by Tom Sheehan
Chester McNaughton Connaughton, aptly named for both sides of the family, landowner in the new world, squeezer of pennies and nickels at the very corpulence of coin, embarrassed at times by his own good fortune where his roots had once been controlled and ordained by potatoes and turnips or the lack thereof, gazed over the latest acquisition of a two-acre parcel abutting his prime abode and wondered how he could best utilize it. Mere coinage, he had early assessed, would apply the jimmy bar under Carlton Smithers and separate him from the land in their town of
A big man in his own right, massive across the
shoulders, Chester, even as a dreamer of large proportions, was given to
talking to his father long gone down the pike, from a runaway case of pneumonia,
to better pasture. The old gent had once called it “a greater kingdom and a lesser court.” Still civil in such matters,
Chester
addressed his father as “sir,” never once forgetting his manner of address.
“Sir,” he said this day, “how can I best use this land? The farmer is no longer
in me; no endless hours, no thievery of land and what it will allow to be taken
from it, these I do not envision. What would you propose? I would by design do
whatever you suggest.” On his porch, the sun pushing its heat across the width
of the two acres, Chester
transposed himself into his study mode.
Now it takes all kinds of beliefs to
manage oneself in this world, and commerce or business demands certain of those
beliefs come into the fate of a man. Chester heard his father say, in the same
enigmatic voice, the same wonder of voice, the simple words, “Swan River Daisy,” the words a barely
audible breath coming upon his porch, like an aside from forever. The long-gone
old man had not entirely eluded him. A sense of trust redoubled itself in him
as he heard the echo say again, from some parallax athwart the universe, “Swan River Daisy,” and repeating, “Swan River Daisy.”
Acceptance struck him. Oh, he knew that sun-yellow
flower well, a hardy, deep-root grower that dispelled an easy pull of root work
in the fall. One year, a decade or so earlier, he had planted the whole flower bed across the
front of the old colonial house with the tenacious daisies, waiting for their
yellow waves to unfold a day in May, a wave a teasing breath of wind could set
to dancing, the daisies standing so tall. Both the blossoming and the root work
came back to him in swift recall. Did the old man mean to have him construct a
greenhouse on the property, to specialize in Swan River Daisies? Was that the
evolution of the simple answer a soft wind had brought him across the field?
Should he plant the whole field with such golden color it would attract
tourists? Should he run horses, like roans and pintos, through the field, and
to what end? What good means is such advice without fair and equitable
interpretation?
At length, in this quandary, the sun
nodded his head and closed his eyes, and the old man said again from off the
porch yet at immeasurable distance, “Swan
River Daisy.”
Came upon him eventually turmoil and
noise and his daughter crying out to him, “Father! Father! Look, look at the
field!”
Upon his new property sat the most
gorgeous Mississippi
paddle wheel steamboat he had ever seen. It was red and blue of color and proud
in its bearing and was smoking at its single black stack. Bales of cotton, like
pale brown dominoes, stood on the prow of its deck and the paddle wheel astern
of it, like a huge radius, spun itself through slow, angry revolutions. But
there were no passengers crowding its deck, no crew evident about its surfaces,
no movement other than smoke in a single column drifting upward to dispersion
and the paddle wheel only partly visible in its circular passage.
Boldly printed in large yellow
letters against the blue hull was the name, “Swan River Daisy.”
In less than the passage of one hour, he was nearly
assaulted by the Building Inspector who had come in answer to neighbors’
complaints, his eyes popping and his hands in agitated gesture. “How did you
get it here? Do you have a permit? Was there a building plan submitted to Town
Hall before this traffic? I suspect, sir, that you have violated many laws and
regulations and will be held accountable.”
“Is that your field?” The inspector
was indeed young, indeed officious and surly in manner, the way Chester looked upon him,
and wore his hair long and uncombed.
“Yes, I bought it quite recently.” A
pup is still a pup, Chester
announced to himself.
“I suggest, sir, that this must go
all the way to the Mayor. You, most likely, as I have said, have broken all
kinds of rules. That plot is not zoned for business.” The inspector was young, snotty-nosed,
arrogant in an imperial and puerile manner at one and the same time, and was
shaking his head and pointing the most possible accusatory finger at landowner
Chester McNaughton Connaughton, smarting at the surliness.
“What business is that, inspector? Chester could not bring
himself to call the young man sir.
That was reserved for his father. His father came from that distant point
again, that far parallax, “Swan River
Daisy.”
The wide-eyed young inspector,
obviously not in on the other conversation, replied, from his haughty
countenance, “Why, that of transportation, having a river boat, delivering
cotton bales, obviously a horde of passengers who are below deck and gambling
illegally.” His head shook in a fearfully authoritative manner, superior
counsel judging the Swan River Daisy from his dais, and thus judging Chester
McNaughton Connaughton.
“Delivering bales where?” Chester ’s hands were on
his hips, his arms like sails, a big man towering over the young judge in pants
though not in robe.
“Why, the next port of call,
perhaps.” The young man looked down past the fields the way one might look down
river. Fluster, for the lack of another expression, came on him. “I must report
this to higher authorities. I will call the electric and telephone and cable
companies to see if any of their wires have been cut or disturbed. This is
highly unusual. Improper displacement of utilities most certainly has been
commissioned in this transport. Think of all your neighbors so unceremoniously
impacted. Perhaps half the town. Why haven’t I been so informed?” In the most
inquisitive gesture, he cocked his head to one side, a half smile at his mouth,
as if to say you can let me in on this,
and said, “How did you ever in this world navigate the underpass from the main
highway? That seems quite impossible.”
“I suspect it does look that way,
but I did not bring it here. I did not build it. I did not order it. I did not
wish for it. And I assure you I know nothing about the underpass or the
overpass or how it was, as you say, navigated. ” Chester suspected there was in his own eyes a
merry twinkle at this point. He consciously depressed the words, “Perhaps
there’s been a change of tide.”
“But, sure as heaven, you are
responsible for it.” The finger was wagging at Chester once more. “It’s on your property,
sir, and you are therefore responsible. I hope you have insurance.”
“For what?” replied Chester , still hearing the far voice saying,
“Swan River Daisy.”
“For the obvious damages you have
incurred getting it here.”
“Getting what here?”
“Getting the Swan River Daisy onto
your property, that’s what. I can read the name on the hull. I know what a Mississippi steamboat
is, and a stern paddle wheeler for all that. You can’t fool me in these
matters. I assure you I have read The
Adventures of Tom Sawyer. I know about the big river and the boats. I even
saw the movie, Tom and Huck and Becky in the cave. And Injun Joe.” A pause came
upon the young inspector, jaw hanging slack, then a distant light came into his
eyes as he stuttered in saying while pointing at the Swan River Daisy, “This…
this, sir... this is not Saxonish. This is,” and he held his breath in proper
caesura before he nearly shouted out, “Mississippian.” As he walked away,
Chester McNaughton Connaughton saw a definite slump had accosted the young
man’s shoulders.
In less than another hour, a parade
of men and two women came to Chester McNaughton Connaughton as he and his
daughter Chadra were leaning on the fence that girded the new parcel of land…
and the Swan River Daisy still puffing a thin line of black smoke, the wheel
still turning mysteriously into the earth, and as yet no passengers or crew
evident. Counted in that new audience were the Mayor, the Town Counsel, three
men from the Planning Board and two women dressed in rose-colored dresses, an
energetic member of the Appeals Board who was rapidly making notations on a pad
of paper and citing the length of the Swan River Daisy by use of a visimeter of
a special sort. Every man was dressed in a black suit, white shirt and black
tie and Chester ,
whispering to his daughter, said, “They look like hangmen if you ask me.” To
which the daughter replied, “Especially the women in those deep-rose dresses,
so ghastly.”
The Mayor, bristling, holding forth
in front of the small parade, addressed Chester McNaughton Connaughton. “My
dear Mr. Connaughton, what is going on here?” With his hands on his hips he was
still half the size of Chester ,
yet he had a round face, almost moonlike above the black tie, and deeply-set
eyes continuously at measurement. “This disturbance, this disdain. I was at a
wedding reception. It is no mean fete to slip away from a wedding reception,
I’ll have you know. I might have dishonored a constituent.”
“Is this your craft?” The Mayor,
whose name was Anton Mustain, said to Chester ,
and then smiled at the two ladies from the Appeals Board. He did not know which
one he favored best.
“It is not my craft. It is not my
boat. It is not my ship.”
“Is this your land?”
“We all know this is my land,” Chester offered, leaning
back against the split rail fence. “I bought it from Carlton Smithers.”
The Mayor smirked for the ladies
once more. “At a ridiculously low price, from what I hear.”
“Would you have bought it at that
price?” Chester
said.
“That’s beside the point,” the Mayor
said.
“Precisely what I say,” Chester came back with.
“It’s all beside the point. This is not my paddle wheeler.”
“If it stays here in your field, you
will have to pay taxes.” In his affirmation, Anton Mustain was holding the hand
of one of the ladies of the Board of Selectmen. He squeezed that hand as a sign
of his authority and their potential. “That means property taxes, water fees,
sewerage fees, all that apply to a place of business. The Assessors are at this
moment coming up with a firm billing." He felt puffed and thorough and
mightily superior.
“To what business do you refer?” Chester said.
“The business of commerce, sir. It
is most evident that this craft is a business enterprise. My god, man, look at
the piles of cotton bales on the prow of that craft.”
“Do you suggest that I have a cotton
field where such cotton is raised?”
“Where you get it, sir, is your
concern. Mine is that you pay the appropriate fees for running such a
business.”
“If I offered you for the taking
every bale of cotton, would you take them, for free?” Chester offered. Chadra Connaughton squeezed
her father’s hand.
“What in heaven’s name would I do
with bales of cotton? Where would I take them?”
“Your Building Inspector, whom I
note did not return with you, suggested the next port of call, down river
somewhere.”
“My god, sir, there is no river here.”
“That is precisely my argument, Mr.
Mayor. There is no river to properly run a business of boats. There is no next
port of call. There is no place to deliver the goods of a business. There is
nothing. This town has not supplied any services for such a business. And you
wish to tax me on those conditions.”
“By god, sir, there is a boat in
your field and you will pay taxes on it.” His voice was a few octaves up on its
normal range. The lady of the held hand squeezed him back. He turned to the
assessor still madly scribbling on his pad. “I want the whole business of this
land sale scrutinized before this day is out. We will get to the root cause for
all actions, mark my words. And once you have ascertained the proper tax
billing, please present it to Mr. Connaughton.” He squeezed the lady’s hand and
said, in his best manner, “And with a duplicate copy to me so that I can fully
watch and control this situation myself, if I must say so.”
The parade of authority of the Town
of Saxon walked
off behind the Mayor who strutted like a drum major at the head of a band.
Chadra Connaughton tugged her
anxiety at her father’s sleeve. “Easy, child,” he said, “it will be fine with
us. We have done no wrong.”
When Mayor Anton Mustain awoke in the morning and
looked out his back window, hoping to catch the glint of the early sunrise, The
Swan River Daisy, on due course, was now crowding his whole back yard.
Bio: Tom Sheehan served in 31st Infantry Regiment, Korea, 1951-52, and graduated Boston College, 1956. Poetry books include This Rare Earth & Other Flights; Ah, Devon Unbowed and The Saugus Book. He has 20 Pushcart nominations, 350 stories on Rope and Wire Magazine, work in Rosebud Magazine (5), The Linnet’s Wings (6), Ocean Magazine (8), and many internet sites/print issues/anthologies including Nervous Breakdown, Eskimo Pie, Faith-Hope-Fiction, Subtle Tea, Danse Macabre, Best of Sand Hill Review, Best of Frontier Tales, Wilderness House Literary Review, MGVersion2Datura, Literary Orphans, Eastlit, and Nazar Look, etc. His work has been published in Romania, France, Ireland, England, Scotland, Italy, Thailand, China, Mexico, Canada, etc. HIs latest eBook, an NHL mystery, is Murder at the Forum, released January 2013 by Danse Macabre-Lazarus-Anvil Fiction in Las Vegas, which treats of the Boston Bruins-Montreal Canadiens long-time rivalry in a distinctively new slant. Two mysteries are scheduled for 2013; Death of a Lottery Foe and Death by Punishment. Other eBooks at Amazon or B&N or Smashwords include the collections Epic Cures (with an Indie Award); Brief Cases, Short Spans, Press 53; A Collection of Friends and From the Quickening, Pocol Press. His newest eBooks from Milspeak Publishers are Korean Echoes, nominated for a Distinguished Military Award, and The Westering, 2012, nominated for a National Book Award by the publisher (with 7 collections completed and in the publisher’s queue). Now in his 86th year, Sheehan writes 1000 words a day.
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