If you looked closely at the inside of my bride’s left hand,
you’d see the a little web of scars under her wedding band. The story behind
them typifies her personality, and, frankly, the reasons I was attracted to her
in the first place. She didn’t have these particular scars when we got married,
but she did have one on her neck and a little one on her ankle—and each of
those tells a story as well. Now she has gobs—of scars and stories. So do most of us, I’ll bet. Babies, breast
cancer, emergency appendectomies, horseshoe nails…heck, just living life, does
that to you.
They say: “clothes make the man”, but I think our scars…or
at least the wounds that give us those scars make us—and the characters we
create—interesting.
Some of the scars on my hands are from police work, but most
are from shoeing, or otherwise working around horses. At least three are from
stupidity with pocketknives. I have a scar between my eyes from an overzealous
deputy marshal during defensive tactics training. She thought I was ready and
attacked me with a baton while I was explaining a particular technique to the
rest of the class. I could pinch my nose together and blow blood-bubbles out
the wound so it was really kind of cool. Anyway, she and I both have stories to
tell over that incident.
My two newest wounds—that will shortly become scars—are from
changing the oil on Modestine, my BMW motorcycle, before we ride down the
Alaska Highway to Texas in coming weeks.
A guy I once fought flipped himself (at least that’s the way
I remember it) through a sliding glass door as he was trying to get away from
me. This was pre-shatterproof days so the door all but exploded into horrific
daggers of glass. The guy froze on his back, legs in the air, as still as a
statue with a long shard of glass sticking out of his…let’s just say below his
hip pocket. Missed anything too important by a few centimeters, but it sure
stopped the fight…and he’s got a heck of a battle scar.
My grandpa on my father’s side was one of the kindest men I
ever met. He was a muleskinner, building roads with his team in the 20s, owned
a honkytonk when my dad was a youngster and worked in the oilfields in West
Texas. Now, that man had some scars. It baffled me as a boy when I’d help him
build fence and he’d skin a knuckle and keep working—when I was sure we needed to
go back to the house and get a band-aid before he bled to death. He had a scar
on the back of his neck shaped like a half moon, apparently left years before when
someone in his honkytonk smacked him with the base of a broken beer bottle. As
a boy, it was a big deal to know that my sweetheart of a grandpa had a past
that included a bar fight or two.
Our oldest son has a scar over his eyebrow from the nine
stitches he got when he got bucked of a little horse I was training. He was six
years old and should never have been on that particular horse by himself. I
carry some internal scars from the guilt of putting him up there in the first
place.
One of my defensive tactics instructors in US Marshals Basic
had a long scar across his cheek. He was an accomplished kick boxer and all
around tough dude. As basic deputy trainees, we came up with dozens of
scenarios of knife fights, arrests gone bad, and all sorts of great stories.
After graduation, the instructor told us the truth. The chain had broken on his
heavy bag while he was kicking it, snapping back and impacting his face.
Essentially, he’d been knocked out by his training equipment.
Some of our scars are internal--physical and more
figurative. I came off a patrol horse when I was a young mounted police officer
in what we affectionately called an “involuntary rapid aerial dismount”. Six ribs snapped in the process, putting me
in the hospital. Every few months those internal scars decide to act up and
re-tell me their story, prompting my wife to force an aspirin on me just in
case I’m having a heart attack.
Sometimes it’s the emotional scars that affect us the most
deeply. Bad decisions, inaction, harsh
words—both spoken and received—illnesses, loss of loved ones, shattered
relationships, all scarify our souls. Hopefully, a friend or pastor or bishop
or rabbi or whatever sin eater we put our faith in, can help us get past the
really bad stuff. But we still come out changed—maybe even better.
Over the course of four books my protagonist has had little
pieces of his body and soul whittled away by the life he leads. When last I
left him, he could hardly walk, had just lost someone for whom he cared deeply
and…well, I don’t want to give too much away. The point is, he ends up with
lots and lots of scars. That’s what I believe makes him real.
In the MUSIC MAN, Professor Harold Hill says “the sadder but
wiser girl” is the girl for him. I feel that way about people and literary
characters who look too perfect.
I don’t care about being married to a hand model. I prefer
the sort of woman who, knowing little about horses when I married her, would
pull over when she saw a young foal tangled in barbed wire and do all she could
to free the poor thing, even if it meant a trip to the emergency room,
stitches, and getting her wedding ring cut off.
It’s a scar—and a story—she can be proud of.
Marc Cameron is a retired Chief Deputy US Marshal and 29-year law enforcement veteran. His short stories have appeared in BOYS’ LIFE Magazine and the Saturday Evening Post. He has published nine novels, six of them Westerns (several as a ghost writer and two under his pen name, Mark Henry). His present Jericho Quinn series—NATIONAL SECURITy, ACT OF TERROR, STATE OF EMERGENCY and TIME OF ATTACK (February 2014 Kensington) features an adventure motorcyclist, Air Force OSI agent and renaissance man who spends his days sorting out his life and kicking terrorist butt. Marc lives in Alaska with his beautiful bride and BMW motorcycle.
Visit him at:
www.marccameronbooks.com
http://www.facebook.com/MarcCameronAuthor
Always fascinating, Marc. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Marc! I totally agree - not just men, but women ought to be marked inside and out, or they're just not real 3-D people to the readers. And the stories behind all those visible and invisible scars - if they don't come out in the plot, the author should know them!
ReplyDeleteEnjoy your motorcycle trip!
Missing an index finger, half a thumb, and have more than a few other scars. You're absolutely right. The scars tell lots of stories. Like the night I ran down the driveway because I was late for scout meeting, but forgot there was a barbwire gate up across the cattle guard. Nice scar of the barbwire gouge in the middle of my right thigh. Yup. I could go on and on. Still, insurance money from the missing digits allowed me to complete the ocean-going yacht I was building, only to wreck the boat on a rocky shore and get rescued by helicopter. Long story, that. Thanks for the hint.
ReplyDeleteHi Marc, great post. The invisible scars may be even more impacting than the outer ones. Every one tells a story.
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed this post, so full of the human experience inside and out. You are so right, Marc, we do all have scars and they each have a story to tell.
ReplyDeleteI also enjoyed reading the comments. Boy, Chuck has a good story with his scars.
Great blog.
Thanks, guys.
ReplyDeleteYep, I'm thinking I need to go to Japan again just to get to know Chuck better.
Modestine is loaded and ready to go. Looks like I'll be riding into a black cloud north of here... But, hey, with just shy of 7000 miles by the time I'm done, I expect I'll be riding through plenty of rain.
Hope to get quite a bit of writing done in camp each night.
One of the things I noticed when I moved to the city was few men had scars. In rural areas, most do. And yes about the shoers. Most of 'em have hands like a bag of marbles. :)
ReplyDeleteMarc, I always look forward to your insights. This post is no different. The scars inside us that can't be seen are so important to our "characters" and memories of who we are--and I know I've drawn on my own experiences to create some of the scenarios for my characters that were pretty painful, emotionally. Most writers do, I guess. As far as physical scars, I have one on the sole of my foot, where I was trying to learn to ride a bike at age 6 with no shoes on. Another from when I jumped over the park fence into the cemetery and put my hand down on a broken beer bottle. And one more--from my C-sections. Each of those scars made a lasting impression on me, for sure. Wonderful, thoughtful post!
ReplyDeleteThanks for a thought-provoking post Marc! There's a term for those too-perfect characters, too - "Mary Sue" (or Marty Stu)! Real characters, like real people, have scars, both physical and emotional. Thanks for reminding us.
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Marc. It has given me food for thought.
ReplyDeleteHave a good trip.
Welcome any time, Marc. I'll pick you up at the airport (Narita) which is 30 minutes down the road. Tracking in Japan may be a bit difficult, though.
ReplyDeleteIt is what makes us who we have become. Wonderful, insightful post. Doris
ReplyDelete