinda, assuming that the offer of meeting at a hotel meant that they would sleep together, had made provisions unbeknownst to Sam to stay that night with him. Sam, perhaps a little more backward in the dating game and its progressions expected them to just have a few drinks, go out for some dinner, come back and have a nightcap, let her go back on her way, and leave it at that. That afternoon Melinda came on strong, almost caught Sam flat-footed with her desire but he was not ready, had not been prepared for Melinda’s desire and so nothing happened that night except an unhappy Melinda who left unfulfilled around midnight.

That event left Sam in a quandary. He knew, just like Melinda knew, that he desired her, wanted to have sex, make love to her. But he also knew that once that happened that a bridge would be crossed, or so that was his thinking at the time. Still Melinda was there, still he wanted her so the next Friday afternoon he called her up out of the blue and told her to meet him at that same hotel. Oh yes, and feed the cats and bring an overnight bag. She was thrilled and arrived a couple of hours later. And that was that. Well not exactly because that night they a great long sex bout like fifty years of unacknowledged, unknown, unknowable desire surfaced. And that was their high point, the acme of their thing. That was also the point where Sam, back-tracking, began to squirm a little both at what he had done, that bridge that he had crossed and that home he had left behind for a minute. The omens thereafter were not good, although he never spoke of those nights to me and I only knew about them from the notes he handed to me.     

 

Who knows how some relationships turn from spun gold to dross in a short time, in time for a “forever” man to turn into a never man (the first designation an inside joke as it turned out since Melinda had started to call him that in the early days when she was still smitten with him and expected to share her time with him that long, and everything was possible. In the event “forever” turned out to be, ah, significantly shorter).

 

Maybe the turning point was Sam’s response to that second date, a December Friday a couple of weeks before Christmas date at a Tapas restaurant in Portsmouth. Sam had never been to such a restaurant where they give you small portions of many good things to eat, well-prepared, served at intervals and a place which provided a relaxed atmosphere to while away the time in. They talked up another storm and could barely keep their hands off each other, gathered closer as the evening progressed. After the meal, the weather New England winter cold he escorted her to her car and before she left they exchanged several meaningful hugs (and he might have kissed her on the cheek). They left knowing they both definitely had a thing for each other.

 

But Melinda was a fretter and a planner, not necessarily in that order so at some point between that Friday and their resumption of e-mail traffic the next day Melinda possessed of some dream future with Sam tried to find out more about Laura, about that “roommate” arrangement and what was to become of her. See Melinda had certain rules as we all more or less do in that she took pride in her serial monogamous relationships. She was with a man, and a man was with her, or no dice. Once she finished with a man that was that. She told Sam that in an e-mail exchange set. He in a little panic over her position kept trying to calm her doubts, kept trying to pass over his longtime relationship as some platonic boy-scout trip, kept trying to keep his head above water with Melinda. That night, that restless Saturday night he tossed and turned trying to mull things over in his head and came up empty. Came up with the only conclusion that made sense-end the flirtation and walk away. He, and this is characteristic of Sam, “wrote” the thing out in his head first and then at the crack of dawn gathered himself from his bed and went to compose the following e-mail which he sent later that morning:

“Dear Melinda

I have to admit that I am all balled up about you but in the cold light of day I have also admit that I am perplexed by the tone of your e-mail last night (the “down the snowy road” one in case you have sent a later one). I am a little confused now about your reasons but from early on you seemed interested in my pursuing you, and encouraging me to that effect. And I certainly have been interested in pursuing you and encouraging you to make me feel that I should. Also I like you am amazed by the fateful number of common things we share but now I am beginning to believe we might be star-crossed. It is with you do not know how much great sorrow I have to write the following, I hope you will respond to my e-mail with an e-mail (seems we are better on such issues this way) and if you don’t I will understand and accept that you agree with my solution. In any case I hope you will think and reflect on what I have to say and not think too badly of your old classmate.

 

We are cursed you and I, we, the both of us with the three curses, A tendency to intellectualize things, over-analyze them, fret them to death, try to engineer things rather than let them take their natural course. We have also been around the block enough to be wary, defensive about relationships and things having taken and given our bumps and bruises. Of course, as well we carry those long ago created scars  about expectations, acceptance, need to be wanted, praise and the like. A lot to carry for sure.  

I know and I have said it before that you have had a rough time with men and now it looks like with me too. That has to color your perspective and that is not wrong. However your e-mail got me to wondering about why you have kept trying to throw up roadblocks to our blooming romantic relationship (formerly known as our possible “affair”). Not when we are together or on the phone but in your e-mails. I won’t argue the point if I have done the same but let me point out some things that will show what I mean:

Your general early wariness of my intentions and what I was about and lately about my “marital” status.

The criminal report incident where you assumed that in the whole universe I did such a goofball thing

The whole FB/ring thing

The womanizer issue

 Now this thing about my true relationship with Laura

    

 I wasn’t going to bring it up but since you asked about it and I have told you more stuff about myself than probably any other woman including Laura we have not been intimate for over fifteen years (part of our problem). Sure on trips and stuff we have shared the same room and even the same bed but that is it.  If that isn’t platonic I don’t know what is.

We share a seven room house she has a room and another room for her singing/mediation/photography- I have a room, a small office (which I am writing this in now) and we share a living room, dining room and kitchen. All modest and kind of small but with room for guests.

The big thing is that all of this in really uncharted because Laura and I have never had to confront a situation like ours. Who knows what would happen. All I know is she is the innocent party here and should be treated like that.

 Of course if our romance had blossomed then I would have no problem bringing you to my house. But I do not think you are thinking outside the box. I/we have resources so if something had bloomed I know (since I have done it before) that other arrangements could have been made. Laura keeps the house and I move out to an apartment. I move in with you and share expenses. We both move some place together. We run away to a cave off of the Pacific Coast Highway-they are plenty of alternatives.

All of this to say I really never would want to hurt you. I am sorry if I have but there are no guarantees. Although I would much rather have you holding my hand right now dear sweet Melinda I think perhaps it is best that we stop right now, accept that our time together has passed. We have been on a roller-coaster so I think just friendship would be hard, although maybe when I calm down and knowing the limitations maybe we could work something out. I hope you will respond but in any case I still hope to see you at the reunion. That after all is what got this whole thing started. Sam”

 

Sam never gave Melinda a chance to respond since a few hours later, maybe two, he called her up and begged her to forget what he had written and that they should keep on going as best they could but that he planned to do right by her. Of course he sent me this new information and I blew my top but since it cannot do anybody any harm, or minimal harm let me show you an e-mail he posted to Melinda after their “mini-break-up” episode:           

“Melinda -Glad to reach you this morning to make sure things were right between us and thank you for being understanding about me being a little crazy yesterday. Yes, crazy because why would any guy in his right mind walk away from somebody who was certifiable good for him. In any case the time for walking away is past. If I really wanted to do that I could have just done that yesterday. And you could have indirectly done the same by just saying to yourself why should I go forward with a guy who doesn’t have enough sense to come in out of the rain when somebody that is good for him walks through the door. So the walking away is done and while we probably still have rough patches ahead we are moving along-along in case anybody asks to the hand-holding stage. So something is up.

I still can’t get over my response when you started tearing up Friday night. I have been accused and rightly so in the past of not showing enough emotion but I almost instinctively reached over to you to comfort you like we had been together for a long time. I won’t forget that.

 Hope you are okay after your dental work-rest and take it easy tonight. Later Sam.”           

 

Maybe it was San Diego- Sometimes a guy can’t quite figure out what to do, can’t for the life of him, despite his age and the fact, the hard fact that he has been through many mills before what the right thing to do is, or maybe is too callous, too concerned with having his own way, having his kids’ stuff “two women” thing that he gets blindsided by the truth, by the equally hard fact that he cannot burn the candle at both ends. Melinda had screamed at him, raised bloody holy hell about the fact that he was taking Laura to San Diego with him, a few days in the sun he said to give her winter-weary body so Melinda would have to put up with the fact that he would be with “another woman” in the same room in the same hotel. That drove her to rages, to fits, to tantrums which made him cry bloody murder. He made sure that he called her every day but that every day was like a prison as she took aim at his situation. He made the supreme mistake though of one call making a comparison between the hotel room in San Diego and their love-nest in Portsmouth. That caused a burning flame for days after.          

 

Maybe it was after that Washington, D.C in February which was a trip that solidified, mainly, their desire for each other, but because she was taking a scheduled bus back to New Hampshire and he was grabbing his car from an off-site lot they had a rushed good-bye after furious movement at the airport where she had an odd exchange of luggage problem getting hers’ mixed up with another causing several headaches and problems for Sam at his house when Laura received a telephone call from Jet Blue asking if that mislaid luggage was there.  The next day feeling some ill-wind had crossed their paths Sam had refused Melinda’s request of him to call her when she was confused by an e-mail that he sent because he had written it hastily as he had his hands full with Laura and her furor as fallout over the luggage problem.

 

Probably though the end started to crumble the month before the end when a few days after coming back from that fateful Washington trip Melinda took a big spill, a serious fall at a pool in Portsmouth where she swam to get exercise, that broke her hip bone requiring surgery and their budding romance came to a crashing halt as she convalesced and Sam took on the unaccustomed role of care-giver- general. Not so much that incident itself since it was an accident but what it did to enforce her idleness which left her too much time to think about how she wanted him with her, wanted him to leave Laura, wanted to make those 208 plans (roughly) that Melinda spent her waking hours doing in order to have him come closer to her. And Sam needed to be in Boston, or wanted to be, and not stuck in some winter wonderland town in Podunk New Hampshire at the beck and call of her highness.

 

Not a meeting between them in that period went by without some variation of the on-going argument. Although there were some nice times, (one time he drove her to their North Adamsville youth homes and they had many laughs, and some sorrows, over that). Even when he had driven up in order to allow her to teach a seminar at UNH and then drove her the next day over to the Portsmouth General to get her cleared to be able to drive she/he/they argued over that same old, same old material. Now that Sam thought about it he believed that was clearly the case, the place where all hell broke loose, since he just from his end got tired of the arguments that were leading nowhere.             

 

The few days before the end had not been better (really a few weeks Sam thought since that damn accident put her out of commission placed a damper on their affair as he became a care-giver and she a patient). The inevitable Melinda war cry of when was Sam going to leave his “wife,” when he was going to leave Laura, and what, get this, constructive steps he had taken to break with her had led to a series of arguments starting with the day that she was finally given the okay by the doctor in charge of her case at Portsmouth General to drive.

 

Melinda, as an act of liberation from her confinement, had driven them to Newburyport and then to Plum Island where when Sam had expressed his concern about the change in their relationship from romantic to care-giving, that the “spark” had gone out somewhere along the line (she took his remark, the way he said it, as his displeasure at her). Melinda had exploded and said that “she wished he had never taken care of her during that month she was laid up if she was such a burden.” They talked but the fires had not been put out. Newburyport was significant for that was where he had brought her a trinket on their first trip there in December when they could hardly keep their hands off each other (and had their first “lean-in” kiss). The next day walking on Hampton Beach the smoldering fires erupted (slightly) again when an issue came up about Melinda doing a favor for her ex-husband. They kissed a statutory kiss and parted company she to Epping and he back to Boston.

 

Naturally the e-mail and cell-phone traffic (actually the diminished traffic, significantly down from the days when they would sent blizzards of e-mails to each other when he thought about it later) reflected those unresolved tensions. She needed to spent that first week of liberation catching up on work, house, social chores and could only spare that next Thursday evening for them to get together and since she was going to be in the Salem (NH) area they decided to meet in Amesbury for dinner. Before that though Sam made what would be a mistake, a fatal mistake, of putting into writing some of his feelings about where they were at in their relationship. Thus he sent the following e-mail which was the final piece of evidence that things had gone drastically wrong.

 

“Dearest Melinda -Where have those hands grabbing at each other across the table in delight/need/want at Morry’s (and elsewhere) gone. Where has your hand grabbing my arm while walking outside of Rudi’s (and elsewhere) and me glad to have you do it gone. Where have the little stolen sweet kisses of Portsmouth parking lots gone. Where have those endless phone calls where we hated to sign off talking about great adventures ahead gone. Where have those roundabout hours of blissful silliness gone. Where have those shy but meaningful moments when our feelings for each other blossomed gone. I could go on with a million more examples when were on the same page and were relaxed and confident about our relationship and where it might head but you get the idea.

 

I sensed from this e-mail that you are beginning to get the feeling like me that you/I/we are not in a good place these days. Think about the first time at Newburyport in precious December and last week. I had already spoken about this last week and now I think you sense that too from your side. Our talk today where we got all theoretical about the future without any sweet talk kind of epitomized that. Frankly, and you can speak for yourself, I am unhappy with the drift of things now. I/you/we spent too much time thinking about the future, future plans, about the relationship itself and not enough about how to get out of the rough patch we are in. How to get the romance back and just relax with each other.  Why don’t we take a step back, maybe two, today and tomorrow and think about things we can say and do when we meet on Thursday to break the impasse. Why don’t we step back and just forget about the future for a little bit and just think we are “dating” for right now with all its sense of mystery in the now with no future goals. Or maybe that we should think about just being friends for a while. I always want to be friends with you that is for sure. These are only suggestions. The main thing is that you/I/we think about this and not rush into a blizzard of e-mails. This rough patch requires thinking not writing-

 

From a guy who misses those delighted hands across the table, that grabbing hand on my arm, those endless funny phone calls waited for in anticipation and nervousness, those sweet shy stolen kisses, that bubble silliness when the outside world didn’t matter for a bit, those intimate moments when you and I both blushed a teenage-like blush at how close we were, those all night talkfests, those candles flittering in the dark, serious Melinda and Sam just being foolish and off-guard, the kindnesses we did for each other just because we were special to each other, the sense that our thing was written in the wind, and lots of other things you remember as well as I do. Sam”

 

They had a short acrimonious cell-phone exchange after that e-mail but again agreed to meet in Amesbury the next day to figure things out. That next evening things started well enough, after Melinda had ordered wine with her dinner. The net result of their discussions was that they would go on as friends for a while and see where that led. Of course to go beyond the friend stage Melinda gave no uncertain terms to the proposition that she could not go on, was “ashamed” to go on under the circumstances unless Sam got a place of his own, left Laura.

 

Melinda ordered another wine, unusual for her, and that must have given her courage to speak again of the e-mail. She said it read like a lawyer’s closing argument, that she had been hurt and that he was basically a bum of the month. He became incensed, yelled at her and threw money on the table for dinner and walked to the men’s room to fume. When he came back he tried to tell her his point of view but he was tired of arguing by then and just said “let it go for now.” They left, she put her hand in his arm as usual and he muttered that “they were in very bad place” as he walked her to her car. He looked at her shoes, the shoes she reminded him that she had worn in sunnier days down in Washington and he commented “that seems like a long time ago” as they arrived at her car. Rather than the usual kiss good-bye he yelled out “I’ll be in touch,” as he walked back to his own car.     

 

Since Melinda was not good at directions (and the Google maps were helter-skelter on this one) Sam had consented to have her follow him out of Amesbury on Route 27 which she did until they got to the U.S. 495 South entrance. A couple of exits up she veered off onto Route 133 for home. As he shifted gears from fourth to fifth to push on up to speed in the U.S. 495 night after he saw her automobile veer off to the northern route home he breathed a sigh of relief, and of sadness. They never saw each other again.

 

That is prologue.

Sam was, frankly, heart-broken over the loss of Melinda, had had many sleepless nights and days of forlornness, as he expressed the matter to me on several occasions after that last highway parting when we met over drinks later at one of our old watering holes of late Jacks’ in Cambridge and an old time haunt of mine, Jimmy’s Grille, in Boston (where in the old Irish bar fashion you can still get a beer chaser gratis with your whiskey, high shelf or low).  Of course there were other feelings as well, feelings of rage and outrage after Sam had told Laura he was leaving her and their household arrangement once Melinda forced the issue. All for naught since Melinda had probably been preparing to give Sam his walking papers at exactly the same time that he was deciding in her favor at least that was Sam’s speculation after the fact. Speculation necessary, as will become more apparent as well mull to over the dregs of the situation, since Melinda refused to discuss her reasons in that last cellphone communication beyond what he already knew. He had thought perhaps she was going back to her previous man who was emotionally less high maintenance than Sam, maybe had gotten cold feet, or just did not want the drama associated with trying to work out a kind of long distance relationship since he had balked at spending too much time in the Podunk New Hampshire town where she lived.

That telling he was leaving the household to Laura part had caused more anguish than Sam expected especially since he freely admitted to me that he had not managed that part well. Had hedged his bets on Melinda after that last meeting feeling that she was going to “dump” him (Sam’s corner boy sweet sixteen term, Melinda’s was the adult-like “breaking off the relationship”). Fearing to be left with nobody once the dust settled he had told Laura that he not sure what he was going to do and would need some time to figure things out. Made the fatal error, which would come back to haunt him in his relationship with Laura, that he had “two women” now. But said it in such a way that he implied that he was happy or at least not unhappy about that situation like some errant lust-filled schoolboy. Then when the Melinda other shoe dropped all the mess of back-tracking to try to repair the Sam-Laura relationship. That was a story in itself but since it does not revolve what Sam did later we will let it ride (let it ride as well since I honestly have my own privately-held outrages about what Sam did to Laura and how he maneuvered himself out of harm’s way with a lot of fast-talking).  No things had not gone well, gone well at all. Hence the rage, and sorrow.

Getting back to Melinda though somehow something (something unknown and only half suspected by Sam) had snapped in Melinda about Sam’s commitment to Laura, about the enraged last meeting, about that fateful e-mail, that “closing argument” e-mail as Melinda had called it in an irate moment that had expressed Sam’s apprehensions about their future. As mentioned before what happened upon later investigation by Sam, or what he thought had occurred, was that while he was giving Laura notice of leaving Melinda had independently and unilaterally made her fateful decision. When Sam tried several time to call or e-mail Melinda during that next week under the pretext that Laura had to make plans to leave their household as she was anxious to do to get out of the maelstrom (that leaving would be partially true later but she came back after a few weeks) Melinda stonewalled him finally telling him to wait two weeks for her reply.

That hard-bitten and anxious two weeks over and done Melinda definitely and unceremoniously gave Sam his walking papers. Of course faithful Laura locked into limbo during this period was frantic, was outraged (and rightly so Sam kind of half-heartedly acknowledged to me as I scoured at him when he mentioned to my mind the dirty way he had treated Laura) and had made arrangements to leave when Sam told her that he wished to stay with her, for her to stay. At that level I had some sympathy for Sam and his loss of two women. Somehow though, damn, Laura did stay with Sam in the end but since this is about Sam and Melinda I will let it go.       

 

A couple of weeks after the Melinda break-up decision Sam sent her an e-mail keeping open the old possibility of being friends, acknowledged that they could not be lovers under the new dispensation. He did not expect and did not receive any answer the way he posed the question in the e-mail since he assumed that Melinda was still in furious mode and so left the that possibility for some vague future. Then he made another fatal mistake. Not as devastating as the previous ones since they had already done their damage and were done with but for the events that would follow. He assumed the “no answer” was really that Melinda was thinking things over about a friendship. Fool’s paradise and prima facie evidence that even a smart guy like Sam can act as silly as a 16 year old. He went along with that idea in the back of his mind leaving Melinda plenty of room to decide. Eventually after several weeks as her birthday approached he sent another short e-mail with a birthday greeting. Still no reply (none was expected, he said, as he presented the thing to me as strictly a greeting like on a birthday card, oh, alright an e-card). Then all hell broke loose.        

As detailed previously Sam and Melinda met up through a fortuitous searching for reunion information. That class’s reunion committee, which included Sam in a secondary role, had set up a website to help organize the reunion events. For a period in the bloom of their affair they had collaborated on messages to the class, memory stuff mostly like lots of such sites. That website gave all who joined their own profile pages to do with as they liked (within reason and with some regard for taste and such). The site had the now standard ways to tell each members’ story though words, photos, and videos and ways, publicly and privately, to communicate with other on the site ( to the exclusion of the rest of the universe since it was a closed site, closed to all but members of the class).

One day a couple of months after the break-up Sam noticed that Melinda had updated her profile on the site. When he clicked on her page he saw a photo (actually two) of her and her high school friend, Donna, at Donna’s place in California. Melinda had gone out there to celebrate her own 68th birthday. Under normal circumstances no big deal- a couple of good-looking older women in a photo (good-looking to older guys, okay, maybe not to hungry younger guys looking for fast sex and bouncy women). What made the photo a problem for Sam, had him seeing red actually, was that he was originally supposed to have been on that California trip to see Donna. Seeing the photo, and seeing something that was not there (he thought that Melinda had placed the photos there to stir him up or something, another  fatal mistake) he sent Melinda a private e-mail that was available as part of her profile page.

Mainly the message once again sent best wishes for her birthday, congratulated Melinda on her trip, telling her that he had been in California earlier that same month and that he still believed that their thing had been “written in the wind.” No response. A few days later he placed a public message on her profile page stating basically the same information. No response. The day after that he noticed that his comment had been deleted by her (which he or she could do the way the site was set up). A couple of days before this Sam had also placed a rather long remembrance of childhood July 4th celebrations in the Atlantic section of North Adamsville on the Memories section of the class website. A day later Melinda posted an old photo of her and other North Adamsville classmates on a July 4th float in the Norfolk section of North Adamsville’s celebration.

The posting of that ancient photo led Sam to write a public response to Melinda, a kind of coded love letter (based on another fatal mistake that he assumed she had placed the photo in response to his post, Jesus, didn’t he see this whole thing as a house of mirrors, the poor love-sick bastard). Here’d what he wrote (with some explanations by me where necessary although even I am not sure what he was trying to get at so don’t shoot the messenger):    

“Once Again on NQ Fourth Of July

Professor Loring, oh, I won’t be formal, Linny, if I recall I think I saw a photo of you in the Magnet [school yearbook] one time as a member of the Russian Club. [In those red scare Cold War days after Sputnik and a rise in tensions in relationships at critical points, like with the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, it was not at all clear whether we would not all be speaking Russian after everything was said and done. Apparently some students, including Melinda, wanted a running start.] And I think some place I read that you were a Russian history major or something like that so you probably remember the samizdat movement where the dissidents had to speak in strange Aesopian phrases or say things in a certain way to express themselves. [Of course Sam knew both that she had been in the Russian Club and had been a history major, although not Russian history since they had spent many a pillow talk night discussing just such matters, Jesus. The “samizdat” reference is a beauty since even I had forgotten the term since the demise of the Soviet Union and the word had become something of an anachronism, double Jesus.] That is what this classmate website seems like sometimes since many times short replies are necessary, etc. I think of how strange it is that we are Message Forum #74 and 75 as I answer this and are right next to each other in cyberspace although we live very far apart from each other. It’s a great tool to have though. [A reference to her posting that old time 4th of July photograph that wound up next to a reply he was making about some aspect of his 4th experiences. Laced as well with some Sam symbolic cosmic meaning that I still have not quite figured out and did not want to ask about since I did not need another six hour run on that “written in the stars” theme he was ambling on about between shots of high-shelf whiskey.]  

Needless to say I am very happy that Professor Garland, I will use that designation here, has read my Fourth of July sketch and I am also very happy that you shared that photo of you and the Norfolk gang from back in the day although now with sadness. [Norfolk Melinda’s growing up section of North Adamsville.] Were we ever that young? I wish I had some photos from then. About that July 4th sketch I have been telling everybody they should go back and re-read the dedication though because I have changed it some.

[Sam had made yet another fatal mistake by including a fetching, yes, fetching photograph of Laura with an inscription about how she had stood by him as his “best friend” which he had placed in the site prior to seeing Melinda’s placement of her California photograph. He had quickly deleted Laura’s photo in some kind of frenzied reaction to what her reaction might be. By the way the word “fatal,” is Sam’s term whenever I use it here and was based purely on his speculation as noted previously since Melinda has not said word one to him since that awful highway parting, I have my own terms for his dizzy schemes.]  

Maybe if you have time you could write a little something expanding on what was going on in the photo you posted. You know what events took place, did you have tonic [soda] and ice cream and so on. Or you could write about anything like the nice thing you wrote about Miss Hooker.

I know from your In Memory contribution to Alice Hardy (also for Corrine and Linda) that you were great friends. [All three, now deceased, had been on the float that posted Melinda photo.] Funny because as you know she was very much into photography at some point. I actually have a photo that she had taken some time ago of the North Adamsville Yacht Club that I am looking as I write this message that somebody had bought and had given me. [Guess who that somebody might have been, triple Jesus.]

I also noticed that you updated your profile page and placed a couple of photos of you and your longtime friend and our fellow classmate Donna Mario out in California celebrating your birthday. Belated best wishes. [Like he hadn’t already sent those previous private e-mails saying the same thing.] Funny I was out in California last month on business, San Francisco. I had wanted to go to Big Sur but things did not work out for one reason or another so I only got as far as Pacifica. I know I sure would like to get to Big Sur some time since I am crazy for Jack Kerouac these days and I recently saw a film adaptation of his book Big Sur by that name. [Of course he and Melinda were to go to Big Sur after they visited Donna on that projected trip.]

By the way both of you look very nice in those photos. I would say “hot” but I don’t think members of the 68 club that you and I are now in (although not Kathy, right?) are supposed to say such things. [Saying things like “hot” which I suppose could mean “sexy” as well are part of what got him before the lord high executioner, the site webmaster. Jesus you would think, hell, I would think if I was a, ah, “mature woman,” that if anybody, even and old geezer like Sam said I was hot that would make my day. Actually if any women said that to me it would make my day.] Especially to people they don’t know very well or haven’t seen in a long time. [Humility itself here, Sam.]

Someone on site says aging sucks and I agree. All the aches and pains gathering like a storm I know you must feel that way after that hip surgery you had. BTW I hope you have recovered fully and are okay. 

I hope you are going to the prom, oops, it feels like a prom the way things are going, I mean reunion. [The way Sam explained this one was that since neither of them had gone to the senior prom they were, in sunnier days, planning to use the reunion as the prom. Fair enough.] Please write stuff here if you have some time. Regards, your fellow classmate. Sam Lowell”    

[Honestly I had to re-read this screed a couple of times to figure out how anybody would figure out what he was referring to who was also not equipped with a Rosetta Stone or some such ancient deciphering tool, much less see the damn thing as a love letter, coded or not. Actually my first response had been-what the f- -k and then I started laughing at the almost sophomoric way, yes sixteen-ish way, he was thinking. I held off for a while in telling him that though. When I did mention the flim-flam of the thing he too broke into laughter, but I felt bringing the matter up was a close thing.]        

 

That Message Forum note elicited no response from Melinda.   

 

Then Sam got the bright idea to make a “cute” comment about how sexy the two women looked in that earlier posted photo by Melinda. [Apparently you can make comments under the photos which is where Sam said he placed the remarks. That is both open to public (class public) view and cannot be deleted, except by the webmaster.     

“Well Dan McNulty [an ex-football player and flame of Donna according to Sam] may have lost a step, may have become a little modest in his old age, maybe has played too much golf or something, I don’t know. I will be a little forward though since I am in a flirty mood today. From where I sit whether you are partial to dark–haired, brown-eyed, ruby-red-lipped women [Donna] or favor light brown-haired, pale blue-eyed, no lipstick ones [Melinda] they are “hot.” 16 or 68 (is Donna 68 yet?) Is anybody going to argue with me? I think not.” 

[Yes, very definitely that would put a bug in the ear of somebody who was not speaking to a guy, who was pretending not to know him. This comment has trouble all over it and you do not need a Rosetta Stone to figure that out. Sorry Sam, that’s the bitter truth, and that is a sophomoric mistake if I ever saw one.]          

That posting brought down the “cops,” the webmaster Delores. It seems (although Sam is still not sure of the exact story since we know Melinda has never spoken or written to him since she dumped him) that she took umbrage at Sam’s remarks and got in touch with Delores who read Sam the riot act about appropriate behavior on the site threatening bloody murder if he did not stop bothering Melinda.

That “snitch” (and here I agree with his classification of the deed being an old-time corner boy myself) to the “cops” was the end for Sam. A boyhood corner boy like me, a working-class corner boy who had followed a certain code established seemingly from time immemorial did not countenance squealing, not for this silly stuff. Snitching to anybody but certainly not to authorities of whatever degree. Sam wrote one last personal e-mail to her commercial e-mail address (he had been warned not to use the class site to contact her by the “cops”) with a very cutting e-mail finally giving up the ghost of that relationship. [I am being polite here using the term “cutting.” I turned red when I read his draft although there was nothing obscene in the thing but any normal person might have avoided the word “bloated” to a mature woman or low-rent to anybody. Worse, far worse, even mentioning Laura’s name to “seeing red” Melinda.]

“Melinda-Laura was right. You are turning into vicious bloated old hag. I should have listened to her. Six month later and we are reduced to this. I was only trying to be friends with you. Now I finally see the light. For the first time I am glad that you dumped me. Now I can write you off as the latest chapter in the low-rent continuing saga of the North Adamsville bummer that has followed my life. I have had enough.”        

[Nothing more need be said by me.]

Moreover, since in the communications between him and Delores  seemed to him to have cast him as some kind of lonely-heart “cyberspace” stalker of an older woman, he set Delores straight about what had been what was going on between Melinda and him since it was apparent that she was taking Melinda’s side or assuming Melinda’s case was clear-cut. (Melinda used Delores as an intermediary and did not communicate with him directly also not good form from an old corner boy perspective.) Delores had threatened to kick him off the site and made other remarks that indicated to him that she was not getting the whole story so he felt he had to lay his cards out on the table. Here is Sam’s part of the e-mail traffic around this controversy since he does not have Delores permission to use her name and the messages are pretty straight forward anyway:

“Delores- Finally on this whole mess-or as you say trying to let it die a quiet death part of this whole flare-up with Melinda from NH (I don't know who else would be complaining and do not need to know since everything else is I think straightened out between you and me) was my attempt to be friends or civil for a reason. [Delores did not initially identify who was complaining about what Sam had written but since Melinda’s photos were the only ones where he placed a message he identified her.] Melinda has said on her profile page that she intends to go to the reunion. I obviously am going and so I was trying to smooth things over since the way things were left between us (and probably for her as well) was not good. My long- time companion Laura has been talking about wanting to go the reunion. So you can see where things were heading. 

 

I was using Melinda’s posted photo of her and Donna (and a Message Forum message which you deleted) in what appears to be an ill-advised effort to break the ice since I didn't want to have a bad evening filled with tension, etc. for either of us but, frankly, mainly for me. I am sure that this information is far more than you need or want to know but Melinda could have e-mailed me at my Comcast address as she has it (as I have hers so I would not have to make that one NA64 e-mail if I thought she would answer the Comcast one) rather than put you in the middle. That is apparently how bad things are between us. Hopefully all this will have died its proper death by September but who knows. (Maybe we can hire another ballroom at BW for all the estranged ones). So that is the inside story and I am sure you understand that this information is between you and me in case Melinda contacts you for some reason.  At least you have my part, or part of my part of the story. I will not try to contact her again in any case (or make comments on her page except maybe vanilla stuff if she posts something like the photo of Norfolk July 4th 1962 like I would with anybody.  Yeah, 16 or 68 relationships are hard to figure. Later "oh great dudette webmaster" -Thanks for your input and actually your help as well-the Dude (or is it dud)-Sam”       



And then:

 

“Delores- I just sent you an e-mail detailing what I was trying to do.  I have not sent any e-mails on the class website so I am not what you are talking about. If it is about Melinda then I have explained my situation and will say yesterday that I sent one last Comcast e-mail to her [that one with bloated, low-rent and Laura in it] which I do not know whether she has received or not. If it is somebody else then let me know who because I have not sent any female classmate a message either on the site or through my own personal Comcast-mail. Why would anybody including Melinda put you in the middle like this? If it is Melinda she has no right to cause me problems with you or the site when she has my e-mail address. If she has a problem which I think I addressed yesterday then she can e-mail or write me. This is all will say for now until you explain better what is going on. I was startled by your message to be honest. This has to straightened out and let's get it done today if possible.”

 



And yet again [after another e-mail from Delores complaining that Sam had not stopped using the class e-mail system to contact Melinda as she had requested]:

 

“Delores - I have not posted anything on Melinda’s page since Thursday I think which you deleted-so I am not sure what is going on with this. I have just sent another e-mail to you and will wait on your response but what the heck is going on here and why are you being put in the middle of a personal dispute. And why am I being put in the middle here through you by somebody I cared about and think highly of in my apparently ill-advised attempt to smooth things over. I said before 16 or 68 it does not get easier. Later Sam” 

“And then after several hours of getting enraged, bitter, and in order to defend himself and what he was about this e-mail:
“Delores-the more I think about it the more I think you should know some facts about whatever is wrong between Melinda and me. That “threatening to throw me off the site” and the way you emphasized that point about not e-mailing female classmates (really Melinda) and your “scary” reference has me feeling you should know some facts that she has, or has not, related to you. The way you presented the situation to me was like I was some lonely-heart  cyberspace “stalker” preying upon some older woman from out of nowhere- I will present some other facts that you should weigh. For better or worse at least until this is settled you are in the middle- I am sorry for that since I consider you the heart and soul of NA64 and a fine person who should never have to deal with this.     
1-Melinda is not some faint-hearted female but a very strong, assertive person who should be able to deal with this situation on her own. Christ this is all about e-mails, comments and stuff not some abuse thing. That strength was part of my attraction to her. 
2. In our good days we would exchange about six zillion e-mails a day so this whole e-mail thing is rather strange since before this past week when I e-mailed her once on site (saying I missed her basically), put a comment on her profile page (basically telling she was “hot” and hoping she was doing well) and wrote a reply to her on the MF (which I sent to you earlier) and a cutting Comcast e-mail yesterday before she called our affair off in early April I had sent her exactly two e-mails –one to ask her to be friends, the other a couple of weeks ago sending birthday wishes.
3. Who do think was the person who cared for Melinda a lot up in NH when she had her hip surgery in Feb/March?
4. Who do you think encouraged her to write the Ms Hooper article and her painful parts biography on her profile page.
5. This one will be ironic now-who got mad when I called a classmate “hot” in a personal e-mail which I did not include her. 
6. Why do you think I picked the recent Melinda-Donna photo from CA. Originally her and I were supposed to go see Donna in June to celebrate Melinda’s birthday-so that did not come out of nowhere. Also we were to go to Big Sur. 
7. I am not altogether even now sure of the exact reasons why Melinda decided to split up with me because she refused to see me in person after she made her decision. I know a couple of things around our last meeting but the deeper reasons escape me.
8. I had actually told Laura, my off and on companion of 30 years, that I was leaving her and our shared house together for Melinda when she decided to call our thing off. Laura and I are still trying to work something out but we are not living together right now.  
9. I still hold Melinda in high regard and still think she is one of the most interesting woman I have ever met. I have had enough though and told her so yesterday in a cutting way because she should have just sent a damn e-mail back in May to say definitely that she did not want to be friends.  
10. I probably still am heart-broken that things did not work out but like the rest of our generation or most of it I will get over it.
You can show Melinda this if you want. At this point you can share it with anybody you want but there are two sides here and I will not be made to look like a fool/maniac/weirdo just on her say so.  Later Sam”   

Delores, a good woman and wonderful webmaster, now caught in the middle of something she did not want to be caught in the middle of, e-mailed Sam back and said “let’s drop the thing.” He agreed and agreed to not contact Melinda on site.  And that is the end of the story. Oh well, knowing Sam, actually knowing him much better now than in the old days when we were more like nodding acquaintances he had one more thing to get off his chest. (The “nod” for those not in the know was that slight tip of the head, or hand, that let another guy that was not your corner boy, or somebody you played sports with or had in one of your classes, know that he was okay with you, that if the chance came up you would be friendly toward him so a very important social distinction, especially if a guy did not nod you up)    

Obviously Sam had taken seriously his attempts to help organize the reunion, help too to try to exorcize some of those childhood North Adamsville demons but the whole flap with Melinda had left a bad taste in his mouth, make him think as he said in his parting shot at her that she was “one more North Adamsville bummer experience” in his life. That factor and the fact that the number of classmates who had signed up was relatively small meant that he would be unable to avoid her at the reunion. So he sent Delores the following e-mail explaining, among other things why he would not be going go to the reunion come September:

“Delores- When I started thinking about the reunion last year, got interested in it, and in helping to organize it one of my motives was to erase some of the negative stuff about my experiences in North Adamsville when I was a kid. Apparently after 50 years that negative stuff will not go away. All of this is getting wearisome-apparently as Thomas Wolfe put in the title of one of his books-You Can’t Go Home Again. Nothing to do with you and the great job you have done as the heart and soul of NA64 and the website. And a fine person in a trying job as well.

On that last Message Forum thing I think we crossed messages or something because I see that you have deleted yours. Naturally I will delete mine since it makes no sense now by itself. [A reference here to a question somebody on the Message Forum asked about why Sam did not discuss much about his post-high school experiences in reply to which he noted that he found no groundswell of classmates clamoring to learn about his marriages, job history, afflictions, addictions, and predilections. I laughed when I read that not having realized that he was a funny guy during all of this heartache stuff.] 

However I think, without asking me, you were wrong to delete that second paragraph.  That was not a reference to Melinda who I did not “meet” on this site but on the Facebook event page that I created last fall before I knew we had this site when we were both looking for reunion information. That was another classmate who I had English with in the old days and who I was (and am) in communication with.  I have tried to be a little more sensitive on identifying others since that flap over Melinda a couple of weeks ago. BTW I don’t believe that Melinda is a better writer than me, I would say about equal, although I agree that she would writer a shorter piece. But these days I am not sure that she would be straighter. Not everything in this world is about Melinda, not now, not by me.  I am having enough trouble getting back on track with Laura.       

All of this brings up the main point of this e-mail reply. Since that Melinda flap a couple of weeks ago and looking at the way that the reunion is shaping up as a small event as of today where it would be difficult to avoid her  I have done some thinking and for my own benefit I am now not planning to go to the reunion. I don’t need another NA-related bummer even if only for one evening. I am giving you this information so that you can either give my ticket to somebody who needs it or use the money as a donation to the fund being set up.  As always thanks for your work. Later Sam”

I will not be going either not out of solidarity with Sam but because I never intended on going after that first flurry on Sam’s part to get me to go. And that is the end of the story, finally. But at 68 Sam still has that heartbroken feeling of a schoolboy of 16.  Join the club, brother, join the club.                        

 

In The 74th Anniversary Year Of The Assassination Of Great Russian Revolutionary Leon Trotsky A Tribute- DEFEATED, BUT UNBOWED-THE WRITINGS OF LEON TROTSKY, 1929-1940



 

BOOK REVIEW

 

If you are interested in the history of the International Left in the first half of the 20th century or are a militant trying to understand some of the past lessons of our history concerning the communist response to various social and labor questions this book is for you. I have reviewed elsewhere Trotsky’s writings published under the title The Left Opposition, 1923-1929 (in three volumes) dealing with Trotsky’s internal political struggles for power inside the Russian Communist Party (and by extension, the political struggles inside the Communist International) in order to save the Russian Revolution. This book is part of a continuing series of volumes in English of his writings from his various points of external exile from 1929 up until his death in 1940. These volumes were published by the organization that James P. Cannon, early American Communist Party and later Trotskyist leader founded, the Socialist Workers Party, during the 1970’s and 1980’s. (Cannon’s writings in support of Trotsky’s work are reviewed elsewhere in this space). Look in the archives in this space for other related reviews on and by this important world communist leader.

To set the framework for these reviews I will give a little personal, political and organizational sketch of the period under discussion. After that I will highlight some of the writings from each volume that are of continuing interest. Reviewing such compilations is a little hard to get a handle on as compared to single subject volumes of Trotsky’s writing but, hopefully, they will give the reader a sense of the range of this important revolutionary’s writings.

After the political defeat of the various Trotsky-led Left Oppositions 1923 to 1929 by Stalin and his state and party bureaucracy he nevertheless found it far too dangerous to keep Trotsky in Moscow. He therefore had Trotsky placed in internal exile at Ata Alma in the Soviet Far East in 1928. Even that turned out to be too much for Stalin’s tastes and in 1929 he arranged for the external exile of Trotsky to Turkey. Although Stalin probably rued the day that he did it this exile was the first of a number of places which Trotsky found himself in external exile. Other places included, France, Norway and, finally, Mexico where he was assassinated by a Stalinist agent in 1940. As these volumes, and many others from this period attest to, Trotsky continued to write on behalf of a revolutionary perspective. Damn, did he write. Some, including a few of his biographers, have argued that he should have given up the struggle, retired to who knows where, and acted the role of proper bourgeois writer or professor. Please! These volumes scream out against such a fate, despite the long odds against him and his efforts on behalf of international socialist revolution. Remember this is a revolutionary who had been through more exiles and prisons than one can count easily, held various positions of power and authority in the Soviet state and given the vicissitudes of his life could reasonably expect to return to power with a new revolutionary upsurge. Personally, I think Trotsky liked and was driven harder by the long odds.

The political prospects for socialist revolution in the period under discussion are, to say the least, rather bleak, or ultimately turned out that way. The post-World War I revolutionary upsurge has dissipated leaving Soviet Russia isolated. Various other promising revolutionary situations, most notably the aborted German revolution of 1923 that would have gone a long way to saving the Russian Revolution, had come to naught. In the period under discussion there is a real sense of defensiveness about the prospects for revolutionary change. The specter of fascism loomed heavily and we know at what cost to the international working class. The capitulation to fascism by the German Communist and Social Democratic Parties in 1933, the defeat of the heroic Austrian working class in 1934, the defeat in Spain in 1939, and the outlines of the impending Second World War colored all political prospects, not the least Trotsky’s.

Organizationally, Trotsky developed two tactical orientations. The first was a continuation of the policy of the Left Opposition during the 1920’s. The International Left Opposition as it cohered in 1930 still acted as an external and unjustly expelled faction of the official Communist parties and of the Communist International and oriented itself to winning militants from those organizations. After the debacle in Germany in 1933 a call for new national parties and a new, fourth, international became the organizational focus. Many of the volumes here contain letters, circulars, and manifestos around these orientations. The daunting struggle to create an international cadre and to gain some sort of mass base animate many of the writings collected in this series. Many of these pieces show Trotsky’s unbending determination to make a breakthrough. That these effort were, ultimately, militarily defeated during the course of World War Two does not take away from the grandeur of the efforts. Hats off to Leon Trotsky.
********

In Honor Of Leon Trotsky On The 74th Anniversary Of His Death- For Those Born After-Ivan Smirnov’s Journey

From The Pen Of Frank Jackman

Ivan Smirnov came out of old Odessa town, came out of the Ukraine (not just plain Ukraine like now but “the” then), the good black earth breadbasket of the Russian Empire, well before the turn of the 20th century (having started life on some Mister’s farm begotten by illiterate but worthy and hard-working peasant parents who were not sure whether it was 1880 or 1881 and Mister did not keep very good records up in the manor house) although he was strictly a 20th century man by habits and inclinations. Fashioned himself a man of the times, as he knew it, by developing habits favored by those who liked to consider themselves modern. Those habits included a love of reading, a love of and for the hard-pressed peoples facing the jack-boot (like his struggling never- get-ahead parents) under the Czar’s vicious rule, an abiding hatred for that same Czar, a hunger to see the world or to see something more than wheat fields, and a love of politics, what little expression that love could take even for a modern man stuck in a backward semi-feudal country driven by the ruthless cops and General Staff bayonets. 

Of course Ivan Smirnov, a giant of a man, well over six feet, more like six, two, well-build, solid, fairly muscular, with the Russian dark eyes and hair to match, when he came of age also loved good food when he had the money for such luxuries, loved to drink shots of straight vodka in competition with his pals, and loved women, and women loved him. It is those appetites in need of whetting that consumed his young manhood, his time in Odessa before he signed on to the Czar’s navy to see the world, or at least  brush the dust of farmland Ukraine and provincial Odessa off his shoes as the old saying went. Those loves trumped for a time his people love (except helping out his parents with his wages), his love of liberty but as we follow Ivan on his travels we will come to see that those personal loves collided more and more with those larger loves. 

So as we pick up the heart, the coming of age, coming of political age, Ivan Smirnov story, he was no kid, had been around the block a few times. Had taken his knocks on the land of his parents (really Mister’s land once the taxes, rents, and dues were taken out) when he tried to organize, well, not really organize but just put a petition of grievances, including the elimination of rack-rents to Mister which was rejected out of hand and which subsequently when Mister took his revenge forced him off the land. Forced him off under threat to his life. The rack none too good for him heard in some quarters by Mister’s lackeys and henchmen. He never forgot that slight, never. Never forgot that it was Mister and his kind, his class and its hangers-on that took him away from home, split his family up, pushed the rack-rent higher and finally killed off his benighted father at an very early age in an age when early age was the norm. So off he went to the city, and from there to the Black Sea Fleet and adventure, or rather tedium mixed with adventure and plenty of time to read, read novels, big Tolstoy-sided novels, novels for long sea-ward trips, when he could and clandestinely radical political tracts.

Ivan also learned up close, made it his business to learn up close, the why and wherefores of modern warfare, modern naval warfare. Knew too that between the stifling old-fashioned naval bureaucracy and the shoddily built ships (many with badly welded seams) some minor confrontation the Czar’s navy was cooked.  As things worked out Ivan had been in the Russian fleet that got its ass kicked by the Japanese in 1904. He never called them “Nips” like lots of his crewmates did not after that beating they took that did not have to happen if the damn Czar’s naval officers had been anything but lackeys and anything but overconfident that they could beat the Johnny-come-lately Japanese in the naval war game. And so Ivan came of war age and political age all at once. And the Russian navy was in shambles.

More importantly after that debacle he applied for, and was eventually granted a transfer into in the Baltic fleet, the Czar’s jewel and defender of citadel Saint Petersburg, headquartered at later famous Kronstadt, and so he was in the swirl when the revolution of 1905 came thundering over their heads and each man, each sailor, each officer had to choice sides. Most seaman had gone over the rebels or stood on the sidelines, the officers mainly played possum with the Czar. He had gone wholehearted with rebels and while he did not face the fate of his comrades on the Potemkin his naval career was over. That was where his love of reading from an early age came in, came and made him aware of the boiling kettle of political groupings trying to save Russia or to save what some class or part of a class had an interest in saving Russia for their own purposes. He knew, knew from his dismal experience on the land, that Mister fully intended to keep what was his come hell or high water. He also knew that Mister’s people, the peasantry like his family would have a very hard time, a very hard time indeed bucking Mister’s interests and proclaiming their own right to the land all by themselves. Hadn’t he also been burned, been hunted down like a cur over a simple petition.

So Ivan from the first dismissed the Social Revolutionary factions and gave some thought to joining the Social Democrats. Of course being Russians who would argue over anything from how many angels could fit on the head of a needle to theories of capitalist surplus value that party organization had split into two factions (maybe more when the dust settled). When word came back from Europe he had sided with the Mensheviks and their more realistic approach to what was possible for Russia in the early 20th century. That basic idea of a bourgeois democratic republic was the central notion that Ivan Smirnov held for a while, a long while, and which he took in with him once things got hot in Saint Petersburg in January of 1905.       

That January after the Czar’s troops, his elite bloody Cossack troops in the lead, fired on (and sabre-slashed) an unarmed procession led by a priest, damn a Russian Orthodox priest, a people’s priest who led the icon-filled procession to petition the Czar to resolve grievances, great and small, Ivan Smirnov, stationed out in the Baltic Fleet then after the reorganization of the navy in the wake of the defeat by the Japanese the year before had an intellectual crisis. He knew that great things were going to unfold in Russia as it moved into the modern age. He could see the modern age tied to the ancient agrarian age every time he had leave and headed for Saint Petersburg with its sailors’ delights, the taverns, music halls, and whorehouses of which Ivan usually took his full measure. (Being sea-bound he was a proverbially “girl in every port guy” although he had had one short serious affair with a girl student from the university, a left-Social Revolutionary who had never been outside the city in her life) He could see in the city within a city, the Vyborg district, the growing working-class district made up of fresh recruits from the farms looking for higher wages, some excitement and a future.

That was why he had discarded the Social Revolutionaries so quickly when in an earlier generation he might very well have been a member of People’s Will or some such organization. He had that kind of heart, the heart of a warrior –avenger with the cool calculation of the average ward-healer. No, his intellectual crisis did not come from that quarter but rather that split in the workers’ party which had happened in 1903 far from Russia among the émigré intellectuals around the question of what kind and how much activity qualified an activists as a party member. He had sided with the “softs,” the Mensheviks, mainly because he liked their leader, Julius Martov, better than Lenin. Lenin and his faction seemed more intent on gaining organizational control, had more hair-splitters which he hated, and were more [CL1] wary of the peasants even though both factions swore faith in the democratic republic for Russia and to the international social democracy. He had sided with the “softs” although he saw a certain toughness in the Bolshevik cadre that he admired. But that year, that 1905 year, had started him on a very long search for revolutionary direction.           

The year 1905 moreover had started filled with promise after that first blast from the Czarist reaction. The masses were able to gather in a Duma that was at least half responsible to the people, or to the people’s representatives. At least that is what those people’s representatives claimed. More importantly in the working class districts, and among his fellow sailors who more likely than not, unlike himself, were from some strata of the working class had decided to set up their own representative organs, the workers’ councils, or in the Russian parlance which has come down in the  history books, the soviets. These in 1905, unlike in 1917, were seen as supplementary to other political organizations. A pressure group not a central contender for power.  As the arc of the year curved though there were signs that the Czarist reaction was gathering steam. Ivan had then had trouble organizing his fellow sailors to action. The officers of his ship, The Falcon, were challenging more decisions by the sailors’ committee. The Potemkin affair brought things to a head in the fleets. Finally, after the successes of the Saint Petersburg Soviet under the flaming revolutionary Leon Trotsky that organ was suppressed and the reaction set in that would last until many years later, many tough years for political oppositionists of all stripes. Needless to say that while Ivan was spared the bulk of the reprisals once the Czarist forces regained control his career in the navy was effectively finished and when his enlistment was up he left the service.       

Just as well Ivan that things worked out as they did he had thought many times since then because he was then able to come ashore and get work on the docks through some connections, and think. Think and go about the business of everyday life like marriage to a woman, non-political but a comfort, whom he met through one of his fellow workers on the Neva quay and who would share his home and life although not always understanding that part of his life or him and his determination to break Russia from the past. In those days after 1905, the dogs days as everybody agreed, when the Czar’s Okhrana was everywhere and ready to snatch anyone with any oppositional signs Ivan mostly thought and read, kept a low profile, did as was found out later after the revolution in 1917, a lot of low-level underground organizing among the dockworkers and factory workers of the Vyborg district. In other words developing himself and those around him as cadre for what these few expected would be the great awakening. But until the break-out Lena River gold-workers strike in 1912 those were indeed dog days.     

 

 

And almost as quickly as the dog days of the struggle were breaking up the war clouds over Europe were increasing. Every civilized nation was impatiently arming to the teeth to defend its civilization against the advancing hordes pitched at the door. Ivan could sense in his still sturdy peasant-bred bones that that unfinished task from 1905, that fight for the land and the republic, hell maybe the eight-hour day too, was going to come to a head. He knew enough too about the state of the navy, and more importantly, now the army through his organizing contacts to know that without some quick decisive military action the monarchy was finished and good riddance. The hard part, the extremely hard part, was to get those future peasant conscripts who would provide cannon fodder for the Czar’s ill-thought out land –grabbing adventures to listen up for a minute rather than go unknowingly head-long into the Czar’s arm (the father’s arms for many of them). So there was plenty of work to do. Ivan just that moment was glad that he was not a kid.  Glad he had learned enough to earn a hearing, to spread the word. To get people moving when the time for action came.     

As the war clouds came to a head after the killing of the archduke in bloody damn Sarajevo in early summer 1914 Ivan Smirnov knew in his bones that the peasant soldier cannon fodder as always would come flocking to the Czar like lemmings to the sea the minute war was declared. Any way the deal was cut the likely line-up of the Czar with the “democracies” of the West, Britain and France and less likely the United States would immediately give the Czar cover against the villainies of the Huns, of the Germans who just the other day were propping up the Czar’s treasury. It could not end well. All Ivan hoped for was that his party, the real Social-Democrats, locally known as the Mensheviks from the great split in 1903 with the Bolsheviks and who had definitely separated from that organization for good in 1912, would not get war fever just because the damn Czar was lined up with the very democracies that the party wished to emulate in Russia.

He knew too that the talk among the leadership of the Bolsheviks (almost all of them in exile and thus far from knowing what was happening down in the base of society at home) about opposing the Czar to the bitter end, about fighting in the streets again some said to keep the young workers and the peasants drifting into the urban areas from the dead-ass farms from becoming cannon-fodder for a lost cause was crazy, was irresponsible. Fortunately some of the local Bolshevik committeemen in Russia and among their Duma delegation had cooler heads. Yes this was not time to be a kid, with kid’s tunnel vision, with great events working in the world. 

Jesus, thought Ivan once the Czar declared his allegiance to the Entente, once he had gotten the Duma to rubber-stamp his war budget (except for a remnant of the Bolsheviks who were subsequently relieved of immunity and readied for Siberian exile), he could not believe that Plekhanov, the great Plekhanov, the father of the Marxist movement in Russia and mentor to the likes of Lenin, Martov, Dan, hell even flea-bitten free-lancer Trotsky, had declared for the Czar for the duration and half of Ivan’s own bloody Menshevik party had capitulated (the other half, the leadership half had been in exile anyway, or out of the country for some reason) this was going to be hell.

There would be no short war here, no quick victory over the land hungry Huns, nothing but the stench of death filling the air overcoming all those mobilization parades and the thrown flowers, the kissed girls, the shots of vodka to fortify the boys for the run to the front. The Czar’s house, double eagles and all, was a house of cards or rather of sawdust like those villages old rascal Potemkin put up to fool Catherine in her time. Most of the peasant boys marching to the front these days would never see Mother Russia again, never get to smell the good Russian earth. But if he had anything to say about it those who survived, those who would have to listen if not now then sometime, would have their own piece of good Russian earth unlike their fathers who toiled on the land for Mister’s benefit for nothing. And went to early graves like his father.

And so in the summer of 1914 as if led by blinders Europe, along with solid phalanxes of its farm boys and factory workers, went to bloody stalemated war.

Went without Ivan just that minute declared too old to fight and relegated to the home guard. There would come a day, a day not too long in the future when the “recruiting sergeants” would be gobbling up the “too old to fights,” like Ivan, the lame and the halt, any man breathing to fill the depleted trenches on the Eastern front. By then though Ivan would have already clamored to get into the ranks, get in to spread the new wave message about the meaningless of the fight for the workingman and the peasant and that the fight was at home not out in the trenches. But that was for the future, the music of the future. Ironically Ivan’s unit wound up guarding the Peter and Paul Fortress for the Czar.  The same place that would see plenty of action when the time for action came.

The home guard was a loose operation, especially in Saint Petersburg, which entailed not much more than showing up for guard duty when the rotation called your turn and an occasion drill or assembly. The rest of the time, or most of it, Ivan spent reading, reading clandestinely the sporadic anti-war materials that were being smuggled in from various point in Europe by whatever still free exiles groups had enough gall and funds to put together those first crude sheets proclaiming the new dispensation. Ivan had time to think too during those first eighteen months or so of war. Thought about how right he had been that this “glorious little war” would not be over soon, would devour the flower of the European youth and if enough lived long enough change the face of half-monarchial Europe. Thought about how, when, and where street organizers like him (he admitted long ago that he was not a “theory man) would get a chance to change the awful slaughter and the daily casualty lists.

Ivan through all of early 1916 thought too that things within his own Menshevik organization needed serious upgrading, needed to be readied if the nation was to turn from semi-feudal monarchy to the modern republic which would provide the jumping off point to agitate for the social republic of the organization’s theory, and of his youthful dreams. Although he was no theory man he was beginning to see that the way the bourgeoisie, native and foreign, lined up it was as likely as not that they would not follow through, would act even worse than in 1905 when they went hat in hand with the Czar for the puny no account Duma and a few reforms that in the end only benefitted them to the exclusion of the masses. He began to see Lenin’s point, if it was Lenin’s and not some Okhrana forgery, that the new parties, the parties that had not counted before, the peasant and worker parties, would have to lead the way. There was no other way. And no, no thank you he was not a Trotsky man, a wild man who believed that things had changed some much in the 20th century that the social republic for Russia was on the agenda right away. No, he could not wrap his head around that idea, not in poor, not in now wounded and fiercely bleeding and benighted Mother Russia. Beside Trotsky was living off his reputation in the 1905 revolution, was known to be mightier with the pen than the sword and a guy whom the main leadership of the Mensheviks thought was a literary dilettante (strange characterization though in an organization with plenty of odd-ball characters who could not find a home with the Bolsheviks and were frightened to death of working with the mass peasant parties being mostly city folk).

He thought too about the noises, and they were only noises just then, exile noises mostly that the Bolsheviks had had a point in opposing the war budget in the Duma, those who had not deserted the party for the Czar in the patriotic build-up, and who had been sent to Siberia for their opposition. He admired such men and knew slightly one of the deportees who had represented one of the Vyborg worker districts in the capital in the Duma. Now word had come back from Europe that a small congress held in some no-name village in the Alps (Zimmerwald in Switzerland as he later found out) had declared for international peace among the workers and oppressed of all nations and that it was time to stop the fighting and bleeding. More ominously Lenin and his henchmen had come out for waging a civil war against one’s own government to stop the damn thing, and to start working on that task now. Worse Lenin was calling for a new international socialist organization to replace the battered Socialist International.  To Ivan’s practical mind this was sheer madness and he told whatever Bolshevik committeemen he could buttonhole (in deepest privacy since the Czarist censorship and his snitches were plentiful).  In Ivan’s mind they were still the wild boys, seemingly on principle, and he vigorously argued with their committeemen to keep their outlandish anti-war positions quiet for now while the pro-war hysteria was still in play. But deep down he was getting to see where maybe the Bolsheviks, maybe Lenin, hell maybe even goof Trotsky were right-this war would be the mother of invention for the next revolutionary phase.

The Czar has abdicated, the Czar has abdicated, the new republic is proclaimed! The whirl of early 1917 dashed through Ivan Smirnov’s head. A simple demonstration and strike by women in the capital after the bloodletting of over two years of war, after the defeats of 1905 and later showed the monarchy, the now laughable double-eagle monarchy that held the masses in thrall for centuries was shown to be a house of cards, no, less, a house of sawdust blown away with the wind. While Ivan had not caught the early drift of the agitation and aggravation out in the worker neighborhoods he had played an honorable part in the early going. And the reason that Ivan had missed some of the early action was for the simple reason that Ivan’s home guard unit, the 27th Regiment, had been mobilized for the Silesian front in early 1917 and had been awaiting orders to move out when all hell broke loose.

This is where the honorable part came in. The 27th Regiment had been fortified to a division with remnants of other front-line divisions whose casualty levels were so high that they were no longer effectively fighting units. As the units meshed and the action in the capital got intense two quick decisions needed to be made by the 27th –would the unit go to the front as ordered by the General Staff and subsequently would the unit still stationed in Saint Petersburg defend the Czarist monarchy then in peril. Now this new unit, this of necessity haphazard and un-centered unit, was made up of the likes of Ivan (although none so political or known to be political) and of disillusioned and bedraggled peasant boys back from the front who just wanted to go home and farm the land of their fathers, for Mister or for themselves it did not matter. And that is where Ivan Smirnov, of peasant parents born, came center stage and made his mark. Ivan when it came time to speak about whether they would go to the front argued that going to the front meant in all probability that if they went that they would farm no land, Mister’s or their own since they would be dead. And some other peasant boy would come along to farm the ancient family lands.

Ivan did not need to evoke the outlandish theories of Lenin and Trotsky about civil war and the social republic but just say that simple statement and the unit voted almost unanimously to stay in the capital (those who did not go along as always in such times kept quiet and did not vote to move out). Of course as always at such times as well Ivan’s good and well-earned reputation among the home guard members for prudent but forceful actions when the time was right helped carry the day. That reputation, borne of many years of street organizing and other work, also came in handy when the 27th was ordered to defend the Czar in the streets. Again Ivan hammered home the point that there would be no land, no end of the bloody war, no end of dying in some forsaken trenches if the Czar stayed. The 27th would not defend the Czar to the death (again the doubters and Czarist agents kept mum).

And for Ivan’s honorable service, for his honorable past, when it came time to send delegates to the soviet, or the soldiers’ section of the soviet (the other two sections being the workers and the peasants with everybody else who adhered to the soviet concept filling in one of those three sections) Ivan was unanimously elected to represent the 27th Regiment. Now this soviet idea (really just Russian for council, workers councils mainly) was nothing new, had been created in the heat of the 1905 revolution and had been in the end the key governmental form of the opposition then. Now with the Czar gone (and as our story moves on the government is in non-Czarist agents hands) there were two centers of power- the bourgeois ministry (including representatives of some worker and peasant parties) and the soviets acting as watchdogs and pressure groups over the ministry. As Russian spring turned to summer Ivan from his post in the Soviet saw some things that disturbed him, saw that “pretty boy” Trotsky (who had just gotten back from American exile as had Lenin a bit earlier) and now damn Lenin had begun to proclaim the need for the social republic right then. Not in some few years future but then. But he was also disturbed by the vacuous actions of his Mensheviks on the land question and on social legislation. As the summer heat came Ivan began to see that defending the people’s revolution was tough business and that some hard twists and turns were just waiting ahead for him.                                      

 Jesus, Ivan said to himself as summer turned to early Russian fall when is that damn Kerensky going to pull us out of the war after that foolish summer offensive ordered by who knows who collapsed and made Russia look ridiculous to the world, our ragged starving troops are melting away from the trenches, his own 27th had repeatedly been called up to the front and then mysteriously at the last moment held back to defend something. Who knows what the General Staff had planned after Kornilov’s uprising was halted in it tracks (everybody in the private drinking rooms laughed at the fact that Kornilov could not move his troops step one once the Soviet told the trainmen to halt all troop transfers). See here was the deal, the new democratic deal. Now that Russia was a democracy, weak as it was, it was now patriotic no matter what that madman Trotsky said, no matter what the man with the organization Lenin said, the brutal Hun must be defeated by the now harmonious democracies.

Bullshit (or the Russian equivalent) said Ivan when a part of his own party swallowed that line, went along for the ride. Lenin was calling from the rooftops (in his Finnish hideout once old Kerensky put a price on his head, wanted to smoke the old bald-headed bastard out and bring him to trial for treason if he could) for a vote of “no confidence” in the ministry. Both were beginning to call for the soviets to do more than express worker, soldier, and peasant anger and to stop acting as a pressure valve for Kerensky and his band of fools and take the power to change things into its own hands. And that madman Trotsky was proclaiming the same thing from his prison cell at the Peter and Paul where a remnant of the 27th was still doing guard duty (and standing in awe of a real revolutionary giving him unheard of privileges).  Meanwhile Ivan, Ivan Smirnov, the voice of the 27th, the well-respected voice of the peasant soldier, was twisting in the wind. There was no way forward with Kerensky, the mere tool of the British and French imperialists who were holding him on a tight string. But Ivan could not see where poor, bloody, beleaguered and drawn Mother Russia, his earthen Russia could move forward with the radicals who were beginning to clamor for heads, and for peace and land too.

Jesus, cried Ivan the Bolsheviks have this frosty October day proclaimed the social republic, have declared that the war over in the East (or that they were prepared to sue for peace with whomever would meet them at the table and if not then they would go it alone). Ivan had heard that it might be peace at any price in order to get the new order some breathing room. But peace. Necessary peace if Russia was not to lose all its able-bodied men for the next two generations.  The longed for peace that Ivan had spent his underground existence propagandizing for. Ivan already knew as a soldier delegate to the Soviet that the trenches had been and were at that moment being emptied out by land-hungry peasant soldiers, his peasant soldiers who heard that there would be “land to the tiller” and they wanted to till land not be under it. Ivan’s old call was being taken up by the damn Bolsheviks who sent out a land decree as a first order of business once they dumped the Kerensky ministry, once they flushed out the Winter Palace of all the old deadwood. All kinds of things were being proposed (and sometimes accepted even when the human and material wherewithal were non-existent which worried Ivan to perdition).

But here is the funny part. Although Ivan had lined himself up with Martov’s Left Mensheviks (those who wanted peace and some kind of vibrant bourgeois democracy to pressure forward into the social republic) in the Soviet for most of the summer and fall he kept getting incessant news from the 27th that they were ready to mutiny against the Kerensky ministry, they had had enough and wanted to go home. Ivan was twisting in the wind. He saw that the idea of the social republic was being presented too soon, that the resources were not there to give the experiment a chance (who knows what outside force would come to the aid of the Soviets and when). But he also knew that right that moment the old ways could not relieve the impasse. And so he broke ranks with Martov and his group, did not walk out when the voting did not go the way Martov wanted. In fact when the division of the house was called Ivan Smirnov, longtime political foe of the madman Trotsky and scarred opponent of the damn Leninists (he had not heard that Trotsky had quietly joined the Bolsheviks earlier), voted for peace, voted for the land distribution. The new day had come and there would be hell to pay and he would not join the Bolsheviks, no way, but in for a dime in for a dollar and he would defend the Soviet power as best he could.       

 “Petrograd must be defended to the last man, everyone to their posts, no Whites must get to the city itself,” cried Political Commisssar Ivan Smirnov now that the Red Army (or rather one of the Red armies since between the internally diverse White Guard forces, their foreign imperialist backers and the vastness of Mother Russia there were several fluid fronts and battles raging at any given time) had its back to the wall and the working-class capital of the worlds’ only workers’ state in existence was threatened by Cossacks and other forces. It had come to this, come to this as Ivan always knew it would, the forces of the past would not let go without a bloody fight (even if the actual seizure of power by the Soviets in October 1917 had been relatively bloodless), would scream bloody murder about the land (the land that he had come off of at the turn of the century), about the factories and about the very fact that the fellahin of the world had decided to take matters into their own hands. Ivan had sworn once the heads had been counted back in that cold October of 1917 that he was in the fight to the finish (in for a dime, in for a dollar as the expression when then), or until he had lain his head down from some stray bullet.

And it had almost come to that at Kazan in that desperate struggle to hold Russia together before the Czech Legions that were marauding their ways back from Siberia took the city and cut Russia into not much more than a small province. Trotsky himself, then risen to War Commissar with extraordinary powers had organized the fight, had put every resource at hand (on that famous train that he rode through most of the civil war) and in the fierce river battles before Kazan some sniper had popped Ivan in the shoulder just above the heart. That seemed like years before as he now helped prepare the defense of the capital. There had even been talk that Trotsky himself was coming through to boost morale (and to die like Ivan and many others defending the city street by street if need be. It was that perilous.). Yes, Ivan had come a long way since those October days when he swore his oath. Of course a military cadre like Ivan was hand-picked to move away from the placid Soviet parliamentary job and into the yawning gap that needed filling of cadre who could fight and give reason to the fight. And so Ivan, grown old in the previous two years, had worked his way up to division commissar in the days when political reliability meant-for or against the revolution, arms in hand. He had not, despite many attempts by the Bolsheviks, joined the party (now called Communist harkening back to Marx’s time). Yet there he was steadying the nerves of the raw recruits from the factories in front of him. No the Whites would not pass, not while the Ivan Smirnovs of the world drew breathe.  

Finally, finally the Whites were being pushed back, the revolution, the red revolution appeared to be saved after many losses, after the carnage of the world war, after three years of civil war, the worst kind. Ivan Smirnov, political commissar of the 5th Army, had done more than his fair share of bringing in that result (including organizing and fighting, arms in hand, before Petrograd when that city was threatened by the Whites. Hell, even Trotsky himself went crazy in defense of the revolution during that action rallying the troops personally like some whirling dervish). He had even received the Order of the Red Banner personally from Trotsky for his heroic action. But now in the year 1921 Ivan was ready, more than ready, to take his place in the struggle to bring socialism to Russia as a civilian as fast as possible.

Still as he pondered the future Ivan was anxious for his Mother Russia alone in the world as a workers’ state with no prospects that he could see in sight. Still had, despite increasingly insistent requests, held off from joining the Communist Party (Joseph Stalin himself, at Lenin’s personal request, had delivered the message along with the lure of high position). One thing about Ivan Smirnov was that he was a man of his word, had sworn to defend the revolution come hell or high water once he broke with his Left Menshevik friends and voted for the soviet power back in fateful October (old calendar) 1917. He would not desert the revolution with so much work to be done although he still insisted on remaining outside the party in order to have room to criticize what he did not like, have room to speak for his peasant brethren to the powers that be. And so Ivan, as he readied to demobilize himself, after the general demobilization of the red armies needed now at the factory and farm fronts, decided that he would take that lesser position in the commissariat of agriculture when he paperwork was completed. Ah, civilian life, he murmured to his wife whom he had seen infrequently the past few years but who had kept his houses in order during the chaos of the bloody civil wars.  Civilian life indeed.