c. 2025 Rod Ice
All rights reserved
(1-25)
January at Evergreen Estates had already been difficult to survive. With a mass of Arctic air dominating the meteorological patterns in Ohio, winter took on an aggressive tone not seen in several years. This caused hardships in the village of mobile homes that included frozen pipes and drains, buried driveways, and impassible streets. Conditions at the park were never friendly, even on the best of days. But now, basic survival presented a daunting challenge. The pervasive madness of residents, fueled with alcohol, cigarettes, and poor dietary habits, was supercharged with a sense of desperation.
Spring seemed very far away, indeed.
For Townshend Carr Lincoln, who already existed in a dark pit of isolation and scorn, the change was less pronounced. He had only one companion at his prefab hovel, an adoptive, stray feline who had been abandoned to live under the boxcar dwellings. This multicolored, chubby, furry creature had become skilled at foraging for edible scraps in the trash barrels, and wandering rodents. So, she prospered while other members of her homeless tribe did not fare so well.
Her routine remained unchanged even after adopting the boxcar home as a place to eat and sleep. She continued to go in and out much like an unleashed dog. Her independence was something not to be challenged. Yet when inside, she sought a warm spot upon which to land, and the comfort of her keeper.
Lincoln bristled somewhat at this arrangement. He had been alone for so long that sharing his domicile with anyone, or anything else, seemed foreign. But his heart softened particularly as the temperatures plunged. He did not want to see the little beast suffer, with the thermometer outside crashing toward zero, and beyond.
As the weekend approached, he dug out for long enough to visit two stores that were on the perimeter of his rural encampment. The first sold smoked meats and also had a fully-stocked beer cave. The second carried household goods and bottled water. A necessity with the well on his property yielding a flow of rusty, malodorous liquid that was fit for nothing except flushing the commode. Once he had procured enough goods to survive the coming onslaught of snow, he huddled inside, with a faux fireplace streaming via YouTube.
Five or six brews put him in a calmer mood, and eased the ache of his limbs. Then, several rounds of bourbon numbed his head. Finally, the sunset approached. He had a meal of pork and kraut reheating in the Crock Pot. Something likely to be forgotten as he snacked on Doritos and beef jerky. With his consciousness swooning toward oblivion, he heard the cell phone nearby chirp with a notification. He reached out only when it had repeated three times over.
“You have a message request from Libby K. Raal, former staff reporter at the Cleveland Plain Dealer...”
His eyes were out of focus. When he clicked on the chat link to investigate, his device began to ring with a VoIP call sent through the app itself. The sound was unlike any ringtone ever produced by the wireless wafer. It made him sit up straight, and blink, repeatedly.
“What the hell is this? One of those gawdamm internet programs the kids use?”
He heard a young voice crackle from over the virtual connection.
“Link? This is Libby the journalist whom you met recently. Can we talk for a minute?”
The drunken iconoclast was befuddled by her presence on the line.
“WHAT THE FUCK? WHO? WHO DID I MEET?”
Ms. Raal was in her Lakewood studio, miles from Geauga County. She had been unable to sleep for several days. The disconnect between her and newspaper allies in once in the social circle, had aroused a sense of being useless and unworthy. She needed to revive her mission as a professional writer. But that accomplishment would not come without some sacrifice.
Her intention was to listen and learn, and perhaps, draft a manuscript that might rekindle the career she had enjoyed, before.
“Link, you were the only one in that community who gave me any time with an interview. The couple who live right on your corner boasted about MAGA doctrines, and not much else. It was standard stuff, uninteresting to either of my editors...”
The reclusive hermit nodded and laughed.
“Yeah, Linn is known for beating his chest and crowing about his orange hero. That’s gets him off, I guess. I’ve been here so long that honestly, I don’t pay attention. People keep their distance which I appreciate. Fuck ‘em!”
Libby cupped a tea mug in her hands, for extra warmth during the chilly evening.
“Friends and associates around the Cleveland area are mystified by your slant on things. Well, I should say, not yours personally, but the citizens at your development. That’s what I can’t measure. I can’t grasp it tangibly. How does a group of people become so ignorant, and uninformed? How do such individuals wallow in philosophical mud, like pigs? And come out thinking that they’ve been baptized by a new prophet?”
Lincoln felt the liquor burn his throat. He coughed and spit before speaking.
“Umm... that’s a question I can’t answer. Even after more than 22 years in this shithole. It’s a freaking point of view I’ve never shared. A total and inescapable delusion....”
The guild writer fiddled with her piercings. She was nervous enough to tap out a drumbeat with her pencil, while trying to explain the point of making contact.
“I drove all the way to your township, and didn’t even get a chance to scratch the surface. Nothing made any sense! My editors wanted a jazzy product, something that would sell papers. They wanted an expose to raise circulation numbers. Do you understand? This whole industry has been in a downward spiral. The next generation is already using TikTok and Bluesky, they don’t have any idea what a regular journal looks like. We’ve become relics in our own time. I need to peel back layers of the onion, and find out why some want to dump the Stars & Stripes, in favor of a Confederate battle flag! It is a kind of craziness I can’t comprehend. No one here by Lake Erie gets it, I don’t get it, and somebody needs to tell the story!”
Lincoln belched and spilled his can of Miller High Life. This made him curse and frighten the kitty who had been dozing by his feet.
“DAMMIT, DIDN’T YA HEAR WHAT I SAID, SITTING OUT ON THE PORCH? I’M NOT PART OF THIS BUNCH! I DON’T RUN WITH THE MILITIA GANG! I DON’T WAVE SNAKE FLAGS OR STICK CROSSES IN MY FLOWER GARDENS, OR GO UP THE HILL, TO CHURCH FUNCTIONS! I’M A MISS-AND-SOMETHING, OR THE OTHER! MISS-AND-WHATEVER!”
Ms. Raal smiled and gently sat her tea aside.
“Misanthrope? Is that the word you’re trying to use? Kudos for having such a good vocabulary!”
Her contact from the trailer oasis slammed his fist on the end table, and belched again.
“THAT’S IT! I’M A GAWDAMM MISANTHROPE!”