(Photo by Karalyn Dorn)
J.R. Trujillo.
J.R. Trujillo.
We started out as reporters together in the mid-1980s at the
student-run Monday, Wednesday and Friday paper, The Mirror, at the University
of Northern Colorado in Greeley. Already shooting for the top, J.R. applied for
and got the Editor-in-Chief position and hired me as his News Editor.
With black hair so sprayed and lacquered it shone like a ’65
Impala low rider, J.R. had an arrogance about him borne of burgeoning talent.
His dark eyes flashed when he talked about The News, which he ate, drank and
slept.
Behind those eyes an even deeper darkness lurked. From Grand
Junction, he’d hint late at night in the newsroom about a mom who was in a
nursing home there, and who wasn’t going to get better. I don’t ever remember
him going home to visit her, or the working class family he had left behind and
appeared to want to be shed of.
We had several things in common … News, Nicotine and Novas …
His Chevy was yellow and mine blue, but they were of similar vintage, and J.R.
was forever coming up behind me as I typed at my desk and borrowing two of my
Camel unfiltered cigarettes. One which would go in his mouth and be set ablaze,
and another which went behind his ear until he shifted it to his mouth and came
sniffing around later for another.
We made a good team. He was a better reporter than I was and
I was a better writer than he was and we learned from each other. A natural
lady’s man to my nerdy shyness, he once called me and a reporter that I had
been sleeping with, and who had broken up with me, into his office when it was
getting in the way of the work. He told both of us together that we needed to
work it out. Privately he told her that if it came down to firing her or me, he
would fire her. Privately he told me to quit sleeping with the reporters unless
I was going be enough of a print pimp to keep them in line.
A year ahead of me in school, it looked like J.R. was on his
way to Bigger and Better when he applied for an internship with the San Jose
Mercury News in California the summer between his junior and senior year.
Competing with candidates from across the country to work at one of the more
well-known and respected papers on the West Coast at the time he made it to the
final rounds of interviews, but ultimately wasn’t selected.
It was stumble on his career path from which he would never
recover his balance.
That fall, saying “presidents don’t take cabinet positions,”
J.R. wouldn’t work at The Mirror. I continued writing and editing at the paper.
He dropped out of school. He was talented enough as a reporter that he was
getting stringer and freelance gigs with some of the local dailies, but when he
started pushing for a staff position they told him he needed to get that degree
first.
He had also begun to develop what was appearing line by line
to be a growing addiction to cocaine. Liking coke and weed and booze plenty
myself, I was happy to spiral down the shiny slide of substance abuse with him
… to a point. I remember both of us being out of money, and looking for a high,
and grinding up Vivarin caffeine pills and snorting them one night. Now in
retrospect I’m not sure if that makes us more pathetic for our need for a high,
or an indication of how naïve and nerdy our junior junkie ways were.
Since we weren’t going to school or working together, I saw
less and less of J.R., but I still heard about him. A mutual friend who said he
had found him nursing a drink and brooding one night at the bar, complaining
bitterly about the shit-hole amenities of a press box at a local high school
where he had managed to cage an assignment to cover a football game. I heard he
had gotten a gig covering Weld County for one of the dailies, but that his car
had broken down, and unable to fix it, he had simply let the State Patrol tow
it away and now was being buried by impound fees.
I consciously distanced myself from him. I didn’t answer my
phone when I heard him on the message machine, knowing all he wanted was to
borrow money. I was in the final push to get my degree, and I saw him less and
less and honestly thought about him even less than that.
One morning I was awakened by a call from my parents. They
had seen a story in that morning’s paper about the former editor of The Mirror
that had killed himself. The story didn’t name who it was, “pending
notification of next of kin” and my dad said he couldn’t dial the phone fast
enough, in fear that if he didn’t, it would ring.
J.R. had hung himself in his bedroom of the house he lived
in with several other guys. They said he had watched some ESPN SportCenter with
them, drank a few beers, then said he was going to bed.
When he didn’t come out the next morning they finally went in to see what was
up.
He was. Against the wall. With a belt around his neck. He
was 22.
I remember at the time of his death not seeing it as a
cautionary tale as much as a poetic prediction of where things may be headed.
Where I may be headed. I saw way too much romanticism in him choosing to kill
himself, too much torment.
In true shark smelling blood in the water journalistic
tradition that would have made J.R. proud I managed to get a freelance
assignment with the Denver Post’s Sunday magazine writing about his death. I
turned in this 10,000 word story that was as much a manifesto about college
journalism as about him. After I sent it to the editor J.R. came to me one
night in a dream. He was impressed that I had scored a gig with The Post, even
if it was over his dead body, and asked, "How long was it (the
story)?" When I told him, he said, "Oh man, that's way too
long."
He was right. The editor wrote back and said it was obvious
that his death had deeply affected me, but “the story just wasn’t something
they were looking to publish.”
As the years went by, I put J.R. away, pulling him out of my
emotional baggage every now and then, but for the most part, life went on.
That's why I was excited in 2005 to hear just before leaving for Lake Powell
for a vacation with Lesli and the girls and her parents that a reunion was
planned for late August of staffs of The Mirror from the mid-1980s when I
worked there. Quickly it became evident that part of any revisit to this time
would have to be a coming-to-terms with J.R., who for two decades had lain
beneath his native Grand Junction soil. Grand Junction was always the overnight
stop on the two-day drive to Powell.
I had been to J.R.'s grave in Grand Junction once before,
almost 20 years ago shortly after he died while I was doing research for the
story that never ran. Through all the years, it had stuck with me how the
cemetery was off 'Unaweep' Avenue. What hadn't stuck with me was how to get
there again. As soon as we hit Grand Junction on the return trip from Lake
Powell, I started trying to find directions. Despite the fervent and somewhat
hostile pronouncements by many Grand Junctionites that there was "no damn
cemetery off Unaweep," I eventually discovered there was, and how to get
there.
At dawn, on Father's Day, Lesli and I left the girls
sleeping with grandma and grandpa at the motel and headed out to the Orchard
Mesa Cemetery. I've always had good graveyard karma with Lesli. When we were
younger, we spent an entire afternoon drinking beer with Billy the Vault
Installer at Buddy Holly's grave in Lubbock, Texas. The years haven't
diminished her enthusiasm for such adventures, nor her sense of humor. As we
pulled into the Grand Junction cemetery - with gravestones and trees stretching
to the horizon - she actually laughed when I said: "It was by a
tree."
It was Lesli who first saw Ernie. It was her that approached
him and told him our story. Ernie didn't work for the cemetery, we got the
impression that maybe he was doing court-ordered public service but didn’t want
to probe too deeply, but for whatever reason he was out cutting weeds around
headstones with a weed-whacker at dawn on a Sunday for the city of Grand
Junction. While officially he couldn't be of assistance, he was sympathetic to
our quest.
"Could you come back Monday," he said?
"No, we're going to be heading back to Johnstown in the
next couple of hours," I said.
Ernie would have none of that. He said he knew where they
kept the grave registration cards in the cemetery office. He led us to the
office, where drawer after drawer of 3 x 5 card holders lined one wall and maps
of plots lined another. Lesli asked what J.R. stood for. I realized it was
"junior" and that he had been touchy about his real first name. But
time had smudged the memory enough that I couldn't read the handwriting in my
mind.
So we began a melancholy trip down the card catalogue of
Trujillos that lie in eternal rest at the cemetery. Old Trujillos. Baby
Trujillos. Wilfred Trujillo.
"That's it," I said. "Wilfred."
We wrote down the plot number, Ernie figured out the area on
one of the maps, and the three of us headed in that direction.
Ernie found it. I remember it being at the bottom of a small
hill, but there it was, near the road, under a tree. Ernie, proud as any
superhero, went back to his weed-whacking. Lesli hung back and I sat down on
the grave.
Like a wave, the past 20 years, the good and the bad, all
came over me. Lesli. Our marriage. Living in New Mexico. Moving to Johnstown.
The girls. The paper. All these things washed over me as I realized that J.R.
would never get to experience any of this. He was frozen in the amber of a
time, sitting on my psychic shelf like a trinket bought at an interstate truck
stop during a summer vacation that I pick up, and forget, at a whim.
I realized though, standing there, weeping at my friend's
grave, that he's also likely been along for the ride all the way - as the
spirit has moved him and me. I thought about whacking a chunk off his headstone
to take to the reunion, but I was afraid Ernie might get in trouble.
Now, looking back at J.R.’s story three decades
later, I’m not even sure he meant to kill himself. According to the coroner, he
had tried first looping the belt from a plant hook, but it had pulled out of
the ceiling. For years I pictured him so desolate, with plaster in that hair of
his that he used to scream like a queen if you touched, then grimly looping the
belt again to something more substantial, and the pain in his soul that kept
him from putting his feet back down on this earth after he pulled them up.
It’s just as likely in my mind now that maybe he was just trying to cut off the oxygen to his brain and then releasing it at the moment
before you pass out. I still feel sad, but now for the potential wasted chasing
a cheap high, not the romance of the torment and tragedy of it all, that back
then I think now in retrospect, I wore like a reflected badge of honor.
Either way: It's. Just. Damn. Sad.
Either way: It's. Just. Damn. Sad.
A couple of years ago, just before I got clean, I decided to
get a bracelet tattoo on my right wrist of “Day of the Dead” skulls, most of
them tweaked in some manner to honor someone in my life who has died. One of
them is of J.R. I told the tattoo artist I wanted something primitive and
basic. Blacks and whites and simple lines. “I want it to look like I got it in
prison,” I told him.
Now, when I hold my hand up while I’m writing, on the inside
of my wrist, J.R., a cigarette hanging out of his mouth,
his initials on his forehead and RIP on his chin, stare back at me from behind
greaser shades. It’s a reminder of him, but also an admonition to me about the
dangers of taking yourself too seriously, or looking in substances for an escape
from the ghosts that haunt you.
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