Friday, November 4, 2011

Dreamers on the Rise



We grabbed the first T we could find and made our way over to Cambridge.  We wanted to have breakfast over at Harvard Square and found a little greasy spoon tucked next to a used book store.  Charly and I located a table and sat down.  I looked around and saw male students, smoking cigarettes and looking smug, explaining Kafka to girls in high school pretending to go to Harvard.  By eleven o’clock they’d have them in the sack.  One of the guys nodded at me as I sat down, figuring I was one of the fraternity.  I wasn’t about to go all Jerry Falwell on these guys for a minute.  I was a far sight older than them and Charly was just a hair older than the girls.  The waitress came up to us.
     “How ah ya?” she asked, bored, taking the pencil out from behind her ear.  She looked me up and down and then did the same to Charly.  She zeroed back to me and stared.  I felt like I still had Charly’s panties around my neck for crying out loud.  Cut me some slack here Flo.

. . .from the forthcoming novel. . .Dreamers on the Rise

Permanent Declarations of a Temporary Love



As we pulled into the driveway of the main house, I noticed two cars I didn’t recognize.  I popped the trunk and took out Rin’s carry-on and her suitcase.  I toddled up to the door with them.  The door opened and I eyed Amber as I tumbled in, awkwardly hoisting the suitcases into the house.  I set them down in the foyer and looked up. 
Sara.
                                                                       # # # # #
“I told you I impinguinated him,” Amber said.  She kept telling me she had been telling Sara she was fattening me up so other women would stay away from me.  And it had worked wonderfully!  Sara looked me up and down and then came over to me.  She hugged me for a long time.  Eventually the clapping by all the roommates broke us up.  I looked over and saw Slick Vanderwall stride over toward me. 
“Slick,” I said.
“How are you, Ben?”
“Better now.”  I looked at Sara and her eyes were glistening.  She still hadn’t said a word.
“Numbers,” Sara said.
“What?”
“The numbers.”  Confused as ever, I stared at her.  Sara looked at Amber with frustration.  Amber came over to Sara and whispered into her ear.  Sara nodded.  She took my hand.
“We’ll be back,” Sara announced to the others.  She led me down into the basement, down through the hallway and punched the numbers into my security keypad.  Sara walked over to the steps pulling off her shirt.  I was right behind her.  She unsnapped her bra and tossed it back into my face.  We entered the kitchen, she reached into the fridge and grabbed two beers.  She took off her jeans and put them on the kitchen table.  She headed up the stairs, hopping on one foot and then the other as she eased her panties down.  She stood at the top of the stairs in white socks.  I was fully dressed.  I climbed up the stairs and stood in front of her.
“Uh,” I said.
“Brilliance spews forth.”  She tugged at my belt and cut to the heart.

 . . .from the novel in progress. .. Permanent Declarations of a Temporary Love

Permanent Declarations of a Temporary Love



“There’s a guy . . .”
                                                                       # # # # #
There are times when I wondered how much God wanted to dump into my lap.  After the adventure Amber and I shared a few years back, I thought my quota of lifetime adventure had been adequately filled.  Sara apparently thought differently.  And there was a reason Sara sent Rin my way.  There was a guy.  A bad guy.  Wasn’t there always?
“ . . .by the name of Parson Shivers.” Rin finished.  I dropped my coffee cup, coffee splattering across the floor.  The waitress was none to happy.  I apologized profusely to the woman and helped her clean up the mess.  After we determined the floor was clean, I sat back down across from Rin.  She looked at me.
“Sara figured you’d know the guy.”  Shit.
“I don’t know the guy, really, Rin.  I know his brother very well.  We knew he was into girls, but not to this extent.”  Just how did I go about telling Stimple his brother was a bigger cretin than we imagined.  Rin continued her tale.
“When Sara and Kim were digging around over in Korea to find old comfort women, they ran across some of my relatives.  One of them told Kim about me.”
“And how did they piece all this together and get Parson Shivers out of it?”  I figured it would lead back to our old buddy, Slick Vanderwall, and I wasn’t far from the tree.
“Sara knew a guy back here in Ohio, Slick Vanderwall?”  Bingo.
“He’s a good man.”
“So Sara said.”  Sara and Slick worked together while Sara was in college.  Slick was a private detective in Columbus.  He was a tremendous help to us when we tracked down Pervis Stahl, another cretin who lived to torment young women.  But, I figured with the demise of Pervis, an adventure I’d never dreamed I’d share in, that would be the end of my being a Hardy Boy and Amber being Nancy Drew.  Sara, apparently, had other ideas.
“If I might ask you, Rin, just what is my role in all of this?”  She gathered up the pictures, tapped the pile into a neat stack and put them back into the envelope.
“She knew Amber would need your help.”  I looked at Rin.  Figured the little shit knew all about this already.
“I see.”
“She said you would do whatever Amber said.”  Rin looked at me for some kind of confirmation.  “In fact, I believe she said you were helpless when it came to Amber.”  Indeed.
“One might say.”
“So, you’ll help us?”
“Us?”
“Me.  And Amber.  And you would make three.”
“And just what is it we’re supposed to do?”
“Get Parsons.  And they also know he’s had some help here in the states.  A woman.”
“A woman?”
“Yes.”
“Any clues on whom that might be?”
“Yes.”
“And you might enlighten me this evening?”
“Yes.”
“Now?”
“A woman by the name of Hanna Doushay.”
All the blood drained from my face.

. . .from the novel in progress. . .Permanent Declarations of a Temporary Love

Permanent Declarations of a Temporary Love



Circle takes the square.  The picture didn’t do this girl justice.  I was staring at God’s perfection. 
She smoothed out her plaid skirt and handed me her carry-on.  “You are Ben, right?”  I’ll take Whoopie to block.
“That would be me.”  The carry-on only weighed four hundred pounds.  My right hand dipped toward the floor.
“I could use some coffee.”  And I could use somewhere I could reside besides the shallow end of my fantasy pool.  I patiently waited for Amber to bitchslap me mentally at the two-foot mark.
“Right this way.”  She walked on ahead of me until she spied a coffee shop.  She walked in and sat down, awaiting my presence.  A waitress came over and quickly brought over two cups of coffee.  Rin started talking.
“Sara saved my life.”  I could relate.  She’d saved mine many a time.
“How so?”  I poured cream into my coffee and five packets of sugar.  Rin looked on in a look I would describe as a cross between horror and disgust.
“How much do you know about Japanese culture?  I should say, about the subcultures over there?”  She spoke wonderful, unaccented English. 
“I know nothing.  Sorry.”
“There is a subculture over there, because I don’t mean to paint all of them this way, that values the subservience of women.  A throwback to the Geisha culture.  There is a huge fetish culture in Japan.  Remember back in the old days when postcards of naked women were a big deal?”
“I’m old, Rin, but not ancient.” I looked at her for some kind of confirmation and didn’t even get a shrug.  I probably was ancient in her eyes.  She looked to be the same age as Amber.
“Well, I got thrown into the life,” Rin said.
“The life.”
“I was kidnaped.  Forced into it.   I had to get out or I’d commit suicide.  You can only be hogtied so many times.” 
“I suppose.”  Hogtied?  I was way out of my element.
“The last time I was tied up and left for three days.  Some people get their kicks in different ways.  This guy was into massive pain.  I was lucky to get out alive.”  There are some things one can’t comment on in life.  This was one.  Knocking on clever’s door was a useless task during some monologues.  For once, I decided to keep my mouth shut.  The waitress came over and refilled our cups.  I was in no hurry.  Rin reached for her overnight bag.  She unzipped a zipper and pulled out a large manila envelope.  She unclasped the back of it and slid out five 8 x 10 glossy photographs.  Rin was naked in all of them, tied up into impossible poses. 
“This is what it was like,” she said.  “You know, it goes all the way back to the middle ages.  It was originally used as torture.”  A guy came cruising past the back of our table and did a double take looking down at the photos.  He looked at me.  I felt as unclean as a four-year-old on a playground.  Rin continued.
“They get girls over there as young as nine.  I’m sure it happens over here also.  In fact, I’m sure of it.  Countless little girls kidnapped and forced into sexual slavery.”  I took a sip of my coffee.  She put one of the pictures in front of me.  The rope was tied above and below Rin’s breasts in an elaborate pattern.  “This is called Shinju.”  This looked like none of the knots I learned at summer camp with the Boy Scouts.
“They have names for all this stuff?  It looks like people just tie you up willy nilly.”
“Every single rope and truss has a meaning.  This particular one makes the breasts and nipples very sensitive. Shinju.  It means, the pearls.”  Bondage 101 being taught to me by a twenty-year old. 
“Rin, no offense, but why are you telling me all this?”
“Because Sara thought you might be able to help me.” 


. . .from the novel in progress. . .Permanent Declarations of a Temporary Love

Permanent Declarations of a Temporary Love



I felt like a damn chauffeur standing at the gate holding up a sign that said RIN.  All I needed was a cap and a white shirt.  I looked around at several other people around me.  They were all waiting for loved ones.  There were no other signs. 
Soon, people were filing off the plane.  There was an endless stream of humanity, all coming from Los Angeles, entering Cleveland from vacations or visits from relatives.  At the end of the line I waited.  No Rin.  I waited another five minutes.  Finally, I saw walking down the tunnel the only Japanese girl who had disembarked.  I was the only one left at the gate.  I held up the sign.  The girl came right up to me.  Now I felt like a fool.  She took the sign from my hands and tossed it aside.   

. . .from the novel in progress. . .Permanent Declarations of a Temporary Love

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Permanent Declarations of a Temporary Love



“Sorry, man.”  I blew smoke out and looked at Stipple.  He hadn’t had an easy life, but he made the best out of it.  Right out of the service his dad died and he raised his brothers and sisters.  His mom had died before he went into the service.  Sometimes your life is put on hold.  Sometimes it stays that way forever. “Every time he’s in it costs you some serious cheddar.”
“You know why I like talking to you, Ben?”  For some reason, Stipple and I had hit it off immediately.  I had the utmost respect for him.
“Because when I call money cheddar you know exactly what I mean?”
“Because I never have to Barney things down to you.”  That sounded like something Amber would say, not Stipple.
“Has my daughter been in here talking to you?”  Amber was always coming up with new words and phrases.  It was a habit she picked up in high school and she was always ambushing me with a word from left field or a phrase that left me in stitches.
“She’s become a wonderful young lady, Ben.”  He smiled at me.  You took a poll around town, nobody would disagree with him.
“She has, hasn’t she?  Been here?”  Amber liked stopping in the Legion to talk to Stipple.  Stipple was almost like a grandfather to her.  Sara’s father had died a couple of weeks after Amber was born.  My dad lived in Boston, but I saw him rarely.  He was a fairly successful writer and traveled the world.  We weren’t estranged.  We both lived our own lives and intersected when convenient for either of us.  Amber didn’t have a relationship with him.
“You think I’d come up with Barney things down on my own?”
“She’s a one of a kind.”  I had become accustomed to people bragging about Amber. 

“And you’re one lucky man,” he said, getting into his wallet for some more money.  Warren came over to our table and joined us.  We both looked at Warren, waiting for brilliance to emit from his mouth.
“’bout all I can take of that fucking Magruder for one day,” Warren said.  I’d be shocked as shit if Warren didn’t squeeze in one fuck per sentence.
“I hear that,” Stipple said.  He tapped out another cigarette from his pack.  “That shaved head of his. . .”
“I fucking hear that,” Warren said.  All of our hearing, apparently, wonderful.
“You’re off in space all of a sudden, Ben,” Stipple said.
“Have to leave pretty soon and go to Hopkins.”
“Waddya going to the fucking airport for?” Warren asked.
“Picking up a new roommate for my daughter.”  I was waiting.  It didn’t take long.  Warren and Stipple high-fived each other.
“I just know you got something going on at that fucking mansion of yours,” Warren said.  I looked at Stipple and Warren.
“Aren’t you getting a bit worn to be high-fiving people, Stipple?” I asked.
“When you’re my age, any appendage you can raise, you raise.”  Stipple and Warren high-fived each other again.  I wasn’t much on the high-fiving business myself.
“I think our man needs another fucking drink,” Warren said, pointing to Stipple’s empty glass.  I walked the glass up to the bar and pointed to the Jim Beam.  I came back and placed it in front of Stipple.  He nodded his thanks.
“So, what kind of a fucking model you picking up tonight?” Warren asked.

“Japanese girl,” I said.
“Ahhhhhhhh,” Stipple said.  He looked into his glass.  “You talk to war buddies and those Pacific boys say they had it all over us guys fighting the Germans.  Never did care for all that hair in the pits and legs those French girls had when I was there.  But, those Pac boys said some of those oriental girls taught them things they were pretty certain their mothers hadn’t a clue about in this lifetime.”  I didn’t even want to think what my mother knew about in terms of the bedroom.  I was just glad I was here for chrissakes, grateful she’d figured that part of it out.
“Well, how’d you like to fucking be me?” Warren asked.  “I didn’t as much as see a fucking ankle over in Desert Storm.”  They both looked at me.  For some reason Warren assumed, since I was at the Legion, I was naturally a vet of some kind.  The truth was, a friend of mine signed me up as a social member a few years back.  Now, every time Warren talked about Desert Storm, he assumed by my age I had to have been there.  It was pretty obvious I was too young to have served in Vietnam.  Warren came from a family that put a premium on military service.  It was as natural as going to college right from high school was in my family. 
“Breathing is the way I prefer them,” I said.  They both smiled and said some amens to that, brother.  I figured if Warren ever cornered me about what branch of the service I had served in, I would tell him I just couldn’t talk about it.  He’d figure it was too painful for me.  A lot of them couldn’t talk about it.  Maybe he’d figure I was CIA or some undercover bullshit.  It was one of those things I should have cleared up on day one.  Now, day nine hundred and something, I kept trying to avoid the issue. 

“Doesn’t much matter where we served,” Stipple said, “all I know is those mothers were at the ass end of one hell of a beatdown.”  He polished off his drink.  “Gotta go.  Thanks for the drink, Ben.”  Stipple got up and wobbled toward the door.
“He was in a fucking mood,” Warren said.
“Brother again.”
“Fucking Parson?”
“Parson.”
“Motherfucker.”
“Indeed.”  I gathered up my keys and cigarettes.  “I gotta run, Warren.  Have to go to the airport.”
“You fucking want me to go with you, keep you company?”  Warren had a gleam in his eye.
“Well, I appreciate your kindness, Warren, but I’m sure this girl will be nervous enough as it is.”
“I’d calm her fucking nerves.”
“I’m just quite sure you would.”  I shook his hand and walked out the door.
             
. . .from the novel in progress. . .Permanent Declarations of a Temporary Love