RUMFORD ROSWELL?? PART II

ME ACTUALLY IN ROSWELL, NEW MEXICO IN SEPTEMBER, 2009

Back in the 1970s, hardly anyone would dare admit to having seen a UFO, lest they’d be ostracized as a “nut case” and lose the respect of their peers, friends, and even family. This was especially true of airline pilots, who would likely be grounded first, and then secondly lose their cherished careers. It really happened.

This little clip from Steven Spielberg’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind dramatically illustrates that professional dilemma. Today, in 2024, airline authorities have eased up on their restrictions, and pilots are generally allowed to make their reports without fear.

Click and enjoy…

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Of course, there are those who’d like nothing better than to have a close encounter of the extraterrestrial kind. For instance, here’s a ‘friendly’ old geezer, also from the Close Encounters film. Apparently when word got out that his city was getting inundated with UFO sightings, he decided to start hanging out most nights in a reported UFO hotspot, high up on a hill overlooking the cityscape. And he wasn’t alone for long…

EARTH’S SELF-APPOINTED FRIENDLY AMBASSADORTO THE ETs

FIRST, A RECAP OF PART I’s CONCLUSION:

(Jack Rogers’s speaking): “I mean, I didn’t drive all the way out here just to be lied to. OK? So let’s have it. What was it I saw last night?! What’s going on here?”

Silence.

Well…? I want an answer.”

The boy looked up at him with imploring eyes, and then his gaze dropped back down to the toes of his shoes again. In the saddest, softest little voice you could ever imagine, he confessed.

Uhmmm… we’re not allowed to talk about it…”

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

PART II

“You’re not ALLOWED to…?! What the…?! Whatta you mean you’re not allowed to talk about it? Who’s not allowing it, for cryin’ out loud?!”

Silence. Then a mousey “… my dad.

“Oh yeah? And why would he not allow you to talk about it…?”

“’Cause… he don’ wanna get in trouble.”

“Oh, really!?

So this is where I butted in. “Son? Believe me. We’re not here to get anybody in trouble. Not your dad, not you, or anyone else, I swear. We’re only here because well, my… friend here saw something in the sky last night, OK? And see, it made him really really... curious, you know? And it’s been bugging him all day. So all we’re here for is to try to find… an answer. Just, you know, only the knowledge about what it was, nothing else. I promise. Just… knowing.

“And I don’t want to get me in trouble, either, like him getting mad at me ‘cause I told.

“OK OK, I get that. We get that. And no, of course not. That’s the exact last thing in the world we want, too.”

“‘Cause Dad’s a Forest Ranger.”

“Oh… Ah.” That was a lot to take in. “Hmmm. I see. OK then. So here’s what’s let’s do. You tell us what it was my friend saw up there in the air last night, and poof! we’ll disappear, just like that. We’ll get right out of your hair. He and I, we’ll get in the Jeep right how and go right back to our homes. It’s almost past our bedtimes anyway. OK? Nobody gets in trouble or anything. How’s that?”

Uhmmm, I dunno.”

Please, son?”

Oh, OK. I guess.”

Aw, great. So. Just what was this curious thing?

“Well, Dad makes’em.”

The two of us let that sink in for a moment. “So. You say he makesthem, eh? So… he’s made more than one, I take it?”

“Uh-huh.”

“OK. That’s cool. Yeah. And your dad. He does this… why?”

The boy thinks for a moment and says, all matter-of-fact, “For fun.”

“Wow. Yeah. I can see that would be kinda fun. Kinda a hobby, I guess. You know what? I think your dad and I maybe have a lot in common.”

“OK.”

“And what does he call them? I mean, does he have a name for these things?”

“Oh, just… UFOs.

“Just UFO’s. And so, he does this because… well, I know you said for fun but, if I may ask, exactly where’s the fun in that, mostly, d’you think?”

“Well. There’s no such thing as UFOs. Not really. But Dad says a lot of people around here actually believe there are. Which is silly. And so he makes’em, and flies’em at night. So that the next day or two, somebody’ll probably call him on the phone to report seeing a flying saucer, because he’s a Ranger.. But he’s the guy who made it. And so he’ll says stuff like, Oh my! That’s scary! Tell ya what. I’ll get right on it. I’ll keep my eyes peeled on my night patrol. Stuff like that. And when he hangs up the phone, boy does he ever laugh and laugh. And he’s got a very funny laugh, too. It always makes Mum and me laugh right along too.”

“Wow. Sounds like your dad’s a funny guy. One good ol’ boy fun-loving guy, too.”

“Oh he is, he is! He says it gives’em a little… spice in their life. That’s the way he says it.”

“Well yeah. All he’s doing is just giving them something to think about. Just making life a little more interesting for’em, I’d say.”

“Yup.”

“Hey, you know what that reminds me of?”

“Uhmmm, no. What?

Halloween. You know how much fun Halloween is. The one day of the year everybody’s lovin’ the fun of being spooked and freaked out? Well, sounds to me all he’s doing’s just spreading Halloween fun around, off and on, other times in the year. And good for him, I say. There’s no harm in that.”

“Uh huh.”

“I mean, they might not be getting actual little kids all dressed up in scary costumes knockin’ on their doors, calling out, Trick or Treat. But what they do get, after they see one of your dad’s ‘UFOs’ go by overhead, is something that gives’em that same spooky fun, right? For a few days they’ll be peering out their windows at night, a little spooked and hopin’ they don’t come face-to-face with a bunch of little green men peering right back at’im, right?”

Hah! Little green men! Yeah. That’s funny, ’cause that’s exactly what Dad calls’em too. The little green men!”

“Your dad sounds like a very likable guy. A lot like myself. But OK, you know what?”

“Nope.”

“I just want to say thank-you very much for telling us what it was my buddy here saw last night, to put his mind at ease.”

“OK.”

“And whatta you, Jackie ol’ boy, have to say to our little friend here?”

“What? Oh! Yeah, thank you very much, son.”

“You’re welcome, Jackie.

“Thanks to you, kid, Ol’ Jackie here will be able to get some much-needed peaceful sleep tonight.”

“OK.”

“Now, one more last question before we go. OK?”

“Uhmmm, I guess…

“Your dad. How exactly does he make these UFOs anyway. Only asking because, being sorta like your dad, I’m thinking I might like to make one or two of these myself, you know?”

With straws!

Straws? Ummm, whattaya mean, straws?

Drinking straws. Plus his plastic bags. And a candle.”

Drinking straws? You mean like, plastic drinking straws? Really?

“Yep. We got a whole box of them.”

“Oh. OK. So that’s what he uses to make them. But, like, how does he… you know, put’em all together?

“Oh sure. He sticks the straws together, kinda like Tinker Toys. And next, he starts by building… well, what he calls ‘a cage’ with’em. It’s kinda like when we was puttin’ that box kite together we built last year.”

“Oh yeah. A box kite. Sure. That’d sorta explain why it might have that top-of-a-tower look about it. So, he’s using the straws he sticks together instead of, like, your kite’s… long, wooden sticks?”

“Yeah. ‘Cause they don’t weigh nothin’. Cause it’s gotta be like… light, you know? And then he bends the bottoms of the straws over into the middle. And tapes them all up with the candle, all together. Yuh, right in the middle.”

“Ah. The candle. Heat supply! And a.k.a., the flickering light, yes!”

“’Course, the last thing: he pulls the bag down over it.”

“Uhmmm… what kind of bag does he use, by the way.?”

“The bags his uniform comes in.”

“You mean… when he buys his uniforms, they come in a bag?”

“No. The plastic bag when it comes back from the cleaners. And that’s only his dress uniform. Mom washes all his regular uniforms.”

“Oh. I get it. You’re talking plastic dry cleaner bags. Right! They have no weight whatsoever.”

“Yup. That’s why.”

“OK, little man. I can’t tell you enough how helpful you’ve been. And I really apologize that we probably made you feel a little nervous at first, a coupla big adult guys like us just pulling up into your driveway and banging on the door like we did. Well… like he did,” I say, frowning at Jack. “But this whole evening’s been very… educational. For the both of us. But

“Oh well… it’s getting late, isn’t it. So, time to say adios, I guess. But I gotta tell ya son, and we both mean this: you… are one good man, Charlie Brown.”

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

A couple of minutes later we were tooling back down those pitch-dark, spooky, Deliverance roads, back toward our safe little-green men-free lives

But: an ‘interesting’ evening was had by all.

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Now, I don’t know if any of you’ve gathered this from many of my previous posts, but… I suspect there’s probably something… a little weird (?) about me here. Well OK, a lot of things. I mean, what better a ‘for instance’ than this? Go figure:

(A) I’d serendipitously been treated to a nice, late-evening, Unsolved Cosmic Mystery Ride in a Jeep— great entertainment;

(B) the mystery had been solved— Robert Stack, eat your heart out;

ROBERT STACK OF UNSOLVED MYSTERIES

(C) I’d gained yet one more “adventure” to write about in this blog;

and (D) Jack Rogers could now sleep soundly at night knowing that his world (and ours) was not under at least an immediate threat of an extraterrestrial invasion.

Quite a day, right? So, wouldn’t you think that would be enough? For anybody? Well surprise. It wasn’t. Not for me. Because I was one of those people for whom enough is never enough. Right. I guess you could say that maybe I… had a “problem?”

“(ahem) Hi. I’m Tom. And I’m a prankster…?”

Church basement Pranksters Anonymous Gathering responds (in unison): “Hi, Tom! So. Go ahead. Talk to us about your problem.

“OK. The first prank I remember pulling was the time I screwed the cover off a brand new, previously untouched jar of peanut butter, fresh from Ma’s grocery shopping. I was in fourth grade. You know how flawlessly smooth the peanut butter’s surface always is when you first get that cover off?

“Well guys, I don’t know what devil or demon must’ve whispered in my ear to get me to do this, but with the pointy end of a toothpick, I actually etched the following message into that smooth surface: “RAT POISON.”

Then not only did I screw the cap back on tight, but with a couple of Dad’s tools from his workroom, I managed to screw it on so tight that there would be no question whatsoever that the jar must’ve been tampered with before leaving the food processing plant.

“Hey, I don’t know why I did that. Bad genes, I suspect. Plus… I was only nine and I thought, you know, it’d be funny. And it was the 50s, right?

But oh, didn’t the family just go nuts over that one. Of course I obviously confessed to the crime before, you know, they called the police. Anyway, after the scalding scolding I got and everybody’d calmed back down, I realized I felt hungry. So I made myself a fluffernutter sandwich.

“No surprise: Harold and Maude has been one of my top ten favorite films ever since I first saw it.”

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With all that in mind, you should know that I came away from that flyjing saucer episode with Jack with what people colloquially call “a bee in my bonnet.” I came away from that episode with sugar plums of straws and plastic bags and candles dancing in my head. And I was chomping at the bit.

So I began chatting up my colleagues as to whether or not they happened to have any dry cleaning bags in their closets that they could part with. Didn’t actually tell’em why. Just that it was a project I was working on. And then (duh!) I checked my own closet, and it turned out there were a couple in there “protecting” sport jackets I hadn’t worn or even seen for a decade or more.

So: dry cleaning bags: check!

And of course the drinking straws and a candle? No problem. Grocery store: check! and check!

Oh yeah. I was locked and loaded!

But here’s the thing. In those days I was always more of a dreamer than a doer. Plus as I’ve attested in previous posts, laziness was definitely another one of my character flaws back then. So, as fun as the idea seemed (you know, to simulate a War of the Worlds attack on the population of Rumford, Maine), time just kept on slipping by. (yawn) And slipping by…

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But then eventually, it just so happened that Bruce (my kid brother, twelve years my junior) came to stay with us during a good part of the annual school summer vacation. Which put the onus on me to find something entertaining for us to do together.

One thing I came up with was taking him camping over night up in the woods in a place called Moody Mountain. I was in the Army National Guard at the time, so I raided the armory for the pup tent, canteens, and other supplies. That day or two remains in my memory as a fun, idyllic, little adventure.

That, plus having him stay at our house for an extended period of time gave me an opportunity to really bond with him. And I’m grateful to this day for that.

Anyway, later it dawned on me that Bruce would be a great partner in crime for my War of the World dream. I mean, he and I both were the biggest fans of the comical and popular late-night, radio-talk-show host, Jean Shepherd, who entertained his listening audiences throughout the 40’s, 50’s, 60’s, and 70’s with humorous and bizarre stories based on his own life.

JEAN SHEPHERD

(Now you may claim to not know who the heck Jean Shepherd was, but… I believe you do have a connection.

He’s the one who both wrote the story of that perennial favorite holiday movie, A Christmas Story, was based on, and performed the narrated voice-overs throughout the film. You know— that story of little Ralphie who nearly shot his eye out with his new Red Ryder BB gun. (Man, I can think of few fictional characters with whom I identify more than that kid.)

RALPHIE

But I only mention this because Bruce and I were both inspired by one particular episode from his radio show, set back in his college dormitory days. A bunch of the frat boys supposedly decided to prank New York City with a Halloween UFO scare. Here was their recipe for chaos:

(1) First collect some of those black, Glad, 39-gallon lawn and leaf bags and then, with scissors, cut some of the bags up into long strips

(2) With a flat iron set on a not-too-hot setting, hot-iron the strips together to eventually form a hot-air balloon ‘envelope’

(3) Fashion the plastic ‘sheets’ together as a ‘balloon,’ so that the balloon you’re making has an approximate golf-ball-size hole at the top and a softball-size one at the base

(4) Then with aluminum foil, fashion a little, light-weight, open-topped ‘tray’

(5) Attach the ‘tray’ to the base of the hot-air balloon

(6) Inflate the balloon with hot air from a hair dryer

(7) Push each inflated balloon outside your 15th-story dormitory room window and hold onto it

(8) Fill the tray with a generous measure of lighter fluid

(9) Ignite the lighter fluid, and let the balloon go!

Bombs Away!

Now Shepherd claimed that he and a bunch of other students (most likely drunken frat brothers) actually did this on one dark and windy Halloween night. Thus around the witching hour of midnight, several silent, evil-black ‘drones’ beset the city like a squadron of flying monkeys. And because it was a windy night, according to him the balloons were prone to swaying back and forth at times. And when this happened, some of the flaming lighter fluid sloshed out of the aluminum trays, dropping fiery driblets down toward the city below. Consequently, calls started coming into precinct headquarters from all over, with terrified citizens reporting dark UFOs shooting flaming death rays down upon the unprotected citizenry!

WAR OF THE WORLDS

A silly story to be sure, and very likely 95% exaggeration, but inspirational nonetheless…

So anyway, Bruce and I went to work. We had the bags, straws, and candle. And if I remember correctly, we were planning to use one of those tiny little birthday candles because of its weightlessness. And English-teacher-me thinking, How hard could it be to recreate the thing Jack Rogers had witnessed that night up in the sky?

So down we went to work on our knees on my living room floor.

OK. I challenge you, dear reader— just try to build yourself a usable, five-foot-high, cage-like framework out of drinking straws sometime. I mean without going mad. Surprise— straws are not like is Tinker Toys! Each one was virtually refusing to allow itself to be inserted into its fellow to form a longer strut. And we were probably going to need five or six five-foot-long or longer struts to build said frame, down over which we would then slip the dry cleaner bag. And oh yeah, if you do ever manage that, then try to figure out a way to bend all the bottom straw-ends into the center and… connect them in such a way, with tape perhaps, that an upright birthday candle can be mounted firmly there!

I was no engineer. And we had no manual, only that kid’s list of the main ‘ingredients’ his dad used, along with that inspirational Shepherd broadcast to go on. And me? I was that frickin’ useless English teacher!

Great Idea #1: never ask an English teacher for practical help. Unless it’s for something like diagramming a frickin’ sentence.

By the time I was just about ready to scream and give up…

I actually gave up. Well, I rationalized it in my mind thinking, We do have the bag. Maybe we should take a little break, run a test first, and check it for leaks or something…

At least that sounded do-able. So I confiscated Phyllis’ hair drier from the bathroom, plugged it in, and began inflating the bag. And up she ballooned, like a breaching Moby Dick bumping and nudging its head against the ceiling! The hair drier heat was so hot I worried that the sheer, cobwebby plastic would go all Hindenburg on me at any second. So I was quick to switch the dryer back off and then I tied a string around the bottom of the bag.

Now here’s the thing. A Chinese lantern (which is what, in reality, this contraption is technically classified as), is supposed to look like this:

or this:

Screenshot

Our “thing,” however, looked discouragingly like this:

So I had to come to terms with the facts. With my skills (diagramming sentences, etc.) this big bag of hot air was never going to get its upright candle secured firmly in place and, therefore, would never be visible if flown at night.

Disheartened, I threw in the towel. “To hell with it. Let’s just take her outside and fly her now. As is.”

The only thing was though, the balloon was not floating in either a vertical, or a horizontal, posture. It looked wounded, tilting up there against the ceiling at a 45 degree diagonal, like the minute-hand of a clock pointed at the ‘2.’ I felt it would look less embarrassing (heaven knew why) if it were at least to launch from my house floating straight up and down. So we needed some ballast, and for that we ended up hanging a small plastic sandwich bag of coins from her. Turned out a quarter, dime, nickel, and a couple of pennies were just heavy enough to keep her floating upright. Yup. 42 cents.

We opened her up for one last infusion of hot, hair-dryer air; cinched her back up once again, at the base; and escorted her outside. It was a perfect sunny, blue-sky day outside.

As soon as we let her go, it became immediately obvious that she was practically invisible, being of such gossamer, see-through material, but up she rose, as upright as a chimney., a shimmery gleaming thing in the sun. It looked at first like she’d be piercing the stratosphere in no time, but she leveled off in a minute and then was being carried by the wind toward downtown Rumford.

Bruce and I trotted along beneath her. We could see her up there because we knew right where to look, but it was doubtful that anyone else would be likely to. She was spectacularly unnoticeable. And then she started moving faster, so we had to keep up with a spirited jog. Eventually we were crossing the big bridge that leads over the Androscoggin River and into the downtown business section of Rumford.

The bridge actually had a lot ot traffic on it, pedestrian and four-wheeled traffic (unlike in this picture).

RUMFORD MEMORIAL BRIDGE

So what did we do? Why, we hitched our wagon to a fast-paced group of five or so walkers and theatrically (shamefully theatrically) began looking up! Pointing up! And loudly and inanely asking each, other back and forth, “What in the heck is that thing up there, in the sky” “My goodness! Gee, I dunno! Never saw anything like that! How ‘bout you?Et cetera…

But did anyone pay any attention to our not so well thought-out ‘dialogue?’ Did anyone else, besides us, even look to the sky for a single second in wonder? Catch even a frickin’ glimpse of our transparent, ridiculously invisible UFO?

Of course not. Not a one. They were all too wrapped up in their own, much more realistic and apparently more interesting, worlds and lively conversations to notice a couple of babbling crazies who didn’t seem to belong in that picture at all. Two guys who didn’t amount to much more than the shadowy flash of a transparent glitch in the matrix?

I mean… how rude!

So then we tried butterfly-netting the equally elusive attention of people passing by in the opposite direction, but it didn’t take long for us to realize that for some reason we we’d somehow become as transparent as that hot-air bag quickly dwindling in size as it continued its flight path following the river down below it.

No, it was just not in the cards for that day to be one wherein we were gonna get to garner even a minute of fame. It was a classic Wile E. Coyote failure.

So what could we do?

Well, all we ended up doing was leaning ourselves up against the concrete sidewalk guardrail to watch… what? Our Unidentified Flying Bag?

THE VERY TREES (LEFT) THAT RECEIVED THE “THING”
PLUS 42 CENTS

(Hmmm. Can something be said to be unidentified if absolutely no one ever saw it even? To you know, unidentify it?)

Anyway, we watched the deflating bag gradually banking to the left, heading for the taller shoreline trees. We watched it alight, like a faraway eagle, among the uppermost branches of one of the taller ones. And by squinting, we could actually make it out from time to time hanging up, way over there, especially when the breezes fluttered the bag because then it glinted in the sun.

What could you say but… oh well!

Except maybe “not with a bang but a whimper.”

Sometimes I imagine, hundreds of years from now, some extraterrestrial archeologist doing a dig along the sides of the mighty Androscoggin (who knows what its name might be then?) and becoming excited when they come across a tiny little pocket-lump of five ancient coins.

I hope they’ll still be in good shape.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

As always, I invite you to leave a comment below…

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RUMFORD ROSWELL???

BUT FIRST, A BLAST FROM THE PAST TO SET THE TONE…

CLICK TO PLAY…

Mid-September, 1977, the Teachers’ Lounge…

Three or four of us were hunched over the far end of the lunch table. We’d been poring over the daily newspaper. They’d been checking out the local area high school football scores. Me, not so much. But anyway, after I folded the paper back into its original shape and arrangement, and laid it back down, front-page-up, I spotted that same news article that had caught my attention earlier, back at home during breakfast.

Me: “You guys see this one?”

One of Them: “What’s that?

Me: “Steven Spielberg. Got a new flick coming out. Gotta say, I really like his stuff.”

One of Them: Shark boy? What’s this one gonna be about? Killer whales?

Me:UFOs.”

One of Them: Well, that’s stupid.

One of Them: Come on. Science Fiction? Really? That’s a ‘step down,” isn’t it?

Me: “Maybe. Maybe not. I mean, I just LOVED Duel. And… Sugarland Express was really good, too. The guy’s a movie maker’s movie maker.”

One of Them: “What’s it called?”

Me:Close Encounters of the Third Kind.

One of Them: “Well now, that’s a hell of a title. Wonder who came up with that clunker.”

Me: “It’s a technical Project Bluebook classification.”

One of Them: “Oh yeah? Well, of course… you’d know if anyone does.”

Me: “But here’s the thing.”

One of Them: “Yeah?”

Me: “Says that after this movie hits the screens, authorities’ phones all over will be ringing off the hook. UFO sightings’ll start going through the roof. A UFO movie like this, it says, could generate a lot of mass hysteria. You know, like everybody and his grandmother’ll probably start seeing ‘em and calling’em in.”

One of Them: “Hmm. No shit. Well, that’s all this country needs, isn’t it.”

One of Them: “Christ, I wouldn’t know who to call.”

Me: “Well, I mean, Jaws did that, sort of. I mean driving everybody nuts about sharks. Put the ol’ bullseye on’em, didn’t it. Put’em right on the ‘World’s Most Wanted List.’ Not Dead or Alive, either, just Dead. All sharks must die. They’re Public Enemy #1 right now, whereas before…”

One of Them: “Well… they are basically man-eaters, aren’t they.”

Me: “I know I’m in no hurry to go swimming in the ocean. But this article’s saying the movie’s basically about UFO abductions. So, maybe it’s Move Over Time for the sharks. Little green men are about to be climbing up the FBI’s Public Enemy List.”

One of Them: “Well. They sure as hell aren’t too likely to turn out like My Favorite Martian, are they.”

One of Them: “Christ, listen to yourself. They’re not likely to turn out to be anything, stupid.

Me: Hell though, I still remember the nightmares from when I watched The Man from Planet X at age seven.”

One of Them: “I mean, little green men? That’s rubbish.

One of Them: “You know, I wouldn’t mind seeing one of these UFOs your keep hearing about though. I just wouldn’t wanna meet the pilot and crew, is all.”

Me: Well, if quote-unquote “seeing” one of them does become all the rage, maybe you’ll see one too. Maybe we’ll all become victims of mass hysteria.”

One of Them: “Baloney!”

One of Them: Whatever.”

Now although the timing couldn’t possibly have been more flukey, it was at this exact point of this discussion that the door to the lounge swung open and in strode math teacher, Jack Rogers. We each greeted him with our routine “Hi, Jack,” and “Mornin’, Jack!”

Jack, not saying Good morning back, marched straight over to our little group, not bothering to set his brief case down, take off his jacket, sit down, or anything. And he had the look of someone who hadn’t slept at all last night. He also had the look of a man on a mission because there he was, just standing there before us, kinda dazed-looking and staring down on all of us with the look of someone who’d just swallowed a June bug.

Hey, guys,” he said, sounding like he was a little out of breath.

“So what’s up with you this morning,” someone asked.

“Jesus,” he said, shaking his head as if to clear away cobwebs. “Something happened last night.”

We waited. “O…kay?

AND…?

“This is gonna sound weird, but… OK, here goes. So I was driving back from Portland last night, taking a shortcut over some back roads, when I noticed something in the sky, up and off to my left. A dim, flickering light.”

Right there, we all made eye-contact with each other. Deadpan eye-contact. But with raised eyebrows.

“And it was moving. Slowly. In the same direction as me. It was dark out, but I could still make out the tree lines off away on the horizon, and this… light… whatever it was, was above those. The thing was less than a quarter mile off to my left, and probably up, I dunno, maybe about 400 feet.”

“You telling us what we think you’re telling us?”

Jack nodded. “It’s like… it was like one of those UFOs you hear ab…”

We erupted in a thunderclap of raw, involuntary laughter!

Which was pretty unfortunate, as Jack looked like he’d just been bitch-slapped! His cheeks burned a feverish pink. He was hurt, and angry. And who could blame him? And I know I immediately felt pretty bad about it. I think we all did. But I mean, come on, what were the odds?

{Just a couple of notes here: (1) “Jack” isn’t his real name of course, and (2) “Jack” hadn’t been diagnosed yet, but for quite some time he’d been exhibiting symptoms of sugar diabetes: a seemingly-forever constant thirst regardless of how much water he regularly consumed and (2) a very touchy disposition where he sometimes would lash out in anger at things that were irritating him.}

But before I could say, We’re so sorry, Jack, someone asked, “Did you by any chance read the paper this morning?”

No! I didn’t as a matter of fact, OK?! I mean, after last night... Iyou know what? I wasn’t exactly in the mood!”

Oh yeah. He was really pissed.

“See, all I was in the mood for this morning… was to come in here and… try to… I dunno… screw it… try to talk to you guys! And…”

“Hey listen,” I said, “we are so, so sorry. We weren’t laughing at you. See, we…”

“Oh. Really? Had me fooled!”

“No, I swear! It’s just this article in the newspaper this morning. Here. Read it. You won’t belie…”

“Excuse me if maybe I don’t wanna read it. That OK with you?!

“OK. That’s fair, Jack. But please. Just hear me out?”

I took his glaring silence as an OK. So I ran pell-mell through what the article had to say and asked him to try to imagine what the effect of his entrance, along with his so unfortunately coincidental… revelation, had had on us. “And I swear to God, Jack, if you had been in here… and in on this conversation and I, or any of us, had come walking in through that door and said exactly what you saidwell… think about it. How would you have reacted?”

His glaring silence persisted. I got it. The sting of anybody getting targeted as the subject of a chorus of belly-laughs, like that one, would linger. “OK, but please, Jack. Just know that we really weren’t laughing at you. We were just… reacting to the un-frickin-believable coincidence of the whole thing. I mean, c’mon, what were the odds, right?

He just said, “Hmmmm,” placed his briefcase down on the floor, hung up his coat, came back, and joined us at the table. “You guys can think what you want. But you weren’t there. And damn it, I know what I saw.”

“And I believe you. I’m sure we all do. People are seeing things like that all the time. Which is why they created Project Blue Book in the first place, to follow-up on the thousands of sightings. So please, I hope you can work on forgiving our unintentional… but still pretty rude and thoughtless reaction.”

Jack just nodded. But finally he said, “So, can I tell you about it then, or what?”

I said “Yes, of course!” and everybody chimed in on that sentiment. And somebody asked, “So what’d it look like?”

“Well, you see… that’s the thing. It wasn’t saucer-shaped. Or cigar-shaped either, like they usually say. This thing, well… it honestly looked like (and this is gonna sound weird, but it’s one of the things that makes this so perplexing for me) like the top of a tower. Only floating.”

We were all duly puzzled. “Wait a minute. Like… whattaya mean, a tower?

“I mean, you could see sort of a structure to it, even though the thing appeared kinda fuzzy for some reason. Sorta… shimmery. But I mean… so just try to imagine the top of a radio tower off in the distance, OK? Upright? Tapered at the top? Only this tower’s lower half was missing. And the thing was floating. It’s crazy I know.”

“Well, that is sort of hard to imagine”

“Well, not for me anymore. Hey, gimme that piece of paper over there. I’ll draw you a picture of it.” Jack plucked a pencil from off the lunch table and went to work. It didn’t take him long. And this is what he showed us:

The four of us pored over it. Someone said, “Shit, that don’t look like any normal ufo.”

“That’s what I was saying!”

And then, seemingly right out of the blue, the first bell was ringing and all of us had to haul ourselves out of our chairs, gather up our things, and head for our respective classrooms.

End of discussion.

But it had been an interesting morning, to say the least.

And I still felt bad for Jack.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

That Evening, 5:30-ish:

A cool autumn evening with the darkness threatening to settle in. We were seated around the dinner table, our family, partaking of the typical evening meal. Suddenly, a knock at the front door!

None of us was expecting anybody. “I’ll get it,” I said, rising from my chair and heading out through the living room.

I was totally surprised to find Jack standing on the other side of the screen door.

“Hey, Tom.”

Jack. Hi. This is a surprise. C’mon in.” I stepped aside and he stepped into the entryway.

“Who is it?” Phyllis calls from the kitchen.

“Jack. Jack Rogers!”

Oh.”

“What’s up, Jack? I couldn’t help but notice that he was appearing somewhat antsy.

“You busy right now? Or having dinner? I don’t wanna interrupt your meal.”

“No problem. Just finishing up. Maybe three or four French fries left. Why? You wanna talk, I take it?”

“Yeah that, plus I wanted to know if you’d be willing to take a ride with me.”

“A ride? What, right now? Where to?”

“Look,” he shrugs, “First, I apologize for how upset I got this morning, OK? But it’s just… this whole thing’s driving me crazy, alright? I mean, still.

“You don’t need to apologize. I…”

“But I know what I saw, OK!?”

“Sure. Look, I know you saw something… something unidentifiable. I don’t doubt that for a minute.

“Well, if you’d’a been there, you’d sure as hell’ve seen something too, damnit! And then…”

“I’m sure I would have. Look, Jack, I believe you, OK? I have no doubt in my mind you saw something, alright? Something weird. But listen, if anyone needs to apologize… well, it’s me. And I do. Again. And sincerely. I’m honestly sorry we all laughed. It was just… a gut reaction to the bad timing of that whole damn thing. I’m serious. Look, if you’d been in our shoes, you’d see that.”

“Yeah. So you guys all said. And yeah, I do get that now.”

“I hope so. It was just a bad… one hell of an unfortunate coincidence. I mean, there we were reading that very article, talking about it and everything… and in you come…”

“Yeah. OK. Whatever. I get it.

“It was like some slapstick scene right outta a sit-com, you know?”

“Yeah yeah yeah. So anyway… you got time to take a ride with me, or what? Right now? I just really need to go back there. And have a look. It’s driving me nuts!

“Well, sure. OK. I’m in. But honestly? You gotta realize that whatever it was you saw is more than unlikely to still be there. Right?”

“I know. Yeah. But I still wanna go out there. And just take a look-see. I just feel I gotta go back and… I dunno what!

Got it.”

“And I really just don’t wanna go by myself. Because on the off-chance there is something to see out there tonight, I don’t wanna be the only one. I want a witness.”

“OK, Jack. I mean this sounds like an adventure. I’ll get my jacket.”

As I lifted my jacket off the hook in the rear hallway, I stuck my head around the corner into the kitchen to say goodbye to Phyllis. “Remember I told you this morning, Jack told us he’d seen a ufo last night? Well… I’m going for a ride with him to check out the area. And who knows, maybe I’ll be abducted. Probably be back in an hour or so…”

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

It seriously did feel adventure-like to me though, cruising on a UFO quest through downtown Rumford in Jack’s Jeep with the doors removed and the cool, rushing air breezing all through the cab! There was something wild and crazy about it. And right up my alley.

Then the town limits were behind us and we were tooling out into the woods on back roads growing spookily darker by the mile, what with the leafy branches from both sides of the road entwining themselves together and forming a canopy of even greater darkness over our heads.

But it was invigorating to be outside. Certainly better than watching the 6:00 news on the living room sofa.

Jack was detouring circuitously around, so that we’d be traveling down the road in the same direction he’d been traveling the previous night. “I know we’re not gonna see anything,” he bemoaned. “But I’ve just gotta go back there and be sure. I just can’t stop thinking about it. All the time.

“Yeah. I get it. But it would be amazing, really too much to ask, to be treated to the same sighting two days and a row. Too good to be true, most likely. But I swear on a stack of Bibles, Jack, I totally believe you. Actually, I just wish I’d gotten to see it.

The whole thought of it felt pretty exciting, in a goose-bumpy sort of way.”

And soon we were rolling down the road in the exact area where he’d first noticed the thing in the sky. There were acres of flat fields of grasses on either side, checkered with bales of hay lying in loose rows.

“Yeah see, it was right up over there,” he told me, with an index finger pointing at the horizon off on one side of the road. “Just a damn, dim, flickering thing, crawling right along up there low in the sky in the same direction as me.

And see, that’s the thing too: what you so often hear about UFOs is that they’re usually bright, not dim. And strobing, not… just barely flickering. But it was weird just the same.”

We rode along for a minute or two in silence. You could now see some of the stars coming out, glinting overhead. But nothing other-worldly. Finally, I asked him, “So whattaya wanna do now? Throw in the towel, or wait awhile longer?”

“Not ready to throw in the towel just yet, even though I’m pretty much positive we’re never gonna see what I wanna see. It’s just that about a mile up ahead is the turn-off, where I had to go right to head home and the thing… just continuing heading off and away in a straight line. Last I saw of it anyway.”

It was a crossroads where Jack finally let us roll to a slow stop. “Yeah. This is it. Where I had to turn off.”

Whoa. You forgot to tell me there was a graveyard right here.” There actually was.

“Honestly, I never even noticed it myself. It was dark, and I was keeping my eyes glued to the sky.”

We climbed out of the Jeep, walked around to the front of it, and leisurely leaned our butts up against the grille and the front of the hood. The stars were pretty and bright. But the dim UFO was nowhere to be seen. “The graveyard’s kinda spooky though.”

“Hey. Sorry I dragged you all the way out here.”

“Not at all. It’s all good. I enjoyed the ride and the fresh air. So much more exhilarating than scoring the stack of essays I brought home with me this afternoon.”

“I just wish I knew something… anything I could do to get this… anxiety out of my head!”

“Well, I dunno if, or how, it might help, but see that big barn over there’s some guy over there leaning in under the hood of his pick-up. Working on his truck’s engine. We could just head over there and ask him if he saw anything last night. Worth a shot.”

That gave Jack a little boost. “Good idea. Let’s do that.”

A minute later we rolled up into the guy’s driveway and climbed out. Right away the guy looked up and started giving us the hairy eyeball. I didn’t blame him. Two guys pull up in my driveway that time of night way out in the willy-wags, I’d have felt very wary myself. Jack called out a friendly “Hello!

I noticed in the light hanging above him that the guy picked up what looked like a foot-and-a-half long wrench. He certainly didn’t look too happy to see us. “Whatta you two want?

“Sorry to bother you,” Jack said, “Just have a question. See, I was driving down this road here last night, ust about this time actually, and I happened to notice a… well, a dim, flickering light in the sky right up about there,” he said, pointing. “No idea what the darn thing was, but it was moving at a pretty good clip. It’s been driving me crazy ever since trying to figure out what it might have been though.”

The guy just stood there staring at us, stock-still by the open hood of the truck, silent, waiting. For more of the story maybe? Jack went on.

“So I was just wondering. If you saw anything like that. Last night? Or any night, for that matter.”

The guy didn’t seem to like that question. “That, Mister,” he said, “is none of my business!

I felt Jack’s body stiffen, saw his face flash to anger! This morning he’d suffered the indignity of being laughed at by his peers in the faculty lounge. And his day apparently hadn’t been going so well since then.

What did you just say to me?!

Oh great— those were fighting words.

“I think you heard me,” the man snapped back.

For a second, I don’t know why, but I felt sure Jack was going to try to jump the guy. The guy with the big steel wrench. In my mind I could imagine hearing a couple of duelling banjos starting to pick out “Yankee Doodle.”

“Take it easy, Jackie. Please. And… time to go., right? Let’s just get outta here…”

Hey, you! All I did was ask you a simple, friendly question. A simple yes, or no question! And You? You…”

“Jackie! Come on!” I urged. “Let’s go!

OK,” said the Man with the Wrench. “Let me point you in the direction of somebody you should be asking that question! All right? Now, you see that white farmhouse right down that road there?” He nodded toward it, over his shoulder. “Next one down? They’re the ones you need to ask! Not me or anybody else. Because. As. I. Said. It’s none of my business.”

“So… let’s go. Let’s go do what the man said, OK Jackie?”

Jesus!” Jack growled. But he did back away and, thank God, slammed himself back into the Jeep.

But… I was wondering, what in the hell is going on here? What were we getting ourselves into? And more than that even, Did I really know anything at all about Jack? “You know…” I told him as we went barreling down the little dirt road spitting rocks out from under the tires toward the white farmstead, “we really don’t have to go to this place, though, do we?”

I never got an answer.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

In no time, we had mounted the little front porch of the main house, and Jack was banging his fist on the front door. He’d begun with a knock, but since we could see some of the windows were blazing with light while no one was deigning to answer the door, he’d started banging on it.

After a while, the door cracked open a little. A crack no more than five inches wide. And peeking out through the crack was a nervous little boy’s face. A boy maybe four feet tall, plus or minus.

Hello?” he asked.

“Hi,” Jack replied. “Could I speak with one, or both, of your parents please?”

The door opened to about a foot wide now. Swallowing noticeably, the boy said, “Uhhmm, they’re not home right now.”

“Oh. OK then, I guess I’ll hafta talk to you. So anyway… last night I was driving down the road back there and I saw something up in the sky. I guess I’ll hafta call it a unidentified flying object since I sure as hell couldn’t identify whatever the hell it was. You ever see one of those around here, up in the air at night?”

No sir. Never.”

“It was giving off a flickering light and it was moving, traveling, right in the same direction as me… and it’s been driving me crazy ever since because… all I wanna know is what the hell it was. OK? Because it was disturbing, you know? And then, on top of that, this guy and me here? We just stopped up the road at your not-too-friendly neighbors’ place and asked him the same question. And you know what? He got all pissed off and said if I wanted to know what it was, I should come over here and ask you folks. So. OK. Here I am. And I’m asking. What exactly was it I saw last night, Huh?”

It took a moment before the boy, looking down at his toes, pretty much whispered a meek, “I don’t know.”

Once again I sensed Jack doing a double-take. “Well, I’m sorry, kid. But I think you do know. And I can’t imagine why you would, but I think you’re lying to me. Because that guy back there, your Mister Greenjeans from hell? Hesaid you people would have the answer!”

“Jackie, would you please take it easy? You’re scaring the kid. Cmon. Let’s go home.”

“Well, I wouldn’t be sounding so scary, kid, if you’d just own up to whatever this is, all right? I mean I didn’t drive all the way out here just to be lied to. OK? So let’s have it. What was it I saw last night?! What’s going on here?”

Silence.

Well? I want an answer.”

The boy looked at him with imploring eyes, and then his gaze dropped back down to the toes of his shoes again. And then, in the saddest, softest little voice you could ever imagine, confessed.

Uhmmm… we’re not allowed to talk about it…”

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

You’ve just finished reading my true story, “Rumford Roswell Part I.” Part II will be following close on the heels of this one. Watch for it to find out about The Aftermath of Part I.

In the meantime, below is a little smile for you in the form of a short little YouTube video. Enjoy.

Please feel free to leave me a comment, below, if the spirit moves you.

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