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![]() The Summer of Living Dangerously A writer's remembrance
It was an L-shaped second-floor apartment in Old Town with a bay window
in the crook of the L. It looked southeast with a clear view of the
Hancock. My Shaker-simple desk was placed such that I was backed against
the gorgeous view. I would pound at my typewriter--no computer as of
yet--and fling crumpled wads of paper on the floor till the end of the
day because I didn't have a wastebasket.
It was my summer of writing dangerously. Grieving estrangement from
my ex-wife and family in southern Indiana, I'd come back to Chicago's
South Side, labored a while as an A/V scriptwriter along Michigan Avenue
and thrown that aside for the urgent need to simplify and write short
fiction. The landlord was desperately trying to sell the building and
most tenants had fled, but Bad Penny had friends there and brokered a
space for me. Cheap, no lease, and the neighborhood was gentrifying all
around St. Michael's "Catlick" Church, whose bell extolled its
provenance on the hour.
"Bad" Penny sounds uncharitable, but ever since southern Indiana
she was dropping in and out of my life, and frequently there was some
price to pay. She was a seductive, confidential woman with a smoky
drawl, darkly beautiful with Cherokee cheekbones, a once-wonderful
writer for a Chicago daily. Our fling after my divorce in Indiana had
ended badly; in part because of her alcohol abuse. We would always have
a soft spot for each other, but she would ever be a flame to my moth.
Not long after I settled into the building, she moved in upstairs.
Before I got anywhere, I was killing mice at a rate that will no
doubt come to haunt me in the afterlife. A disturbed packrat first-floor
tenant had been evicted but left rotting flora and fauna behind.
Returning from the church's periodic food distributions to the needy,
she would stand in front of the building with her filled grocery sacks
and hurl curses at the absent landlord. Despite her ferocity, she failed
to scatter the mice who regarded my tenancy as an alternative food
source.
I found a local job doing marketing work a few hours a day but spent
the rest of my time in Spartan pursuit of writing. My wall cupboard
safely above the diminishing rodent population was stocked largely with
generics in black-and-white boxes. Sometimes in the evening Penny would
come knocking wearing a short dress to show off her long legs and ask me
to escort her to O'Rourke's just a walk down North Avenue, then a
demilitarized line between the gangs and the Cabrini-Green projects and
the Old Town Triangle. Occasionally shootings spilled over to our side.
She ridiculed me for my simple cot, and she had a boyfriend it
seemed, but I wondered whether she wished to re-ignite our flame or was
expressing sarcastic jealousy for the art I'd been able to resume. She
had cleaned up her act, and introduced me to barkeep Jay Kovar and
showed me how to nurse coffee, so long as you tipped well, while writers
and reporters flung back alcohol and shared stories backdropped by
posters of Joyce and Behan.
One tale was that a mutual acquaintance, a radical Chicago poet,
appeared in fictional form in John Gardner's hefty "Mickelsson's
Ghosts." I had examined its spooky jacket and description of the
central character who, himself escaping a dying marriage and pursued by
his demons, tried to reestablish himself in a remote, haunted farm
house. So one morning I was seized with a compulsion to possess this
book but knew I must find it as a remainder because I was broke.
My adventure took me from Barbara's Bookstore up to Evanston (and an
evocative coffeehouse conversation with a young woman about Anne Rice's
"Interview with the Vampire"), through a dozen bookshops and finally
back to Lincoln Park where at the end of the day, on the last possible
shelf at leftist old Guild Books, I spied my quarry. Indeed, Gardner's
dense work spoke to me on many levels and fueled my writing.
Though my personal life was a mess, the kindness of strangers who
became friends gradually restored me. My car was repossessed but an old
friend's generosity reclaimed it. I took part in neighborhood rituals.
One evening a week, a couple unfolded a card table and plugged in a TV
at their front stoop, and we all watched "Hill Street Blues" and
played Trivial Pursuit. One player was an Irish girl I fell in love with
by the end of the summer.
With intensity I incorporated new people and fresh events into my
stories. Sometimes I went over to the Hotel Lincoln diner and wrote
late. By then I was reading Larry McMurtry's "Lonesome Dove" whose
odd-couple former Texas Rangers Woodrow Call and Gus McCrae communicated
to me on a whole other level of my own Southern roots and heritage.
Setting up camp at North Avenue Beach a couple hours each afternoon, I
savored McMurtry's cattle-drive adventures, violence and even love,
amidst beautiful girls in bathing suits.
But the building was sold and by September came a knock on the door
and, yes, I could stay if I paid nearly doubled rent. Then things really
changed. A year later my ex-wife died and the kids tumbled back into my
life. The pretty Irish girl and I did not last, and now that is two
relationships ago. One of those women died, tragically, of cancer.
I hear Penny found her peace back in Indiana but also, sadly, died
seven years ago. Sometimes you just have to take a chance, I think. I
found something in myself that summer. And if it seems too many ghosts
ago, I pull down my thick well-thumbed "Lonesome Dove," burnished by
wind and lake. Opening it, I can hear sand crackling in the binding and
a few grains spill out, reminding me of the book and the summer I never
wanted to end.
Also by Martin Northway 1968
Writer's twilight
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