An unveiling of artifacts

The Tale of the Librarian's Fifth Wife is collection of moments, an assemblage of events, a bread basket of words, a swap meet of scraps left behind from a beautiful romance that will help clue you in to the real deal, to the life of two star crossed lovers that has already been lived and left behind. For the moment, anyway.


Our lives lie scattered over several states and a half a case worth of decades. It's not so much a want as a need to do this, to gather together the splinters and the shards of our times and share them here with you. Those bits and pieces of flotsam and jetsam found below in this winsome log are the bits and pieces of our times, a smattering of the trinkets of the love that Jane and I gathered up over the course of five long hard years. How they come to you now is in a story of sorts, a type of autobiographical fiction, with images cadged from places other than our satchel. Give it time, photos, sepia, wrinkled, pocket worn, are yet to come.


So, what else is there to do but get out that cobbled together blanket of dreams from the back of the car, spread it out under the branches of our favorite green and noble Oregon Maple tree that we both loved and share these words and tales of those long ago times with you. It was a wonderful time. Sit a spell, grab your spectacles and come ride along with us for awhile.

Love, Jane, the Professora and Roger, the Wild Half Mexican Boy



Friday, October 20, 2017

A clock is there in Loveland


You once told me a tale of a young girl who used to love to go to her father's jewelry store when she was small. You thought it pretty special, as a young lady, to have a dad who was a jeweler and a watch repairman. One thing that came out of that was your love of clocks. I can remember when I gave you two old toy soldier figures, one of a medieval damsel and one of a Roundhead type cavalier. You placed them in a clock on your mantel at home, the dashing horseman standing behind the access to the clock, his cloak shielding his heart's delight. I have to wonder as to what happened to those figures. Did the they make the move to your new home? Is that little man still guarding the honor of the love of his life inside the dusty recesses of your Art Deco clock?

Fast forward 12 years. I now live a short drive from old town Loveland. As a librarian it was natural for me to want to look up where your dad's old store was located. There are whole histories of the downtown, and of the clock that stands in front of the shop that you once visited as a girl. I pass by it every now and again, and whenever I do I think of the gal who once fancied a lad who loved clocks as much as she did.

We certainly were on time, my love. Here's to a place where time has no meaning.

Your WHMB

A history of Brown Street Clocks:
http://www.shiawasseehistory.com/brownstreet.html

Here is a history of all the historic buildings downtown Loveland. Your dad's shop is mentioned, how cool!:
http://www.historycolorado.org/sites/default/files/files/OAHP/NRSR/5LR9700.pdf

Exit 42



Once or twice a week I take a trip to Trinidad. The firm that I work for has quite a number of  businesses down there that love our product and thanks to the booming industry I've worked my way into I find myself on the road to Southern Colorado regularly, something I consider quite a boon to my existence, never a hardship.

Trinidad is once again a booming town, with more cannabis concerns opening up there every week. It is being seen, by some, as the "New Amsterdam", a town key to cannabis tourism trade in the state. As I come and go on 25 I see license plates from all over, with Texas, Utah, Arizona and, as you might imagine, New Mexico, leading the way. And while the town still has plenty of shabby chic about it, you can see that there is lots of money flowing into it, with plenty of new construction and a whole lot of reconstruction going on, bringing back to life the charm of the old brick town and the highlighting the power of the new green economy.

One thing about my journey that really stands out, and that is off ramp 42 on I-25. I know that in order to get to Durango back in the day you needed to either drop all the way down into New Mexico and make your way over and up or you headed west once you hit Walsenburg. I have to wonder, did you ever see that road sign, then, as you made your way to college? If so, did you ever think that, yes, wow, here's a road dedicated to my future husband?

No matter, when I pass it by I always think of you, of your life and what your times must have been like for you as a fresh, young college student. You told me tales of those times, of the boys who passed through your life, and I found those stories sweet, funny and interesting, somewhat how I feel about you and our times whenever I pass that sign.

It was long ago that you traversed the same highway that I find myself on regularly these days. Once more I find ways to connect to you, across the distance, from here on the road in Colorado.

May your road trips there in Washington be filled with adventure and insight and, as you cross the Cascades or wander the streets of Seattle, may you think of me and our times as well.

Your WHMB

Thursday, August 24, 2017

On the Front Range where you lived




This weekend marks the 12th anniversary of our 27th day of August. This year there will be no tree to sit under, no quilt to spread out to sip malteds on. We will not shop around for dining room tables, nor sniff out the ripest pears at Tacoma Boys, nor see seals cavorting off in the Sound. We will not walk through rose gardens on our way to the car, or endure parting glances, or, most sadly, take away the fondest of hugs, the slightest of kisses.

No, instead, I will find a way to softly mark those years that have passed and to let you know, is some small cosmic way, that I am here where you once lived. Somehow even in saying that I felt a quiet chorus out of My Fair Lady blow about in the breeze. I hear it whenever I go off to Loveland, whenever I pass the clock that stands in front of the jewelry store your father once owned, whenever I drive past your childhood home or swing by your old high school.

Jane, you are here. Everywhere. Where are you, my love?

What gets me right in the heart, my dear, is knowing that you were here and now I am. What a thing to come about! Like some strange sci-fi time travelers film or some book that we shared together. When we started our book club years ago, CALCOPO, I never in my wildest dreams thought that I would exchange the CAlifornia in that abbreviation for COlorado. I do know that my jones for Colorado was one of the earliest commonalities that we shared. I know that just talking about being here lead to other things, things such as, I wonder what it would be like to be here with you. I wrote your that piece about an old pick up truck, dog in the back,  you and I side by side, worn cowboy hats on our heads, rolling down some dusty country road.

Well, now I drive down those country roads, not in an old pick up but in an older model Buick. Weld County is criss-crossed with unpaved roads. Whenever I go off the asphalt and see that dust billow up behind me I think of you. My thoughts raced out and over the mountains to you last July when I rolled into and through Delta. I have no idea how long you lived there, if you ever saw movies at that Egyptian themed movie house, if your family bought Cascade peaches or ripe dark cherries from one of the many roadside stands that are up and down the roads all around that town. But I found myself wondering about your earliest years in the place, wondered how the remoteness marked you,how the dry intermountain west shaped you. Later that day I was right up the highway in Ouray for the Fourth, not too far from Durango, the quaint college town where you met your man, sealed our fate. I know that somehow gaining that education, getting that degree, finding your mate, all made it easier for you to leave the state, start someplace fresh that was all your own.

For what it is worth, I am glad you left Colorado, that you made your way up to Washington, to Seattle, to Port Orchard, to Goat Lake. I am happy that you made your life there for it leaves this state for me to wander. It allows me, in this new position I have coming up next week, to find my way up and over the mountains, up and down the highways along the Front Range, all the while, in the course of my work, to fill in the blanks, from Loveland to Durango to Denver to Monument, to get to know you through the solid geology of the place, the people of this state, the quaintness of its towns.

By being here, my dear, I get to somehow channel you. Twelve years ago I would have never thought to be here without you. But, really, in a lot of ways I am here with you. No matter where I go, no matter what directions our lives go, I still carry you with me in my heart. This space, like an altar to an old, vanquished time, still burns candles bright to that old love of ours. Here along the Front Range I think of you every day and wish you a happy anniversary always.

Your WHMB