
Canto Seventeen – Invisible People
The next day Valerie had a chance to hang out with Pidney and Mary again, so she took it. She road into town on the school bus after school with Danny Murphy. They didn’t actually talk about anything the whole way. Anticipation is often better than the real thing. And it wasn’t often that Mary and Pid were both off directly after school. Pidney had no football practice that afternoon, and Mary canceled whatever school meetings she had planned that day in order to come back to Norwall with him after school. The four Pirates were supposed to meet in the Library for Pirate business.
“There’s Mary and Pid,” said Danny pointing as he and Val stepped off Milo’s school bus.
“Yeah, but who is that?” Valerie asked, pointing at a mysterious cloaked figure standing behind the tree by the Library door. She was instantly reminded of the cloaked man she had seen the day they got the Tiki idol.
“Hey, Pidney!” Danny shouted, “who is that near you behind that tree?”
Pidney was holding the door of his step-dad’s old 70’s Lincoln Mercury to help Mary get out. Mary carried a tall stack of books. They had driven home from the high school in Belle City together.
“What man? Where?” The figure moved out of sight behind the large fluffy pine tree.
“Look behind the tree!” shouted Valerie.
Pid walked around to where he could see behind the tree. He looked back a Valerie and Danny and shrugged. “Nobody here that I can see,” he said.
“You guys need to see what we found in the high school library,” said Mary waving them to come towards the Library building.
Valerie looked at Danny. He shrugged. They both walked toward the Library.
“I found some old high school yearbooks in the library,” said Mary. “We can use them to get an idea what Captain Dettbarn used to look like. He’s kinda hard to describe any other way.”
“And there’s a book about the ship, Mary Celeste. It tells about the old ghost ship, not the Captain’s ship, but I still think it is important,” said Pidney.
Valerie and Danny walked across the street from the bus stop to join the two high school kids.
“Here’s the 1962 Belle City Bronco yearbook,” said Mary, handing the black-bound thin book of pictures to Valerie. “The Captain is in the Junior Class in that one. He had a beard then, just like the one he had on his face the last time I saw him.”
Valerie opened to the page of Junior portraits and ran her finger over the C’s and D’s until she got to Dettbarn. He was kind of a dumpy fat boy even then, with blonde hair, blue eyes, and a derfy smile that showed his crooked teeth. He had a rather ratty looking beard, which was perfect for a rodent-like face, that, while it didn’t look like a rat, it did look an awful lot like the face of a woodchuck, or some kind of short-toothed beaver.
“He’s kinda funny looking,” Val said to herself, but loud enough for all to hear.
“Now, see here! I take exception to that remark!” said a cloaked and hatted figure stepping out of the shadow of the evergreen tree by the door.
“Who…?” croaked Mary, leaping away from the figure and towards Pidney.
“Help me…!” squawked Danny as he awkwardly leaped into Pidney’s arms, the football muscles catching hold of the smaller boy easily.
“Don’t you get mad at me!” said Valerie hotly. “It is not like I was talking to you… whoever you are!” She lunged toward the stranger, grabbing his yachting cap and yanking it off his head.
But where the head was supposed to be… nothing at all there except a pair of thick bifocal glasses hanging in the air like they were weightless in outer space.
Valerie looked at the glasses, and then down at the yearbook picture still in her other hand. Yes, it was an updated version of the same style of thick glasses.
“Erm… Captain Dettbarn. It’s you!”
“Uncle Noah?” Mary said. “What happened to your head?”
“Oh, um… it’s still there, Mary dear. Head-hunters didn’t eat it or anything. I am just the victim of a curse. A curse that makes my body completely invisible.” He removed the cloak to reveal a free-standing pair of pants, a short-sleeved red-and-white-striped shirt, and empty neckerchief, and floating white gloves that didn’t seem to be properly attached to the invisible dumpy body wearing the sailor’s clothes.
“Er, uh… sir?” asked Pidney, “What is all this purple smoke coming out from behind the pine tree? It has a funky smell, like burning sugar or something.”
“Well, I hate to say it, but that is an indicator that the witchdoctor himself is watching us at the moment from somewhere not too far away. That purple smoke always seems to come around right before some evil magic happens.”
“Oh, that’s not good. Maybe we better go inside the library before anything bad can happen.” Mary was looking around the street for signs of the evil witchdoctor.
Pidney put Danny on the ground and both boys headed up the Public Library steps.
“Um, uh… Pretty girl, can I have my hat back. I want to go in the library in disguise. No sense in scaring the librarian.”
Valerie frowned at the invisible man as she handed him back the hat and the disembodied gloves placed it back on top of his invisible rodent-like head.
“Let’s go inside the Library,” said Mary. “We have things to talk about and questions to ask… Lots and lots of questions to ask.”





























Dancing With Alan Watts
It seems sometimes, in a Judaeo-Christian society, that we are a constantly being scrutinized by a rather harsh all-knowing God who rewards getting the faith-words accurately correct, to the letter, and the faith-based actions perfect, without a single mistake. And He punishes missteps of word or deed with pain and suffering and the potential of an eternity in Sheol or Hell. And that is a tough God to live with. He is like a teacher who uses his or her God-like powers to reward or punish to lead his students all down an exacting, narrow path to a destination that does not have room for everyone when they arrive.
It doesn’t take long in childhood for a highly intelligent person to realize before childhood is over that this cosmology is actually a load of horse pucky. It didn’t even take long for somebody as semi-stupid as me.
What I like about listening on YouTube to the wisdom of Alan Watts is that he gives us an alternative way of seeing the universe and ourselves. This he can offer through his studies of Eastern and Buddhist philosophies. Everything appealing in John Lennon’s signature song “Imagine” comes from Lennon’s love of listening to the lectures of Alan Watts. He is obviously a wise-guy.
Alan Watts teaches us the pathways that lead to finding yourself, who you truly are, and how you fit into the universe as a whole. When Carl Sagan says that we are all made of star-stuff, he is not only telling us what is literally true, as the elements our bodies were formed from were literally made in the nuclear forges at the centers of stars that later exploded in nova-bursts to scatter the elements across the skies of everywhere. He is also telling us that what Alan Watts says is metaphorically true, that everything in the universe is part of the same thing and we are all one in this way.
There is plenty to worry about in my little life. I could easily drop dead at any time from any one of my six incurable diseases or even the return of the skin cancer I beat in 1983. I suffer from the consequences of disease daily, as I have for many years now. My sins are many. I broke my promise the other day to never show you the horrors of my naked body on this blog. I constantly eat the wrong thing and continue to do things that I know are bad for the environment and the health of my body. I am prejudiced against racists, stupidity, and the actions of dedicated Trump-lovers. In many ways I deserve God’s wrath and brutal correction. I have come to truly believe that climate change is going to end life on Earth. I am horrible.
But I have learned from Alan Watts that all of those concerns mean nothing. I don’t believe in Heaven or an afterlife. But I do not fear death. I am one with the universe. And the universe goes on even if I do not. And I will always be a part of it, even after I am no longer alive. The universe has a mind and is intelligent And I take part in that because one small part of that intelligence is me, and lives in my head.
There is comfort to be found in the words of Alan Watts. And living in pain as I do, I really need that comfort most of the time. That is why I have attempted to share a bit of that comfort with you.
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