Blood on the tracks

I finally have the iPhone weblogging through WordPress thing working. That should have a link, but I don’t see that happening in my phone tests.

Last night, a big old Tuesday night, M. and I rarer than rare each had something to do. Something that didn’t involve the other one. Separate but equal.

While I had wine and cheese and salsa and chips and whatnot at a friend’s brand new shiney condo in which she was soliciting decorating ideas and sorting photos, M. was mad strategizing in corporate land. Planning and plotting through his increasingly elevated status in the workforce.

Consequently, we didn’t talk much after I got home, since it was getting late into snoozing time. He did tell me about a highway calamity he had steered himself through, but in his half asleep state it wasn’t a dramatic tale.

Now, in a cheesy 1970s mystery TV show moment, a Time-Life book series on extrasensory perception, I had a thought while driving last night. In the late dark, with only a tiny double dot of light in the distance ahead of me and blackness in my rearview mirror, I considered the empty fields and canyons and hills and wild spaces adjacent to the road on which I was driving too fast. I imagined any number or type of wild thing leaping out fromu the shadows.

This highway, 280, is smooth and fast and beautiful. It ranks highly as scenic. Driving it just feels like California looks like it should feel. Imagining a silhouette blocked in your headlights, stag horns and hooves isn’t a leap from reality.

Today I got the story from M. He drove the same 280, although I had been south heading north and he north to south.

During his drive, he watched a small deer clash and lose against an SUV. It was sent skyward and landed in the path if his car. With cars on either side and no where to swerve, he had to drive through.

M. said he could feel it under his tires and hear the crack of bone. His front bumper is stained with streaks of sticky-looking red with bits of dirt, hair and grass.

Still and all, I’m happy, we’re happy he, M. made it safely with his car still fine.

Man that he is, the man who chooses to live with me, he’s curious about eradicating the traces of blood and DNA, an important lesson. For my part, I want to know if the dudes at the carwash are required to ask you the nature of the blood and hair before they detail your vehicle.

I just hope we haven’t just entered the final chapter that guarantees my place as a victimized woman feature in a made for TV movie. Isn’t this how it all unravels?

3 thoughts on “Blood on the tracks

  1. evad

    hmmm even i know you mericans have laws agin killing white folks with suv,s
    even if you only get a fine its agin the law
    so if your passing the runner up in the chip contest
    do run the silly sod over
    would you trust a 70 something ex war monger to lead you
    naaaaaaa never
    love n hugs
    moi

    Reply

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