♥♥♥ Oldsies ♥♥♥
The BookJuly 3, 2006 6:28 pm

I stood in his apartment. The door had been blown open by inclimate weather and gunfire. Maybe at that point it was just the weather. I can’t really say. I can only relate what I think happened as memories are as unreliable as used car salesmen. They are particularly unreliable when the used car salesmen is snorting so much coke that the nose bleeds seem like a dream and the pills popped are as effective as candy asprin unless otherwise directed. Otherwise memory is a farce of imagination. What I can say is that I never wanted to be here. I only wanted a few things out of life and some routes down roads paved in drugs and sex were not the way to get them. Prostitution of, not only my body but my mind were not ways to get places. Being tied up and force feeding myself drugs to ward of the pain of what it was to become this human refuse.
Wind had forced its way in by force of cold blows to the frail window. It wasn’t much of a place anyway. Always stunk of cat piss, stubborn marijuana smoke, and beer. A small pile of snow had started to settle itself into the corner where the window had finally given up and fell prey to the relentless wind. I had the shiny new metal muzzle of my Berretta Tomcat trained warily on the middle of his forehead and a stiletto heel in the knee that I had previously blown through. I thank god for Achilles and our gun lessons at the farm on that steel cold January morning:

Hold it like this (as in a scene from a bad romance where the man leans over the woman and holds a limb or two in order to instruct conduct or proper use of an item, in this case a gun. His hands are cold, dry, and hard with work. They are massive around my hands as he shows me how to hold my arms and take aim at the Miller High Life bottle and then the depressed and crucified scarecrow whose head is slumped over at an impossible angle for anything to be alive. I shot it right in the arms and the bottles came down after a few hours. Lee smiled at me, his lips chapped and cracked from the cold and yellowed cigarette teeth on display).

You’re a natural. (We were close to kissing at this point. His mouth was inches from mine but the closeness of ammunition and gunsmoke between us was enough for us. I didn’t need to kiss him to know how he felt and I never needed to let him know that I was grateful).
Memories of my father’s gun collection that my mother sold after his death also came to mind:

We can finally get rid of these Veronica (my mother says with her perpetual cigarette hanging from the side of her thin lips. She’s wearing some kind of summer dress that looks like it’s made of paper flowers with a belt in the middle to cinch the waist and cloth buttons, hair pinned tightly to the back of her head. The widow Ballard stares at my father’s life in guns as sprawled out on the green shag bedroom carpet. It looks like they’re on display in a shop window complete with fake grass and her paper dress. It’s an Easter display. Her eyes are reading them as they would a magazine. Maybe in her head she wants to keep at least one, as a memory of when she and him went to go shoot something, though I doubt that they ever did that together. Her long thin arms are collecting the guns, my father’s pride and joys, into a large chest. She’s an animated mannequin in this scene staged from my memory. She picks them up each separately and feels the weight in her hands. She feels their coldness and knows that they would only ever be warm again when in someone else’s hands. She would never feel that warmth or any of his warmth again).

With a warm gun contained at the end of my arms something felt very heavy. A large weight had been suddenly slung over my arms like a load of wet laundry. Heavy arms and dry mouth as I stared this fucker down. He was just another scarecrow now.

“You better not fucking move,” I spat out at him. The reaction that I got was not what I had expected, nor what I would do if some crazy redhead bitch had a gun trained on me. My eyes felt like they were heavy marbles in my head. They wanted to escape from their cavities and forget what they had seen but it was too late. Everything was intensified and then rounded; a fish bowl of vision. The drugs made my hands feel slick with a cold sweat.
“Are you going to shoot me? Because if you do that again you should kill me. I could do bad shit to you. Little fucking coke whore,” he hemorrhaged out of his mouth like the blood from his knee. The heel of the boot gouging the wound to make it more open to some kind infection of intense pain. The last word hung in the air above me. I began to feel more like I was doing something right, rather than try to convince myself that I was. I wanted it to be excruciating. This wasn’t to be some kind of pleasant thing like: here I take your money and drugs and leave you alone. I wanted him to learn his lesson. I wanted to shoot his dick off for knowing what he had done and what he would continue to do. If he thought that this was some kind of expensive joke then what I wanted was far worse then most would ever get. I would cut his fucking face off and let his cat Cookie gnaw on the mass of human tissue and muscle mass.

“You better shut the fuck up,” I snapped back. I shot the gun in the air and the pieces of stucco ceiling fell lightly on us like the snow coming in through the window. And then everything was quiet. And we stared at each other for a moment. Assessing the situation. What could either of us do, or for that matter what would we do?

The BookMay 24, 2006 2:16 pm

I am still working diligently on that novel. Here’s another excerpt:

…Richie has been to the emergency room more times then I can count on two hands and he’s only nine.

When he was five a dog bit his face and he received six stitches next to his left eye. There was a neighborhood dog, some kind of rottweiler mix, that was always kept in a yard and I am assuming because of this acquired a nasty disposition. Something that I admire about my little brother is that he has absolutely no fear. After the incident he would tell me that he just wanted to let the dog out so that it could play with him and the other kids. The story he told me was this:

Well I saw the dog and I had walked by there every day to get to the bus stop. He (the dog) always growled and barked at me but I knew that all he wanted was to play like me and my friends. Then Trevor Avery told me that if I let him out we could play games with him. Trevor knows a lot because he’s like two grades ahead of me. So I went over to the fence and I saw the dog. He had his teeth out all mean and I thought that maybe I shouldn’t let him out, you know, cuz his teeth were out. But there was Trevor being all like Richie he just wants a bone to chew. That made sense I thought. So I let this dog out and it’s really big. He jumped up at me and knocked me down and I wasn’t really sure how to get back up. His teeth were like this close to me (He held up his thumb and his index finger to indicate the distance that the dog’s ferocious jaws had been snapping at him). Before I knew it Trevor was pulling me away and we were running and I was bleeding. A LOT. Mom was really pissed. She started crying all the way to the emergency room. I hope she’s not still mad at me. It wasn’t really my fault and it isn’t fair if she thinks it is.

Another incident was maybe a few months later in June or July. We were at the community pool. The one where you have to have plastic badges with numbers raised off of them attached to pins that would always stick you if you put them on your suit. It was there that Richie decided he wanted to be the first shallow water diver to be successful at the age of five. I was with him but at the time I was enamoured with the life guard who worked there, a certain Jesse Beach. He had this great brown skin that brought out his eyes. So we were busy talking when out of the corner of my eye I see Richie run and dive full force into the swimming pool and it took a few moments to process that he was doing this from the wrong end. Jesse and I quickly exchanged horrified looks with eachother before we went running to the side of the water. Richie had stood up and was holding his nose making little plumes of blood in the water with each drop. It was swirling around him in beautiful stringy clouds. He just stood there and looked and me and smiled crookedly. With a mouth full of blood he said “I guess that wasn’t such a good idea, huh?” I shook my head and told him to get out of the water. During the car ride to the ER Richie explained himself with his hand on his broken nose. There are still stains on the passenger seat from that incident.

You know Vern. I was thinking that I could just like dive in and I’d be light enough with the right, uhm projectory then I could definitely just dive in there it turns out that I guess I am a bit too heavy and I just didn’t skim the surface enough or something. In my head it looked like something real easy to pull off you know, like a handstand underwater or those stupid teas parties that the girls do. They always look so stupid when they do that. I know I’m good at diving usually so it just seemed like something that I would have no problem.

Richie maybe you should stop talking and try not to get blood on the seat. (He laughed at that one)

It’s pretty much too late for that Vern. It’s kind of already all over the place. So I guess I shouldn’t try that one again, even though I think it’s still possible. I just need to lift myself up or something somehow. I promise not to break anything if I try it again. (He looked at me hopefully)

Yeah well. You won’t be trying that again Richie. I can’t keep bringing you to the ER when mom is at work and when I’m supposed to be watching you.

You were too busy with that lifeguard huh? (I shoot him a look. It’s the one where my face says that I have no retort but I still want to say something. Not much could really excuse me from not watching him, but fuck he should know better)

I think you should save some of your blood for the ER Richie, in which case you might want to stop talking.

But…(To which I silenced him by making a sound that is much like air escaping from a tire; a harsh SHHHHHHH!)

The BookFebruary 25, 2006 12:37 pm

Hot Nick was more like a nickname attached to him for ironic purposes rather then real ones. His moniker should have been Sleazy Nick, Dirty Nick, or I’ll give you that coke for free if you let me do a line off your ass Nick. He was pretty good for that. I had known Nick through a friend of mine who never left town. She was more of a parasite than a friend. We drove up there on a bone chilling December evening because she wanted to get high. It was the week before Christmas if memory serves correctly. But look, my memory is pretty fucked at the moment. Everything is interwoven with itself.

The BookFebruary 21, 2006 2:26 am

He told me that night that he loved me and that he couldn’t imagine being without me. All I could stare at was the half empty wine glass in front off me and slowly blink. I stared through the glass at the picture created backwards from the liquid. It was distorted and round.

Vern, hey, are you listening? I am sure that at that moment my face became twisted. It was in response to him referring to me as Vern. He knew that I hated that. My mother’s voice always popped into my head. It was echoing in my head when it came to the next part. I felt as if half of the dinner would come up. The chocolate cake had been too rich, and the wine put me in a haze*. It was in a flash of a magic trick and some kind of foil flame (look that up). His slight of hand produced a box from nowhere. By this time I was choking on something. It was hallucinogenic. The room had become what I pictured in the glass and the sound was turned down and then flooded with water.
I want you to know…
And then there it was. He had revealed the contents of which I pretended to look at with close scrutiny. It was a beautiful setting. He must have spent some money that I didn’t know he had. Later I was to find out that it was his dead mothers’. It didn’t take long for his frustration to grow.
I sat there silent and I wasn’t even sure if I could have closed my mouth.
Excuse me. I have to go to the ladies room. I stumbled from my chair as best as I could. The alcohol was more then I could handle right now. That’s what I had to keep telling myself anyway. I felt like I was having an allergic reaction. I half expected to see hives on my inner thighs when I let myself into the bathroom.

The BookFebruary 14, 2006 3:57 am

The Salt felt like it was coating my skin and i wasn’t breathing just air. It was heavily laced with salt. My hair was transformed into tiny whips that stung my face and left a salty residue. My eyes burned as the molecules assaulted my cornea. Sand felt like tiny razors cutting into my skin and the salt would continue to penetrate my body.

The BookDecember 30, 2005 11:17 pm

What can I tell you about my family. My father died when I was nine and my mother is a nurse at the medical center. She works long hours and always has. I have a little brother. He’s 8 years younger. He never knew my father, which could probably be considered a good thing. It’s not as if I knew him either. I just remember going to a church, and everyone wearing black. It smelt like old people and flowers. I am convinced to this day that all older women wear the same perfume. It’s layered with death and flowers.

Vernica sweetie are you ready?
I think so are my shoes shiny enough? I want daddy to see how shiny they are.
Honey your shoes are perfect (she tries not to blow cigarette smoke at me and she makes a funny face while accomplishing this)
Is Roddy coming?
No your brother is staying at the neighbors. Now lets get in the car and go say goodbye to daddy.
We’re saying goodbye? (deep sigh from her and she inhales deeply on her cigarette)
Yes honey. Yes we are. Now buckle up.
Ok. Mommy?
Yes?
Where’s daddy going?
Somewhere a whole hell of a lot better then here. (she laughs at herself, and sighs. She hopes it’s better)

I can safely say that my presence was most definitely missed during the time that I was away. I am the center unit of the family. Which is probably the reason why I always wanted to run away so bad. I attempted and failed many times over. When I was 11 I packed lunch in a brown paper bag. There were potato chips, a sandwich, and some mashed potatoes I had stuffed into a plastic back. I brought my blankie, and my wristwatch, and was convinced that I was set for the road. I packed it all away in a bandanna and attached it to a stick, like I had seen in an old movie. I made it to the playground up the hill from our house, at which point I was hungry. I decided to eat my lunch. I thought I would easily be picked up by some nice family who would ask me to do anything like baby-sit, make dinner, clean the house, or anything. Just be happy to have me enough to do what I wanted. I opened my bandanna and the mashed potatoes has leaked all over the place (mom always made them a little runny) and made everything soggy. I had to go back. And I was devastated. I arrived back at the house and my mother was there. I hadn’t been gone for more than an hour. She just puffed on her cigarette and smiled down at me. I guess she must have been home from a split shift. She didn’t say a word, but made me tomato soup and grilled cheese. This last time was supposed to be for good, but there were…complications.

The BookDecember 20, 2005 12:29 am

I worked in a building named Plaza One. It is a brown building that looked liked it was someone’s brilliant idea in the 70’s. By this I mean that it’s constructed of light brown bricks and it looks something a child would make out of legos. It is three stories and on the right hand side there is a large window that reveals an awful decision in lighting fixtures. When I had to walk everywhere as a teenager we knew that is was one of the only places we could go into air conditioning and smoke. The top floors are reserved for offices, but I am not even sure who works in them or what they’re for. The front was dedicated to a strip mall housing an Italian ice place, a tuxedo rental place, and Video Thrills. That’s where I worked. Seems pretty inconspicuous and yellow neon sign proclaiming that it was where thrills involving that of the video nature were located. I want you to break it down though. Do you think we specialized in action films and that’s what thrilled? I will give you a word. Pornography. That’s what we were constantly thrilling people with.
At first Marty, my boss, wouldn’t hire me. It didn’t matter how much retail experience I had. There was no way he was going to hire a girl. I said:

Look Marty I don’t want to tell you how to run your store, but I think that it’s pretty sexist for you to just turn someone away just because they are a girl. I could probably call some people. Plus I think having a girl work here instead of a sleazy guy then you probably get more customers in here. I know what kind of people these are and I know how to handle myself and…

Well I had the job now didn’t I? Besides it would have been hard for him to turn me away. He’s an old friend of the family. My mother’s friend to be exact. I think at one point my parents were probably swingers. What she would have done with fat old Marty Schillman was beyond me. Maybe he was a real looker back in the 70’s, just the Plaza One building may have been a good idea. Or even the interior of Video Thrills. Red counter with a white base. Shelves behind the counter of the same nature. Because Marty is a real genius with interior design. That’s what I always told him anyway. It was situated so that in the front there were old vhs copies of bad movies and then there was a back section. It was kind of a cheap front because I didn’t think that Marty really bothered to stock anything after 1992. We didn’t have any horror either because my friend had ripped most of it off. I don’t think Marty ever noticed.
The good thing about the job was that I could read as much as I wanted to and also be on the internet for long periods of time. I had a little monitor where I could watch to see if anyone was stealing Cum Guzzlers. It was usually just some shady looking middle aged man who roams the aisles for and hour and a half and comes out with Dirty Debutants 2. People love Ed Powers I guess.

The BookDecember 19, 2005 1:49 am

More about the character:
she works at video thrills (the porn store in an old 70’s throwback building)
was that worth your time? i hope so.

The BookDecember 15, 2005 11:15 pm

this is still the book btw, not my life. although a lot of times the line is blurry.

The alarm beeped at me. I casually rolled over and looked at it. 8:00 on the digital face and it looked like it was shaking at me. The numbers were doing a dance, wavering to and fro. Telling me to wake up. I lay there and contemplated going to my shitty job. I closed my eyes and told myself, twenty more minutes. In that twenty minutes I would reach into my underwear and relieve the sexual tension that had been built up for the past week to my secret fantasy. It wasn’t unlike any other morning I had had since I moved back in with my mother. The masturbation was a little odd, but other then that I brushed my teeth, did a bump, and went down for coffee. I wasn’t staying long anyway. Just a couple of months before I could move. Then I would get out of the town that had raised me. A town that was stifling and boring and didn’t have a real bar.

I guess it’s like a lot of suburbs. About three or four chain restaurants that have bars, a couple of convenience stores. A diner. Basically a crossroads with nothing in it. At the time I worked in retail. It paid shit, but for some reason I didn’t think I could do better. I didn’t think much of anything since I had arrived back. Oh yeah. I totally lived in a city. And it was totally cool. Which is what I tell all of the old friends that I run into, because they haven’t left and never will. They will be trapped here and that’s how they like it. If they wanted to leave they could. It never happens that way though. Dollar bowling on Mondays and half price drinks at the name-a-chain restaurant on every Thursday. Why not? Why not live in your parents’ basement and fuck when no one is awake? They can’t come up with good enough reasons to leave, but I can’t come up with good enough reasons to stay.

The BookDecember 14, 2005 8:12 pm

“Astronomers use a star’s light to determine the star’s temperature, composition and motion. Astronomers analyze a star’s light by looking at it’s intensity at different wavelengths. Also known as Wien’s displacement law (developed by German physicist Wilhelm Wien) links the wavelength at which the most energy is given out by an object and its temperature. Astronomers put filters of different standard colors on a telescope to allow only light of a particular color from a star to pass. In this way, astronomers determine the brightness of a star at particular wavelengths. From this information, astronomers can use Wien’s law to determine the star’s surface temperature.”
–Microsoft Encarta. 2001

I stood there, with my booted foot on his bad knee and my Beretta Tomcat in his face.
“Don’t you fucking move” I said as calmly as I could. He just laughed. This frustrated me to the point that I dug my heel into his kneecap. I think I witnessed a wince of pain but I couldn’t tell if it was the drugs at that point or not. I couldn’t tell much of anything. I could only feel the rage that boiled inside of me with an intensity comparable to the surface of a white dwarf stars. For some reason my astronomy class was running through my brain. The different intensities of stars and the scale they used. They were hard to remember because letters were assigned to each one.
“Are you going to shoot me?” he laughed under his breath. All I wanted to do was remember the letters.
“You better shut the fuck up” I snapped back. I shot the gun in the air and the pieces of stucco ceiling fell lightly on us like snow. And then everything was quiet. And we starred at each other for a moment. Assessing the situation. What could either of us do, or for that matter, what would we do?”

beretta