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A Cord is Made of Lesser Strings
The storm surge has brought a strong tide in. Out on the beach, men scurry between the
interlaced, lapping waves to gather tools and get out fastseveral thousand dollars worth of
equipment will be left behind. Relentless. The ocean crashes indifferently onto the same old
sand; a work crews scattered tools mean nothing to it. In the summer, thousands of absent-
minded beachgoers lose towels, coolers, sun block and other items, simply by not paying
attention to the slow creep of the tide. In the middle of winter, the sea is just as sleek, just a fast
and even more unstoppable. Steel is the color of the winter Atlantic, though it cannot be welded,
and will not molten, it has a cold bite that cares not for the softness of skin. Like a knife edge, the
nearly constant offshore breeze flays exposed parts and shivers the human core. Modern building
systems have virtually eliminated the effect of winter's chill on the materials, but the menas
they rush about desperate to avoid drenched feetfeel it as an omnipresent fiend, gnashing.
Before the new construction on Hampton Beach began, there stood an iconic 1960's glass
and steel hat-shell. The eye sorewhich was surely admired at its inceptionshowed as many
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marks and stains from the forty-eight winters as it did beatings and scarring from the inhabitants
of nearly fifty summers. During all those years a concrete patio yawned before the structure; now
a mosaic of shifted and uneven slabs and broken, patched and repaired sections. The old
bathrooms which flanked to the left and right were in at least as poor a shape, with cracked
fixtures, inoperable sinks and sand drains long since clogged and rendered useless by the erratic,
extreme high tides that are known to strike the region at or near the full moon. The weather-worn
benches have seen it allsplintered babies, lost children, young lovers and old sweethearts alike
and they may yet again; they were all stacked up and carried off just before demolition began.
Countless folk acts, community player groups and local bands have stood and sweated (or
shivered) in the ever-changingand often inhospitableNew Hampshire coastal weather. All
that is left behind now are a few snarled and tangled piles of iron rebar, and untold scrapbooks
full of days at the beach.
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A bright future is forecast for the region, $14 million in state-of-the-art bathrooms,
geometric shade structures and a new stage areareplete with post and beam timbers, and sonic
bafflesis slowly emerging from the sand. All of the new structures are bolted, welded or
otherwise affixed to massive corrugated steel pilings which have been driven 30 feet below frost
line into the ground. All materials are hurricane rated and all buildings are secured structurally
by two unrelated systems. All wood framing is nailed, but it is also drawn together with thick
steel bands across the top plates, unifying one floor to the next as the building rises. Because the
project is government funded there is an insistence on permanence about each phase of the
project. Every thing is checked and double checkedand more often than not, changed in some
mannerbefore being signed off by state inspectors. Though this attention to detail is surely
meant to benefit the end consumer, it has had a grinding effect on the workers. Each
subcontractor has been whittled down to minimal profits by an unending series of extras and
change orders; prevailing moods of misery accompany each of them in their daily tasks. $14
million may sound like a huge budget for a handful of buildings, but frankly, Harvey
Construction, the general contractor, is reporting $1 million dollars over budget and four solid
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months behind schedule.
http://nhunderground.com/forum/index.php?topic=15563.0
Current observation of New Hampshire Division of Parks and Recreations website
would indicate a steady, optimistic reporting of success on the project. The captions indicate a
subtle, effervescent excitement about the whole undertaking. Though plagued with legitimate
weather delays, and a job-site super who appears to know little of logistical coordination, the
weekly posts seem to be subject to a yawning chasm fixed between where the project is, and
where it is supposed to be. Among the crews, constant streams of changes and altered conditions
have made the dash to completion less a hearty workout, and more a game of survivallike
running in thirteen inches of tidewater. There are explicable reasons for all plan shifts, and a
reasonably objective representative from the builders office could sit down and clarify the cause
for months of delay. Were such a man appointed, and had he they spent months on the ground
taking each issue head-on, a report might have surfacedbut there has been no such agent.
Reasons have become speculative, bordering on mythical. Here on the shore there is only the
building manager and scores of subcontractor supervisors who know the issues lie somewhere
outside of their purview yet still, somehow, fall squarely upon their watch.
All this money and mystery and manpower aside, there has to be some justification for
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the expense. One theory driving the revitalization project is a claim that the new sub-floor heated
year-round bathrooms will draw a larger winter tourist presence, who are in turn expected to
contribute in a small way by stimulating the overall projected revenues for the region. A less
optimistic counter claim warns that the winter population in the popular summer destination is
reflective of a seedier element than mere 'tourists', and that drug use and crime statistics shoot up
each winter in direct proportion to the presence of some of these seasonal miscreants. Vacation
home rent prices the Hampton Beach seaboard dive significantly during off season, and a whole
sub-culture of opportunists occupy dwellings that go for as much a $3000.00 a weekduring the
eight prime summer weeksfor $600 or less a month. This poorer class is responsible for nearly
all of the crime, drug trafficking and prostitution which keeps the local law enforcement just as
busy 10 months of the year as during the prime summer months. A winter observer would note
the slow shuffle and downcast looks of the off-season occupants, they move slow, but steadily up
and down the drag, making connections, collecting who knows what packages and always
peering into parked cars and eying delivery trucks with quick, subtle glances.
A provocative study could certainly be made showing the winter populace as part of an
overall economic cycle of highs and lows. During the construction timeframe, an additional
element contributes to the local cash flow. As diverse as the beach-goers, who return year after
year to enjoy, relax and spend cash, are the construction men of this dynamic winter project.
Their faces are no less tan (or wind burned, it is hard to say which...), their language no less
coarse, and the only thing missing are the shrill cries of the childrenyet with food scarce and
wind quick to cover with sand and snow what meager supply remains, the gulls of the region fill
in for children's thrilled voices. The men move, bodies slant to the wind with steady methodical
steps in the pursuit of individual goals. They are heavy laden, but relentless, as they pick away at
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the work which, along with accompanying deadlines, looms over them all. The project managers
lay low, showing face only on alternate Tuesdays. It is on these dread days, that every one is
suddenly on edge. Cost containment reps scour the project looking for safety offenses, and think
nothing of the result of cutting a cord they deem unfit, right on the spotoften while still
plugged in. It is said that these days of scrutiny are far more tiresome than the grueling rest of the
month and it is unnecessary to even mention how the already low profits only plummet in the
face of such subjective and arbitrary inspectors. With budgets draining, and poor weather
threatening each week the men just keep on workingits a wonder they do, a wonder and a
tribute to the common mans need to survive.
The backbone of any commercial construction job has always been the framing crews.
These are the guys who make what the blueprints say should happen, happen. They stay with the
project, in greater and lesser numbers, from start to finish and are definitely considered the
problem solvers. Whenever a detail is not specifically shown on the prints, the framers fill in
where the architect falls short. These men have the ability to 'see' the structure laid out and plum
before them, months before the first wall is raised. Of particular frustration to them are
discrepancies between the structural architecture and the finished project blueprints. When these
two signed, authenticated sets of plans do not agree, a value judgment must be made. The head
framer must weigh what he knows intuitively against what the plans indicate. It is no crap shoot,
and all decisions still must be articulated and approved, but just as in tense chess matches, setting
up the background to justify a certain move is the name of the persuasion game. A convincing
argument or intense debate is nothing without a series of carefully laid, preparatory steps in place
providing the underpinnings necessary to actually make the logical change. The head framer
knows how to emphasize and superimpose, and carries the whole match often on his own
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shoulders. This kind of real-world pressure forges a peculiar mannot a loner, but a lone
visionary who needs a crew of believing craftsmen who will jump precisely to the level needed
on demand. This symbiotic relation defies what popular pick-up truck television commercials
indicate a solitary foreman should be, the truth is, the head framer and his crew need each other
to survive.
The waves, slowly lapping the winter sands do not bring to mind images of sunbathers,
gull's swooping cries or salty wet fun; they send instead a chill, a deep, chiseled chill, down the
length of the spine. The gray expanse, slivered with sharp stabs of whitecaps speaks of
endurance and element and raw, cold flesh. Inhospitable is a word, and primal another, but
neither quite carry the scene as captured in the faces of the bold souls who daily meet on
Hampton Beach to raise a summer temple from the cold winter sands.
The men gather anytime from dawn on, bodies clad in every conceivable garb, from full
work suits, padded and double zippered, to Carhartts and long-johns three layers deep. Head gear
is as individual as bathing suits will be here in six monthssome with masks, nostrils steaming,
others with drawn clenched faces squinting to the weather. The hard-hat requirement on the New
Hampshire State Parks building project levels the men to a degree, but a close look shows even
these are emblazoned with unique stickers, scars and distinctive cants and tilts as each man
strives to position the heavy device to best suit his need.
Out of a road-salt dusted Ford of unidentifiable base color, steps a rugged pillar of a man,
he turns to the sea as if in acknowledgment of a peer, and then rolls in a forthright canter toward
the tool corral. Men passing nod curtly, and give way; the purposeful stride of a leader is
unmistakable. His gear is plaina tight woven poly turtleneck, over shirt and insulated jeans
but his shoes seem out of place on this wind-whipped project. While most plod along in heavy,
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waterproof boots, this man steps surely in what resemble simple, low-cut bowling shoes. They
speak of a confidence and a precise awareness of hazard.
John Bonden is one of those rare men who naturally draws others to him. He shares his
views with a quiet certitude and nods along agreeably when others speak. A builder by trade and
in more ways than one John constructs direct, effective working relationships with the grace of
any architect. Whether a man shares Johns manual skills or is in the act of reaching for them, his
precise direction backed by deep azure eyes encourages and plants within those nearby a quiet
yearning to set the bar a little higher.
Whether they be scars or wrinkles that cut his ruddy, wind-burned face is not clear, but
the cocky smirkwhich always gives way to a sturdy smilecommingles with the lines and
projects an earnestness that stands in sharp relief next to other tradesmen. John is a man's man,
and as such gathers those around him at a metaphysical level, especially at break-time.
Each morning at 9:30 a.m., give or take (usually take, as much as a half-hour) John calls
his crew together for break. A ritual in the trades, morning coffee is at once a political poke-fest,
a muscle-car review, and a great rank-leveling contest to see who can tell the funniest story or
joke. Perhaps the original setting for "shuck and jive", these twenty-minutes are all John has to
set his agenda out there: It is time for a revolution. Radical notions and an acrid detest for
politicians pepper his daily rebuke of all things Washington. On a given day, he will quietly ask
any one in earshot if they are ready for the revolution? For all the confidence and command he
wields as head framer, John shies from a leading role in the movement as he calls it, preferring
instead to join the throng once events are set into motion elsewhere. Dead of winter is no time
for recruitment anyway, an audience in the area of Hampton Beach mid-winter is as fleeting as a
lull in the breeze. For the bulk of these hard winter months, crewmen break in their own cars
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and trucks, and conversation is limited to the check out line at the corner store. Occasionally, an
exception arises:
The two brothers, who generally take lunch break separately, sit looking out at nothing in
particular from the front seat of Charlie's car. Beyond the windshield and between two huge
mounds of plowed snow, the restless ocean bastes the sands. Rhythm. Their conversation skips
like a stone across the surface of timetime only shared due to John being a little short on cash
and Charlie buyingand comes to rest on the usual topic:
"I remember when Dad took us up Copper Mountain so he could run," Charlie says, eyes
dead ahead.
"There was that sharp turn in the road where crazies when Para-sailing, er..." his voice
fades as he searches for the word 'hang-gliding', but misses.
"I remember when I tried to drive up to the peak...the road went straight, but I kept
driving sideways." John adds, a smile growing..."Dad came running towards me with his eyes
bugging right out of his head. John swings his long arms up, ten cupped fingers stopping a
whiskers breadth from his own eyespulsing.
"A lot of people drove off that curve." Charlie leans his head against a curl of knuckles,
pauses and exhales softly, "only the sober ones diedthey tightened up all their muscles, and the
fall broke every bone in their body the drunk ones always survived..." tapering off, he leans
heavier on the knuckles, sliding down into the driver's seat. "One guy went straight off, not over,
but offthe mountainsidestraight into the bluedidn't find him for days 'cause of how far off
the road he landed. Nobody knew he was gone."
Yeah, Wyoming was wild, John nods, Charlie grunts in agreement.
The two brothers gaze continues to pass beyond the windshield, but never crosses. Nor
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does either approach an invisible center line directly between them, in the silence each wrestles
with his own interpretation of the memories. John, an avid motorbike racer, probably reliving the
hair-raising experience of barely staying on the steep mountain road, while Charlie has likely
broken free of earth's grip and is just hanging there, waiting for her gravity to command him
back down in a mangled fiery heap.
Outside, wave after wave raise their fists and smash the cold winter beach, splintering
shells and idly tossing hundred-pound clumps of knotted-wrack far up on the sands. No matter
how hard the sands are struck, they absorb the shock indifferently and are changed little. In the
final minutes of break, the two aging men complain about wet feet, the weather and the job-site
super who has what they call "short mans" diseasethings upon which they both safely agree.
With them it's all or nothing.
Back at work John steps back into his role as leader, even though he is 4 years younger,
and Charlie withdraws into precision assemblydissatisfied with everything from the sharpness
of his saw blade to the work of those who came before. The work he does is excellent, yet his
unwillingness to compromise on quality has been a bone of contention for long enough, that John
simply plods on, differently conscientioushe answers to Rodney, the owner of the company
and the younger brother to them both. Watching Charlie form, measure, cut and fit materials
together is truly a marriage of skill and will, but John is looking for a one-night standthe
quality level for work on this project lies somewhere in between.
Three years ago, when John crashed his motorcycle on the speed track, he just wanted the
bones in his face put back together. Today, as the wind chill is reading 17 degrees below zero,
each tiny titanium filament carefully laid into his cheekbones screams as it seeksby its nature
as a conductive metalto equalize the outside temperature, with Johns fiery inner heat. The
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resulting display rivals any found in nature. Redness consumes the bottom half of Johns rugged
face that befits a rage, yet when blended with his beaming, blue eyes strikes a balance of burning
passion and perfectly controlled will. Although he complains of the frigid ache, he knows that
his posture and diligence under these conditions inspires those around him. Even Charlie, who is
often first to take break and last to return, admits John is the man for this job.
Charlie Bonden would give anyone the shirt right off his back. Any one that is, except his
stepson, Nigel. Two years ago, Charlie's world was flipped irreversibly on its head when this
selfish and slack-minded 32-year old methodically lured his 13-year old niece (John's third
daughter) into sexual submission. The first trial was beleaguered and ended in a mistrial due to
some incompetent evidence handling and strong pressure for the girl not to testifypressure
applied directly from Charlie's then wife, Sarah. The tension at the first trial was exemplified by
the distance between Charlie and Sarah's seats. He stood by his brother John, and Johns
daughter. She stayed defiantly, behind the son of her first marriagea son conceived under
circumstances similar to the ones being laid before them in court on this occasion.
Torn by this inconceivable pressure, their strong and loving marriage of 18 years did not
recover. After Nigel was convicted on three counts of felonious sexual assaultand sentenced to
17 years in the New Hampshire State Prisonthe two halves of this once strong family turned
their backs to one another. The unfortunate liaison became Charlie and Sarah's adopted daughter
Gina, now seven years old, who has born much of this weight on her own small back. Charlie
looks very tired some mornings, and if asked, will tell of a sleepless night, wondering, worrying
or wishingin complete sobrietyon the edge of his lonely bed. He is a good man, though
Charlies father and Brother John would have him stand up and fight for custody, they know
whose decision that is, and Charlie would never bear pain or discomfort knowingly to another.
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That, he will tell you, is his ex-wifes job.
The materials Charlie has become master of on the Hampton job are as non-conforming
and hostile as many of the people he has known. The haze gray siding which clads all structures
on the project is a chemically engineered concrete product known as Hardiplank, and it resists
craftsmanship with an inbred tendency toward shattering and splitting. Surrounding each hard-
won square inch of the interminable siding is a composite plastic trim which is known to grow
and shrink as much as a full half-inch over 20 linear feet. Setting a balance between expansion
prediction and shrinkage accommodation places Charlie in a critical control seat of the
appearance of the final productall aboard agree, he has definitely struck that balance. Though
even he cringes when mention is made of 100 degree summer days blazing on the white trim;
like all his life, the days of future are just murky enough to make the current moment an
adventure of discovery.
There are men on-site who would throw their hands up in despair and allow their
standards to dwindle into unacceptable compromise were it not for Charlies laser eye" and
complete unwillingness to install anything that is not pleasing to his own carefully cultivated
sense of proportion and balance. Inch by inch, the men who work with him are made better, more
conscientious workers by virtue of his undeviating commitment to excellence. Even when his
sense insists on cutting a complicated piece a number of times over, there is a passion that flares
in Charlies eye when the work is acceptable to him. His effort ensures that, as the years go by,
the men who worked these buildings on the framing crew will walk by with their sweethearts,
children and even one-night stands with a pointing finger and beaming pride.
One thing a man learns of himself when assigned to work with Charlie Bonden is his
commitment level. Several members of the framing crew rotate in and out as his assistant
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throughout the project duration. Charlie works with each of them with a bemused skepticism. As
the grandfather of the crew he has seen enough flashes in the pan to know that the value of a
craftsman shows itself over the course of years, not days. There is, however one man with whom
he will not work.
Each weekday morning at about 7:03 a.m. a small, strange little man creeps onto the
jobsite. He speaks not a word, but makes his waythreading footsteps carefully one before the
nextover to the big Lull tractor. Everyone else on this jobsite contributes a certain talent, a
skill or a tool that makes him expert, but Lane McQue does not brandish such a skill. Every
evening he runs out an extension cord to the $117,000 heavy duty forklift. Plugging the machine
in overnight both keeps the engine block warm, and prevents freezing of fuel oil. This small act
earns Lane the privilege of starting the beast first thing each morning, and, over 17 years, has
placed the puffing, red faced fellow into the drivers seat by default more than any one else on the
crew.
Snarling at other workers and blowing smoke from the seeming eternal cigarette parked
in the corner of his thin, clenched mouth, Lane has few friends at workyet everybody knows
him. Following close behind him, wherever he goes, is a cloud of vapors. Amidst the many
conflicting odors is the stench of indifference. It has been said, that the opposite of love is not
hate, but this vacuous and colorless trait, and Lane has it mastered. Any given day where a series
of events causes break time to be shortened or simply delayed, a litany of pointed, shameless and
fiercely incomprehensible curses erupts from this rigid little man, single-handedly sneering any
optimism in the vicinity into a death rattle of murmurs. A dedicated effort is required to think
beyond the sometimes miserable moment when Lane McQue is present. Of course every one has
an off day, but this fellow sees reason each day to install a sense of doom. So what is he doing on
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this critical jobsite? Recall the $117,000 forklift? Jobsite regulations require the certified
operator to remain within 25 feet of the machine during all operations, and when a man is lifted
on a work platform or harnessed cage, the operator must remain inside, behind the wheel. A
rated, certified operator can earn as much as $40 per hour for this mundane performanceLane
begrudgingly does it for the equivalent of chicken feed. His negative influence is quickly washed
away under the bulk of savings found by tolerating him.
That the average crewman falls somewhere between the dedication of Charlie and the
depravity of Lane is a safe presumption. But to assume some complacent, middle of the road
dullness would be to compare the roiling ocean at high tide during a Nor'easter to a choppy
Vermont lake. The rest of the crew is fantastically distinctive. Religiously speaking alone there
are diversities enough to surprise and enthrall; two Mormons, a militant Baptist, a Catholic (in
outright defiance) and a young man raised in the Jehovah Witness faith who has made it his
mission to defy and adulterate every belief he was ever shown. Gary shingle is this young man.
At once a child in his willingness to throw himself headlong into work far outside his
skill set, and a competent craftsman who scoffs at the lack of a challenge in many phases of basic
construction. Gary does not stay still long enough to be labeled. His slightly bow-legged swagger
and bushy goatee alone send a baffling double signatureand this is acceptable to him. Neatly
avoiding any easy description, he may be the strongest single man on the crew, and at 175
pounds and 6 2 he is likely in the best shape of the bunch. Bottom-line, when muscle is needed,
Gary is called first. He has a sense of this, and seeks to lead on occasion, but, strength
notwithstanding, the young man is mentally closer to Lane than to Charliehe would have the
world believe he doesn't care about craftsmanship, work ethic, dedication or anything.
Gary is a self-admitted addict to all things, or substances that provide a path away from
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the doldrums of reality. Disillusioned and damaged, he wanders somewhat aimlessly through the
dayif it weren't for Johns recognition of his potential and willingness to call for and direct it,
Gary would probably simply wander home each day. Plagued by Pharmaceutical cravings, Gary
admitted once that his heart has probably beaten far less total beats than would befit an active
man of his age. His preference is, and has been, opiates for as long as he can remember.
"I don't know, I just like to get stoned", Gary's permanent smirk suggests he may actually
be there now. When queried he names his favorite drug
"I used to love Oxycontin, At 60 bucks a pill I tore through 3-grand in a weekfell
asleep at the wheel three timeswrecked my parents car." He looks away, shyly.
"I had to go to the methadone clinic for months to get straight, but they have changed the
Oxy compound now, so you can't snort it any moredown south they make a paste and smoke it
off tin foil."
This last is spat as if it were far beneath him, when the record indicates that he has been
will to beg, borrow, steal and assault under infinitely varying circumstancesnot least of which,
abuse within his own tight-knit Jehovahs Witness familyto get high. Clearly, Gary has spent
more hours in a haze than otherwise, his own words sum it clearly enough:
"I'll try anything..."
A truth resonates within this possible epitaph, under Johns leadership, he has been tested
in many areas of framing and related construction, and shortcomings in personal conducts aside,
he is among the best paid under the Bonden Brothersa fact that appears to please him, but not
enough to try working chemically sober. If nothing else, Gary is true to his one-man battle
against spending time in un-altered reality.
Gary flinches as the pneumatic air gun shoots the jammed nail out at an odd angle. He is
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well aware that the projectile has pierced him, but is content for the moment to try and
understand whyrather than attend to first aid. He eventually peels back the ragged glove on his
left hand and observes the puncture. Clean throughbut no sign of the shard. With a shrug, he
replaces the glove and begins to hang the next piece of siding. An interesting characteristic of
stainless steel siding nails are the serrated pattern of rings found along the nail shaft starting from
the tip and running back toward the head. This ringed shank, as it is called, serves to bed the nail
much more firmly into the side of the building than a common smooth shank nail, and
experience shows that these nails are very stubborn to remove once shot.
Gary says no more and works along smoothly until break time (about an hour) when he
turns to a coworker and casually asks for a pair of tweezers. Dan Seivins, is known on the crew
as the man prepared. On countless occasions he has had the mechanical solution to most
proposed problems. Gary meets Dan at a workbench and removes his glove exposing a hugely
swollen and clearly throbbing left outer palm.
Dan reaches for his utility knife and comes directly toward Gary, who
uncharacteristically shies away from letting the would-be surgeon touch him. Sensing Gary's
distrust and possible shock, Dan calls for a pair of needle-nosed pliers and then heads to the job
trailer root out a pair of tweezers. As break begins, Gary is noticeably agitated; the tweezers are
not strong enough to hold onto the chunk of nail embedded in his left palm. Alternately grabbing
the pliers and then the tweezers to no avail, he calls to Charlie:
"Hey, can you help me grab this thing?"
The next five minutes are an exercise in futility and pain, as Charlie repeatedly finds a
small nub of the embedded shard with the oversized pliers and then loses the faint grip as he
attempts to tug it free. Toward the last attempt, Gary yelps in pain and snatches the tool from
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him. In a certain degree of shock now, Gary, hands shaking badly, lays his wounded paw on the
side rail of a pickup truck. Exerting an incredible amount of self control, he noses about the open
end of the wound with the tool which was never meant for invasive surgery. With a grunt, he
appears to find what he seeks, and with a sharp glance heaven-ward, clenches his right hand and
literally yanks the nail from the flesh of his left outer palm. Smiling he brings it over for the
others to see. Many nods and appreciative comments are exchanged for a glimpse of the ragged
inch broken nail shaft, which is encrusted with blood and bears small pieces of human meat
firmly affixed to its raspy convolutions. Within minutes, the moment is past, and Gary is back on
the wall, counting down the time until lunch, where a pipe full of weed, waits to console him.
Since sanity is not prerequisite for membership to the framing crew, Gary is actually right
at home. And the men do count on his indestructibility for tough moments on the job. They say
he hasnt been the same since a recent leave of absence. About 4 months back, Gary fell
backwards, in complete alcoholic blackout, from the top of a half-flight of stairs onto a solid
concrete deck. The resulting brain trauma was so extensive that in order to accommodate the
swelling, a 5 inch disc of his skull was surgically removed, thus allowing the swollen grey organ
to expand up and out of his cranium. After some time all was neatly packed back inside, but his
lifestyle has taken its toll. At 24 years-old he sports a significant crop of gray hairs and a
penchant for not showing up in poor weather. He and Charlie work particularly well together,
and can be found together on most daysGrandfather and wayward sonan odd, effective
couple.
Two others who have found success working directly together are John Bonden and Dan
Seivins. For every ideological diatribe John may propose, Dan is the educated man who helps
shape and hone these raw thoughts into a cohesive mass. One of Johns favorite phrases is I
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dont know what that means, around Dan, he says it a lot. John openly praises Dans vocabulary
and lifestylea devoted family man and dedicated Mormonhe sees in the smaller, younger
man a successful, satisfied person. Dan is slow to receive such compliments, but John has
worked with enough men to know what he sees, and Dan repays the feeling with his appreciation
for Johns direction and plain, effective speech. The two often break together and constantly
banter on the state of general politics, world events and religion.
In skills and pay, Dan hovers around Gary Shingle, but in optimism and future planning
the two are worlds apart. When these two work together a warm rivalry almost always surfaces.
Gary is not about to be bested by a scrawny, intellectual Mormon and Dan, sees no gain in
subjecting himself to the distractions of a pleasure-seeking druggy. They talk of many things, but
always remain superficial on areas of stark disagreement: Fair treatment and roles of women,
sobriety, nature of religious belief, etc. Though to the casual observer, most audible construction
banter is lewd and crude (and this crew is no complete exception) but when Dan is on the wall
a quality of dialogue seems to at least temporarily outweigh the steady flow of profanity and slur.
Dan commutes about and hour a day with Charlie Bonden, and has been exposed by him
as a hands down, bona fide cheapskate. Charlie takes great pleasure in prying into the micro
savings plans that form the bulk of Dans outward expenditures, and no two men could stand
further apart on an issue. Charlie and Dan take break together on a consistent basis, and joke
constantly about all things frugal. On a particular pre-Christmas day they entered the corner store
together:
Noticing, a cluttered table, off to one side of the counter, Dan peers over to see what is
for sale. The table is strewn with date-reduced snacksname-brand, from the lookeach one
clearly stamped "$1.00".
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"Hey, Look at this, Dan says, grinning, "Townhouse Toppers for a buck." He looks
inquiringly at the shop-owner.
"Near or past freshness date," the burly man indicates. Charlie rolls his eyes, while
glancing upward.
Dan scoops up two boxes and lines up to pay. Back in the car, Charlie eyes Dan's cache,
"Found a 'bahgain', eh?" Charlie is smirking
Dan, holding his prize, slips a deft finger under the tab and breaks the seal...
"Yeah, my wife will love this, Keebler's, and Townhouse for a buck each..." an
incredulous pause, "name brand!" Then he pauses again, and carefully closes the cardboard lid.
"I guess I better save them for her, they might go stale fast..."
Charlie lurches forward, barely containing a snort. "Probably already turned to dust..."
Hey, I got a lotta kids, I gotta keep my eye out for bah-gains..." Dan shoots back,
mocking Barney's Lowell, Massachusetts accent.
On another occasion, this time riding the miles home together:
"We don't buy paper towels." Dan responds, to Charlies inquiry.
"Are you kidding me? I use five or six whenever I wash my hands." Charlie's eyes are
wide. "Don't tell me you've found a way around that, too?"
"Well," Dan starts, "we do buy them, we just don't use them for hands. My wife has me
buy six rolls of Viva, for like 8 bucks, but she carefully tears each one in half and mixes up a
solution and makes our own baby wipes." Dan looks over, proud to share the genius.
"What? How much is a box of wipes, two bucks? My kid uses them for toilet paper..."
"You're joking, right?" Dan returns, in awe.
"No, that's right."
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"Wow," Dan reflects for a moment, so, I guess you don't follow the 6-sheet rule,
either?"
"What's that?" the older mans face is alight with amazement, but a lurking mocking
undertone lies just below the surface.
"Yeah, my wife figures, six sheets for a clean wipe of toilet paper, plus or minus."
"You can't get clean with six sheets, I use 30, at least, and thats just gross." Charlie is
clearly offended at the concept. He peers over at Dan, Two-Ply, right?"
Dan sinks a little lower into the custom leather seat of Charlies car and says nothing
eyes forward. Both men stand oppositely amazed.
When Charlie tries to embarrass Dan with the crew around, several of them are forced to
admit that some of the ideas are pretty smart, and not a few have stroked their chins wondering
how much they might save with a little cheap thinkingor as Dan calls it, provident living.
The project these men all share has ground on for 6 months. Other temporary crewmen
are used in times of high production, but over the course of the job, these fiveJohn, Charlie,
Lane, Gary and Danhave become collectively the framers, and are known to be the solution
center on the beach. They all carry the burdens of survival in a strong economic downturn; they
pay dearly at the pump for the privilege of driving the miles out to the coast each day, their
problems are a slice of any working mans trouble, and they are in their individual ways, very
grateful for the work they have. Problems on the jobsite come and go, materials frustrate and
hamper the work, bad coordination sets progress back but in the final analysis any one of these
guys has each others back.
A perfect example occurred when Dan was new to the jobby about a week. He was
trying to consolidate the poorly loaded dumpster to accommodate more debris when a Lull driver
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from another crew drove up and yelled at him to get down. It may never be clear if the man was
genuinely concerned or just felt pushy, because instantly all four of Johns crew immediately
assaulted the driver with forceful language and absolute obstinacy, preventing him from
proceeding with his designs on the dumpster. As Dan finished the work and climbed down, he
was received into the crew as one of theirs and he knew they would always do the same for each
other. On the job, there is no I in team and no room for the one-man showboaton the winter
beach there is warmth only in the knowledge that a man doesnt need to see eye to eye to be
included in the indivisible cord comprised of lesser strings.
There are ten thousand shades of gray over the course of a winter sea, each one a moment
each one in flux. As the old earth slowly lifts her skirts for the summer sun, much of the
violence, filth and debris of the Hampton Beach State Park Revitalization Project will be swept
awaybut the structures that remain testify to the strength and resolve of men who take a deal of
what the world gives, uncomplaining, and strike back not in anger but in the form and fashion of
their crafteach one connected, each one alone. And the waves crash on...
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After WordThe sun slowly spends a little more time each day now on the mile-long strip known as
Hampton Beach. I still spend the bulk of each day with these semi-compromising men, and am
still chided daily for keeping my funds close to the vest. Normally an independent stonemason, I
am continually amazed at the diversity of these guys who daily unite to become the real jobsite
leaders. John rallies the troops with weekly safety meetings, where in his own gruff, direct way
points out our shortcomingsalways with a solution in tow. Charlie bears a continual heap of
familial burden which has grown to include the looming menace of a mysterious step-father to
his daughter and the reality of her new ADD medication which changes the face of all he holds
dear. Lane and Gary have added a new fellow, Jack to their private circle, and they three pursue
every pleasure known to fit into a 20-minute work break. The jobsite inches its hobbling way
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toward a grand opening in July, well Augustsurely by September 2011!
The challenge of this piece was to remain invisible while in the present tense. Many
sections defied the distance of narration, and sorely tempted me to assume the first person
perspective which bore witness to the events as they happened. As a writer I needed to push
through in order to learn distance and tame inclinations toward inner monologue, and false
omniscience. I wrestle with the desire to share this work with the subjects, the topics are personal
and may be viewed as a form of betrayal, and I think I will let John decide. He remains sensitive
to the mood and ability of the crew and can predict with uncanny accuracy how everything from
pay cuts, to new trucks to rotten weather may affect the unusual organism that is his to tame and
direct.
I could have spent reams on the unrelenting, biting cold of a seacoast winter. My body
has been buffeted, pierced, frosted and drenched intermittently over the last 5 months. I have
attained a new low in over-all health and may take a sabbatical refuge in Florida if my ailments
continue to increase. Let it be said the silent sixth and most hated crewman is definitely the
obnoxious and unpredictable weather. It must be a natural force such as this that binds us all
together, for we would all agree that only a massive non-human intervener can tear us apart. Men
who might not say word one to each other otherwise have found a comfort, compassion and
compatibility among the driven wind and pounding surf.