Wednesday, June 27, 2007

First Time

Off-topic post. Comic books for everyone! Regular posts to return soon.



To the left! To the left! All these SPOILERS are coming in a blog to the left!





Please don't judge me for quoting Beyonce.


SPOILERS AWAY!


The last Wednesday of the month is one of my favorite days out of the whole 30-something day cycle. All my favorite comics come out on the last Wednesday and since I only buy five comics a month, due to budgetary reasons, the last Wednesday pretty much defines my monthly comics experience.

Today was an excellent Wednesday, on most counts. Daredevil and Iron Fist, at the hands of Ed Brubaker, were wonderful. I can't wait for Daredevil #100 in August! It's triple-friggin-sized! My first 100! WOO!

However, I also got another first today. My first, "WHY!?" moment.

This sucks.....


WHY!?

For those of you that didn't realize that was just a digital picture on my kitchen counter top, Kyle Rayner, my favorite Green Lantern, metamorphized into the evil Parallax. The same Parallax that a decade ago drove many a Hal Jordan fan raving mad. Superman went out in a blaze of glory. GL's become monsters. BAH! I guess it goes with the space cop thing.

I understand that this, the whole evil thing, must happen. Even a character like Kyle Rayner, who is only about thirteen years old, becomes stale without change. The initial "Whiz-bang" of a hero fades away if the only problems he/she faces is the "villain of the month." It's what defines the "modern age" of comics, and what sometimes can destroy it. Again, I refer to the original Parallax shenanigans. If you go too edgy, then you eventually fall off.

Kyle recently became a near god in the "Ion" storyline, and now he has fallen. It makes sense. I enjoy superhero comics where the good guy actually wins. I don't mind how we get there and I don't mind Pyrrhic victories, but I like for characters to come out on top. DC will probably kill off Kyle Rayner, which makes for another comic first for me. As a nerd, it feels like I'm growing up. And I'M FREAKING OUT!!!!!

Hopefully SallyP will get her thoughts up about the Sinestro Corps War soon and I can calm down a bit. Until then....FREAKING OUT!

Peace!

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Underneath

The past few days in Ithaca have ranged in the mid-90's and everyone, everything, is seeking relief. A young white-tail deer doe has taken refuge under our porch. Well, actually, under the house's porch. Amanda and I live in the bottom half of a house split into two apartments. The porch belongs to the upstairs tenant, but we get the best view of everything under the weathered planks.

Living in a converted basement isn't bad at all. During the summer, that first blast of air from the apartment feels good. Compared to the outside temperature, for a few minutes, it feels like we have air-conditioning. My skin gets that same tingling feeling I remember from sitting next to an air-conditioner after getting wet in the rain. In this heat, it feels wonderful.

Of course, then there is the deer. It comes and goes throughout the day, even though the few plants that grow around the porch's edge show plenty of deer damage. She would never have to leave, it seems, except for the necessary exercise. In our sheltered suburban environment, she has found another layer of security. Imagine the ecological equivalent of tucking the end of your blanket under your feet.

As environmental studies majors, we were taught to hate deer. They are pesky generalist species that over-graze the few ecosystems left around development. They endanger people (and themselves) by blasting through roadways and backyards. They munch away on hobbies and livelihoods. I called a u-pick strawberry farm last Sunday and the outgoing message on the lady's answering machine went, "I had a lot of deer damage this year. They took most of the fruit." She suggested going to another farm.
Deer, however, are native animals, which we first decimated and now brought back. All those flowers are not. Like the rabbit, we share a love-hate relationship with them. A creature we venerate though movies and Romantic imagery, but still hunt.
Observing the porch deer, I understand how people can fall in love with the creatures. She twitches her ears, searching for sounds in the neighborhood. I studied her snout from the kitchen window. She appears equine from my angle and whoever challenged the nobility of a horse? Her fur there starts bristly white and then changes into the warm browns of her body. Reminds me of my dog's own nose. Her own snout looked snowy around her wet nose. The deer's mouth lines run clean across her entire face and up towards the eyes.

I have never looked much into a deer's eyes. Folks say plenty about human eyes, and even cat and hawk's eyes. All those eyes have nice layers of pupil and iris, each with its own colors. and while deer certainly have a pupil and iris, all one sees is black.

How expressive those black eyes can be! The eyes shine with different lusters and inkiness, giving the entire surface a slick surface and mottled underside. I have observed the same wonder in my pet's eyes. How the rabbit will expand or shut his eyes or the guinea pig will bat the reflective sheen of his. In the scientific sense, black absorbs all colors, but does not reflect them. It keeps all those molecules and dancing photons, letting the deer express that energy through muscle and movement.

Peace!

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Surf and Turf

One of my favorite books, and favorite writers, is J. Robert Lennon's Pieces for the Left Hand*. It is a neat little read, made up of snippets focusing on life in one medium Upstate town. Lennon has a few books out chronicling several fake little towns in New York. They are all based on places right here in CNY. The first book I ever read by him, Mailman, featured the town of Nestor, NY. Nestor is pretty much a carbon-copy of Ithaca. And a nice scintillating copy of it! Filled with all the zanniness that gives you enough material to both love and hate the place. He was recently in the news for creating a fictonal Aurora, NY and writing about how one famous resident has bought up much of the local real estate, in an attempt to create an ideal "dollhouse" look.

I find Lennon's work gorgeous and find it invigorating that he lives in the area. He is a wonderful satirist, cutting, yet never sardonic. You don't need to take a step back and say, "Well, he is being satirical, right there," with Lennon. It all just makes sense.

Anyway, I mentioned Lennon, because the following piece is something in the spirit of Pieces for the Left Hand. Just a quick little anecdote that could be a part of something big. I don't have the patience for writing full lenght fiction. I just realized that. But maybe I can whip up a nice little chap book with a dozen or so interconnected stories. Here is my story in the same vein as Pieces and with a little of those quick George Saunders sentences. I just finished In Persuasion Nation. Amazing book, and another amazing local resource.


__________________________________

After Vacation

By Garik Charneco

I saw it in the paper after we got home. The lobster story. In the "Odds and Ends" section. I was in the kitchen catching up on all the back papers the delivery boy had stacked on our porch. I gave Ryan, my son, the little subscription hold slip to drop off before we left. I enjoyed a nice week at the beach, knowing all the stove elements were off, the windows were locked, and the paper wouldn't come. But, the papers came.
I found it fun. To read through all those papers and catch up on the past week's news. I stacked them into a neat little pile on the kitchen table, a little dossier for me on our town.
And there was the story. The lobster story.

The headline read, "Park officials baffled by lobster release."

I had seen the exodus! I had seen the story! Ryan and I were throwing around the Frisbee and he heaved it over the dune grass. My first fears were that it landed in the water or bonked some poor person laying behind the grass. However, I heard no splashes or curses.
"Hey," I said to the boy. "Go get it. The one that lost it has to get it!" Those were the rules between me and my father and they would be the same between Ryan and I. But, Ryan, just shrugged.
"You got get it," he said pulling his cap down over his eyes. "You're closer."
I should had said something. I should have made a lecture, right there. About responsibility and Frisbee tradition, hut, it was vacation. I let it slide, and what a wonderful thing, because I had seen the news!

Ryan had heaved the Frisbee well beyond the dune grass and almost to the edge of a low cliff! There I saw it, the story. Below the cliff, I saw a dozen people squatting in the water next to boxes. All the boxes looked like coolers, made of styrofoam and thick. And there were some beach towels thrown around the sheltered beach. Looked like a picnic to me, at first. But, then, I saw all those lobsters coming out! I almost dropped the Frisbee, I was so surprised. Even from up on the cliff, I made out the lobsters. They looked black and mottled, especially in the shallows, but their spindly legs still kicked. The people there lured them out of the boxes. I heard lots of "C'mon's!" and "Yay's!" I didn't know what to make of the whole thing, so I just left.

I must had left before the lifeguards got there, accompanied by a ranger. The paper read, "When initially confronted, the liberators, as they referred to themselves, all produced receipts indicating they had bought the lobsters from local markets and restaurants."
Then a quote from a meat counter man and another from a restaurant manager. All their lobsters had disappeared into the sea.

The paper went on. "Dozens of live lobsters milled around the shallows at the east end, exploring the warm waters with their antennas. Park officials felt the freed lobsters would have a good chance at surviving in the wild due to existing fishing spots in the area. However, they discouraged others from copying the liberators actions, citing safety concerns."

I had only seen, maybe, seven black shapes in the water when I got the Frisbee. But the paper said over forty lobsters were freed. I imagined all those lobsters, pouring over one another in the same waters my family splashed. All their legs and eyes whirring through the sand and out into the sea. I should have gone down. Called Ryan and Marie, and even the baby for it would be irresponsible to leave her in her beach travel crib. Would have made even more of the vacation.

_______________________________

Any thoughts? I find the image of a dozen freed lobsters just clawing their way out to sea very moving and colorful**. I would be much more comfortable with it through a creative non-fiction lens. You know, pretend I am actually there. I'll try that for a final piece. Peace!



* Unfortunately, Pieces for the Left Hand, is only for sale in the UK. Makes no friggin' sense. If interested, you can buy it through Amazon UK or, if you live in Ithaca, can snag a copy at the Bookery 2 book store.

** While the ethics of freeing lobsters that one legally purchased are pretty clear, I am still fuzzy about how the animals will really take it. Releasing a domesticated cow into the wild, might not be the smartest thing, because that animal is no wild bovine. No bison, yak, or musk ox. I might not know anything but the feed lot! However, can a lobster go back to the wild? Some folks think so. In any case, makes for fascinating imagery, no? And for a crazy fish tale. Might try it sometime, if I lived by the sea.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Round-Up

I am back to the blog. Nothing really special to report. The trip to Ohio was lovely, as usual and I am plugging away at the new job. Even though I work in a law office that specializes in estate planning, wills, real estate, and such, I can't help but imagine being some plucky paralegal in the offices of Matt Murdock, wondering why all our clients seem to be gorgeous women or murderers.

Fan-boy feelings aside, it would probably be no fun to be Matt Murdock's paralegal. If I wasn't messing up the order of the Braille dots, a hitman would be throwing ninja stars at me from across the street.

Other jobs are going well. The coffee shop things keeps a going and my paper offered me to be the replacement film critic for the summer! But, then they found someone else who, you know, actually knew what they were talking about. Too bad. I was ready to convince my editor to let review the upcoming Transformers film for the paper. What a geek dream that would be!

"Optimus Prime has never looked better, leaving his boxy 80's looks for Bay inspired techno-militarism!" Well, I haven't actually seen the movie yet, so of course that line sounded bad, but, come on, the geekiness would have been astonishing!

Actual writing to follow later. Peace!

Monday, June 11, 2007

Hello, Charlotte

Speaking of nature...

________________

A Spider

By Garik Charneco

We live in the bottom half of a house split in two. We live in a basement. And every summer it fills up with creatures, mostly small. I caught a spider the other day, while getting the apartment ready for my sister's arrival. The nieces and nephew would not find the spider pleasing, probably even terrifying. Maybe the boy would delight in it, as little boys are supposed to, but I was never drawn to creepy crawlies. I imagined my nephew to be the same.

I pressed a plastic container against the ceiling and scooped her into the bowl. I didn't seal the lid, but left it haphazardly over the container. Too heavy for her to lift, but loose enough for me to watch.

I referred to the spider as a "her," because the back end, the thorax, glistened in a gray marble. It has a gelatinous shimmer to it and a purple veiny lattice work all around it. I envisioned her being pregnant, it being spring and all. Her legs were long, daddy-long legs long, but the field guide left over from college did not differentiate much in long-legged spiders. I had to pick from Eastern Daddy-Long Legs or Brown Daddy-Long Legs. All the other spiders in that section were woolly monsters with barbels and sharp hairs. Spider nothing like I have ever encountered, or would like to, in the apartment. Spiders nothing like her

She didn't seem like any of the long legs. From her midsection, her legs came away in neat little segments. Each joint between the segments had a pair of black bands around it, like old tube socks from gym class. She had a single black dot on the top of her midsection and nibbly thimble shaped head with a mess of shiny eyes. She performed tricks in the plastic, almost seemingly hanging from nothing in the middle of the bowl. Other times she pogoed on one leg, but, mostly, she probed at the sides and the lid.

I let her go into the container garden we keep outside the front door. I dropped her into some basil that had been gnawed on by insects unknown. As she scampered away, eight legs over one another, a moth flew into the house as if it knew the predator was gone.

________________________________

Peace!

Backyard Naturalist

I just finished reading a wonderful book. It's Suburban Safari by Hannah Holmes and it chronicles Holmes year spent detailing and recording everything in her backyard. She chronicles a wonderfully wild quasi-ecosystem in a quirky humor full of pleasant anthropomorphizing. As compared to saccharine anthropomorphizing, which is what I do with my bunny Carson.


"Carson-warson-darson! I LOVE YOU SO MUCH! My sweet prince!"

Like that. The guinea pig gets it too...

Anyway, I enjoyed the book for several reasons. I mentioned this earlier in the blog, but during the summer I enter my naturalist phase. My first summers here I spent lounging by the scrappy rock islands in Six Mile Creek, reading God Emperor of Dune on a fallen oak log over a divot cut in the stream bank. I can't help but enjoy a good piece of nature writing, particularly during the summer when I can see all the life mentioned. Holmes demonstrates a greater understanding of the impacts of lawns and suburbia on the environment. The American Dream tells us to isolate ourselves in the big house with the big lawn. But the big lawn; with its Kentucky Bluegrass monoculture, lawn mower fumes, and pesticides, brings the problems right to the castle.

OK, that's a bit melodramatic. Most of the lawns I see are the types of "Freedom Lawns" that Holmes describes. Not just perfectly manicured grass, but little patches of dandelions, clover, and plantains also making up the greenery. The whole book made me wish I owned the land I lived on, so I could run about creating edge space and planting natives all summer long.

I also enjoyed the book because it demonstrated how nature is all around us, not just in wild lands and mile-long hikes. Nothing beats a John Muir style hike through the sequoias or musing about taking on the Appalachian Trail, but I guess I am just too much of a Romantic. Even the pesky Ailanthus tree, can inspire me to wax poetically. Not very well, mind you me, but waxing nonetheless!

In The End of Nature, author Bill McKibben, describes just that-- the end of nature. But McKibben does not talk about total apocalypse. He means the end of nature as something completely separate from humanity. There is no wilderness, at all. Climate change and global pollution took care of that. But there is still wonder and awe in nature. It will always be gorgeous and violent. Holmes even describes the micro-fauna of her living room carpet in documentary terms. A carpeted Serengeti where mites and pseudoscorpions, all microscopic, fight for life. Holmes describes another scenes where a native plants enthusiasts does a survey of her lawn. It does not go well.

Everything is from somewhere else. The common garden slug, common earthworm, iris, lily, and those loathsome English Sparrows are all imports. Our nature isn't old. It's just a different kind of new.

However, it is still something. Something "natural." And for that it inspires me, while it also bothers me.

Peace.

Saturday, June 09, 2007

Ghost Story

I enjoy ghost stories. In the book club I used to go to, one of the fellow readers said, "Garik, you sure do enjoy horror." I guess I do, even though it isn't a genre I really explored. Much of the horror I enjoy is the Palahniukan horror of the spooky and the mundane. Patrick Bateman and X-File such. However, I enjoy pretty much all horror or thrillers. * Even the cheesiet movie or story can work for me.

With all that said, here is little ghost story I once wrote for a class. It isn't scary, but what do you think of the pacing? I find it reads fast, especially now in retrospect, but I never meant it to be heavy. Just a slice of life story....with some ghosts. Peace!

______________________

Smells Like Almonds

By Garik Charneco

The soft crunch of the wind pant’s nylon shell comes in between my gasps for air. The old fleece sweater I have on wicks up my sweat and when my skin hits the wet fabric, I remember how alive I am. Someone once remarked about how depressing my job was and she was surprised I just didn’t crawl into a bottle after every client. A haze of alcohol could take the edge off work, but it didn’t get my adrenaline oozing or make my skin a gentle firelight red, like jogging. Alcohol would just lull me, dull my senses and make me feel like the ghosts I treat.

I take a gentle curve into the new cookie cutter home development that lines the old country road I jog. The cream-colored duplex houses break the former wood lots in neat square parcels. Trampolines, swimming pools, and blacktop dominate where there used to stand gnarled swamp white oaks. The only thing wild left in the area is the deer and the screaming children that tumble on manicured lawns. I run past house after identical house knowing there are no ghosts in them. They are too new and free of swallowed marbles, wine-painkiller cocktails, and faulty furnaces. I give it time and soon some guy will come back from the office early and find his wife with the neighbor’s Mexican gardener or some teen will freebase a little bit too much.

Running through the neighborhood I wonder if anyone will recognize me. My commercial ran this morning, right after the farm report and the early news. I hope I don’t get a prank call today. I get a lot of pranks from people who think wasting my time and my generous offer of a free estimate is funny. They call me for a ghost and when I open the attic, closet, or wherever they say creepy noises are coming from, I find an old dressmaking mannequin with a white sheet thrown over it. They listen, feigning interest, while I go on about Kirlian photography, time slips, and shamanistic shape shifting. Then the tape recorder they hid behind the couch skips.

I take another soft, gentle bend and look straight on, ignoring the bay windows, porch swings, and shingled roofs. At the edge of the neighborhood, my cell phone rings, breaking my stride. The adrenaline in me stops rushing and my legs begin to ache. On the phone, Mariela from Blue Iris screams at me, demanding I come downtown. I ask for an hour and then I hear a dish crash in the background. She says, “Thirty minutes, Fort.”

* * *

The cold blast of the Blue Iris Café’s air conditioner smacks me. My hair, still wet from a quick shower, feels icy and overexposed. The coffee shop appears busy and I wonder whether Mariela was just panicking. If Roger was really acting up, then the place would be abandoned, but this looks like the usual lazy Saturday lunch crowd. Patrons still curl up in the plush lounge chairs, reading paper backs and sipping at lattes. A couple slices off pieces of tiramisu and feeds it to each other in slow dainty dollops of espresso soaked cake. Over the speakers, chanting choral music plays, and while it seems out of character with Mariela’s intended Indie, up-scale, trendy atmosphere I dismiss the music choice as a phase.

Even over the choral music and hiss of the coffee machine I hear my name ring out from the back of the shop. “There you are! Fort!”

Mariela does not come over to me, but instead angrily waves me over to the back. Her overalls are stained brown and a patch of sweat expands out from the neck of her tank top. Her long, black, curly hair shines from a mix of sweat, steam and grease. I walk over to her and when I get close she grabs me by the hand and leads me into a corner, where she pins me against a stack of soda can flats and begins questioning me. Mariela speaks in hushed whispers, but her hazelnut eyes cut into me, and I droop my head. “Damn it, Fort,” she says. “I thought you said you got rid of that thing.” She points up at the ceiling and waves her hand, motioning to the entire space of the coffee shop. She pulls my head up and says, “Look at me, damn it! That thing is scaring away my customers!”

I look into her eyes and she reminds me of that roadside wraith I treated last week, angry and betrayed. “Mariela,” I start, with the soothing voice I use with ghosts. “I don’t get rid of them. I treat them, get them to cope, deal with their condition…”

She cuts me off. “Well, you failed because today he just starts moaning and moaning! He smashed a set of dishes and fired a jet of hot water at one of my employees; I lost all my morning regulars. They went to the gas station for coffee!” She rubs at her eyes and groans. “That kid has been too much of a pain. First he dies in the middle of the store and even when dead he steals money from the tip jar and moans on and on.”

I pry her fisted fingers from my chest and let her hand fall to the side. “It wasn’t his fault. He didn’t know he was allergic to the almonds in that biscotti. Both his parents are lawyers, you know? They could have sued and then…”

Mariela grabs both my hands and cups them inside her own sweaty hands. She holds them up so both hands stand in the air in a spidery grip. Her hands are strong and I feel uncomfortable. She swings our hands from side to side with every one of her words. “Fort, I have customers drinking gas station coffee and employees threatening to call OSHA because of this thing. Fucking OSHA! Deal with it.”

I look up at the ceiling, my hands still in her vise. “I don’t hear anything.”

She breaks the hold and flings her arms upward. “Jesus,” she screams, and the tiramisu couple stares at her, odd and concerned. Mariela blushes and hunches down behind the soda flats. “You think I’m making this all up? I have this chamber music on because it drowns out his moans and groans. If I turn it off or switch to the usual music, we’ll hear him.”

Mariela pulls me to the center of the hallway and starts pushing me even further back. We pass the kitchen and a store room, until we’re at the grimy back door. She opens the door and light begins to creep in through the crack. “I’ll try to talk to him, Mariela, but you know my policy. Ghosts don’t work with guarantees.”

I feel my heel lean over the threshold and wiggle over the gap. Mariela begins to ease me down, into the alley. “And I don’t work with empty promises. I’m a business woman and I didn’t make this coffee shop out of broken promises and shoddy jobs! I paid good money for you and now he comes back! Unacceptable! I thought I stopped dealing with hustlers and liars when I left El Salvador.” The door is wide open and the heat from the outside feels strange with the icy air of the café. “Go out there, talk to him, and get rid of him. If he isn’t gone then I am going to call that psychic lady from daytime TV to blast him out!”

I step down and walk backwards, into the alley. Mariela shuts the door. Standing there, all alone, worrying about losing this job to Mystic Delvar, I cup my hands around my mouth and begin to call, “Roger! Roger!”

* * *

Roger is not a mean guy; he’s a simple guy. He didn’t deserve to die of anaphylactic shock, right in the middle of Blue Iris, with his throat doubling over and his face buried in his accounting textbook. When he was alive, Roger worked Thursday nights at the soup kitchen, said his prayers, and kept a 3.4 GPA. When he was alive, he just needed a nice Catholic girl to go to his parent’s house for dinner every Friday night. I keep calling out for him, alternating my calls between long coos and sharp pleas. I hear a clang, metal against metal, and the ladder of a fire escape slides down, slamming upright into the ground. I swivel around, and through the sun I see Roger drop down, swaying from side to side like a falling leaf

Ghosts like Roger, those that just never loved or were never loved, aren’t very tangible. Unlike angry wraiths or endless apparitions, Roger is just above a poltergeist in the visibility department. He comes through in wispy flickers, undulating as one unit, like a swarm of insects. His voice comes out in pieces, in a sort of ghost Morse code that starts with one word, pauses, and then says another. Roger touches the ground and tells me, in a broken slur, “Hello, Fort.”

I whip out my notepad, just to humor him. My head begins to ache, pain brought on by annoyance. Roger would not be in this situation if he ever had said, “I love you.” His post-partum depression and permanent residence on this astral plane stem from deep issues with his parents and with loneliness. I look at him and say, “Roger. How are you? I hear that you have been causing some trouble? What is up?”

He swirls up and hovers over me. “I saw McKenzie today!” His words trail off and his pauses are long and stifled. “Saw her wrapped around some huge meathead in the shop today.”

I look at some of my older notes, again to humor him, because I know who McKenzie is. We can’t have a talk without him mentioning her or her sea-foam green eyes, dirty red hair, Roman nose, or pout-perfect lips. “We have talked about this before, Roger. She wasn’t yours.” He never even talked to her.

“But I sat behind her in class for an entire semester. I know how many freckles are on the back of her neck. She smiled at me once.”

I have all of this in my notebook, written in smudged blue ink. My headache grows sharper and Roger complains about the guy McKenzie was with. If it weren’t for his speaking impediment, his words would machine guy across the alley in angry, whiny bits. I rub my pupils and try to block out Roger. He has no new developments and Mariela hasn’t done anything to anger him. Roger had a relapse and wants attention. I can see this even after just one question. Fuck, a sixteen-year-old girl reading Cosmo can recognize Roger’s wailing need for comfort. He complains about feeling unwanted and even betrayed. Even though Roger no longer has any senses, he says that he is in pain and his heart broken.

The headache begins to chip away at my temples. I want to grab on to Roger and somehow give him this headache, make him remember how it really feels to be alive. I bury my face in my hands and he notices me, trying to ignore him. Roger clicks his lips and the words come out slow enough that he sounds pretentious. “Are you even listening to me, Fort? Did Mariela get you out here just to distract me?” The clouds around what would be his head thicken like a thunder head and flicker in rapid saccades of light. For the first time in this conversation he is thinking, but I worry about what. “Is McKenzie in there? Did you just get rid of me so she can come back with that meathead and get some spanakopita or mochacinno? Are you here so Mariela can make a sale!?” His body twirls around and wisps of clouds slither like tethered rags. I have seen blood pouring from showerheads, computers type out phantom messages, and a rag doll in Key West scurry across a room. Roger does not scare me, but he exacerbates my headache till it pounds like the souls trapped in the scraped metal of the Kursk. For the first time ever in the presence of a ghost, I scream. The noise sounds loud, but angry enough that it carries no fear.

Roger stops his fit and he hovers in the air, straight up like a pillar of air. He says, “Woah.”

I’m not sorry and I go off on Roger. “God! We have been though this a dozen times! McKenzie was never yours and she never knew you. She can date anyone she wants because she has that right, she’s alive!” I push my eyeballs deep into their sockets, trying to shoo away the pressure on my head. “And you need to leave this coffee shop. You’re not a specific haunting, so any attachment is entirely in your head.” I lean up against the wall and slide down the hot bricks. I use my free hand to wave at Roger, telling him, “If you stay, then Mariela is going to bring in Mystic Delvar and then you’re gone. She’ll blast you with psychic energy, and then who knows?” I shrug my shoulders. “She is the real deal, but whether you just dissipate or end up in limbo, I can’t say.”

I still have my eyes closed, but my head feels better. A tiny breeze of hits my side and Roger hovers over to my side. “You mean that psychic lady on TV? She is real?”

I nod, laughing. “Of course. Come on, I am talking to you, a ghost. How can Mystic Delvar be any different?”

“What would I do, Fort? Like you just said, I’m a ghost.”

I think I have a moment with Roger and he snatches it away with his whining. I take my hand away from my face and look up at the sky. The view is blocked by the grates of fire escapes and the verdant leaves of the plants on the terraces. “Roger,” I tell him. “You’re a spirit. You can fly. Go somewhere. Get a map and just find some isolated island and live there. Go haunt a theme park or something. Go back to the college and haunt your old dorm room for all I care, but not this place.”

The air around me rises up and I lay eyes on Roger. The vapor around him no longer undulates, but wafts in the alley. “Psychic blasts? Maybe I will leave then. Go see McKenzie”

I look away from him and stare at the pavement on the alley. “Good. Just leave and try to stay calm.” I reach my hand over, but Roger is above me. All my previous experience with him and I still struggle to find his eyes.

Roger keeps floating up and begins to meld into the broken sky. “Thanks for the help,” he says, when he is just wisp. He completely disappears, but his presence still lingers, like a hangover on a Sunday morning. “I still feel like shit,” he announces and then the presence is gone.

I’m alone in the alley and then Mariela comes through the back door. Her arrival feels all too convenient and I bet she was listening in, hearing me and Roger. She carries an empty cardboard box with its sides adorned with dancing bananas and smiling Clementine oranges.

“You done,” she asks, her finger nails gripping into the wax-covered sides of the box.

I pull myself from off the alley floor. Dusting my self off I tell her, “We talked and I think he is gone for good. Decided to go on a vacation.”

Mariela curls her lip and twitches her nose, getting ready for a question. “The ghost? A vacation?” She chucks the box into the dumpster and starts laughing a deep and hot Salvadorian laugh, filled with life. “That is crazy, but is he really gone?”

I nod and raise my hand, flicking my wrist and twirling my fingers, so that they make this starburst motion. “Gone,” I point at the sky. “Poof! Gone for good.”

Mariela pulls a rag out from the front pocket of her overalls. She starts to wipe her fingers clean, shucking off brown coffee dust from her fingers. “Well, I guess thanks are in order.” She comes over to me and grabs my hands again, but this time puts them up to my chest. She pushes the hunk of flesh into my chest, rubbing the flat of my sternum. Mariela brings her face to mine and we are inches away from each other. For a second I think she is going to kiss me. Her breath comes across steamy and smelling of Arabica. “But only if he never comes back. I’ll call you in a few days.” Then she breaks the hold and pushes me away. I slide back a bit and watch her laugh, booming with delight. Her business is saved, but my headache remains.

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*Except for that godforsake Chucky doll in the Child's Play movies. Hate the little bastard and all his sequels. Dolls and any sort of toy that comes to life for the sole purpose of killing eqauls terrifying.


In Sickness and Health

Been a while since I blogged, but that doesn't mean things haven't kept busy.

Right now, I am helluva sick. A I have been taking knock-off dollar store Nyquil to boot! So this, cold from hell hasn't gone away just yet. But my lovely girlfriend Amanda bought me some of the real stuff today, so eat it sickness! Whenever I am sick, I try a two-prong approach of western bio medicine and alternative therapies. Basically, I wash down some Nyquil with a whole packet of Gypsy Cold Care Traditional Medicinal tea. It rocks.

Other news...

1) Got a real, new job! WOO HOO! I am going to be a paralegal for a downtown law office. WOO HOO! It is only a part time gig, but it pays well and has health care! WOO HOO! Because of the part time basis, I will still be slinging coffee in the shop, but that is fine as the adjustment to the new store has gone well.

2) The paper I write for freelance has officially listed me as a contributor in their credits! WOO HOO!

3) I have Nyquil! WOO HOO!

I am actually going to Ohio later this week, so I hope to slap some posts up before I go and have a legitimate excuse for not posting.

Peace!

Sunday Morning

 My father was not a man of faith That is something I stole from him, that phrase I use to politely defuse the handsome couple at my door on...