A poetic memoir of my father, the Long Beach Pike and a Roller Coaster ... all gone now. |
As if in a Dream….. I remember a seaside town called Long Beach ... where I was a little girl ... and for one kind carefree moment I had bright stars and rainbows in my eyes ... Oh I remember so very well …. the Great Cyclone Racer by the ocean ... and riding the winding tracks with bold souls .. … and with sailors holding their sweethearts tight …. Clickety clack all the way to the top … Then diving, rushing, breathless …. to the bottom Then quick … quick … fast around the curves … The saltwater mist kissing our faces … as we sailed in grand Red Cars .… it seemed like over the ocean and up toward Heaven …. And how we all screamed and hollered out loud around the perilous curves …our hearts gasping and pounding fast… until we would all arrive back … Safe and drenched with laughter … And I remember that on cold chilly nights and also in daytime bright with sunshine ... I would walk on the Pike, marching to the tune of the calliope or to a brass band Alone with my father, Leo “Tony” Miller, leading me down the Midway holding my little hand in his big rough warm hand …. And all Carnies would all wave at him … and all of the ladies would smile at us ... and we would get on all the rides for free ... My father knew all of the carnies and the bearded lady and the fire eater ... and he could do trapeze and magic tricks … and he always had a million wonderful stories to tell ... They called him Tony but his name was really Leo Miller … and he was the head electrician at the Pike during the Fifties …. The “Magic Man” with the dark handsome good looks and the twinkle always in his warm brown eyes … who always kept the neon rainbow lights glowing and the rides going I remember …. as if in a dream …. eating saltwater taffy and candy rocks and getting my fortune told and seeing King Kong at the Strand Theatre And trying to catch the brass ring on the Carousel and a scary Fun House with a big fat lady and man laughing on top and a ferris wheel where you could almost touch the stars … My father was the man who lit the lights at the Long Beach Nu Pike ... And as long as he was there … everything was magic … and I was safe … and everything was possible …. and everyone was wonderful and good and beautiful The carnies, the freaks, the midgets, and the stone man at the Pike were all his best friends … and he taught me they were beautiful .... and to love them too And by loving them to never fear difference but to embrace difference and to honor it … and to shelter and protect it deep in my soul. I remember my Father when he was alive and vibrant ... and handsome and strong ... and he was there loving me and rubbing his rough whiskers on my face ... He said it would make me tough ... Just like he said burnt toast would give me curly hair. We both had curly hair ... my Dad and I. .. . And he always smelled so good like Lilac Vegetal … When we walked on weekends at the Pike ... long ago ... when the Great Coaster was still there. Then all of a sudden … Vanished The Coaster … The Pike ….. All all the glittering moments… like coins in a magic handkerchief … it all disappeared … somewhere in time … never to be found again…. When Time grabbed the Great Cyclone Racer ... And before that my Father. ...the rest of the story … near lost in a brief - long darkness… That I try really hard to forget. I want only to remember the Magic And the rainbow lights and smell of the surf And my Father’s arm around me, and my head on his chest And the little red cars clickety clack clickety clack … Going up to the stars … |