Jean and I
drive past the corner of Bayshore Boulevard and Gandy Boulevard in Tampa every
couple of months on our way to the base commissary. And I can’t pass that
particular intersection without thinking about what was, and what has ceased to
be.
At the time
I was a proud member of the United States Air Force, and my first wife and I
lived in a large two story wooden house which sat on that site. “Sally” and I
lived upstairs, and just outside stood a couple of massive oak trees. Underneath
the shade of those trees, I parked my car.
That old
house is gone now, and in its place is a modern apartment complex.
Interestingly enough, at least to me, those old trees are still there.
Back in the
early ‘70’s I drove to the base on a daily basis, and sat behind an electric
typewriter; where I punched out multiple military discharge, retirement and
reenlistment documents. After a few weeks on the job, I could have “done it in
the dark.”
Bayshore
Boulevard runs along Tampa Bay and connects the City of Tampa and MacDill Air
Force Base; a distance of perhaps 7 miles. Sometimes in the late afternoon, or
early evening I would walk or jog along the seawall, and for the most part,
things remained very much the same. After walking a couple of miles, I would
pass a Jewish synagogue. Another half mile and I would pass a multi-story
apartment building. Another mile and I walked past an older part of the city
referred to as Hyde Park. And a few hundred yards later, I reached the
outskirts of the business district of Tampa.
But this
evening was far from mundane, and altogether different than all the rest.
For you see,
as I approached the skyscrapers of downtown Tampa, I looked over the rail of
the seawall, and witnessed something I’d never before seen.
A corpse lay
at the bottom of the seawall; wrapped in clear neoprene plastic!
My thoughts
flowed quickly and freely. What to do? What to do?
I stopped,
and stepped down a set of stairs; a duplicate of other stairways installed
every hundred yards along the length of the seawall. There, on a small landing,
at the bottom of the short flight of steps, lay the body. It was positioned in
such a way that now and then the small waves of the bay lapped up against it.
I steeled
myself, stepped a little closer, and lightly kicked the plastic covered body
with my right foot.
It was then
that the corpses
… moved!
And sat up,
and proceeded to pull the neoprene from around its face.
And then the
“dead man” spoke.
“Uh, wah,
what are you do, doing? What do you want?”
Of course,
to say I was shocked would be a gross understatement. When one happens to be
under the false assumption that something is dead, and then that something sits
up and speaks; well now, perhaps you can imagine.
About then, I
recall making some kind of excuse that sounded something like,
“Sorry
mister. I thought you were,… well, dead.”
And without
any further adieu, I took my leave.
As I
retraced my journey home that evening I surmised that the “corpse” was, no
doubt, a homeless man of perhaps 50 or 60. Why he was wrapped up in that
fashion, (for as I recall it was anything but cold outside) and why he had
placed himself where the ocean waves cascaded upon him, I have no earthly idea.
Funny, I
have thought about this episode several times in the past couple of weeks.
I can only
wonder if that poor fella, whom I believed at the time was a corpse,
… has after
all these years assumed that rather permanent status.
By William McDonald, PhD. Excerpt from "(Mc)Donald's Daily Diary" Vol. 15. Copyright Volumes 1-15.
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