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    The Pancake That Saved Silicon Valley and other NaPoWriMo Poems 2013

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      in 1975, 1976, 1977

      How can that be conjured

      in a different time,

      another place

      Like all I’d need to do is close my eyes

      and be there

      Late afternoon or evening sun acts like a time machine

      and once again

      I’m ten years old

      without a care in the world

      Juror #18

      I had never been called to serve before

      I had no idea what to expect.

      As it turned out, taking public transport was the best part.

      The rest of the day leaves me feeling weary.

      But not as worn as juror #18.

      She was pregnant,

      what she told the judge as soon as she could. But he paid no attention;

      she was jury fodder

      like the rest of us.

      “Do you think severe morning sickness

      cramps and bleeding would preclude you from serving?”

      Was he serious, I wondered.

      Why didn’t he just let that woman leave?

      More questions, defense and prosecution,

      more blah blah blah.

      More blah blah blah than I could ever shake a stick at,

      then juror #18 asked permission to be excused

      to the restroom.

      She didn’t make it,

      getting sick, on her knees,

      into a waste can

      three feet from where I sat.

      Then she was excused, but it was too late.

      She shouldn’t have been there in the first place.

      My previous view of the criminal justice system was average;

      checks, balances, etc etc etc.

      But I am a person,

      not jury fodder.

      That woman

      with life inside her

      wasn’t given the courtesy the defendant was shown.

      (And let’s not forget how many people were late, coming back from a two-hour lunch.)

      This is a rant, at the end of a long day.

      Juror #18 was excused, so was I.

      But I won’t forget her anytime soon.

      We Call Her Gracie

      For that’s her name;

      Gracie Allen rose.

      Rose isn’t capitalized

      as it’s not actually part of her name.

      But a flower by another

      could be misconstrued

      as a daisy, a carnation, a lily.

      However besides being a deceased entertainer

      and wife to the late George Burns

      Gracie Allen

      is also the name of one of the roses

      in our backyard.

      The others don’t have monikers

      but they have histories –

      two came with the house,

      one of which was transplanted

      (and survived)

      in order for an A/C unit to be installed.

      Four in the front yard sort of came together,

      two fragrant

      two not.

      White and red, yellow and red

      all beautiful.

      Something special about roses

      whether they grow as if long-stemmed

      (red fragrant)

      or prolific and odorless (the other red which

      lives near the garage, surrounded by

      golden California poppies).

      Gracie is a cluster rose, with petite

      blooms and a scent to die for.

      Swirls of yellow and red

      make her one of the prettiest around.

      She lives near a short peach tree

      and another tall rose bush

      sporting singular buds that will be a

      peachy-pink when open.

      (But that has nothing to with the

      neighboring peach tree.)

      Another bush sits a few feet away;

      it’s also pink, smells nice.

      On the other side of the yard

      grows a wild cluster rose

      fighting geraniums for attention.

      It offers a plethora of blooms,

      as if wanting to be noticed

      so far away from the rest.

      But I always come back to Gracie

      for that lovely name

      her spectacular colours

      but mostly her charming personality

      which is a blend of scent, hue,

      bloom potential, and shape of flower.

      She’s not tall,

      will probably be overshadowed by the

      peach tree one day.

      Yet she’s sweet,

      unassuming,

      willing to proffer some of the loveliest roses

      I’ve ever seen.

      I never enjoyed Burns & Allen

      but for as much as George loved his Gracie

      I adore mine.

      The Pancake That Saved Silicon Valley

      As soon as she saw the first special of the day

      she knew something was coming.

      A little bit of nirvana

      she smiled to her husband –

      graham cracker chocolate chip pancakes

      with fresh strawberries.

      “Oh my goodness

      I know what I’m having for breakfast.”

      They sat,

      the place deserted

      but then it was 6.25 in the morning

      Sunday morning.

      They had gotten up late

      for them

      yet it was still early enough

      that only Melissa the waitress

      and Robert the cook/owner

      and his staff

      were present.

      And a husband and wife

      who inadvertently

      saved the entirety of Silicon Valley

      on that particular Sunday morning.

      They sat down, chuckling

      as Melissa didn’t bother with menus –

      the wife would have a half-order

      two pancakes instead of three

      while the husband had most of his usual:

      two eggs over easy

      extra grilled onions

      over cottage potatoes

      and wheat toast

      but no bacon.

      The other oddity

      was that he ordered a hot chocolate.

      He never had anything to drink

      but water

      while his wife asked for a double latte

      when normally she had a single.

      One might assume it was those

      out of the ordinary beverages that altered

      events.

      But they were just red herrings.

      It was the pancake,

      one pancake,

      as the wife only ever ate one.

      Two would have been too much,

      and besides, there was always their sleeping youngest daughter

      who might want it.

      Maybe, but if not, the wife

      would eat it later

      perhaps during the Giants-Padres

      game that wouldn’t have taken

      place if not for the one

      pancake that was devoured.

      One little, well, not so little,

      but in the grand scheme it was

      a pretty darn innocuous

      pancake; one pancake would

      rise above all else,

      and rescue a whole valley.

      But first, let us examine the pancake –

      it was the top pancake

      of course,

      with syrup and butter on the side.

      But the wife never employed

      those extras.

      “They’d overwhelm the chocolate,”

      she told her husband

      as Sandra the other early Sunday morning waitress arrived,

      wishing them a good morning.

      The pancake was topped with sliced fresh

      and otherwise unadulterated strawberries

      that were festooned with chocola
    te chips

      melting from the heat of the pancake.

      Chocolate chips swirled within

      the pancake, mostly settling in the center

      which had turned into a gooey but delicious

      mess by the time the wife had worked her way

      to that part of it.

      She compared that pancake to the other breakfast highlight of her life,

      two Christmas Eves ago

      at that same café;

      chocolate chip pancakes

      topped with crushed red and green candy canes.

      She liked a little carbohydrate with her sugar

      on Sunday mornings,

      she joked to the

      older man who joined them,

      the only ones besides Melissa, Robert and his crew,

      and Sandra.

      They were the only witnesses to

      the pancake that saved Silicon Valley.

      Once breakfast was eaten,

      conversations shared,

      coffee and cocoa sipped,

      the husband paid the check,

      left a tip,

      good Sunday morning to all exchanged.

      The extra pancake,

      which later served its purpose,

      was tucked into a large styrofoam box,

      held by the wife

      as the husband drove them home.

      They didn’t live near the café, which was

      nestled in the beginnings of the Santa Cruz Mountains,

      but still at the bottom of the valley.

      It was there the trouble started,

      a rogue car blocking both lanes

      of Highway 17

      before it turned into Interstate 880.

      Yet, as it was still early,

      barely seven a.m.,

      the couple’s vehicle was the only other car on the road.

      No one sat in the parked average-looking sedan,

      the driver’s door opened,

      the engine running.

      Smoke billowed from under

      the hood,

      wafting into the crisp morning air.

      “Well, what now?”

      the wife asked,

      strangely not worried.

      She was running on heavenly pancake fuel;

      only their own car suffering a flat

      might have bothered her, just for the nuisance of

      having to change the tire.

      Her husband rolled down his window,

      for reasons still unknown.

      “Layla” boomed from the stopped car,

      the guitar-driven intro

      as if the song had just begun.

      That set the tone,

      as a catastrophe in the making unfolded.

      Now usually the wife would be prone to

      rolling her eyes

      shaking her head

      shrugging.

      She wasn’t the most patient person,

      well, she could be,

      but she didn’t easily suffer fools.

      Yet the pancake had been so tasty,

      satisfying,

      perfect actually.

      If not for that chocolate chip strawberry pancake

      percolating not only in her tummy

      but easing its happy way through veins and arteries

      the day would have been very, very different.

      Unknown to the couple

      and everyone else on the planet,

      aliens had picked that morning

      to tease humanity

      choosing Silicon Valley

      for its wide variety of inhabitants

      and its technological pulse.

      The North Koreans might think they were in charge

      but the aliens hovering over the southern tip of the

      San Francisco Bay Area

      could have obliterated all of North Korea

      with little more than a blink of their eyes

      if they had eyes.

      Instead their focus was the very southern

      edge of the most

      advanced collection

      of persons

      and hardware

      on all of Earth.

      Weapons were superfluous;

      The future was all about innovation.

      Yet, the aliens had no way to measure

      the power of chocolate

      and fresh strawberries

      shared in a quiet, favored

      location

      with an additional dose of milky caffeine.

      Even more unrealized

      was the capacity

      for good

      endowed upon one woman’s

      often cynical heart.

      “Stop the car,” the wife said.

      “We are stopped,” her husband sighed.

      “No,” she grinned,

      over which the aliens took note.

      “Kill the engine.”

      “What? Are you serious?

      This could be…”

      A litany of disasters filled the car,

      but the wife gently shook her head.

      The aliens paid attention to that too,

      surprised at her willingness to investigate

      a situation destined to stir a small initial panic

      that would insidiously infect

      the entirety

      of the most plugged-in

      segment of human society.

      New Yorkers or Los Angelinos

      or Tokyo residents

      might assume they owned that title.

      But it was here

      in Silicon Valley

      where social media

      and a well-cultured

      yet fully exploitable

      techie indifference reigned.

      The wife got out of the car,

      then looked back at her husband,

      who gripped the steering wheel.

      Her extra pancake,

      like insurance, rested safely inside

      styrofoam

      on the car’s dashboard.

      Then she faced the stalled but still running vehicle,

      Eric Clapton’s aching voice

      pouring from the driver’s open door.

      “Anyone there?” she called,

      pleasing the aliens.

      She assumed someone was in the car,

      waiting to strike,

      to attack, to…

      “Layla,” she sang,

      taking the aliens’ attention from their

      nefarious machinations.

      In the realm of space,

      their ploy would later be tried

      by a court of other life forms.

      But at that moment,

      no one in the galaxy had noticed their deeds,

      which in the grand scheme

      wasn’t more than illicit graffiti sprayed on freeway signs.

      The wife trilled along with Clapton

      as if she was alone in the world,

      unafraid and enthralled.

      The aliens weren’t at all prepared

      for her boldness in the face of potential and unforeseen tragedy

      nor the beauty and strength of her voice.

      “Layla,” she continued,

      along with Derek and the Dominoes, as she fearlessly approached

      the car,

      smoke still rising from its purring engine.

      In later space-court testimony,

      the aliens’ appointed attorney claimed his clients were only looking to test

      humanity,

      and merely one small section of it.

      Grand-scale warfare hadn’t been their goal;

      although if their strategy had been executed properly,

      the prosecuting lawyer rebutted,

      over two million people would have been killed,

      half of those in San Jose alone.

      As these facts were presented to the jury

      the aliens squirmed in their chairs,

      their faces, or what sufficed as faces,

      pointed toward the floor.

    &nb
    sp; “If not for the actions

      or more correctly the reaction

      of one female

      an entire region of

      humans

      would have been obliterated.”

      The prosecutor

      then faced

      the defendants,

      offering a nasty glare

      which the jury and judge

      could not see.

      Then the prosecutor looked at the judge;

      “If not for her calm,

      albeit chocolate chip pancake

      With…” The prosecutor retrieved his notes.

      “With,” he said forcefully,

      “fresh and unsweetened strawberries,

      death and wanton destruction

      would have engulfed the most

      technologically savvy spot on Earth.”

      Some in the gallery sniggered,

      mumbling to themselves:

      Some techie hub my ass.

      Others chanted Lay-la, Lay-la

      or Clapton is God.

      The presiding judge banged her gavel:

      “Order in the court!”

      All quieted, eyes on the defendants

      who like the jurors

      and the lawyers

      and the judge

      could not believe

      how utter mayhem

      had been thwarted

      by the simple joy

      produced by a single

      chocolate chip pancake

      laced with strawberries

      no butter or syrup involved.

      Attorneys for both sides

      proffered their closing arguments –

      the defense claimed their clients

      had eaten too many intergalactic Twinkies

      and weren’t in charge of their faculties.

      The prosecutor reminded jurors

      how the woman, fueled on human consumable bliss,

      had confidently walked to the open driver’s door,

      singing “Layla” in a loud voice

      then turned off the car,

      silencing the music

      but not herself.

      She continued singing,

      the lawyer said,

      with no musical accompaniment

      as if to God himself,

      alerting space authorities

      attending to a disturbance on Mars.

      As the woman stepped away from the still-smoking sedan,

      galactic cops far overhead

      surrounded the aliens’ craft,

      severing their connection to the vehicle blocking the road.

      To the wife’s, her husband’s, and those in a few SUVs

      idling behind the couple’s car

      total surprise

      the wayward vehicle became elevated, drifting from the freeway

      into the sky, then

      disappearing from view.

      The woman stood motionless for only seconds

      then glanced at her own car,

      noting the styrofoam container on the dashboard.

      “What in the hell was in that pancake?”

      she said aloud, smiling as she walked back to where

      her husband

      and others

      were waiting

      wondering if what they had witnessed was real.

      The jury deliberated for less than ten minutes.

      Guilty, the judge pronounced

      as the charged aliens sighed,

      led away from the courtroom to a chorus of jeers

      and a few lingering shouts of

      Clapton is God.

      Meanwhile, back in Silicon Valley,

      in the bottom of the fourth inning,

      the Giants at bat,

      the wife removed that extra pancake from

      the toaster oven.

     

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