Jake’s Hand
Part 6
To Shilshole and Back
The storm front had passed quickly and lightly as it often does in late May,
and the sky had cleared by the next afternoon after a morning sprinkle. I
pulled up to the Emery with two bicycles in the back of my van just before 5:30
p.m. Jake was waiting in shorts and a tight red tee shirt, his burgundy
rimmed sunglasses pushed up onto his hair above his batik hair
band. We drove out to University Village, parked and unloaded the
bikes. Jake looked at them both and then frowned—really frowned.
“Do you have a tool box?” he asked, somewhat acidly. “And maybe some
WD-40?” I looked at the bikes and thought they looked okay to me, except
for some rust patches. I guess the chain did look a little dry.
“There are some tools in the trunk.” I’m orderly about paper work and
numbers, but tools? As long as I keep my tools in a limited number of
places, I can find what I need. That’s as organized as I get about
tools. I opened the trunk and pulled out a tool box, then opened
the glove compartment and pulled out a few more tools.
“I used to think you were so organized,” he said, with a grin.
“Disorganization by you. Point for me. 187 to 186.”
“I am, it’s just a different type or organization. If I can find it
quickly, isn’t that organization enough?”
Jake didn’t answer, so I figured I had lost the point permanently. He
pulled out some tools and started to work on the bikes. “We could
use some WD-40. Why don’t you run over to the hardware and get
some? Take some money from my wallet,” and he swung his butt toward me to
let me get into his back pocket.
For some reason, I swatted him somewhat forcefully. “I’ll pay for
it. But thanks for the offer.” And I swatted him again, before I
walked down the street to get the oil.
“I didn’t know you were such a bicycle maniac,” I said, on returning.
“And I didn’t realize you were such as sadist,” he said, rubbing his
butt. “Besides, I’m an expert, not a maniac. At college I would
ride every day, even in the snow. I even did some racing. I
would’ve in Mississippi if it hadn’t been so hot and we hadn’t been so
busy. Even, in Vietnam…” His voice trailed off, and he became quiet
and suddenly distant. I didn’t understand his mood change, but it didn’t
bother me.
Jake got the bikes into what he pronounced “temporary shape” and we took off
for Puget Sound, about a 9-mile ride along Lake Union, through the Fremont and
Ballard districts and along the Ship Canal leading to the shores of the
Sound. It was about 65 degrees with a breeze coming from the
northwest—nearly perfect weather for this exercise.
“Don’t you have a helmet?” I asked.
“No, never use one.”
“I’m going to buy you one next ride. I want to see you stay alive.”
Jake looked at me as if I were a mother hen, but I hoped he would wear one if I
handed it to him on a silver platter.
We rode hard for the first 20 minutes past the University, the old Gas Works
and the Fremont Bridge, me leading, getting our heartbeat rates up, then we
rode more slowly side by side through the backstreets of Ballard, giving Jake a
sight seeing tour of, well, the industrial / commercial backstreets of
Ballard. The boatyards did make that leg of the trip somewhat
interesting.
I would look over at Jake from time to time, sunglasses now on his nose, the
wind blowing the hair beneath the batik band. He looked like a teen-aged
boy about to get into mischief, a grin shining on his face. On several
occasions, he would look at me and break into his radiant smile. He
seemed happy.
As we got closer to Puget Sound, the smell of the sea percolated through the
air. We sprinted the last few miles to Shilshole Marina, bought some
tonic water, then rode out to the beach at Golden Gardens Park and watched the
sun on the waters of Puget Sound as it dropped toward the Olympics
beyond. We listened to the seagulls and lap of the waves as we straddled
our bikes. There was enough color in the sun to bring out the reds in
Jake’s hair and complexion, reminding me of what he looked like at the end of
our Mississippi summer.
We left the beach in order to get back to the University District before
dark. This time Jake led the way and set the pace. He had memorized
the route. I rode behind him, admiring the lines and flats of the muscles in
his calves and thighs. We sprinted the last mile, and he won
easily. Another point for him. Score: Me 187, Jake 187.
After we got to the parking lot, we packed our bikes in the van and went out
for pizza at the Northlake Tavern and ended up talking and drinking beer for a
couple of hours.
The bike riding and dinner afterwards set the pattern for the rest of the
week. We were at Kidd Valley the next night, sitting at a picnic table
outdoors, eating hamburgers, fries and milk shakes.
I started to reminisce about our time in Mississippi—the usual ‘remember that
time we did such and such’ sort of stuff. Remember Grannah’s fried
chicken, I said. Remember the hornets’ nests we had to scrape off her
house before we painted it and how fast I had to run when you knocked a live one
off, Jake said. Remember how bright-eyed those kids were, I said.
Remember when we went skinny-dipping and we had to hightail it to shore, Jake
said. And so on.
“God, we were naïve then,” Jake said. “We thought we could change the
world.”
I thought about his comment for a few moments. “I think we did change the
world,” I responded somewhat defensively.
Jake looked at me quizzically. “You’re serious?”
“I would go there and do it again and again, knowing what I know now.
What we did was important in a small but significant way.”
“Even with what you know
now?” he repeated, but his tone carried just a hint of a wish to believe me in
the midst of doubt.
“Yes,” I said emphatically. Jake looked perplexed at my response.
“I don’t know how much of a difference it made,” I continued, “but I’m sure it
added some small bit of good to the world, and that was what our summer was all
about. I have felt proud and good about what we did ever since.”
“But it all turned so ugly, with Vietnam, Kent State, ghetto riots—too much
death and destruction.” Jake looked uncomfortable and unsure of
himself. He became very quiet, and our conversation died. We talked
in monosyllables for another 10 minutes, pretending to watch the sports event
on the television.
“Why don’t we call it a day?” I suggested finally, and he nodded with relief on
his face.
As I dropped him off at the hotel, he tried to brighten his mood up, but he
sounded to me that maybe he was doing it only because he was desperate to
maintain our relationship despite our differences. We parted on a
friendlier note, though: “Is it okay if I come over and tune up all your
bikes this weekend?”
“Thanks, that would be wonderful, Mr. Bicycle Maniac.”
He didn’t acknowledge that he had heard me. “Just bring them all over to
your place and I’ll do the maintenance there.”
“Are these two bikes fit enough for you for another ride tomorrow?” I asked,
archly. “Or will you have a fit at their state of maintenance?”
“They’re good enough,” he allowed, “but not as perfect as they can be—until
this weekend.” He sounded relieved that he would have the opportunity to
make them perfect. He grinned at me as we said good night.
As I thought about our conversation, I had to admit I was seriously
disappointed that Jake’s and my view differed so much on the meaning and
importance of our work in Mississippi. Had Jake lost all his
idealism? Had he changed that much? I felt distinctly less
close to him after that exchange. Maybe he had retreated into cynicism
more than I thought. But he was an old friend, so I vowed to continue to
be pleasant to him for his short stay in Seattle.
Herding Cats and Programmers
“Okay, now tell me what you’re really doing in Seattle,” I said as we sat down
in our booth at Duke’s, another one of the neighborhood restaurants that had
pretty good wine, after we’d dropped our bikes off at my condominium.
“I’m doing a project for this startup computer software company that I work
for. If I told you what I was doing I’d have to kill you,” Jake laughed
at his little joke. I made the requisite face. “I’ll be here for
about a month or two.”
The waiter came and took our order and returned shortly with a bottle of
Associated Vintners Riesling and two glasses.
“Normally, I just herd a bunch of programmers around, but this is a special
project.” Jake said as he poured us two fresh glasses of wine.
I asked dubiously. “I’ve heard of herding cattle and cats, but
programmers?”
“Unfortunately, it bears a very strong resemblance to herding cats.” I
could see him thinking over what he said. Jake’s eyes suddenly shone with
the amused, mischievous look that I remembered as he would joke with me or the
kids in Mississippi.
“Let me explain,” he said, gathering his story-telling skills together.
“This company I work for has dozens of hot-shot programmers who work 18-hour
days for almost nothing except access to the latest personal computers and free
vending machines. But these programmers are free spirits, to say the
least. They’re into code and electronics, not people or any language but
Fortran or Cobol or Pascal—definitely not English. The company
founder needed someone to make sure that what these computer ‘nerds’ produce
was usable in the real world. Nerds is a complimentary word by the
way.
“I convinced the company that I was the real world, or that I could fake being
it—hah! my fucked-up life is the real world?—and I could test the programs that
these coders produced. So somehow they hired me. Well, not really
somehow. Actually, mom and dad knew the owner of the company.
Fortunately, the company liked what I could do.”
“How long have you been at this?”
“About six months,” Jake answered. “Time moves fast in the software business.
I found the job shortly after I got back to Boston for my dad’s service.
Mom wanted me to stay around the Boston area for awhile till she got back on
her feet.”
“I’m sorry. I didn’t know about your dad, Sawyer.” That was the
first time that I used the nickname I attached to him since that summer in
Mississippi. It just came out of my mouth.
“That’s okay.” Jake eyes seemed to mist over just before he turned his
eyes down. The waiter arrived just then with bowls of steamed mussels in
broth and crusty bread, filled our wine glasses, asked if we needed anything
more and departed when we said no. “I haven’t heard Sawyer used in 14
years, but I’ve thought about it more often than you might think. It
brings back memories. They were good memories—about everything.” I
think that might have been a partial apology for his remarks the previous day.
We ate and chatted further about Jake’s work and what he did.
“I’m supposed to act as a typical program user, for whom
this stuff, after all, is all written,” he said. “I call myself the
Conscience of the Program—the programmers shorten it to COP—representing the
one touch with reality before the program goes public.” He smiled to
himself.
“For example,” he went on, “these young guys couldn’t figure out why the user
would have a problem with software commands like GREP. It was no big deal
for these hot-shot kids to learn these commands and what they did—‘GREP is
trivial to remember’—they would say. That’s their vision of the
marketplace, and Sally Secretary be damned. It’s unbelievable sometimes
how arrogant—no unaware--these kids can be.”
“Okay, what the hell is GREP?”
Jake thought for a moment. “You don’t want to know.” He went
on. “What I do is make myself into a guinea-pig customer for their
programs. To get ready, I go out and observe real people trying to
operate their computers. They swear, they grimace, they smile. They
learn—or don’t learn—how to operate my company’s programs. Then I would go back
to Boston and swear, grimace and smile, just like I learned. I assume the
role of the end user and let the programmers train me in how to use their
program. You know I’ve always liked acting, and this job is perfect for
an actor.
“God, I can frustrate the programmers,” he said, laughing. “I would
completely get engrossed in the role of the average Joe or Sally trying to
learn their programs. I would forget commands, I would not save files and
turn off the computer. I wouldn’t do things in the right order, I would
bristle and get mad when the programmers were arrogant, and I would demand to
talk to the manager—who was, for these tests, the founder of the company and
who always backed me up. I become the epitome of the terror trainee for
them.” Jake giggled, and I broke out laughing. I imagined Jake
putting his all into the role.
“The boss thought this role playing was all very humorous—but he knew it was
extremely serious for his company at the same time,” Jake continued, “and he
would be sure these frustrated programmers had to make things work for me—or go
out the door. Believe me, a lot of programmers have gone out the door.
“Robbie, I absolutely love the role playing. It’s acting. The
programmers really hated me for about three months for taking them out of their
code world into the real world. I would just grin to myself as they
griped about the things they had to do to please me.”
I was shaking with laughter at his story, tears rolling out of the corner my
eyes as I envisioned Jake making life difficult for these
programmers.
“However,” Jake continued, “these guys are finally coming around to making
programs usable to average Joes. And sales are rising.
“Maybe it’s the play acting, maybe it’s coming back to the States and being
with my mother, but this is the only real lift I’ve had in 14
years.” Jake stared across the restaurant as the memories came back
to him. “Since I’m 3,000 miles away for the time being, I get to be a
pain in the ass by telephone for the next few weeks during breaks in this
special project. I look forward to tormenting these guys some
more.” He smiled to himself again.
I took him back to the hotel that night and dropped him off before heading back
to my condominium. I sat alone and finished the evening paper before
heading off to sleep. Maybe I could tolerate a longer stay from Jake
after all.
Sudden Storm
Jake came by on the weekend and, true to his word, he made the bikes as perfect
as possible—at least from his perspective. The weekend also gave me an
opportunity to introduce him to Alec, whom I felt somewhat guilty about
neglecting. Alec shook Jake’s hand forcefully, as if to prove he were
almost a man and not the almost 13-year old that he was.
“God, he really looks like you did when you were handsome,” Jake laughed.
“I still am handsome,” I said, as I turned my body and preened in front of
him.
“Dad is particularly ugly when he preens,” Alec said, winking at Jake as Jake
set the bikes up on the work bench and started to take them apart.
Alec started to watch closely, showing eagerness to learn what Jake was
doing. He peppered Jake with questions—about the bikes, about Jake’s
life. . What did he do for a living? Why was he in
Seattle? Where did he meet me? How did he learn so much about
bikes? How do you adjust the derailleur? etc., etc. Alec was
a sponge for information; he never stopped trying to gather it in, and he was
quick to absorb what was told him. His face brightened constantly with
expressions of understanding when he learned something new.
About an hour into his barrage of questions, Alec knelt down and was looking at
Jake through the spokes of the bike, his body prone on the concrete floor of
the garage and his face propped in his hands, all eager to get the answer to a
question. Suddenly Jake started. His body actually froze for a
moment. He stared at Alec with a strange look on his face—a look of
infinite sadness that I recognized from the day I met him at the airport.
I thought I saw tears in his eyes. He set his tools down without a word,
got up, wiped his hands on a paper towel and walked out the door and down the
street. I looked at Alec, he looked at me and I shrugged my
shoulders. What was that all about, I wondered? Jake came back in
about 15 minutes, an apologetic look on his face and resumed work.
But something had changed. Jake turned his back to both Alec and me as he
continued to work on the bikes for a couple more hours, even though Alec kept
asking questions. The answers turned from the gracious offer of
information to begrudging monosyllables. Alec looked a little puzzled at
the change of attitude, but he shrugged his shoulders and came over and sat by
me.
I thought maybe Alec had disturbed Jake’s concentration too much, so I
sent him into the condo for some beers for us and a pop for himself. I
did notice my beer was somewhat light and had a large swig-ful missing, and
Alec had an impish guilty smile on his face as he handed it to me. I gave
him a hug to indicate I forgave him. Ah! Near-teenage boys.
We three took off riding toward the Fremont district, then headed north up the
hill to Woodland Park. Jake led a speedy pace, but the athletic Alec had
no trouble keeping up. I kept up, but I had to hide my shortness of
breath a couple of times for fear of losing points. We spent a couple of
hours at the zoo. It felt wonderful to spend the time with my son on one
side of me and Jake on the other. I felt happy with the three of us in
the sun as we walked our bikes through the park. Looking back, I realize
I was so wrapped up in my own thoughts that beautiful day that I wasn’t paying
much attention to the interaction—really the absence of it—between Jake and
Alec.
***
Jake and I adopted a weekday riding pattern, wherein I would pull by his hotel
after work, he would hop in, we’d go somewhere in the city for a good hard bike
ride, him agreeing finally to wear the helmet I had bought for him. He didn’t
look as good with his helmet, but I knew he was safer. Sometimes our old friendly
rivalries would be rekindled and sometimes Jake’s Mississippi warmth would
emerge, like the sun burning through the morning clouds over Puget Sound.
I realize now that it was the physical activity that bound us together, like
the camaraderie that comes from playing sports together or horsing
around. During these times I put my reservations about the person Jake
may have become into the background and decided just to enjoy the
present.
Alec would sometimes join us when we got back, and we three would end up going
out to dinner or bringing something home to the condo. Jake and I would
talk, and, as the days went on, our reminisces became warmer and I could hear
pride rising in his voice from time to time—even about our time in Mississippi.
Maybe he wasn’t such a lost cause after all.
After a couple of weeks, however, I noticed that Alec was finding more and more
reasons to decline the rides and the dinner with us.
“What’s wrong?” I asked one evening.
“I don’t know. Partly, I feel like a third wheel on a bike on these
trips—not because of you, dad. It’s Jake. He just stares at me
sad-faced and says nothing of significance—except he’s polite and says the
usual things. Dad, I know you want to entertain your friend. I just
don’t enjoy the trips. So, why don’t I just back off for a while?
I’ll survive. Jake’s only going to be here a short time anyway.”
It hadn’t occurred to me till then that anything was wrong. Months later,
as I thought about what was happening over that time and the subsequent months,
I remembered that turning point when Jake walked out of our garage after
working on our bikes. It was then that Jake began acting strangely toward
Alec. I realized from hindsight that after that day he never encouraged
Alec to join in our discussions, never asked his opinion of anything, never
rode alongside him. Jake’s interactions were always with me, as if Alec
wasn’t there. I just hadn’t noticed what was happening at the time.
I was oblivious to Alec’s and Jake’s relationship, or lack thereof.
I was just enjoying Jake’s company more and more.
Thanks to Sharon for editing!
|