Written to “Mission at Hand” by Black Fuse – compiled by Kevin Yost (this is a difficult track to find so, please click on the link to download it – unfortunately, it is only available as an itunes or quicktime file… hopefully it plays for you) http://www.stevewooster.com/Downloads/mission.m4p
My flight landed the night before. Unfortunately, it was late by a few hours. I waited at the terminal for my bags to appear on the silver baggage claim merry-go-round. As per usual, my small black roller bag was nearly the last to shoot from the ramp and make its way to me. Wearily, I grabbed the handle and heaved the bag to my feet.
I paused a moment to complete a mental checklist to make sure I had everything with me that I would need. it was late enough, I was worried that I would forget that I, somehow, brought 2 bags on this trip.
notebook and camera, check. Clothes, check. Directions to the hotel, check…
After being completely satisfied, I pulled out the handle on the bag, put my messenger bag on top, and walked to the taxi stand.
This was my first time in a big city. I was intimidated.
Everyone moved with purpose from one place to the other – even if that place was ten feet from where they were initially. Too much talking on Cell phones, too much loud conversation, just too much. My nose burned with the smell of smog, sewer, and curbside fast food. The scents swirled in my head making me dizzy.
“I’m not sure if I can do this” I thought as I slowly meandered to the taxi line.
After about 15 minutes, my cab arrived. I gave him the name of the hotel, and we were off. The drive was chaotic even for this late at night. Despite the darkness, there were more cars on the road than could be held comfortably. It reminded me of those nature shows where the ant colony climbs over each other to get to their next destination. One-million miniscule feet pounding in disorder.
“Damned good to be home”, I blurted. I did my best to sound like I was coming home. It didn’t work. The cab driver chuckled and spoke in some dialect I wasn’t familiar with. I think it could have been Russian – regardless, it was a sharp, angry language. I spent the remainder of the trip to the hotel in silence.
Despite the drive into the city from the airport being more like a roller-coaster ride from some demented 1970′s sideshow, I made it to the hotel in one piece. Shaken but, not stirred.
After a brief encounter with the doorman (who knew you were supposed to tip them for taking your bag from a car), I went inside. The hotel was expansive lines of brass floating over a sea of red carpeting. After taking in the place completely, I went to check in.
ironically, my room could have just as easily been in a seedy roadside Motel given the decoration and size. “False advertising. Guess it secures some business” I thought as I unpacked my bag.
I fell asleep within moments of my head hitting the pillow.
The next morning, I woke without an alarm. it was if the city’s energy had invaded the hotel and snuck into my room as I slept. I got up and took a shower. After I got dressed, I went downstairs to the lobby and pushed my way outside onto the street.
The business I remembered from the night before was nothing compared to what I saw. Armies of people marching in each direction down the sidewalk. Cars flooded the narrow roadway each one honking at the others even though they could see the red beaming light of the stoplight with their own eyes.
Street vendors had appeared on the curb as if from nowhere – they weren’t there the night before. An old man in tattered jeans and a blue t-shirt sold newspapers, postcards, and small nick-knacks from wheeled carts. Another more portly fellow with a full beard stood just down the street with a hot-dog cart screaming at the people as they passed.
Then it happened.
the formations of pedestrians seemed to line up. Each step in sync with the person to their side. Each line in sync with the next. the men in their suits stared straight ahead. Some held phones to their ears, some carried briefcases, and others still just walked. but, all were walking at the same pace.
The news-stand vendor called out to the to buy a paper followed immediately by the rotund hot-dog salesman shouting for each person to try his “best god dammed dogs”. it was if they knew their place in the march and took it up. Veterans marching to war.
Even the cars joined in. Inching forward in unison. Taxi cab after taxi cab revving their engines too fast to go the 2 feet that had been vacated by the car before them only to slam on their brakes before shattering the car ahead. Horns honking in a synchronous melody of shouts, revving engines, and cursing.
I stood there in awe for a moment. Watching the city move. Almost breathe as if it were alive. Everything on that stretch of road moved together like an orchestral percussion section.
Then the first drop of rain landed on my shoulder. The rain started slowly. Pat… Patpatpat…. pat… patpat… pat. Within moments, the sky opened up and spilled on the street below. people grabbed umbrellas, car windows were rolled up, the hot-dog man cursed the sky and ducked under an awning while the old man laughed at him.
The rain fell in the same rhythm as the people. And as the cars. And as the vendors. me standing in the center of it. Speechless.
The rain set the tune while the others kept the beat. The city became the band that everyone and everything followed.
Then, just as it instantaneously as it had begun, it stopped.
I shoved my hand into my pocket and fished out a small slip of paper with an address on it, turned to my left, and started walking.
So, I almost didn’t post this because, well, it is pretty close to complete crap. And, as a confession, this isn’t the first thing that came to mind. However, since I wanted to keep this blog PG rated, I decided not to even try to write about that first visual.
Perhaps, I should not rely on my iTunes being on ‘Random’ to select the song I write to. Or, Perhaps I should.