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Table of Contents

Cover/Copyright Introduction Chapter 1: In the Beginning Chapter 2: Starting Strong Chapter 3: Thunderstruck Chapter 4: No-Brainer Chapter 5: The Odd Couple Chapter 6: Defense and Offense Chapter 7: This is the End, Beautiful Friend, the End Chapter 8: The Gathering Clouds Chapter 9: The Silver Lining Chapter 10: Childhood's End Chapter 11: With a Little Help from My Friends Chapter 12: FNG Chapter 13: Home Chapter 14: Scapegoat Chapter 15: Space Available Chapter 16: Friends Chapter 17: Destiny Chapter 18: The Dogs of War Chapter 19: Until We Meet Again Chapter 20: Take the Long Way Home Chapter 21: A Brief Detour Chapter 22: Reconnecting Chapter 23: Summer of Love Chapter 24: Back to School Chapter 25: Behind the Scenes Chapter 26: FNG Again Chapter 27: Summertime Livin' Chapter 28: Agents of Change Chapter 29: Agents of Change II Chapter 30: Escape Plan Chapter 31: Eastbound Chapter 32: Starting Again Chapter 33: Actions Chapter 34: Reactions Chapter 35: Family Matters Chapter 36: Getting to Know You Chapter 37: Meeting the Family Chapter 38: Transitions Chapter 39: Transitions, Part II Chapter 40: Together Chapter 41: Union and Reunion Chapter 42: Standby to Standby Chapter 43: New Arrivals Chapter 44: Pasts, Presents and Futures Chapter 45: Adding On Chapter 46: New Beginnings Chapter 47: Light and Darkness Chapter 48: Plans Chapter 49: Within the Five Percent Chapter 50: Decompression Chapter 51: Decompression, Part II Chapter 52: Transitions, Part III Chapter 53: TBD Chapter 54: Into the Sunset

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Chapter 8: The Gathering Clouds

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24 September 1986 – Hardwick Road, Enfield, Massachusetts

Jeff felt more in control of himself after he chatted with the coach. He still pushed the midfielders hard at practice, but he wasn’t running them into early graves any longer. The team hosted Amherst-Pelham Regional today for the fifth game of the season.

Midway through the second half with the score tied at one-to-one, Thompkins’ goalie cleared the ball with a booming punt that sailed past the midfield line. Jeff fought for position while the ball came down near him. As the opposing player gathered himself in an attempt to head the ball away, Jeff cut towards the other team’s goal.

Without Jeff to push against, the other player fell to the ground. The ball continued down the field with Jeff pursuing it unmarked. He dribbled it down the sideline, keeping track of his teammates while he ran. The other team moved to defend him. At the corner of the penalty box, he crossed the ball in a high, arcing pass.

The opposing goalie came out to challenge for the ball. He had the advantage as the only player allowed to use his hands. It may have worked out better for him had he made contact with the ball when he punched at it. The player next to him was Peter Dufresne, a forward for Thompkins. The ball passed the goalie and into a position for Peter to head it into the net. Chris Micklicz grabbed him around the neck before they joined their teammates for the celebration.

The game ended in Thompkins’ fifth straight win.


“So what classes are you taking over at Swerve again?” Jack asked Allison at lunch the next week. ‘Swerve’ was the unofficial nickname of Swift River Valley Community College in Enfield Village.

“Calculus II this semester and Calc III next. I should be well ahead of my peers when I get to college.”

“Where are you going to apply?” Kathy asked.

“I’ll be applying to MIT Early Decision.” Jack let out a low whistle even though the other three friends weren’t surprised. “What about you guys?”

“My first choice is Johns Hopkins for pre-med,” Jack answered.

“NYU for computer science for me,” Kathy added.

“I’m still not sure,” Jeff said.

Allison looked at him out of the corner of her eye but said nothing; Jack and Kathy didn’t notice the exchange. Allison cornered Jeff after their next class and pushed him outside.

“What the hell’s going on?” she demanded.

“With what?”

“Don’t play coy with me, Jeff! You lied to your best friends at lunch! You lied to me. Why?”

He waved her to a bench. “I’m sorry, Allison. I can’t afford for my mom to find out yet.”

“About what?” she asked, exasperated.

“Allison, I’m not applying to college.”

“What?”

“I’m not going to be applying because I’ll be enlisting in the Army.”

Allison’s eyes nearly fell out of her head they opened so wide. “What? Your mom’s going to flip! With your GPA? And with as hard as you’re being scouted?”

He shrugged. “It doesn’t seem as important in comparison. Can I ask you not to tell Jack or Kathy yet? I don’t need my parents finding out before I tell them myself.”

She hugged him. “Of course not! I won’t say anything until you say it’s okay.”

“I know I have to tell my parents eventually, but not just yet.”


Jeff searched for something unusual in the attic three weeks after his conversation with Allison. His mother’s birthday was coming up in another three weeks, at the end of October. He was trying to find something to go with his present to her. His mother and sister were off shopping together today while his father tried to catch up on work at his garage.

Jeff flipped through papers in an unlabeled box he’d never noticed before. Most of the paperwork in the box dated from the mid- to late-1940s. In it, he discovered pictures of a man he resembled more than the man he knew as his grandfather. That man wore World War II-era clothes. As Jeff continued to leaf through the box, he came across more pictures of the man, George McLaren, with his grandmother. Grandma Keiolis appeared to be pregnant in some of the photos.

Jeff also found letters addressed to his grandmother. The hand-written letters were grouped together with their envelopes. He unfolded the yellowing papers and read each letter. George McLaren described what he could of the military training of those days. World War II censorship didn’t allow much detail.

The letters started a month after December 7, 1941. George McLaren enlisted in the Army the day after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Jeff followed his biological grandfather’s training progression over the next few months. Grandpa McLaren, as Jeff began to think of him, described Basic Training in general terms. He continued on to Artillery training and then volunteered for the Airborne.

Grandpa McLaren’s later letters described the Normandy invasion and its build-up. He wrote to Grandma once he returned safely to England. George McLaren’s last letter was dated September 14, 1944. The next letter in the pile proved to be a Western Union telegram: Grandpa McLaren had been killed in the invasion of Holland on September 20, 1944.

One page brought him up short. The page was a notarized copy of some sort of legal document – an adoption decree from the Probate Court of Hampshire County, Massachusetts in Northampton. The document announced that Nickolas Keiolis of Pelham, his grandfather, had adopted one Marisa McLaren. The date on the decree read ‘May 22, 1948.’ His mother would have been five and a half years old at the time.

Jeff carried the box down to his car. He drove to his father’s garage on Route 21 near Belchertown. He found his father working on a car’s engine. Joe looked up when he noticed someone entering the service bays.

“Hey, Jeff! What brings you by to visit your old man?”

Jeff said nothing as he set the banker’s box down. He lifted the lid and extracted a single piece of paper. Jeff extended the adoption decree without a word. Joe’s smile faded when he recognized what his son held. Joe set his wrench down and waved his son towards the office while he wiped his hands.

“Where’d you find that?” Joe asked as he settled into the desk chair.

“In the attic.”

“You just found it?”

“Yes. Why keep this a secret?”

“Does it matter?” Joe asked, leaning forward on his desk.

“This is family history, Dad!” Jeff cried.

“Yes, it is. More than that, it’s important family history. But does it matter?”

”’Matter?’” Jeff echoed. “Of course it matters!”

“Does it?” Joe replied. “Are you ever going to meet George McLaren? There are no more McLarens in the area. George was an only child, so there are no McLaren cousins. Is Nick Keiolis now no longer your grandfather?”

Jeff didn’t reply right away as he considered the questions. “No, Dad, I guess it doesn’t matter,” he responded minutes later. “Grandpa’s the only grandfather I’ve ever known. I never got to meet your parents.” His father’s parents died before he and Kara were born.

Joe nodded. “Do me a favor? Don’t mention this to your mother. Or your sister, for that matter. Take the box back up to the attic, and make sure it’s back where you found it. When you’re done at the house, meet me over at The Lunch Car. I’ll finish up the Lincoln, head over there, and save us a table.”

The Knox men shared a table for lunch thirty minutes later. The Enfield Lunch Car was Joe’s favorite diner in the valley, a love his son shared. Jeff ordered two eggs on corned beef hash, his usual. He thought comfort food might help settle his mind. He looked at his father with an expectant gaze. Joe ignored him until he finished ordering. His father waited for the waitress to leave and took a sip of his water before he spoke.

“Jeff, your mother and I have never brought up what you found for one simple reason: your mother gets near-irrational if you even bring up the subject,” his father explained. “She was close to seven months pregnant with you when I first discovered that same box. I asked her about it and she had an actual conniption. She was so angry, I thought she’d go into early labor; it took me nearly an hour to calm her down. Why we have that box and not your grandmother, I don’t know.”

Joe sipped at his water again. “Grandma met Grandpa in 1945, after VJ Day. They married in late ‘47 and he filed for adoption immediately. The decree was finalized and that was it. Grandpa’s girls from his first marriage, your aunts, consider your mother their sister. Not ‘step-sister,’ sister. End of story. Your mother tries to lock away her feelings on the subject, yet she keeps that box. Be very careful what you do with this knowledge, Jeff.”

Jeff didn’t know how to reply. They ate lunch in silence.


Thompkins’ soccer team powered through their schedule. They compiled a near-perfect record of fifteen-and-one. They were seeded first in their conference tournament in mid-October.

That’s when the wheels came off the bus.

Wilbraham Academy, the eighth seed, rolled right over them in the opening game of the tournament. Thompkins seemed like they were checking off every possible mental mistake from an invisible list: their play was uninspired, they were out of position, they were a step behind on every play. Even Jeff played below his usual level. He wasn’t far off his norm, but it was noticeable. Wilbraham won five-to-nil.

“Well, shit,” Jeff said to himself.

He stood at midfield with his hands on his hips while his high school soccer career ended with a whimper. One of Wilbraham’s seniors stopped him as the two teams shook hands.

“Hey, you’re a senior this year, too, right?”

“Yeah,” Jeff admitted. “The glory days are coming to an end.”

“I hear you’re being scouted for baseball already, though?” The other boy played the same three sports as he did, though Jeff didn’t know his name.

“Yeah, but I’m not sure which way I’m gonna go.”

Jeff knew that the other player thought he meant he wasn’t sure whether to chose college or pro sports. He saw no reason to correct that assumption.


“How’s life as a sort-of college student?” Jeff asked Allison as the four friends ate lunch.

“It’s okay,” Allison shrugged.

“My, aren’t we enthusiastic?” Jack muttered before taking a bite of his grinder.

“The classes are fine,” Allison said. “Not having you guys around is a bummer.”

“We’re not going to be with you at whatever polytechnic university you wind up at next year, Allison,” Kathy pointed out. Allison stuck her tongue out at her while throwing a corn chip at Jeff.

“Hey!” a startled Jeff exclaimed. “I didn’t say anything!”

“No, but you were thinking something. I could tell.”

“What is this? 1984?”

“Exactly,” Allison replied, nodding. “A thoughtcrime!” Jeff rolled his eyes. “How are you guys doing in your classes here?”

Jack shrugged, answering for all of them. “Okay, I guess. Mid-semester grades will be out Friday. Nothing less than a ninety on any test, quiz, or paper for me.”

“Same here,” Kathy added.

“Still in the early lead in our Spanish class, Allison,” Jeff bragged to her; she grimaced.

Jeff had scored two or three points higher than Allison on every assignment turned in or test taken in Spanish V this year.

“It’s a marathon, not a sprint,” she pointed out.

Jeff gave her a look. “I’m the athlete. I’ll handle the sports clichés, okay?”


Jeff wiped his face with a towel while he sat on the bench. He gulped water before he lowered the cage on his hockey helmet. He watched as Chris Micklicz practiced defensive scenarios with his new partner, Ryan Demmings. Ryan was a freshman.

Coach Kessler permanently split their defensive pairing after two years together. Coach told them that he needed to spread their defensive strength to other lines. Jeff wasn’t so sure that was a good strategy. The new pairings were okay but neither had the ‘pop’ that he and Chris seemed to have together, the near-telepathic foreknowledge of what the other was about to do. Still, the man was the coach, not Jeff.

Chris came off the ice and sat next to Jeff on the bench. The pair shared a look. Chris shrugged at him as if to say, ‘It is what it is.’


“Jeff, did you get those college applications done?”

“Not yet, Mom.”

“The deadlines are at the beginning of January,” she reminded him yet again. “You won’t have much time if you keep putting it off.”

Jeff fought not to shake his head until his mother left the room. He still had two months before the end of the year to finish the applications, if he decided to. His mother’s questions about them came more and more often, and it was becoming harder and harder to put her off.


The Thompkins Black Bears were a disappointing three-and-five by the first week of December. Coach Kessler’s defensive experiment had worked ... partially. The new pairings could hold teams at the blue line most games but, once other teams had momentum in the games, the defense could not break that momentum. There was no sense that Thompkins would suddenly turn on an opponent.

John Kessler sighed as he looked at the chalkboard in his office. He had all the line assignments written on it along with the special teams assignments. He sighed again and erased the defensive line assignments. The new assignments he wrote in their place listed Chris and Jeff as his first line again. The pair were also together on every special teams assignment.

’Gotta change our luck,’ the coach thought.

“Knox! Micklicz! My office!” he bellowed two hours later. The pair soon stood in front of his desk, half-dressed for practice.

“You two are back together. First line.” The two looked at each other in disbelief then smiles split their faces. “Power play, penalty kill, and extra man as well. You’d better start kicking butt if we want to make the playoffs.”

“On it, Coach,” Jeff assured him.

“Hit the ice.”

Agawam High School waltzed into Thompkins two days later expecting an easy game; they heard Thompkins was now a shadow of its former self. They got the easy game but were on the wrong end of the equation. Chris and Jeff combined for five goals. They also combined for three Agawam players needing smelling salts due to clean checks. The final score was seven-to-one.

Their next four opponents met the same fate as Agawam. Thompkins spent entire games in their opponents’ defensive ends, peppering their goalies with shots. It was not unusual for shot counts to be in Thompkins’ favor by a ratio of five-to-one. By the end of the fall semester, Thompkins’ record was eight-and-five. Things were looking up.

On the ice...


Jeff worked on his physics homework at the dining room table the week before Christmas. School would let out for the holiday in two days, on the nineteenth.

“Time to set the table, Jeff.”

“Got it, Mom.”

Dinner was his mother’s grape leaves along with lamb shish-kabobs and pilaf. Jeff would be buried in similar dishes at his mom’s family’s Christmas party on Saturday. All of that side’s aunts, uncles, and cousins would descend on his Aunt Marilyn’s house in Dana for the annual event. His father was an only child with no cousins, so nothing similar happened with the Knox family.

“Great as always, Mom.”

Joe and Kara made noises that they agreed with Jeff while they cleared the table.

“Thanks, everyone. Jeff, have you narrowed down your college choices? You don’t have much time left.”

Jeff’s stomach dropped. He couldn’t put the conversation off any longer.

“Mom, could I talk to you and Dad for a minute, please?”

Kara gave him a look. He gave her a small shake of his head in return. She smiled at him and left the room. Jeff sat back down at the table with his parents.

“What’s up, honey?” his mother asked him.

“Mom, I’m not going to be filling out those applications.”

“I’m not sure I’m following you, Jeff.”

“I’m not filling out those applications because I’m not going to college next year.”

“What do you mean ‘you’re not going to college?’” his mother demanded.

Marisa’s voice started quiet and cold but rose in volume as she asked the question. Jeff’s conversation with his parents about his plans after high school was not going well, and it had only just started.

“I don’t feel that I want to go to college, Mom. At least, not right away. That’s mainly because I still don’t know what I want to do at college. I know I don’t want to major in baseball.”

“What about the history programs you’ve been thinking about, Jeff?” his father asked, trying to play mediator. “And what about all of the college and pro teams that have been looking at you for baseball?”

“History is probably the way I’ll wind up going when I eventually get to college, Dad. The bottom line is that I don’t feel that I’m ready for college. Or for college or pro baseball either.” Jeff dropped the bomb. “I want to enlist in the Army first.”

“WHAT?” his mother squawked. “ABSOLUTELY NOT! I FORBID IT!” She punctuated her displeasure by slapping the table.

“Mom, I turn eighteen in August. If you or Dad won’t sign the permission slip for me to enlist before that, I will enlist on my birthday. I’m sorry, but at that point, it becomes my life.”

Marisa glared at her oldest child before storming out without another word. Jeff sighed as he watched his mother leave. He turned to his father.

“Sorry, Dad, but I figured that’s the way this conversation would go.”

Joe Knox sighed also. “There’s no way this conversation would have ever been acceptable to your mother, not with that as the punchline. You know about her father, though I don’t think she knows that you know. Privately, I will say that I’m proud of you for wanting to serve your country.” Joe sighed again, looking at the ceiling. “It’s going to be cold in our room tonight.” Turning back to his son, Joe said, “Bring me the permission slip and I’ll sign it, as long as you promise me that you’ll finish high school.”

“You have that promise, Dad. Besides, they won’t take me if I don’t.”


There was a knock at his bedroom door as Jeff finished his math homework one night in early January.

“Come in!”

His door slowly opened and his sister stuck her head in.

“Jeff, got a minute?”

“Hey, Kara. Sure, come on in.”

The two siblings were well past the ‘annoying brother/sister’ stage of their relationship. They had relied on each other for advice and insight for three years now. Kara entered and closed the door behind her.

“What’s up, sis?”

“Jeff, what’s going on with you and Mom?” Kara asked. “The two of you are barely speaking to each other, and you seem like you’ve been tip-toeing around each other for close to a month for some reason.”

Neither Jeff nor his parents had said anything else about their talk in December, so it wasn’t surprising that Kara didn’t know what had happened. Jeff handed her a few of the pamphlets about the Army he received from his recruiter in response to her question.

“The Army? Geez, no wonder. What prompted this?”

Jeff shrugged. “I can’t precisely say, kiddo. It’s what seems right when I think about my future. I mean, I can go to college any time. Heck, I can even try out for a pro baseball team later if I want to, but how many chances will I get to serve my country?”

“I know Jeff, but does this mean you’re never coming back?”

“This is still my home,” he assured her. “If not this house, definitely this state. I can’t imagine wanting to live anywhere else permanently after I leave the Army. Could you imagine having Christmas or Thanksgiving without all of our cousins?”

Kara shivered. “I don’t know if I could get used to that.”

“Exactly.”

“So, what will you be doing in the Army?”

“My recruiter put down my preferences as infantry, Airborne, Rangers. We’ll see what I get. He’s pretty confident I’ll get the first two, but he’s not sure about the third. I scored high on a practice placement test but volunteering for the infantry and the Airborne seems like it will trump that.”

“I get that as a mother she’s scared, but why is Mom so against this?”

“From what I’ve found out, Grandpa Keiolis isn’t Mom’s biological father.”

“What do you mean, Jeff?”

“The man who was Mom’s biological father died in the invasion of Holland during World War II. Operation Market Garden it was called. Like many of that generation, her father enlisted right after Pearl Harbor. I’m not sure how old she was when she found out about that fact, but I think she’s more than a bit resentful that he wasn’t around and it’s colored her viewpoint.”

“Grandpa Keiolis isn’t Mom’s real dad?”

BIOLOGICAL dad, Kara. The correct term is ’biological.’ Grandpa raised her and her sisters. He loves her, our aunts, and Grandma; he is a ‘real’ dad,” Jeff cautioned. “Anyway, that’s my theory is on why she’s so upset.”

“I guess that makes it a bit clearer,” she admitted.

“Don’t forget there’s the whole ‘not-going-to-college’ thing, too. Especially when you look at my grades from a college preparatory school like Thompkins. Someone with my GPA? I’m definitely ’supposed’ to be going to college.”

“So my big brother is going to be a soldier?”

“That’s the plan.”

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