Over the phone, Tom Colley said to get to Bluefield "Go to Princeton and take a left."
It's a beautiful drive from Blacksburg to Bluefield. Rolling hills. No other cars. Must be where all those commercials are filmed showing only one car on the road.
I noticed the train tracks. The research I had done on Bluefield before coming up for the interview stated that Bluefield was primarily a railroad town. I like trains, so that was a plus.
The building looked newish. Tom Colley's office was on the second floor. Can't remember if I took the stairs or elevator. Jim Terry, then editorial page editor, was in his office by the elevator, smoking.
I walked into the newsroom. Since this was morning, the composing people weren't there yet. I don't think Frank Sayles, the managing editor, was there yet, either.
Some one sitting in a glass office got up from his desk when I wandered in. He turned out to be very tall. He was also smoking.
"Shoot, I'm gonna have to start smoking again to work here," I thought to myself. I had quit when I was fourteen and really didn't want to start again.
"I'm Tom Colley" he said in that deep voice of his, extending his hand outward (and downward cuz I'm not 6'10). We walked into his office. I was relieved he hadn't offered me a cigarette. The prospect of coughing through an interview frightened me.
That reminds me, Curt Barber lost a contact lens while Tom and I were interviewing him. We hired him, anyway. But that was later, sorry.
In the interview, Tom asked me a question (we were on first name basis already) that I couldn't answer.
"How do you feel about those stories you wrote?"
I knew he talking about the Virginia Tech stories that had gained national attention, not the high school track meets. I didn't have an answer.
"Uh, ... pretty good," I said hesitantly, thinking I had just blown the interview.
Tom deliberately put out his cigarette, squishing it in the ash tray as if to punish it. He cleared his throat, clicked his teeth and pursed his lips in and out like he did when he was going to say something important.
"Wrong answer, young grasshopper," was what I thought he was going to say. But he said nothing. He just looked at me for awhile.
"When can you start?" he finally said.
"Two weeks."
"Why not start tomorrow?"
"I'd like to give the paper two weeks notice."
Tom lit another cigarette. This time, by the way he looked at me, I felt I had given him the right answer.
"OK," he said. We shook hands and I went back to Christiansburg.
The publisher at the Messenger was so mad at me for going someplace else, she told me to pack my things and get out immediately. She didn't want to look at my 'disloyal' face for another minute, much less two weeks.
I was now working for the Bluefield Daily Telegraph and moving to Bluefield.
But I couldn't stop thinking about the question I couldn't answer Tom Colley. I realize now many of the questions Tom asked me were ethical questions. The question I couldn't answer wasn't just an ethical question, it dealt with how I felt about ethics.
I was too young and inexperienced to appreciate the depth of the question, and the mind that asked it. The feelings about what happened to people in the aftermath of those times has haunted me for years.
Getting older helped put those events in a different perspective. I decided I really wanted to talk about these ethical issues with Tom, and our shared experiences (I spent a lot of time in Bluefield getting mad at Tom). I went to the Bluefield Daily Telegraph website to send him an email.
The lead story was Tom's obit. I was stunned. I couldn't believe it. I was mad at myself for not doing something sooner. Now it was too late.
I wanted to go that Denny's across the street, eat crappy food and tell him I understood why he asked me that question in the interview. I wanted to tell him I finally had an answer.
Part Three: The Answer to the Question
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