Showing posts with label Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fiction. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 06, 2008

Firemen Ring Out The Night

Here is that fiction piece I mentioned last week. It takes a letter to the editor format, which is figurative crutch since it helps me frame the action. I strain to use the word fiction since this could really be just a little slice of life piece. Vonnegut and Saunders have used this format in their short story compilations and in the hands of such talent, you get some poignant pieces. Saunders has this one piece ("99390" from In Persuasion Nation) which is nothing but the type out of a lab report (Made up, of course). It narrates the clinical results of brutal animal experiments and the repetition hammers away at your heart strings. This is just cranky. The title is supposed to remind you of the headlines you see above letters to the editor in the paper. There must be a subtle art to that titling. You could save time by just saying 'This guy is pissed!"

Enjoy!

___________________________________________________

Firemen Ring Out The Night
By Garik Charneco

Dear Editor O' Lalan:

Well, I have done it! I decided to "Not take it anymore!" I decided to remain patient no longer.

Oh, I had said these statements before. I will not lie. I often said them to the TV screen or the headlines of your very paper, but, I have now actually done it. I felt empowered after doing it. After taking this stand. Imagine voting, but with your lungs and not with a piece of paper.

I live on Dakota Avenue, right across from the Ward 3 fire station. I closed on this house forty years ago with my wife. We raised a single daughter here and now she lives in Milwaukee working at an art museum. I buried my wife from here three years ago. Well, not literally with something like an extra long steam shovel! And the school district and four different baby sitters had something to do with raising our daughter.

I am used to the noise of the fire station. My family made peace with its blaring cadence at the earliest moment. Every time before the firemen head out, a woman's voice blares from the PA. Her voice comes across muffled and nondescript like the voices of adults on the Peanuts cartoons my daughter used to watch. Her warnings bounce off the cement walls of the garage bay and come in through the living room windows.

"WUUUUUPPPP.....West Neeeintth.....akkkkkkk......truooookkkkk......kiiiiii.....WHAAAPP!"

After that comes the familiar truck and fanfare. When my daughter was younger, I secretly wished for a son that might better appreciate the trucks and tools. The whimsy waned on her as soon as she turned eight.

I did not hope to criticize firefighters. As I prepared this letter, I realized how unwise that proved today. But, I had to do something and I did it!

Neighbors will know what is next to the Ward 3 fire station. Bowden's Bar and Fan Tavern are next to the station and diagonally from my home. Why these bars have not merged into one watering hole escapes me, but I never adjusted to their cadence. It is too sporadic, fueled by different mixers and metabolisms. I have written about them before and even spoke to Mr. Bowden briefly, but I later heard he moved and left the business to his son. Screams, hollers, and the crackling of broken glass often rise up each Friday night. My wife and I made use of ear plugs and my daughter seemed to not be bothered. We made sure to keep her room as far back from Dakota Avenue so that her window overlooks our yard.

Recently, the fire station's and bar's soundtracks mixed. The firemen often spend summer nights on the driveway of their station in lounge chairs. They do not do much except sit. One sometimes reads a newspaper or paperback novel. One night they brought up a ping-pong table and exchanged volleys waiting for the alarm. This does not bother me as they would probably be doing the same thins indoor during the winter months.

But the bar patrons often approach the firemen. Particularly young ladies that like to scream out phrases like "Hooray for firemen!" or "You guys are so much cooler that those cops." Many stumbling patrons like to task the firemen to take their pictures. The men twist their hands into symbols and jut out their arms. The women strike a pose and hold their arms out the side or rest their heads on the firemen's shoulders. A bachelorette party once waltzed by the station and they made the firemen hold an inflated rubber penis while they did cartwheels on the station's lawn. The firemen clicked away with borrowed cameras and the one with the inflatable penis playful walloped his coworkers.

I do not think this would happen indoors. And why are the firemen encouraging such debauchery instead of turning the revelers away? Isn't this the kind of behavior that leaves a hot plate on the kitchen counter or knocks over an idle candle?

As I have mentioned already, I took a stance. On the night of the bachelorette party incident I sat on my porch. Through the cartwheels and screams I ducked down by the veranda and screamed out, "Hey! Are my taxes paying for this!?"

I did not notice any reaction, because I immediately scrambled back into the house. My knees still ache and I have yet to repair the door where the palm of my hand pulled the screen from the aluminum frame. Maybe this letter will bring something of it. A comment from a supervisor or remark from the fire fighter's union. I doubt the revelers will remark since they probably do not live in the city.

I suggest that all residents should try it out! The brick apartments across from city hall could become a new loud speaker for citizen's action. The bicycle shop could rent out a front window and a bullhorn allowing people to scream out "What will you do about county assessments!" or "Please lower the sales tax! The civic center is complete!"

It feels wonderful!

Sincerely,

Edward Meadows
214 Dakota Avenue

_______________________________________________

Peace!



Tuesday, July 01, 2008

With Children?!

Here is that story (Or, better out, creative endeavor) I mentioned at the end of last week.
___________________________________________

Untitled

By Garik Charneco

Anne had just learned the best way to settle down baby Estelle. She squawked out "wada-wada-wada," while playing a quick game of peek-a-boo.
"It look like she is your kid," I told her while I cleared space in the broom closet for the diapers we bought. I snuck into the wholesale club with my brother-in-law's card and all the new items overwhelmed our loft.
'Oh, shut the hell up," she responded with a half-smile. She carried the baby off towards the crib in our bedroom. That, also, barely fit. We had to remove the oak headers and caravan it down the steps of my sister's house and up the fire escape to our apartment.
"Did you put Mickey, to bed, already?" Her voice carried from the bedroom. Baby Estelle cooed.

I was still trying with my nephew. "I wanted honesty as a kid. No more bullshit from my parents. Just wanted to be treated like an adult," I told Anne when we drove over to pick the kids up the night after the accident. A neighbor had come in the house and laid them up in their little robes and bulging overnight bags. Mickey ran from the hallway and wrapped him self around my knees. His forehead bumped against my belt buckle, but he made no sign of pain.
"Are mami and papi, OK?" I strapped him into the back of our car and pulled the straps extra tight. The neighbor had brought out a booster seat from my sister's Town and Country mini van, but I stuffed it in the back. Mickey seemed to appreciate this.
"Are they, OK?"
"We will go see you dad tomorrow in the hospital. Your mom...," I struggled for a lie. Almost like a reflex, I wanted to say she is with Grandpa Hector in the sky or in everything so that she would always watch him. "she is gone, Mickey, but she loved you very much and you and Estelle will be OK with me an Aunt Anne."
Mickey stared at the back of my seat. "Will I see hear at a funeral?"
I imagined what funeral he might remember. Maybe it was someone on Mike's, my brother-in-law, side of the family. Or he learned it on TV or in a book.
"Yes," even though we had barely thought of that.

On another separate ride, returning from the hospital, Anne told Mickey that his dad was still asleep, but that the doctors thought he would wake soon. Mickey looked out on the lights of Detroit Avenue and while staring at the low glow of a Convenient Market sign asked, "Why did mami die?"
Baby Estelle began to cry and Anne swung around in her seat to tend to her. I thought about entropy and randomness. "It just happens, Mickey. You can't do anything about it except make sure that you work hard and have fun each and ever day."
He then began to cry. It was the first time we had seen him cry since the accident. I focused on the driving. All four traffic lights in front of me turned green and I shifted into auto pilot. Anne then tended to Mickey.
At home, she ripped into me.
"Who the fuck says that existential junk to a six-year old?!"
"What else do you want me to say? You can expert on children, now!?"
"And then that little "seize the day" stuff at the end. Jesus, you trying to run his life like a finishing school, Antonio?"
"Just trying honesty." I could not imagine myself saying anything about God, angels, or bad men with a straight face.
Baby Estelle began to cry. Anne ran to the bedroom. "These are your niece and nephew, Antonio!" Then the door closed. Not with a slam, but gently, as to not bother the baby any longer.

We had converted the only spare room into a bed room. We had pulled out the particle board desk and shuffled the computer to the living room. Any books on the shelves were covered by Mickey's own books and toys. We had slid our pet rabbit's cage out of the room, even thought Mickey wanted to keep him there. "Can I share him with you as my pet, too," he asked that first morning after everything. We had no idea where he went to school and decided to just keep him at home. "Sure," Anne said, even though the rabbit, Marzipan, struggled with even the thought of children. I barely see her anymore, but am reminded of her presence by the soft thumping noise coming from behind the couch sometimes.

In the room, Mickey lay on the air mattress staring at an infomercial on the 13-inch TV we brought from our bedroom. The living room TV was no bigger, but he adjusted well to that. "Time for bed, Mickey."
He nodded, but kept the TV on.
Not spotting a remote, I clicked it off before I kneeled next to the air mattress. I felt the rubber and it bounced back against my palms. "Are you ready for school tomorrow?" It had been two weeks, but the school contacted us through the hospital.
"I guess so," he said. "Do you think the other kids will make fun of me."
'Because of your parents?" I wondered if children were really that cruel. Whatever happened to the sheer sanctity of bringing your mother into this? "No, of course not. Not unless you go to school with some really sick classmates!"
"Terry Jameson once killed a cat!" Mickey's eyes went wide and he shook away the bits of hair in front of his forehead. "He threw rocks at it down by the creek behind the school and told everyone the next day."
I tucked the comforter under the mattress. I went deep because sheets slid off the mattress and Mickey would wake up with nothing on him but his pajamas.
A lie came out of me. "Hey, all those mean kids. One day they will work for you." The lie felt necessary. Mickey returned it with a smile. "Mami, used to say that."

If enough adults say a lie is true, it seems to stick with kids. The Easter Bunny. Tooth Fairy. The Three Kings. "Did she?"

Mickey nodded.

"Well, it is true. I learned it from your grandmother and look at me!" I turned around the room and showed him everything that two combined department assistants (Me, legal, and Anne, collegiate admissions) could afford. I stomped around and held a plastic sword tucked behind a cedar chest as a scepter. He laughed, loving the lie.

_____________________________________________

So what did you think? It hops around and I decided not to go with my usual "* * *" breaks. Maybe the readers could keep track of it. If you cannot, then it is my shortcoming and we can go to second draft!

Peace!

Friday, June 06, 2008

Vision Complete

As a quick follow-up to the post of "Like an Open Book," I realize that the two other complete stories for that book proposal were already up on the blog! Here are the direct links to "Smells Like Almonds" and "Cuernos".

The cafe where Emily from "Like and Open Book" is the same one where the protagonist of "Smells Like Almonds" speaks to the ghost. Nothing in "Cuernos" relates to the others, but I had this idea where a customer buying some magical tea (For lack of a better phrase) overhears the conversation about the unicorn horn.

See!? It all makes sense! Well, sort of. Makes sense in the way Star Wars Episode 1: The Phantom Menace makes sense. I mean, I am telling you they are interconnected!

Peace!

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Lazy, Hazy Days of Blogging Summer

I hope everyone had a great Memorial Day weekend and that you are ready for summer! It really is the best season.

In homage of my blog post title, here is a little something from the archives. OK, so I am lazy and did not have any err... jokes for you today. Once again, I am conflicted about what to blog about and how to stay consistent with whatever I choose. There are many wonderful blogs and sites out there already that offer sharp observational humor. I feel much more comfortable with pieces about the mad subtleties of Arthur, but probably because I read blogs with similar posts. Whatever did happen to book devouring Garik? I have only read 10 books this year. JESUS! In my defense, I now have subscriptions to The New Yorker, Harpers, and our local paper. I try to read these first because those New Yorkers come to the mail box as fast as they can print them. The New Yorker people must have material queued up for decades. Has John Updike ever taken a break? Chill out, Mr. Updike! The magazine has enough people screaming to have them take a glance at their short story or cartoon without your fine craftsmanship always eating up those pages!

So, I am still reading, but not just too many books.

Great writer are also great readers. I should get back to some serious reading.

Until something really fresh comes along, please enjoy this piece from back in my college days. In my science fiction/fantasy course, our end of the semester project was to put together a book proposal. We had each written several short stories and the hope was to unify them under one banner.

I entitled my proposal, "Town on the Event Horizon," and said that all my stories would take place in one town where strange things happened. And each of the stories would refer to one another. The protagonist from this one story has a coffee at at the cafe where most of the action of this other story takes place. It is Winesburg, Ohio meets Erie, Indiana!

I only had three full pieces written, along with some ideas and sketches for future ones. In my proposal, I had everything connected, but it is a cinch to write proposals. And fun to draw lines between the stories! It is like the play place mats at Denny's!

One of the stories had to be novella length. Unless we had a whole novella ready to go, we could submit a first chapter. Well, here it is. The main character can read peoples minds, but she cannot seem to control the ability. Imagine a radio that is always on and you can get a grasp on the phenomenon. Come to think of it, I use that analogy in the story!

_________________________________________________

Like an Open Book (excerpt)

By Garik Charneco

Last night, around 1:45am, right after I finished American Psycho and wondered exactly why Patrick Bateman did it, I read these three drunken students on the street. They came down the street and stopped to fumble for some smokes right in front of my place. In the lazy half-sleep of just going to bed, my mind sensed fresh thoughts and pounced. I can’t turn off my ability so I spent thirty minutes reading their minds while they sat on the stoop of my apartment complex—smoking.

Maia told herself that this would be her last cigarette tonight and that tomorrow she’d quit. She would do it for Nana. This Maia girl was the nicest of the group—the least drunk and quiet. She took drag after drag, reassuring herself. I hate when people repeat themselves.

Nikki tried counting how many drinks she had that night. There was the three they had back in Rishel, just as pre-game. Then the two tequila shots at the house party and one swig of whiskey from Jared’s hip flask. She struggled with the directions to the after party, wondering whether it was 249 Stark Road or 111 Oris Place. She was always mixing them up. Must be a freshmen, those streets are next to each other.

Jared nursed his hip flask, taking long, hot draughts of whiskey. His thoughts came in hard and rough. A burst of poetry from his seminar here and an image of Maia in her underwear there. He was the easiest to hold onto and almost entertaining, a mental collage of colors, words, and skin.

They finished their cigarettes and Nikki thought about whom to call for a ride. Maia flicked her cigarette into the gutter, stamped it out and focused through her beer buzz for Nana. That always bites back when people try to think clearly and free their minds. It is the psychic equivalent of staring at the sun. Jared screwed the top back onto his hip flask, debating whether to masturbate to Nikki or Maia at the end of the night.

The three of them walked down the street, striking up a conversation. Then it became the standard fare. Action and reaction. The period of “what should I say?” and “uh huh.” I followed them far, something I hadn’t done since high school, sensing the satisfaction of not having to walk to the party and the uncomfortable camaraderie of six people in a four person car. I followed their minds till they were just wisps in my head, squeaky voices and weak thoughts. I should have read a book or something instead, tried to lose them against a backdrop of words, but I went with them and now I feel tired. I went to bed at 2:30 am.

* * *

The clock at the Broken Quill reads 8:57 am. Three minutes later the owner, Mr. Savona, unlocks the front door. I am sitting at the front register, uncurling orange and white rolls of quarters into the tray. Mr. Savona turns and looks at me, giving me a succinct smile even though he wonders whether he’ll catch me reading the books. Mr. Savona lets all his employees read when at the desk but I tend to ignore customers, burying myself in books with characters whose minds are silent. There is this new collection of poetry by this guy out of the city named Calixto that we aren’t even allowed to display yet. The shipment got in yesterday, when I was punching out, but I sensed Mr. Savona hope dreadlock girl did not get to them. I’ll hide it inside a magazine and read it in the morning lull. Mr. Savona walks past the register and thinks that the novelty gifts—The Make Your Own Bonsai Kits and Home Made Voodoo Dolls—are unorganized. There is one pocket dictionary where the magnetic poetry stands, but nothing heavy. I tell Mr. Savona that I will clean up the desk and when he asks how I knew I say, “Initiative, I guess.”

* * *

This child-choked mother stands at the register, a stack of pop up books in front of her. I ring up the books; one on dinosaurs, another on Australian animals and the last on backyard birds, while her two kids claw at her legs. The mother, Debbie, worries whether the kids will actually read these books. She wonders whether they should just be playing outside or maybe in one of those after school clinics like Joanna’s (her sister’s) kids. I pull out a bag, slide the books in, and say, “It is great that they are starting to read so early.” She is mollified for a second and smiles, content that someone else agrees with her and that her sister isn’t always the best. Debbie says, “Oh, you’re so right. Can never start too early. Do you have any suggestions?”

From the tone of her voice, the soft fake edge and hint of nasal intonation I can tell she isn’t interested. This is idle chit-chat; the kind of stuff that everyone tries to make with the cashier while waiting for their change. I look at her kid, the boy, and catch his name: Alex. Then I read a little deeper into Alex’s head and pick up laser firing robots, juices boxes, and big trees to climb. His entire mind feels fast and saccharine, the kind of thing that if cast on a screen gives people epilepsy. His mind is superficial but not shallow enough that I can pick it apart. I only read what is on the surface, what he thinks about at the moment. I hand Debbie the bag. “No not really. Just whatever they like. As long as they read.”

She snatches the bag, slides her handle through the loop and carries the weight on her wrist. She says thanks, but thinks, Some help. Stupid kidt.

I watch her wrangle the two kids together; Alex, who debates whether King Kong could beat The Incredible Hulk, and the other kid, the girl, who is too young to even know her own name. No wonder I read only two heads. Debbie opens the door and the rusted brass bell above the clatters, announcing their departure.

The sound of the bell still rings in my head and it feels kind of good. For a brief few seconds I don’t pick up anything. During that time, I’m an unplugged radio—all potential, but no product. Then the bell stops and my mind lingers, ready to pick up the next customer or passerby the just happens to think too hard. Debbie is still on my mind and I can read her as she fumbles for the keys to her car. I’m not some stupid student. I tried the whole college thing for a while, but it got hideously boring. I knew what all the teachers wanted to hear. Even an open-ended question like “What did you think the author is trying to do in this piece?” was pointless. I dropped out and started working full time at the Broken Quill afterwards. When an old teacher comes into the store and sees that I dropped out they are honestly sad and think What a loss of potential.

I honestly don’t mind the bookstore. I get to read for free and I can’t mind read a character in a book. If Don Quixote trots into the store right now I couldn’t tell why he tilts at windmills, but this kid over by the poetry section I am all over.

He has a big tuft of curly brown hair that comes over his eyes. He is emaciated and looks like an urban refugee, dressed in all black, gray, shoeless moon boots and three chains running from his wait into his back pocket. I squint, focus on his thoughts, and pick up his name. So, Eric what are you thinking about?

Eric curls around a column and balances a thick anthology of 19th century Romantic poetry in one hand and a crumpled pocket notebook in another. Eric nests the notebook inside the book and whips out a pen. He scribbles away, taking glances at me with every line. He tries to be furtive about all this, taking breaks to scan the room pretending that he is just looking around when he debates a metaphor. This what he writes…

Broken Quill

DNA double helix hair

Shimmer starburst beads

Play in twisted follicles

How did you get that piercing?

On your nose

Didn’t your mother disapprove?

Of that iridescence across your face

Speckled green eyes like

Margarita jelly beans

Razor sharp features

No need for curves

Book store muse

What do you want to read?

I try hard not to laugh. I got some interest in the book from him, but it is camouflage more than anything. I have never been anyone’s muse and I throw Eric a tiny smile, flashing those “razor-sharp” features he likes. He sees me and tries to hide his surprise. He reminds himself to act cool as he slides, out of order, the book back onto the shelf. I single out one of my dreads—one with an orange and cream colored swirl bead—and twirl it in between my thumb and index finger. I chew at one the end of it, while I arch my back against the chair. He forgets about the metaphors and fails to keep cool. He shoves the notebook back into his pocket and walks to the door. He hangs around in front of the register, pretending to read the cover of the magazines Mr. Savona keeps next to the register. He wonders about my name and I lean forward, putting my hands under my chin and letting my hair drape over my eyes. I smile at him again even though all he can think about right now is looking down my shirt. Eric’s eyes dart from the magazines to me and to the door. I pull up and flip through the Calixto poems. Eric thinks Fuck it. Then the hackneyed, Nobody likes me. He looks away from the magazines and shuffled to the front door, defeated and loathing. I sense his final thought coming—smashing through sad little neurons and breaking the surface of his active memory. I want to kill myself.

I laugh because I know he isn’t. He finds suicide appealing but he thinks about it with apprehension and dramatic flare. He looks back at me, his mind snapped to attention and running through a list of possibilities. She has such a sweet laugh. Oh God, what is your name? Was that for me?

Eric opens his eyes and he tries to cut into me, see my soul as he puts it. He stands there at the door under the purple dream catcher Mr. Savona hung up, thinking that he can somehow turn me with just his pale paper bag brown eyes. I blow at the hair in front of my face, so one my tiny dreads swings back up and then I smile, not at him but at the book. He finally gets the message and decides to leave. He thinks I am a bitch that played with his heart. He starts to think about this biting sonnet he is going to write when he gets back to his dorm. Something really harsh in Italian, no Spencerian format that will show them. He thinks about me reading it and then crying at the heartless bitch I was. He imagines me hitting the floor, sobbing, and begging for him to take me back. I say some sappy lines. Stuff like, “I never understood you, baby!” and “Your poetry is too hard for me to understand, but I still love you!” and “I want your cock!”

Still chuckling, I watch Eric leave the store from the reflection on the lacquered counter and with my own minds. I keep reading the book of Calixto poems, happy to experience some real poetry and wonder exactly who the speaker is in this one he entitled “Bruised Apple.” The apple itself or the kid refusing to eat it? I start to lose Eric. He thinks about crossing the street, then about food, how much money he has and then me. But I am reading and his thoughts get fuzzy. He gets farther down the street and I get farther into the poem. I forget how tired I feel and clear my mind till I achieve psychic white noise.

* * *

The rest of the day is uneventful. No more Eric’s thinking about how they want me to suffer in un-publishable poems. Marissa from the rear register decides to cover my post for a bit while I get us coffee. The coffee maker broke. No one wants to admit who did it, but I read Xander at the last store meeting and sensed his guilt over hitting the thing too hard when the water wouldn’t come out of the reservoir. Mr. Savona says he is going to get a new one, but he really thinks we don’t deserve it. Let them bring their own coffee. They won’t waste time at the maker anymore, he though at the meeting as he pretended to write down suggestions for the new maker in a paper pad.

At the coffee shop, I try hard to block out everyone’s thoughts, but the shop is busy. The speakers in the ceiling play a moaning choral music that doesn’t make for a good focus. Surrounded by people I pick up bits and pieces. Someone worries about a deadline over by the napkins. Over by the message board another individual puzzles over what exactly zydeco jam music is? I focus on the lady behind the counter, a big Hispanic woman with greasy curly hair and overalls stained with coffee grounds. She feels angry and thinks about some guy named Roger and how he ruined her business. Her thoughts come in a mix of English and Spanish. Maybe an old boyfriend, I guess, not wanting to pick too deep. I just want the coffee and I put in the order for two tall lattes. I hand her our mugs and she reminds herself to punch in the discount. She goes on to make the coffee and I enjoy the sweet hiss of the coffee machine as it warms milk and water.

No one is behind me, so while she makes the coffee I turn and lean against the register. My mind, stuck on ‘scan’ right now, takes in the entire scene and I hear a few more thoughts. Upstairs there is a paper that needs to be finished. By the bathroom door this one guy thinks, Way too much coffee! There are some sad thoughts—stuff like Should I tell her about that girl last night? and This coffee is going to be my only food today. I swear. Sometimes I get something that feels honestly interesting—when someone wonders about a character’s motivation in a book they are reading or when they gaze at a pamphlet on permaculture farming, wondering how they can help. Then there is the inane—thoughts wasted by over use, thoughts like: Gee, wonder what I want?, Where did I put that extra penny?, That girl looks hot, That guy looks cute, Where did I put my wallet, Weather sure is nice, What a great day, What a crappy day.

I wish the lady gets the coffee made, so I can leave. The coffee shop starts to hurt my head—all the quick thoughts machine-gunning into my head. The whole experience feels like when someone sits on a remote control and the channels on the TV just blur past. Except with me; its ideas, rants, worries, and opinions, and no one gets up to stop it. I sense the Hispanic lady think all done and I turn around to grab the coffee, but I see the reflection in the tip jar. Right under the hand drawn purple and green note that says “Karma Collector” I see him. I didn’t sense this guy. I didn’t feel anything coming from his direction and he is only ten feet away, cradling a steaming cup of oil-slick brown coffee. The Hispanic lady tells me that my coffee is up and I hear her, but I keep my eyes on the man. I fumble for the mugs on the counter and tip some hot latte foam onto my fingers. Wincing, I pull the cups away and hold them against my stomach. I let my tank top soak up the coffee dripping on my hand while I keep looking at this guy. Where did he come from and why don’t I pick up anything from him? What is he doing in the Blue Iris coffee shop just standing in the corner next to a stack of soda can flats? Right now, my mind is entirely blank, just like when I get really into a book or a song. I blink and sway my head around, trying to get something on this guy, but there is nothing. I must still be tired. Some caffeine will do me good and sort this guy out. I lift my cup to my lip and feel a pact of moisture against my stomach. I look down at see a brown splotch at the bottom of my tank—my white tank top, so it looks like some old wound opened up under the cotton. I mutter under my breath and the lady behind the counter thinks Pendeja gringa, whatever that means. My watch says 1:30, so I am late. I hunch over and shuffle out of the Blue Iris trying to ignore the lady behind the counter but she rings inside my head thinking out curses in Spanish.

Back at the Broken Quill, I arrive late, having taken all the quiet alleys and side streets. Marissa’s eyes widen when I walk through the door and I hear her think, Finally! What took you so long? She perks her shoulders and slides the copy of Utne reader off the counter and into the cubbyhole under the register. “Long line or something?” She puts an elbow on the counter and flicks her wrist, so her fingertips reach for me. I hand her the mug and half-smile, feeling actually awkward, as I pry into her head. She is wondering whether there really was a long line and where I got that ugly brown stain on my tank from. She takes a sip from the coffee and is surprised to feel heat still in it. Must be the weather that kept it hot. The radio did say 84 degrees today.

I must look stupid standing at the head of the store with a brown splotch on my stomach and staring at Marissa, who idly sips coffee while playing with the register’s change tray. Marissa’s thoughts bore me. Nothing special, but I still got it. I can still hear her thoughts and comb her short term memory for mental tidbits. That guy in Blue Iris must have been a fluke. I was tired from last night and caffeine deprived from Mr. Savona’s policy. It was loud in the coffee shop, both physically and mentally, so he just slipped past me. It happens and part of my head tells me I should be happy because his presence gave me nothing.

Marissa thinks, Woah. What is that? I circle around the counter and climb up onto the little island in the middle of the bookstore. She forms the question in her head, but I answer before her lips even move.

“I bumped into someone as I left Blue Iris. Spilt a good part of my coffee on myself.” Marissa goes blank, thinking Woah and Umm. I grab the coat I wore over here this morning off the back of the chair and throw it over myself. “It is nothing severe.”

“Oh ok, I’m sorry, but how did you know I was going to ask that before I did?” Starting to feel anxious, she awaits my answer.

“I saw it in your eyes. Just the way you glanced at me when I walked through the door. Besides, it is a pretty huge stain.” I zip up my coat up to the top of my stomach. “Nothing really discrete about it.”

I guess, she thinks feeling satisfied. “Were did you learn that whole face reading thing anyway?”

Motioning around us I tell her, “Read it in a book.” It’s an old joke but she feigns laughter.

“Ok, well do you want me to stay here while you go back home and change or something. You’re here for like another 4 hours, right?”

Marissa is sincere when she says that, but I can also sense how worried she is about Mr. Savona coming back and finding only one register open and two employees. I doubt he will come back. I heard him think It is too nice to stay in here all day and Better go work on the boat while the weather is nice before lunch. I could go back home, but I can only read minds, not the future. I tell Marissa, “I think I’ll live.” She gets out of the chair and feels relieved that I didn’t take her up on the offer. I can’t get another demerit or talking to. She can deal with it. You got to stop being so nice.

I watch her walk away from the desk and take the bend at the travel section. I hope she doesn’t stop being too nice; she’s an easy read.

* * *

At 5:45pm, I am alone in the store. Marissa left at 3:30 and Mr. Savona never returned. I start to close the store; flipping off light switches and re-shelving loose books people leave in the wrong sections. Poetry with poetry, history with history, and humor with humor. I only do the really noticeable ones; like having Crime and Punishment sandwiched in between Chicken Soup for the Cat Lover’s Soul and Yes, You Can! I take a copy of Invisible Monsters someone left next to Greatest Military Blunders and head towards fiction. I take the bend at travel and I hit a wall of flesh. I drop the book and the tip of the spine hits my big toe; it’s a hardcover and I’m wearing sandals. Curling my toes into rubber sole and biting my lip, I look at whoever I hit and it is him. The same guy from the Blue Iris.

He has a lot on him, but he carries the fat well like if his eyes were meant to sink into two pudgy sinkholes. From the crinkles under his eyes I can tell he is old but he still sports a tuft of gray and black hair under a cap. His skin looks permanently tanned a deep toasty brow, a color I have only seen on pictures of people from islands in the South Pacific. He has no coffee but instead carries a plastic bag from the supermarket, filled with odd polygonal black shapes. Our crash didn’t seem to faze him and he chuckles while I wince. The laughter sounds neutral and hearty, but I don’t know where it’s coming from.

I pick Invisible Monsters off the floor. “Sorry. Um, we are closing in like ten minutes. Is there something I can help you with?” It is the first time I ever ask the question without knowing the answer. Without knowing what section to point to or if we have the book in stock. I only have my thoughts and I wonder how Marissa or the other employees handle customers. The questions are pilling up in my head and I have no way to answer them, except by waiting. He laughs again and I think if people always take this long to answer questions. Is he being rude or should I just give him another second?

He points at me with his bag. “I’m sorry if I surprised you. I just came in here to get a little break from the heat and must have lost track of the time. Afraid I don’t read very much.” All his words come out very slow and long like he is spelling everything out nice and clear. I stare at him, wondering what Marissa, Xander, or Mr. Savoan would do. I remember all the store meetings where Mr. Savona would talk about customer relations and wish I paid attention. He takes the initiative and speaks again. “But since I have troubled you and your store I will buy something.” He looks at the shelves, tilts back a burgundy cap that reads “Xavier Brick Works”, and scratches his head. “You know what I have always liked?”

Normally, I would know but this guy isn’t some fluke; he is a freak. I’m left to guess and I have never guessed with people. I shrug my shoulders and let my hair fall forward so he can’t see how red my face is. “I don’t know. That is up to you.” It is a lame answer and anyone else would have thought up something better, something clever.

“Well that is true.” I shuffled over to the side and points at the science fiction section. “I always loved those space stories. And the really campy ones, I mean. The ones with blue aliens, laser axes, and planets that eat spaceships. You have any of those?”

“Sure.” I motion to a bottom shelf and point out some trade paperbacks in bright neons, smooth pastels, and stylized covers. The art on the covers is better than the books, but it seems to fit the bill. He looks over the books—stuff with titles like Starburst Surprise, Bounty Hunters of Terra Nova, and At the End of the Eclipse. His bag is on the floor and I try to look into it. I make out some sharp lines, angles, and a lot of black. I need an excuse to peer in there. Drop the book again? Trip over him again?

He chooses a book, the bounty hunters one, and grabs the plastic bag. “I think this one will do.” He turns on his feet and walks right by me. I stand next to the shelves and see him take the bend to the front register. “You coming?” I hear the plastic bag crinkle with each of his steps.

I pull at my hair and tuck it behind my shoulders. Following him, I rub my eyes, trying to coerce some read from this guy. At the register I don’t focus on the beep of the keys or ring of change. I keep staring at this guy focusing my eyes on his pudgy ham of a face. The book is $10.15 with tax and I wish he pulls a credit card out of a pocket or that bag—something with a name on it, so I know who he is. But he pays in cash and with exact change.

“I don’t need a bag,” he lifts up his arm and shows me the crinkly plastic hanging from his wrist. “I got my own.”

I tuck the receipt into the book and tell him, “Thanks. Have a good night.”

Bag man says the same, but with a tip of the Xavier Brothers cap. I have never heard of any place like that in town, but I spend the rest of the night pouring over the phonebook. I try Xavier Brothers, then bricks, then masonry, then masons, but nothing. He doesn’t seem from out of town, but the hat must and I close the phone book. I tuck it under the counter and look at my watch—6:35pm. After closing the door and spending 35 minutes of unpaid overtime, I gaze around the street looking for him. There is a pair of parked cars and a jogger that thinks I feel so alive! Bag man isn’t around. I don’t hear the crunch of his plastic bag and I give up on sensing him.

* * *

Next day, I wake up having dreamt of Bag Man. In the dream, he came into the store and left his bag on the counter. I looked into it and saw a burst of light come from the crinkles and folds in the plastic. Then I woke up, a full hour before my alarm. I dress for work slowly, always thinking of Bag Man and still trying to remain collected, like if he were there, staring at me, looking for some sort of reaction to his unreadable state of mind. Outside the leaves on trees hang limp and the most common thought I pick up while walking to work is So hot! At the Broken Quill, Mr. Savona blasts the air conditioning and we have a dozen people loitering in the cool halls, escaping from the heat like Bag Man last night. Xander, the coffee maker breaker, stands at the register and rings up a beaded bookmark this lady is buying because she feels bad that she came in here just to dodge the heat. But it is so hot out there! This will make due.

__________________________________________

Any people from Ithaca might note the similarities to local stores or situations. Or maybe not. All my stories have a decent touch of self-awareness in them, particularly this one. Everything happens too neatly and too well explained. How you exactly "show" and "not tell" is still beyond my grasp.

I had several ideas of where to go with the Bag Man. One would be that he is somewhat mentally disabled. Autism was one specific idea. That would be hard to pull off without cowtowing to disability stereotypes. Another is that he suffered a head injury at the brick works. But that sounds too much like a Daffy Duck routine. I had a change set up for the main character, which is critical to fiction. The narrator, previously annoyed with her power (Who is not named in this excerpt, but in my proposal was called Emily), now needs to find out why the do not work on this man. Her whole life is suddenly thrown off kilter. The idea with Emily was that she had this power since birth. Imagine losing an entire sense or nervous reflex. How it would excactly end is always my big question.

Peace!

Friday, May 02, 2008

A Fight

Here is a little aside i have gnawed on for the past few days. I have the annoying knack to get ideas right as I am going to bed. Chuck Palahniuk does not believe in just making yourself write; instead we should wait for the inspirations, but it is 1am already and I spent eight hours entering school date into a spreadsheet. In those cases, I usually just go to bed and then force myself to put down the thoughts to paper (or blog) by the next morning. Or evening, in this case.

__________________________

I just dodged a punch from the big Dominican in front of me and I am bit proud!
Hey, I thought to myself. Slick move. Straight out of the movies!
Then I realized that I was horrible at fighting back. I was afraid to punch. The guy caught his foot on the gummy steel footing of a cocktail table and my clear shot became this wet, noddley slap. My fingers unfurled as I got closer to his gut. Hey I might hurt my hand!

"Hace cosquillas, mi amor," said the Dominican. I think he is Dominican. He has DR flag necklace on his chest, right below the clavicle. The flag is made of hair beads, like the ones you see on the tiny dreadlocks girls have coming back from Negril for Spring break. I never had time to ask him when he first cocked me in the ear. I smelled the rum on his breath, but now my nose is all soggy from his first knee.

I had never been in a fight. A real one, at least. In the eight grade, I got so mad at Freddy Combato that I shoved him into a wall and then tried to pull this wrestling move on him that I had seen on TV. We really just pushed each other around.

At the bar (Sojourners) the people start to pour out of it and into B Terminal. One woman knocks over a display case at the SunGlass Hut across the way. I thought I heard a police siren or an alarm. I really wanted the police to come.

Hay, un problema maricon! It has been years since I have spoken Spanish so heatedly or in any sort of defensive tone. The weekly phone calls with my mother are full of false plesantries and whenever I see my nieces, I just back up my sister and tell them put whatever they have gotten their hands on down.

Calmate. Calmate," I tell the guy. My Spanish must sound even worse through the chipped teeth. A pair of white shirted police offers blasts into the bar and tackle the supposed Dominican. I scoot back on my ass and hide underneath the bar until another office grabs me by the armpits and lifts me up onto his shoulder. "Hey it is over, son," he said.

_____________________________

What a horrible piece! I realized after the first two sentences there was nowhere to go with this and just left it to die. Peace!



Wednesday, April 02, 2008

Early Flag Day

It's always a post when I write about my father!

________________________________________

Untitled

Marie, my assistant, found a flag folding guide online, but it's for Old Gory herself and I can't follow the prompts. My father's flag has one star and three stripes. When I do give up, I fold the flag neatly over itself. I clear a space on my desk, moving the Fillepo closing papers to the side, and let it slide down my forearm onto the cherry wood.
"Give up?" Marie's head over just past the door frame.
"Oh, yeah. I guess." I rub the rust off one of the rings on the hoist. "It's a two person job, anyway. Two Marine job, certainly."
She lets a shoulder slide into the view and the corner of some papers folded across her stomach. "I can help after lunch."
I remember about the Fillepo closing and grab that stack. "Sure. That would be nice, but lets get this done first." I wave the green folder in the air that held the Fillepo papers. Green for closings. Big closings. "Can you please let Donnie know that we can meet to get ready for the closing."

Donnie arrives with his own set of papers. He catches the empty space on my wall, just above the awkward dracena tree. A rectangle of bright white shines through the yellow buff of the rest of the office. "I can't believe you are getting rid of it. It made this office!"Donnies stretches his arms out, captures everything in the room between his fingertips. "Like on the crime dramas and the commissioner has some old tattered flag framed above his desk. Makes them look all the more veteran." He opens his folders and slide a carbon monoxide affidavit across the desk. "It all looks good on safety."
I glance at the paper. "Yeah sure does." I scribble onto a note pad. "My nephew will like it. The flag, I mean."
"Oh, sure. Has a lot of history to it, right?"
"I think. It was my father's. My mother told me some old lady knitted from Lares knitted it for him. Some little old lady in a flowered smock and rollers in her hair knitting pieces of cotton together because she felt there was still something to say."
Donnie shuffles for another safety check. Smoke detector. "They can always use more culture in...where does your nephew live, again."
"Oswego, New York. Lives with is parents. He is only twelve."
The smoke detector checks out. "Well, what a place to live, I bet. Needs a good legend."

Marie helps me fold the flag into a triangle, but all we can see is the red and the white. She tries one last time to get the bit of blue and two prongs of the central star. She unfurls it, snapping the cotton cloth from her waist. She examines a black splotch on the surface. "Has a lot of history, huh?" Her nail scratches at the mark. I don't tell her it's decades old mosquito guts. Leftover from when I slapped a big one, full and red as a Christmas light, on the surface. I still feel it was an offense, but the insect had the white stripe patterns of the dengue carriers. My mother told me to never take chances on those.
"Yes, it was my father's a supposedly an old seamstress in Lares made it for him when he was a teenager. Lares was this town where there was an uprising against the Spanish in 1868."
"Oh, wow! So it's historical!?"
I focus on the Fillepo papers, pretending I am lost in the fine text. We closed on that three hours ago. "I guess, in a way. Like if you had a flag made by Betsy Ross's great-great-great-great-great niece or something like that." Marie smiles and brings two sides together. Oh, and it's entirely handmade. That's important too."

A week later, my nephew calls me. I have no children of my own, but I still sense the honest excitement in his voice. "Hey, thanks for abo's flag. I will make sure to keep it safe and in the family!"
My mother portrays me father in larger than life colors. He watches over the children sitting right next to God. The new holy foursome: The Father, The Son, The Holy Ghost, and Oscar, my father.
William replies after I just squeezed out a weak, "Oh, sure."
"Did someone once steal the flag and make abo walk back from his school naked and covered in paint to get it? Oh, and did he have it when he stole a bicycle to go see abu at school when they were kids."
I am familiar with the tall tales of my father. I know as much about all that as the woman in Lares. "Oh, I guess. Make sure to ask abu about that. She would know better. Make sure to take good care of the flag, too."
"Mmm hmm. Dad has already put some tacks on the wall in my room so I can hang it up and I am going to try and fold it. It feels real. The flags at scouts feel plasticky."

__________________________

I imagine this would make a better scene than story. Just need a few colons and screen instructions! PEACE!

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Happy Holidays!

Amanda and I will be leaving town for the Christmas weekend soon, so I wanted to wish all two of you readers happy holiday season. Merry Christmas! Happy Chanukah! Happy Kwanzaa! Blessed Eid! HOORAY!


However, I do realize that I have blogged more frequently these past two weeks than in two months. Its been fun! Not going to say I have a great blogging groove, but, like Stella, I got it back. If not, for just a few days. Want something to hold you over? Maybe you are a new reader and have yet to skim the archives!? Well here are some of my favorite posts!*

1) The Co-Op of Justice! When gangs, race riots, and Fay Gougakis threaten Ithaca, where will you turn!?

2) Heroes need villains, no?

3) The story that took five different forms. Started with a bunch of kids in a stream and now you get this...

4) We're an entire generation raised by women.

5) Except for several milestones at the newspaper (Being listed as a contributor, that first byline, that first angry letter to the editor, the first front page), as a wanna-be writer, this was my greatest moment. The parking lot of the Family Dollar never heard such a scream of glee!

Hope you enjoy them, and the holidays as well.


Of course, the animals are excited for Christmas. Dante already went to bed!

And all through the house, not a creature was stirring, not a pesky rabbit, not a seven-inch plecostomus, or even a piggy....

MERRY CHRISTMAS FROM FEAR OF THE BLANK PAGE!

PEACE!

*Yes, it's a greatest hits list. I have stooped that low.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Mango Raking

As I mentioned in my last post, here is something about what I actually shoveled back home in PR.
While drawing from memories, the piece isn't truly autobiographical. I only raked mangoes once, maybe twice, in my life. And I just used my hands. Fingertips, actually since those things are messy! However, I loved the image of going around picking up mangoes as a chore. I scribbled out some notes in my journal and here is the blog version.


* * *

My grandmother spoke of plants in homespun anthropomorphisms. A tree my father planted never bloomed because it was "manly." A tiny weed, whose leaves reacted to touch, was "magic," and she mentioned an old neighbor that tried to label it as the eight wonder of the world. Right there in Mayaguez, Puerto Rico.

I am sure she would have described the mango tree in our neighbor's backyard as "pregnant." Fruit always seemed present on the tree, hanging down from leathery vines in the branches. While planted in the neighbor's yard, two solid branches jutted over the hibiscus strangled chain link fence and over our property. My mother said rats lived in the hollowed out recesses of the trees roots. "Go pick up the mangoes to stop the rats," she said, handing me crumpled up plastic supermarket bags from underneath the sink.

The mangoes begin rod shaped, hanging hard and green on the tree. They fall to the grass with soft thumps once they turn peppered emerald color filled with tiny black spots. They are in stark relief with the mangoes you see in the stateside supermarket. Those are softball sized balls that look more like avocados. My grandmother called these "Cuban" mangoes, which were better for straight up eating. Our mangoes, Puerto Rican ones, were better for making into jams and pastes. Better for baking too. She also called the hydroponic lettuce sold at store "Puerto Rican Lettuce" because it came from facilities on the island. Each bag was embossed with an outline of the island. This lettuce supposedly made you sleepy. "American" lettuce came only in bundles of threes. A single head of Romaine lettuce would have probably blown her mind.

The mangoes ripened on the ground, even though, at this point they already developed a blush coming from each end. Then like a banana they turned a splotchy black with a cucumber beetle orange skin. If left for too long, they became completely black with intermittent rings of deep purple in the bruises. At this point the fruit was so soft as to quiver when touched. These were my least favorite to pick up as I imagined centipedes and rats under each one. I filled the supermarkets bag full and carried them over to the trash at an arm's length. "Not in the trash, boy," my mother would say. "The rats will get them there!"

* * *

I wrote that stream of consciousness style, with some help from the notes. It shows. But, you got a post, eh!?

Peace!

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

More Local Legends

Been a while since I have blogged. I have been doing a lot of brainstorming about what I should focus my blog posts on. I tried comics for a while, but the comics blog-o-sphere is loaded with tons of little fish trying to be as good as the masters. I could weigh in on local issues, but that would be really unprofessional considering my position at the paper and I am just a pesky transplant anyway. Of course, there are masters there as well. Books maybe? You guys like books and reading? We shall see.

Here is a little series of anecdotes I wrote up about a little rumor my lovely GF Amanda told me about. I enjoy the fragmented style, but I realize that I am not that deft in applying it. It is more of a crutch for me, a handy way to frame stories. The style gives the narrative a "newsy" feel as if we were trying to garner the full picture from things we overheard on the radio or on the news ticker at CNN. Palahniuk did this with his last book Rant, framing it as an oral history of his protagonist.

I tend to write in sound bites anyway. A little scene here, then a quick scene there. I have focused what little professional writing I do on journalism because I do not have the patience to write a full fledged short story. Except for these blog posts, I write in a world where 800-words is a lot of space. I tried to find something, anything, about this rumor, but could not turn up anything. Tioga County is a relatively rural county with no county-wide newspaper. Maybe their local media haven't made as big a presence online. If anyone from Tioga County or Candor stumbles upon this, are these rumors true? Did someone every release cougars up there? Peace!

___________________________________

Shadow Cats

Terrence Liddle reinforced the floorboards in the tree stand. Since his grandfather passed, there had been little interest in hunting in the household and the wood turned soft and green. With the rumors, Gran forced him to take the post and protect the family investment on White Church Road. At the gas station, Gran heard that the animals could gauge out the siding from a house with their paws as big as catcher's mitts and claws longer than pocket combs. Terrence believed all that to be exaggeration, having looked up cougars in the old set of World Books his father kept in the crawl space.
"I don't think they get that big," he told her while Gran tried to convince his daughter Jamie of the gravity of cougar attacks.
"Oh, maybe this ones special because the whole town is talking about them!" She grabbed Jamie by the waist and made the girl sit on her lap. "I will stay here with her while you make sure that stand is alright."
Terrence remembered something from the encyclopedia, but ignore it. He made a final check of the new pine boards and nestled a cushion from the sofa up there. "Might as well be comfortable," he mumbled, the evening before his first watch.

* * *

"Lions, tigers, and bears! OH MY!"
"Shut up!"
"Lions, tigers, and bears! OH MY!"
"SHUT UP!"
"Lions, tigers, and bears! OH MY!"
"Oh, fuck you, Luke!"
She choked the silver door handle of the Buick and swung the heavy car door open. The hinges popped as the door swung shut. From the outside she fumbled for her cell phone under the yellow light of the lonely streetlight.
Luke rolled down the passenger side window. "Oh, c'mon, Marie. It's just a joke! A rumor!" He leaned further over and managed to get the crack the door ajar. "There aren't any cougars!"
"It was in the paper," she interjected. Far out on Route 33, the hills block any phone service and her phone chirped, "We're sorry" in harsh, soft tones.
Luke rolled his eyes. "The Random Observer, Marie. The new golf course on Route 95 was the headline. Just get back in the car."
Marie cocked her head to the side and saw the white glow of Dassy's Gas Station and Mini Market down below. She popped a leg over the wire divider and prepared herself to skitter down the embankment to the valley below. It wasn't that steep and even in the night the grooves would be familiar from the highway cleanups she did back in 4H.
Luke heard the gravel crunching. "Where the hell are you going!?"
"Away!" She slid off the gravel and began jaunting down the weedy hillside.
"Hey, hey!" Luke screamed from the driver's seat asking, "What the hell do I tell your parents when you don't show up!"
"A cougar did it," said a voice from close to the bottom.

* * *

Police Chief Deborah Capet spent the evening preening through the pages of a yellowed HTML help book the department bought years ago. No one had updated their department's website in years. She hammered out a quick message before a call on the radio reported another mysterious sighting.

* * *

Killing time in the public library and getting near the end of his 30-minutes, computer limit Virgil Stakum stumbled across the police department website. He ran search for "Tendia Town" and "Crime." On the welcome page he found:

Please be advised that it is illegal to discharge firearms within the borders of the Town of Tendia and all other county municipalities unless in self-defense. Illegal discharges and hunting will be prosecuted. Call 557-3870 for more information. Ask for Chief Capet. Thank you.

* * *

Trying to find a comfortable distance form the tape recorder, Town Supervisor Larry Corradino dismissed the rumors. He had dealt with reporters from Binghamton before, but he couldn't find his footing with this story. He later told his wife that, "There is no way to sound intelligent about it. The whole cougar fiasco."
But he tried with the reporter.
"Look the only cougars here are those at the high school," he said trying to crack a smile. The reporter didn't carry a notebook with him, so Larry got in close to the microphone, ignoring his previous apprehensions. "That's the mascot, you see."

* * *

The sound of gunshots disrupted church service all month long. Taking a historian though a tour of the First Presbyterians country cemetery, councilmember Peggy White apologized for the red discharged shells that peppered the woods behind the graves. "People just get a little carried away here when it comes to safeguarding the town!" She smiled her widest grin. "It's why we have so much history!"

* * *

The deer didn't seem to mind the supposed cougars. They still strolled down in the early light of Main Street, stripping the young leaves of forsythia shoots. Opening her bakery, Hope August told the newspaper delivery man if he had heard about the rumors. "Oh, yeah, Hope. Even as far as Syracuse where my cousin lives. He told me, 'Hey, Vince be careful with those cougars!'
Hope helped him heave a bundle inside and made sure the loud thud could be heard by the deer. They scampered away when it hit. "Well, sometimes I hope they had done their duty and controlled some of those deer," she said.

* * *

When the town library checked out all its book on big cats it started a wait list. Michael Bassett, terrified for his family, went to the elementary school library and sat in the plastic bucket chairs around the nature section. When a little girl asked him what he was doing, Michael just held up the cover of the book and the girl understood. "Ohhhhh, OK."

* * *

Elsewhere in the elementary school, Ms. Janson asked all her sixth grade students to write a short poem for their language arts class. Most centered around cats. Eve asked Ms. Jason if it was OK if her poem didn't rhyme.
"Well, sure, Eve. But why did you choose to go that way?"
Eve shrugged her shoulders, acting for the class as much as asking. "Nothing rhymes with cougar!"

* * *

Another child from Ms. Jason's class, Darien, spent the rest of the day in Principal Sherman's office. When he finally meet with Adelle Sherman, she asked Darien to read his poem again. Ms. Janson was there and so was Superintendent Digger. He read it:

Tiger, tiger, burning bright
In the forest of the night
What immortal hand or eye
Could frame thy fearful symmetry

"That's awful good for 12-year old boy," said Principal Sherman.
Darien almost cracked a smile, but Superintendent Digger quickly jumped in. "Ok, where did you steal that from?"
"It's Blake, Jim," interjected Ms. Janson.

* * *

At the coffee shop someone asked, "Where did all these cougars come from?" They must have been a tourist passing through to the wine trails in the next county. No one remembered their face. Could have been in a group. No one knew the answers. "They just are here," said a Denise Hutchinson, a waitress. Everyone agreed. After the stranger left, word began to circulate that Terrence Liddle had bagged one from his grandfather's tree stand.






Saturday, September 15, 2007

Windows

I have this thing about windows. While I was crafting the post about the local Ithaca monsters I realized I had very vivid images about looking through and at windows. First, the more anecdotal ones before I try to make something creative out of memory.

Like I said in the previous post, around the mid 90's I had a fear that an escape gorilla from the zoo was stalking our neighborhood. We had a laundry room in our old house which was nothing more than a sort of big mud room off the backyard porch. Being Puerto Rico, all the windows were of the shuttered variety,except these were just panes of glass that folded over one another. My mom always made me go to the laundry room at night and close that window. I don't know exactly why. Maybe to keep bugs out? Whenever I did look at that window, I expected a pair of red glowing eyes to be looking back at me. Our had a sort of living fence made of wild ginger plants. They were tall, stalky plants, almost like corn, that could hide any sort of creature in them. And I thought this creature was a gorilla. The first Chupacabra sighting in PR was in 1994 and I believe I inserted the gorilla as some sort of proxy for the creature. The monster lived about six counties over in the outskirts of the rain forest. We didn't have any rabbits or chickens for it to feed one and, besides, it wasn't even real! Was it? I knew gorillas didn't have red eyes, but the Chupacabra did and that is why I believe I just substituted the crazy (scaly blood sucking beast) to the sitcom-esque (Oh no! Escape gorilla!).

Speaking of eyes, after first learning about Mothman* in the wonderful Big Book of the Unexplained, I am even more frazzled by looking through windows. Especially at night. I can't sleep with the curtains up. Not because of ambient light coming through the windows, but because last thing I want to see is a pair of hypnotic eyes rise up from below the windowsill and stare at me! At least with curtains, I have some time to prepare myself for terror!

My last window memory isn't that scary, even though a storm can certainly be characterized as scary. The context is that during 1989's Hurricane Hugo, I watched the lemon tree in my backyard fall because of the winds. It was all from a bathroom window and rather physical, as well as visual. This window didn't have any glass. It was some metal shutters placed in the wall behind some metal grating and a screen panel. Here is a little something about it.

___________________________________

My cousins lived out by the bay and after many phone calls and a threat from the police they eventually decided to evacuate. But not to a community shelter. But to our house, which was on a hill and made of the appropriate concrete. "That is what family is for," said my uncle as he came through the front gate. "Yes, family," said my father as he welcomed everyone in.

Hurricanes are notoriously boring. You can only watch the local channels that come in over the air and then they are just running the news. When the power goes out, we need to save the batteries for flashlights, not that portable TV. I hardly read, something I usually enjoy, because it is hard to read by candlelight. To get any decent light, you almost have to burn your book.

My cousins are all younger; six, eight, and nine. But, because I'm bored, I play their games too. We run through all the potted plants that mom brought in from the terrace. It's a jungle in there and we hoard some of the food from the pantry in case the hurricane takes the adults away. Most of our rations are potted meat and water crackers. One cousin, Tuto, tries to eat a palm frond, swearing he saw someone at school do it. He later vomited it up on the backyard porch, right as the first rain storms came through.

"Hey, come look at this!" It was my father's voice and we all blasted out from the jungle to find him in the master bedroom. "Here, in the bathroom!" The rest of the adults were behind us now. My uncle, mother, and aunt pushed us into the bathroom. Through the metal grating over the actual shutters, we all saw the lemon tree sway in the winds. Father explained that he though the neighborhood houses were capturing the wind and bouncing it off the sides of the house. The tree did seem to circle around, with the weaker branches snapping off and twirling down the grass. We heard the soft tuft of a lemon hitting the side of our house. It must have been close to the actual window, since the wind was so strong, that the metal shutters creaked.

"There it goes!" My uncle jabbed out a finger and pressed his nail into the screen grate before the shutters. A sort of cross wind must have caught the tree and sent the top branches in opposite directions. The force ran down each of the main branches and into the base. The tree wasn't very old or strong. The base trunk was as thick as a softball and the wood split down the middle. Each side cam down on separate side of the lawns, held together by splinters of wood at the base. Father let out a swear and mother said good riddance. "It was dying anyway. Did you see that black soot on its leaves."
"Ah, yes," said my aunt. "A fungus."
The fallen branches still moved in the wind, almost twitching with every gust. Though it rained hard and I imagined they were heavy with all the water, the movements were springy as if each branch wanted to crawl away from the wreck. I pressed m had against the spot where my uncle had jabbed the screen. I felt the divot and the squirts of water coming in from the outside. The rain squeezed itself through the metal squares. It was also broken during the hurricane.

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Peace!

*If you want to learn more about how terrorizing the Mothman is, I suggest you stay away from the lackluster Richard Gere movie. The Big Book story (presented in comic book form) just really highlights the creepiness with lots of single panels of those eyes.

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Apples to Apples

This little piece started as a first person narrative, but I don't like writing those pieces because they just feel like glorified personal essays. I feel weird trying to pass off personal essays as straight up-fiction. Just call them creative non-fiction and be done with it! So I added a bit more framing to it and tried to remove my voice from it. I do love apples, though. A lot. That is where the personal comes from.

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Our Town's Apples

My daughter, Janice, writes an article for the local paper. The piece is called, "Talking About Our Town." She didn't come up with the title, but inherited it from the previous writer, a stay at home mother who ran an impromptu antique shop from her garage. Janice is out of town this week, a friend's wedding in Nevada. So I am writing the piece for her, covering the monthly town board meeting.

I settled into one of the steel folding chairs at the back of the room. The town just put new carpet in the building and the room smelled plastic. I didn't notice the man sitting behind me, an older man with a potbelly that hung over his waist, until he cleared his throat. He wore a striped polo shirt tucked into his jeans and a pair of red suspenders. His hair was white, licked into a smooth left side part. "New to town?" he asked.
"Well, no. I have lived hear about five years."
He shrugged then made his lips into a circle. "Oh," he looked at the ceiling. "Well, I've never seen you."
"Well, I've never seen you." I introduced myself. His name was Bob, but even after a cold handshake he still seemed funny. Like he was unconvinced with and of me. "My daughter writes for our town's newspaper. That is why I am hear. I am covering the meeting for her article." I held my notebook and pen.
"Don't read the paper, myself, but I guess if you're new..." Bob's voice trailed off as the side door opened. It was the mayor. Five minutes late.

The conspiracy theory around town was that the mayor showed up to meetings late because he was getting sick of it. And being the mayor of our town must be hard because with only 1,700 people you know everyone. It's one big family. And it's a lot easier to be candid, honest, and angry with your family.

"Let's get this started," said Mayor Valenti taking his seat flanked by Bonnie K., the town clerk. He banged a gavel on the folding table in front of him. "I call this meeting to order." Looking down at his agenda Mayor Valenti said, "Lets talk about our town."

The first few minutes were just pomp and protocol. Approving last meeting's minutes. Reports from various public service commissioners like the police chief, fire chief, and zoning officer. The fire chief, a hefty guy named Jay who looks like he could carry two twenty-foot ladders over each shoulder, gave my first source of material.

"And to conclude, something funny this week. The fire department got a call to Badger Run road to rescue a cat stuck in a tree." He then smiled and someone chuckled from the front row of seats.

Actual cat stuck in a tree! I wrote in the notebook, quickly jotting down the details. A grey tiger tabby named Aurora. Belonging to Jackie McGlot the local aerobics instructor. A poplar tree.

With the reports done, Mayor Valenti opened the floor to public comments. Bob behind me grunted and turned to an older, overweight lady sitting next to him. "Here we go," he whispered to her.

A hand came up from the front row. A knotted hand, smeared with paint and grease. A working hand.

The mayor knew that hand. "The board recognizes Mr. Tom Kell of 137 Invite Lane," he said. The polishing his glasses with the bottom of his t-shirt, Mayor Valenti said, "What have you got for us this month, Tom."

Mr. Kell got up and pulled a bushel of apples from underneath his chair. He passed them down the first line of chairs. "Please, everyone take an apple!" He smiled brightly, revealing yellowed teeth shining among all his farmer's scruffiness. I then realized him as the man people referred to as the local homesteader. Janice had written about him.

"I hope everyone enjoys these apples because they are behind," Tom struggled with opening the flap of a Photopix envelope. "Behind, behind, behind a new endeavor I offer for all the children of our town!" He wrung out the pictures and then flipped through them. "Here I got some pictures, but they are mixed up with some of a hike I just took to the falls."

The apple basket came my way. I grabbed one and held it to the light. "Oooo, yeah that's a good one," said Tom. I then realize he was speaking to me.

'Oh, yeah?" I brought the apple down and cleaned it on my shirt sleeve.

"Yes, sir. A Cox Orange apple. See how the skin looks so mottled and alternates between burgundy and auburn. Reminds me an old leather bound book. And it tastes so complex. Nutty and citrusy, never foamy!"

Never heard of Cox Orange apple, but I was excited. Taking the first bite, I realized Tom wasn't lying, but I could only nod my approval. Someone else spoke up.

"Hey! What kind of apple did I get!" It was a woman's voice.

"Excuse me," interjected Valenti. "Please say your name for the recorder" He motioned to the digital recorded by Bonnie K.

"Oh, sorry," said the woman. "Katie Peterson of 176 Oldfield Road and I just want to know what my apple is." She turned to the whole audience. "No offense," she said smiling.

"Another good one!" Tom scrambled over to her side and held her hands which still clutched the fruit to the light. "An Akane! A Japanese hybrid with cherry pie colored skin and a heavenly pure white flesh. Very bright and sweet. Sunny flavor!"

Over the crunch of apples Valenti asked what the point behind all of this. The town board members nodded in agreement.

"Well, I planted all these apple varieties in my front yard, and created the first ever walking tour of apple diversity for the area! We live in the second largest apple producing state in the country and we know nothing but effervescent Granny Smiths and Red Deliciouses!" Tom stuck out his tongue and faked a gag after saying those words. I scribbled down everything, especially the apple varieties which I hoped to rattle off to Meredith later tonight. She had grown up in Washington state and might help me with the research. "You can see all the trees in those pictures," Tom said stabbing his finger toward the tables up front.

The lady behind me stood up and puffed out her thoughts. She didn't extend any courtesy to the recorder. "Well that is why I am here! I don't want to see these apple trees every morning when I wake up. They are deformed or something, all low to the ground and gnarled. And the flowers attract bees and my grandson is allergic to bees!"

Another voice, young and shrill, came out from the side of the room. "Well maybe if you had a job you wouldn't have to see them all day!"

Then a rumbling din began. The crunch of fruit, throaty laughter of some, annoyed grunts of others, and Valenti slamming his gavel. I made my own noise, scribbling down what was happening in our town.

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I do love me some apples. Back home, the only apples we had were imports from Washington state. Red Delicious apples and Granny Smiths are anything but good. Horrible, messy things that taste like you bit into a fleshy Alka-Seltzer tablet. While I grew up I hated apples, because back home there were no such thing as good apples. But, now, in New York State, apples are everywhere and they KICK ASS! Of course, you can tell that I am a bit of an apple snob and when I taste apples, I bring out all the language usually reserved for wine, beer and coffee. Even when I worked as a barista, I could have never said something like that description of Cox Orange (They also have a wonderful graininess, like a pear, but not as overwhelming.). If you live anywhere in apple country then I suggest you look at any local U-pick farm and take advantage of the season. I will be the guy scaring kids out from underneath trees at Little Tree Orchards in Newfield.

"My apples, kids! BACK OFF! Don't test me! Don't talk to me, criminal! Or I'll cut you...a piece of this apple!"

Awww......even I can be nice to the kids.

Oh, yeah. What did you think of this little slice-of-life piece?

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...