c. 2026 Rod Ice
All rights reserved
(1-26)
Sundays during the winter at Evergreen Estates are often unpredictable. Two factions govern sports fans at the rural development, those who cling to loyalty for Cleveland franchises, despite their persistent woes, and others who have moved to more successful teams, from Pittsburgh or elsewhere. This means that the usual amount of drinking and celebrating may increase many times over, depending on final scores that result. Whiskey and brew flow freely, no matter what the outcome. An aroma of marijuana smoke, or common tobacco cigarettes, hangs in the air. But at Lot 13, the slab of concrete upon which my trailer home is situated, I am somewhat immune to this habit. Years of losing, controversy, and front-office chaos on Lake Erie have turned me numb. I still watch or listen, as a learned response. Yet generally aim to be drunk in the afternoon, and safe from emotional scars that might follow.
The outside porch is my refuge. There I can sit in the cold, duly bundled up and blitzed on distilled spirits of various kinds.
With the regular NFL season ending, I took heart in escaping this period of conflict, as an anonymous spectator. But a dramatic detour came when our CIA and Armed Forces staged an assault on the South American nation of Venezuela. Dictator Nicholás Maduro was captured and flown north, to face justice in the United States. Suddenly, residents who would normally be debating the virtues of their football preferences, switched to a strident display of political partisanship, instead.
From next door, Miss Poindexter yelped at her computer, by the side window that faced my wooden bench. A small group of visitors surrounded her roller chair. She screeched and shrieked while pounding at the keyboard with chubby, clenched fists.
“NO KINGS! NO KINGS! TRUMP IS FIGHTING FOR OIL, AND WE’D RATHER BE WATCHING ‘STRANGER THINGS!’ THE ORANGE MAN IS CRUEL, HE WON’T FOLLOW CONSITUTIONAL RULES! LET HIM BURN IN HELL, THAT BIGOT IN FACE PAINT CLAIMS HE IS WHAT HE AIN’T! NO CHRISTIAN HERO, JUST A PUSSY-GRABBING SCHMOE!”
I had to chuckle quietly at her one-woman protest, among ebullient comrades. I suspected that she must have been doing a livestream for student friends in the city.
With only a couple of liquor rounds imbibed, I was still sober enough to be fully aware of her demonstration. But then, a racket from the street diverted my attention. Aimes Hefti had begun to lead a cavalcade of park inhabitants around the neighborhood. They waved Confederate banners, Gadsden flags, and leftover signage from the 2024 campaign.
“GOD AND TRUMP! GOD AND TRUMP! DUMP THE CHUMP IN VENE-ZEE, IT’S ALL ABOUT TRUMP, DON’T YOU SEE? MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN, CAPTURE CRIMINALS WHO AREN’T OUR FRIENDS! USA! USA! USA! USA!”
The noise generated between these camps soon gave me a headache. I started drinking double-shots to compensate. My senses had nearly been obliterated, when a notification chirp sounded from my cellular device.
Darby Stronelli was puzzled by the story about our military action. She wanted some clarification while playing on her game system in the party barn.
“HEY BUDDY, WHERE THE HECK IS VENEZUELA, ANYWAY? I NEVER HEARD OF IT BEFORE! IS THAT DOWN BY FLORIDA?”
I had to sigh at her ignorance, though it was not unexpected. I pulled off my right glove, and texted a response through the Messenger app.
“It’s at the top of South America...”
She paused for a moment, then offered a garbled reply that made me sure she was completely lost. I figured she had already flushed her system with many bottles of watery, Anheuser-Busch beer.
“South America? That’s like, on the Florida Georgia Line, you know, like the Country Music band. Right?”
I snorted brown droplets out of my nose. The burn tingled wildly.
“South America is a different continent. Google it if you really want to know...”
My reluctance to provide help must have irritated her mood. I could hear the sound of glass breaking in her trash bin, after an empty was tossed out, rudely.
“YOU SON-OF-A-BITCH! C’MON, LINK, I DON’T GIVE A FRIG ABOUT IT, JUST THOUGHT YOU WOULD KNOW! AND I DID! YOU’RE INTO ALL THAT SHIT! ALL I KNOW IS IT LOOKS LIKE THE STEELERS ARE GOIN’ TO ANOTHER SUPER BOWL! GAWDAMN, HOW MANY WILL THAT BE, TEN OR TWELVE, OR MORE? MAYBE FOURTEEN?”
I had reached the point of feeling tipsy. Which brought me a blessed sense of relief.
“Sure, whatever you say, Darb. It’s all good...”
Aimes and his park brigade were literally marching in the snow. I had to salute their enthusiasm, if nothing else. Though it caused a stone to settle in the pit of my stomach. Meanwhile, Trina Trelane, my contact across the side yard, continued her banshee howling. I guessed that her thick, black-rimmed specs had fogged, because she flailed at her computer without any sense of purpose. I could see this unhinged roleplaying through the duct-taped panes of her window.
She and her cloister of Cleveland chicas chanted at the monitor screen.
“TRUMP IS A MENACE! TRUMP IS A FOOL! I HATE THAT ASSHOLE, HE’S A FREAKING TOOL!”
I had completely lost track of the Browns-Bengals match on my phone. Ultimately, neither club was set for postseason action. So, the outcome didn’t matter much. Except for a sack record set by Myles Garrett. They were jockeying for a position in the next league draft, and scrambling to exit gracefully.
My eyes became heavy as this metaphorical ‘Battle of Ohio’ ended.
Once the crisp, yellow sun had dipped below Miss Poindexter’s singlewide trailer, I felt chilled to the bone. The solar glow had kept me comfortable throughout the afternoon. Yet that gentle embrace of Mother Nature was no longer in effect.
Stumbling with my disability canes, I shuffled inside, to the living room. My sofa was covered with decorative pillows, empty Miller Lite cases, and plastic water jugs. But everything scattered as I fell into place. Face-down, drunk, and already snoring.
Outside of our isolated community, the day’s events would carry importance into tomorrow, and beyond. Yet here at home, amid the clutter of discarded pallets, yard furnishings, abandoned cars, and broken cinder blocks, nothing resonated with consequence. We were invisible to those in the mainstream. An unimportant anomaly in the greater cosmos. Pale and pitiful, and stained with a dirty essence of futility.
I had finally scored a jackpot of my own. Fully boozed-out, and sleeping. That alone, was enough.






