Thursday, June 30, 2011

Day 30: Last One


Well, this has been fun.  We'll see what happens next!

Last One

William Clark snored in his bed. His alarm sounded. He pressed SNOOZE and then pulled the tattered Star Wars comforter over his head. Sleep did not return quickly enough, and William lay there, trying not to count his breaths, willing himself to relax, smelling his breath hot against against his face, trapped by the bedclothes.

Outside his window, the birds chirped. The sun glowed through the comforter, and he could see Han Solo's silk-screened face leering at him in reverse. William held his breath as long as he could, and then he exhaled again. Oh, it smelled awful.

Why did he listen to Drew? Cheetos and Jack Daniels were a terrible idea.

Laura Clark climbed the stairs to the second floor of her suburban home. The sun had been up for three hours, and so had she. If she didn't leave for work in fifteen minutes, she would be inexcusably late.

She had called an All Hands Meeting for 10am, and when you own the company, you find you can't excuse yourself for anything.

Laura stepped into the “guest” bathroom to check her makeup. Shortly after she and Donnie had finalized the divorce, she moved everything from the master bath to this one, off the hallway. She still slept in the ridiculous California king that Donnie had insisted they buy with the wedding cash. Using the bathroom with the double sinks was awful. But sleeping in their old bed, fine.

Standing now in the guest bathroom, she looked in the mirror.

Everything in place on her face.

A family joke, that. From twelve years ago.

Which was when she stood with Will, watching his first ever school bus pull up, all big and yellow, and she saw his upper lip began to tremble. She hugged him, but obeyed his instructions to her: “Don't kiss me at all, Mom, because I'm a big kid now.”

He climbed the steps up into the bus and she thought he would be all right. But then he turned back, and his lips were pressed together tight, the corners drawn down, and his eyes crinkling in fear. So she said: “Everything in place on your face?”

Will looked puzzled for a second, long enough for the school bus doors to close. Through their narrow vertical panes, she could see his seven-year-old face smile, and he started to laugh.

Looking in the mirror now, she saw no flaws, aside from those introduced by forty-four years on the planet. Her makeup was fine.

Stepped back into the hall. One door half-closed. William's. He had to get himself on a flight to Columbus, Georgia today. Induction at Fort Benning, tomorrow.

And that would be that. Mark at Harvard. Cynthia in the Peace Corps. And Donnie in the arms of...well, better not to think about it too much.

Not that she did, much, anymore.

Perhaps after William left, she would sell the house.

William heard his mother climb the stairs. If the alarm went off again, there was no hiding the fact. Unless, perhaps, she went back down the stairs, right now.

Up and at'em, Champ!”

She was standing at the door. Oh.

If only she would let him sleep five more minutes!

She was right, of course. He had to get to the airport, the airport was on her way, who needs to pay for a cab? Not that she would begrudge him the money. But, ugh, no, no cab.

He groaned, flung the comforter aside (goodbye, Han! Goodbye, Luke!), sat up, stood up, loped awkwardly over the duffel by the bed, palmed the wall by the door for good luck, and shouldered past his perfect, powder-and-DKNY-smelling mother, a few more steps, and into the stark and comforting embrace of the hot shower.

His mother yelled, “Ten minutes, Champ!”

Fucking awkward, that. On the cusp of manhood, and Mamma Clark mother-hen-ing him into the Army. He hawked and spit, watching the gunk slide down the drain.

He considered jerking off. For about five seconds, he considered it. Then he seized the shampoo, and started making himself presentable.

Laura looked at the duffel by the bed. Clothes laid out on his chair. All squared away. Little Will had grown up.

Laura made her son's bed.

She grabbed her heels from the bedroom closet and padded downstairs. From her home office she grabbed her briefcase, already packed. From the fridge, a yogurt cup and the vegetables she had cut for herself.

Also from the fridge, she grabbed William's sandwich, veggies, and yogurt, and slipped them into a brown paper bag with a plastic spoon and a paper napkin and three single-serving packets of salt. He did love his salt.

A nineteen-year-old boy rattled down the stairs behind her. A nineteen-year-old man, she corrected herself. Her youngest.

William, with damp hair, hoodie, pressed jeans, and duffel.

She handed him his paper bag. He laughed.

My first day at school!”

She smiled, and then held up the wrist with the watch on it.

That's a pretty bracelet, Mom. But why are you showing it to me?”

A private joke, between the two of them, ever since she had explained watches to him, and he had frowned for a moment, and then asked: “Why don't you just check your phone, if you want to know what time it is?”

Now, William looked at her for a second, enjoying the joke.

Then he looked around the kitchen.

Then he headed out to the car.

The drive to the airport took them about ten minutes.

It took her about five minutes to say goodbye.

William stood there by the car with her, anxious but patient, thinking what Mark and Cynthia had told him about Mom: She hates saying goodbye. She talks about everything else. She doesn't want to embarrass you by crying, she says, but it's because she doesn't want to embarrass herself.

Finally, he asks when her meeting is.

Oh, crap. William, I'm sorry, I've got to go. Do you have enough money to buy something in the airport if you get hungry?”

Yes, Mom.”

Alright. I've got to go. I love you, Champ.”

I love you, Mom.”

And suddenly, he was away from the car, and into the airport, and through security, and waiting with two hours to go until his flight.

He called Andy and blamed him for the hangover. Andy told him that maybe he'd stop drinking like a girl while he was in the Army. And then Andy said: “So I'm the last one.” And William said: “Yeah, you are.” And Andy said: “You better come back here when you have leave. 'Cause who the fuck else am I gonna drink with?”

Laura watched her son disappear into the glass front of the terminal, got back in the BMW, and drove to the office.

On the way, she cried a bit.

She fixed her makeup while sitting in the car, parked in the space marked “L. CLARK – CEO.”

She got through the All Hands meeting just fine.

But during the Q&A, when Cliff Haskell from H.R. was about half way through a needlessly elaborate question about equal opportunity hiring, she decided that, yes, she would sell the house.

(c) 2011 Michael Bernstein

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Day 29: Flutoztron 324

Even writing quickly, this took an hour.  And I could spend another hour tightening it.  Sigh.  Too little time for all the awesome things one can do...

Flutoztron 324

Quarkwoz Da'a'dvoi Ahhaaztgz Flubootz, also known as Quarkwoz, Daredevil of Sector B, and also That Joyriding Asshole, gunned the engines of his stolen single-seater Flutoztron 324 and sliced through the troposphere of the blue-marbled planet. Immediately the indicator bank lit up and transludic alarms shot through his glabrous mantle.

He extruded a tentacle or three, disabled the annunciators (the trembling disturbed his digestion terribly), and launched anti-missile defenses just as the blue-marbled planet shot an array of warheads at his needle-like craft.

The attacking warheads vaporized in a shower of ions, positrons, and shredded thermal insulation.

The Flutoztron 324 screamed closer to the planet's surface.

Panicking hordes scurried from the site, shouting things like, “Oh, my God!” and “Don't forget the wedding DVD!”

Massive defense robots, until now a secret from the general populace, raced to the projected site of impact. They energized their plasma bolts and other weapons previously thought to be the domain of mere science fiction. At Cheyenne Mountain and other locations around the globe, including ones so secret that they can not even be implied in a short story, hard-faced men and women prepared to make decisions and sacrifices until now only contemplated in horrifying red-team, blue-team, chartreuse-team simulations.

The Flutoztron 324 drew nigh. The defensebots placed massive carbon-steel-foam cushions upon the ground, confident in their hyper-fast AI brains that the nanotech mattresses would slow and trap the alien that was hurtling closer, ever closer by the microsecond.

Quarkwoz chortled with glee, or more accurately his mantle strobed with a thousand shades of the ultraviolet, for he was amused and even delighted at the Earthlings' puny conceptions of defense.

Down the street from the projected crash zone, over the growling engines of the defense robots, a lone dog could be heard to bark.

At last his ship reached the surface and, without stopping for even a second of digital parley with positronic brains of the defense robots, and easily shaking off the continued missiles, lasers, and destructor beams showered upon his hull, he plunged through the carbon-steel-foam cushions and into dark black topsoil of Alligator, Mississippi.

Not pausing to contemplate the agricultural riches or historical import of his crash site, Quarkwoz powered on, slicing easily into the bedrock as the defense robots, with their heretofore unheralded capacities, transformed into needle-form pursuit-bots, tunneling after the intruder with remarkable speed, unwilling (in their loyal, robotic way) to allow our virgin soil to be raped by this unknown but definitely alien scum.

Quarkwoz saw their pursuit and again he chortled. He activated the Nimbuz 4 Caltrop-Dropper, and oxy-titanium spikes shot out behind him as his ship burrowed ever further in.

The oxy-titanium spikes disabled most of the pursuing 'bots, but one persisted, the one whose creators dubbed Evertrue. Evertrue hardened its little positronic heart, and with an extra burst of power endeavored to close the gap with the alien intruder.

Quarkwoz ceased his chortling, his mantle shifting into a sullen shade of pink. He reviewed the array of input-points before him, pondering hard. As he shot ever deeper into the Earth's crust, his options would narrow as the density and temperature of the medium through which he traveled increased.

Quarkwoz for an ultra-micro-second experienced a rare feeling: panic. For time was running out. Something must be done. But what?

Then, in a stroke of inspiration, he fired the Enveloping Sludge of Capulon Beta. The brown, slimy Enveloping Sludge flowed out behind him, expanding to twenty times its original volume, and then becoming paradoxically even more viscous.

Clever as it was, and ever so full of heart, Evertrue could not anticipate this nefarious tactic, and ran headlong into the congealing goo, which fouled its intakes despite their sophisticated filter-cowlings and grabbed onto Evrtrue's Ultra-Teflon skin like hooks finding loops.

Forty kilometers deeper into the crust, Quarkwoz coasted to a stop, pausing to glory in his latest exploit. Hey, he'd buzzed far more sophisticated cultures in craft of a much higher Yleem-power, even by today's revised Yleem-power ratings, but he never tired of his joyriding thrills.

Quarkwoz finished his savoring, his mantle now strobing in a pleasing alternation of puce and ultrablue, started the Flutoztron 324 into the first leg of a three-point turn.

As he did this, the stolen craft pulsed rhythmically, and Quarkwoz cursed its owners. Stupid back-up beepers! What a buzzkill.

Then the craft juddered and began to wind down. Indicators and annunciators trembled, flexed, and chimed. The craft's lighting dimmed. All was still.

Quarkwoz extruded another tentacle, or ten, and beat the indicator banks and displays of his disabled craft. How could he be so stupid! Stupid, stupid, stupid!

To run out of fuel!

After his tantrum subsided, he collected his seventeen variegated wits, and energized the long-ranged ethersplort communicator, tentacling in a long and obscure code he knew now by heart.

After a few rings, a connection was made, and he could perceive the vibrations of his answering party, and he replied, using the same mode of communication:

Mom? Can you come pick me up?”


(c) 2011 Michael Bernstein

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Day 28: Eddie the Penguin

It starts slow, but it gets better as it goes along.  If I had the time I would definitely tighten the beginning.  By the way, anyone who has mastered this style has my deepest respect.  It is harder than it looks.


Eddie the Penguin


He's a shrimpy little homunculus. But he gets things done.”

Davey Butter keeps his mouth shut when Victor makes the above remark about Eddie the Penguin, because although Davey is thinking bad thoughts about Eddie, Victor seems to end the remark about Eddie on a positive note.

Victor is a kind of guy who has a mustache and curly hair and five different dining and drinking establishments. Victor is also the kind of guy who has a scar on his face and who looks nice when he smiles, but also who you do not want to ask questions about where he gets this scar. Victor is also a guy who does not have a nickname. Everyone knows who you are talking about; there is only one Victor.

Victor is a guy you do not contradict. Especially when he is making a mostly nice remark about Eddie the Penguin.

Eddie the Penguin is a bald, pear-shaped individual with a high-pitched voice and a way of moving his legs that looks like he is a bird that lives at the South Pole.

The thing about Eddie is that he is everywhere. You can be taking inventory in the freezer or putting the schmooze on a customer or scraping the eaves and that little pygmy will saunter by and ask how are you doing today, in that high pitched voice of his, and be gone. He isn't exactly intrusive, but you can't escape him, either.

Don't get me wrong. I am not inviting unfavorable comparisons with Pygmies. What I am saying is that the guy is short and that his dad is a Mbuti.

Who am I? I am a pal of Davey's. It is I who got Davey into this mess. I got Davey a job working for Victor.

Davey meets Eddie the Penguin during the lunch service at the Breast Bar. The owner, that is Victor, the guy aforesaid, means originally to call it the Brest Bar after either that town in France or the pastry invented to commemorate the famous bicycle race. But the sign arrives with the word “Breast” instead of the name of the place, “Brest,” and Victor is a practical man. Also, the bar is a titty bar and the customers don't care about bicycles, so perhaps this is all for the good.

At the moment when I get Davey his job working for Victor, he is in some trouble. The trouble is that Davey's girl Tina ejects him from her apartment, and Davey does not have a place to live. Some persons might object that Davey may rent for himself his own individual place to live, but these persons are not taking into account Davey not having any monetary instruments or bundles of cash with which to effect this sort of arrangement.

Thus it comes that Davey is bunking with me, a phrase I do not mean literally because I do not want to impute that kind of romantic taint into our friendship. Don't get me wrong. I see nothing condemnable about that kind of romantic taint. I just mean that Davey is sleeping on the couch.

I am also a player in the drama of putting food in people's mouths and tits in people's eyes, and my role in this drama is that I am a dishwasher. I am in the employ of said Breast Bar's owner, that is, Victor, at a place called Madeleine, but formerly I washed dishes at his place called The Puff.

The Puff is named also after a pastry, but in this case, shortly after The Puff opens for business, it develops that some customers confuse the meaning and think it is a place for ladyboys. At first the owner (Victor, as I said) takes this unkind and wants to change the name or perhaps burn the place down, but then decides that there is also money in ladyboys, so he hires some, and develops new affection for the name and the customers and most especially their cash.

It is while I am a dishwasher at the Puff that I come to meet Eddie the Penguin. While I am scraping steak bones and fish skins into the trash, this short little guy with a funny walk delivers a case of second-hand knives for the cooking staff to cut things with, and for about five seconds he puts the looking part of his face in my direction, and asks me how I am doing today, like he has this same conversation with me last week and is just checking to make sure that the tumor has not grown.

I do not have a tumor and I have never had a conversation with him before. Therefore I give him a scan and he seems like he is meaning no harm, so I say I am doing alright and he says great and waddles out. That is how I meet Eddie the Penguin.

It is only a few days later that I tire of the fact that the tits being highlighted at The Puff belong to persons who also have things between their legs, and I request a transfer to another of Victor's establishments, which is called Madeleine. Madeleine is a classy establishment, also with tits but tits belonging to regular girls, but that is another story. I will only say that at Madeleine I also see Eddie, a lot, that is practically every other day.

To get back to the point, the story at hand is about my pal Davey, and his relations to Eddie the Penguin.

This lunch service where Davey first meets Eddie is also Davey's first lunch service in this Breast Bar establishment, and at this moment Davey finds it is his job to keep water glasses full.

At the time when Victor makes his remark about Eddie, the one at the top of this story, the remark that starts out disparaging Eddie for his lack of height and of beauty, and that ends with a compliment about his effectiveness as someone who can make things happen, Davey is working at the Breast Bar for maybe two weeks. Davey has therefore had time to form a definite opinion about Eddie.

Like me, Davey sees Eddie maybe every other day, always coming in and going out. But it is in Davey's personality that he sees Eddie always on the move like this and then thinks about how he, Davey, is always humping the same jug of water around the same twenty-five tables and feels like a dope, and he notices that Eddie comes and goes as he pleases, and always has a smile on that face of his.

I believe that this does an injury to Davey's pride. See, everyone knows how Rita pushes Davey out. But they also know that Rita pushes Davey out for a guy who was not very tall. I am not saying that this new boy friend is a pygmy, or even a partial pygmy, but Rita does make a comment as to the new boy friend being twice the man as Davey even though he is half Davey's size.

Also, you should know in case you do not guess it, my pal Davey is good for nothing. This is why his girl Rita pushes him out of the nest, and why Davey is not in possession of any resources of the spending money kind when Rita gives him the ditch.

Davey is also the sort of guy who seems to deserve his nickname, which is Butter, because he eats so much and it looks like what he eats is mostly butter.

Do not mistake me, Davey is good for a laugh and also for helping me to clean out my liquor stash, although I admit that some people would consider this as nothing.

It is on a day when we are laughing and cleaning out my liquor stash that Davey proposes that we knock Eddie the Penguin very hard on the skull. He says that this would be a laugh. I ask him why, and he says that Eddie is having too much fun and that there is no fun left over for other people.

I think this is an amusing thing to say, so I have another laugh, and Davey interrupts my laughing to say that no, he is serious. When he says this he has a look on his face. I do not like this look and tell Davey we will not talk about knocking Eddie on the skull anymore.

The incident is as we say forgotten, until a month later.

At this time, a month later, I receive a telephone call from Davey informing me that he is decided to go to Mexico for his health, as working in the filling water glasses industry is a negative effect upon it. The health emergency is urgent and he is in Mexico already, so I can have the couch back and also there is a nearly empty bottle of my Scotch underneath it.

I think this is another laugh, but I also believe it, for this is a typical stunt of Davey to go away all sudden like, usually because he has built up some debts or because he is good for nothing.

It is a day or two later, at Madeleine, when I next see Eddie the Penguin and I hear the better story. I have finished scraping plates for the day and I am sat down on a crate to eat my filet mignon and trout which I have reserved for this occasion. Eddie sees me in the midst of my gustatory business, and he waddles over to keep me company, to amuse me, and to tell me what happened to him three days ago.

I would say that Eddie's is the true story, but I am not present to observe either party engaging in the events in question, so I will just report what Eddie relates to me.

Three days ago [Eddie says, in his high-pitched voice] I am making a late night delivery to The Breast. It is late enough that people who live by the clock would call it the morning. I unlock the place and wander through it, carrying a package that Victor asks that I deliver. The package is very valuable and very small so I walk back through the kitchen so I can climb the stairs to the office where I know there is a small, safe place that is inconspicuous.

When I am walking through the kitchen, I turn on the light. But before I can take more than six steps [listening to Eddie, I figure that this is three steps for a normal person], something falls on me with a clang and it is now dark again and also very hot and echoing.

I punch very hard at whatever is around me and for my efforts I get some bloody knuckles and also a ringing in my ears. It is obvious now that some person has overturned a cooking pot on me.

I know that my stature is not impressive but I still find this to be an insult to my dignity, so I yell to the person who overturned the pot to refrain from such insults and also to remove the pot.

There is a shouting noise, and although I can not make out the words, I believe that they are rude. Then this person or these persons commences or commence to beat on the outside of the pot with more force and with a harder object than formerly I had been beating the inside. To judge from the noise, this object is a ladle.

Because acute hearing is important to the sort of business I do, I stick my fingers in my ears and wait for the noise to finish. Which it does, eventually, and this I think is because there is only one person outside the pot, and this person is now tired.

At this point it is that I change tactics and stay very, very still. This staying still goes on for a time and then I think my captor gets bored, because the pot is lifted up and I see a pair of legs.

I step toward the legs very quickly and then go around behind them because I do not think that this person is very smart, because his actions so far have not shown me that he has any kind of plan besides being a pest and a bully to a person of smaller stature.

Indeed, I get the jump on him, and he is standing in the middle of the kitchen, holding the pot and swaying and looking for where I could have gone. He is looking everywhere but behind him, so my guess about his smarts is on the money, as they say.

There is no point in waiting for him to grow some extra smarts, so I step forward and punch my fist into the backs of his knees. I do this very hard and he falls down very quickly and I have to move out of the way to avoid being crushed by this man, because in addition to being of greater stature than me, I also find him to be of greater mass.

Then I step onto his chest and I practice my tap-dancing. I find that his chest is not big enough for my routine, so I also include his face and his knees and also some other parts in between.

When I am satisfied that my tap-dancing is practiced, and also that he will not put any more pots over my head, I take a rest, and I ask him how he is doing. I always like to know how guys are doing because I am a sympathetic personality.

He groans a bit and he mumbles, and I think he mumbles because he has his arms over his face and this is not good for the articulation.

It is at this moment that my driver, Big Sally, decides he must appear. I believe that Big Sally has gotten impatient and maybe also a little bit worried for my health. I tell Big Sally that I appreciate his concern but that he worries too much, and I was delayed because I had a sudden desire to practice my tap dancing.

Big Sally looks at me, and looks at the guy on the floor, and he starts laughing because he has a big humorous streak and he likes a good laugh, and while he is laughing I go upstairs to drop off my package.

When I come downstairs again, Big Sally has still got a case of the chortles, and I suggest to him that as much as I, too, enjoy a good laugh, that it is now becoming an injury to his dignity, and that he should give it a rest.

He quiets down and then gives the fellow on the floor, I believe it was your pal, Davey Butter, a hoist. Your pal Davey is not walking so good, what with the cowering and his arms over his face, so Big Sally puts him over his shoulder like a bag of Idaho Russets, and we walk out together and set Davey on the pavement outside.

We prepare to take our leave, and this fellow Davey, he takes his arms from his face and talks. He is more clear with his words now, and this is what he says:

You won't tell anyone about this, will you?”

I am a sympathetic personality and I say no to comfort him, even though this is obviously a lie because I am telling you about it now. But Big Sally thinks this is the biggest joke of the evening and despite my earlier warning to Sal about injury to his own dignity, he cannot stop laughing until we get into the car and drive away.

So [Eddie the Penguin says] that is what happened three days ago.

I thank Eddie for keeping me company, and I scrape my own plate, which has very little to scrape by now because I was very hungry and the filet and the trout at Madeleine are both very good.

Then I go home and I fluff the couch as best I can which is difficult because after this time Davey has left a very big dent in it. And I sit on the couch and take out the whisky and finish it, and I am sad, because Davey did not leave very much in the bottle for me to drink.

(c) 2011 Michael Bernstein

Monday, June 27, 2011

Day 27: The ComfortCat(tm)

Another fictional time stamp.  It's actually 3:26am on the 28th.

Ahh, fear.  We wait and wait for "inspiration," whatever that is.  And then we start writing without it, and something happens.


The ComfortCat(tm)

Darrell Happleby started combing the fur of the ComfortCat. Darrell wasn't feeling too terribly well at the moment. He had just forgotten his wife's name when introducing her to his doctor. The doctor watched Darrell searching his brain, and made a note.

The sheets on the hospital bed smelled of bleach and lavender and the walls had been painted the color of summer wheat. Outside the windows, trees waved in the breeze. Absent from the corridor were the typical hospital sounds; they had either been deadened by carpet and soft wall hangings, or eliminated by careful training or advanced communication technology.

The ComfortCat had been patented by the hospital's managing director. So the label on its belly said. Its silky fur resisted the comb just enough to be satisfying, and as you groomed the synthetic beast it gave forth a euphonious purr.

If a fellow were to be losing his mind, this would be the place to do it. And what better companion than a blue, furry cat?

Rita Happleby sat in a guest chair at Darrell's feet. She had assumed a bright and cheerful look meant to comfort him, but he had been married long to her enough to know that beneath that look of repose a sob waited to burst forth as soon as she could find time alone.

Rita clutched a black patent-leather purse. Of course nobody called them purses anymore. And no one would have mistaken Rita's purse for a design current on the streets of New York or even Bayonne, although doubtless Rita's niece Sarah appreciated it.

Darrell wondered why he was wondering about purses. He saw himself wondering about wondering. And then he thought: if he could see himself think, did that not mean he was all together in the thinking department?

Rita's niece Sarah sat next to Rita. Sarah at age seventeen managed to dress fashionably and simply, in a way that seemed old and new to his eyes. She called her style vintage, but Darrell could not work out the relationship to wine.

Darrell had remembered Rita's name only a minute after he'd forgotten it. Still, his stomach hurt with the shame of it, and he feared to look at his wife and her encouraging expression for fear that he'd start bawling.

How strange, Darrell thought, the older I get, the more readily I cry. When I was a child, I believed that the whole point of growing up was to never to have to cry again.

The doctor made brisk noises and slipped out, only to be replaced by an equally brisk nurse who told Rita that she could stay if she liked but that Sarah would have to step out as it was time to bathe him.

Sarah left, telling her uncle how nice it was to see him, in that way that Darrell knew was a lie, but also that the lie was kindly meant. His wife excused herself as well, telling Darrell that she should walk Sarah out and perhaps get a bite in the cafeteria, as their sandwiches were very good, and she shouldn't pass up the the chance, and would he like something?

Darrell said that's alright, I'll see you soon.

The abrasions stretched down the length of his right leg. The nurse, who introduced herself as Pam, put a waterproof cover on the wound and the dressing, and started to bathe Darrell with a sponge.

(The emergency room staff had cleaned the gravel from the wound last night. They had given him a local anesthetic, not enough, and Darrell found his eyes leaking a bit at the pain but not complaining.

Then they sat him in a room, this room, and gave him the ComfortCat. Darrell looked at the orderly in confusion, and the orderly apologized and gave Darrell the comb. Then the orderly left.

So Darrell sat in the quiet hospital room, by himself, hours after falling off his bicycle on a country road, and ran the comb through the long, fluffy fur of the stuffed cat.)

The nurse sponged all the way up and down Darrell's legs. He got an erection, but Pam the nurse ignored it, and the erection went away again. That's a pity, Darrell thought.

The ComfortCat sat on Darrell's chest, purring still, even though he'd stopped combing it once the nurse had come in.

Pam finished bathing him, his lower half that is, tidied, pulled the sheets back up, and left.

Darrell breathed in the quiet of his room.

Rita hadn't arrived until about an hour ago. She didn't drive, and so had to wait until Sarah could meet her at the train station.

Where will Rita stay, Darrell wondered. Or are we going home tonight? I am in no fit condition to drive a car, and the bicycle won't be at all comfortable. Where is the bicycle?

The ComfortCat stretched, arched its back, and moved from Darrell's chest to the crook of his arm. Darrell thought that the creature had developed quite a personality in the past few minutes.

He dozed for a bit, and awoke when Rita came back in. She stood by his bed, looking down at him. He looked up.

How was the parade, he asked. She smiled and said it was fine.

Then he wondered why he had said that. Silly. No parades in hospital cafeterias.

He searched her face for signs of worry. Nothing, except for a bit of tension above her lip, and a tiny narrowing of her eyes. He reached out to touch her.

Hold my hand, Darlin, and I'll take you for a ride in my Mustang, he said.

Only if you promise not to drive too fast, she said. My Daddy doesn't like boys who drive too fast. Even if I do like them.

He smiled back at her.

I'll take you up in my rocket ship, then. We'll battle bug-eyed monsters together, far from your Daddy and his rules.

Her cool hand felt tiny in his. He held it gently so he would not hurt her. Her fingers, long and elegant always, had thickened a bit at the knuckles. Or was it that the rest of each finger had shrunk? He looked up at her face again. She'd pulled back her hair, but a wisp had escaped, falling across her forehead. She saw his gaze and knew what it meant. She brushed the hair aside.

The ComfortCat at his side began to irk him. With his free hand he pulled it out from under the covers and looked for a place to set it.

What's that? Rita asked.

Stuffed animal, he said. Hospital staff gave it to me to keep me company.

She looked at the thing, read the label on the belly. MADE IN CHINA. It's a pity, she said, we don't make anything anymore. It's the Chinese making everything.

Darrell looked at her and at the cat, troubled.

Where have they put my bicycle, he asked.

Your bicycle, Darrell?

Yes. I'm sure they have it somewhere.

Alright...I'll ask, alright?

Thank you.

Satisfied, he slept.

* * *

Rita Happleby looked at her husband as he dozed in the hospital bed. She only had to squint a little bit to see him when he was seventeen. He still had the same broad shoulders and narrow waist, and his belly, while it had grown, did not hide the man he'd been.

She weighed the cheap stuffed toy in her hand. She wished she could afford a better home for him. This place was noisy and smelled of hospital, but at least the staff were kind.

She set the toy on the bedside table. Put her purse there, too. Slipped her flats off. She let down the rail at the side of the bed, and climbed in with him.

He moaned a bit, and slid over. The scrapes from his fall last month still seemed to bother him, but he did not wake. She lightly rested her fingers on his chest and felt it rise and fall. She felt the warmth of him.

She stayed there like that for a while.


(c) 2011 Michael Bernstein

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Day 26: Saul

I have been sitting on this one for about three weeks.  When I first wrote it, I didn't feel comfortable posting it, so I wrote another one.  Reading this one today, I wonder: what was I worried about?

Tonight I had my pals at Shelter Sundays read it aloud and give me feedback.  The physicality in the story bothered no one, but they still had things to say.

I fixed the easy stuff.  The deeper issues I have not addressed.  The experience reminds me how bad I am at revisions: I so fear breaking what works that I hesitate to change much--at least after the first creative impulse has passed.


Saul

Saul is hot. Saul is cold. Saul wants to skip like one of the nerdcore kids. Saul is holding Kate Gerlacki's hand. Kate Gerlacki is wearing her dress with the roses on the front, the one that goes down to her knees. Saul wants to lift the dress up and feel what is underneath. Or even have the wind come up and do it for him. See if she wears a thong or granny panties or nothing at all.

They let go of hands and hook it into Pizza Tim. That's what they call it, Pizza Tim, because the E has fallen off the sign leaving a pale reversed image of itself. Inside the new version of Pizza Tim. Grand opening. Owners fixed up the interior but no one bothered to fix the sign.

On the wall brown and orange painting of old guys with mustaches and not much hair on the tops of their heads. Behind the counter one of those same guys, he must be the owner, and also a bunch of Dominicans and also a woman who Saul hasn't seen before. On the other wall, dark grainy pixelized versions of Frank Sinatra and all the other heroes.

Saul gets two lasagne slices and a giant Coke and Katie gets one plain and a large Diet Sprite. They eat and talk about how goofy Katie's parents are with their obsession with raw milk and ugly tomatoes and how specifically Katie's dad is actually kind of cool about the piercings thing, not that Katie actually has any piercings, she is seriously considering getting some, but hasn't yet, she's actually waiting for her mother to stop freaking out about the idea. Saul rubs his shin on Katie's calf.

He has a truly terrific hard-on, an unusual high-grade hard-on, and is definitely feeling a buzz, not certain if this is from the giant Coke which is almost gone now or the warm resilient softness of the flesh on the side of her knee which is touching the side of his knee. Saul is like one of those lobotomized robots on Invasion of the Body Snatchers and he can feel his ability to form a definite plan melting away--aside from the plan that maybe they could go right out the door and one door down and then upstairs to her place, and check out her dad's old yearbooks to see if possibly he could have been that cool when he was in High School, because sometimes you know a guy can be a nerd and then grow out of it. Right?

They shove their paper plates into the bin. Saul rubs his hands with his napkin and throws it away because you can never be sure if a girl is going to notice. And specifically he wants to make sure that he isn't sweating when they hold hands again.

As it turns out she doesn't have a moment for him to hold her hand or even open a door for her as she unlocks the gate and then the inner door and then goes up the stairs ahead of him and he considers for a second looking up her dress but isn't sure if she'd catch him, so he races up the stairs right behind her almost too close, was it too close, or does she like that?

While she looks for the yearbooks he drinks a glass of water and swishes it around in his mouth to make sure he doesn't have any cheese between his teeth. It is a good chance that they would make out now. He walks to the front windows and looks down.

Down on the street he can see Tommy fake-punching the back of Esteban's head and Esteban fake-pulling Tommy's backpack off. Some guy in his thirties looks like he was about to pull out his phone to call the cops in case the altercation becomes violent.

Saul inhales the Gerlacki family funk. It smells like B.O. and mint-scented trash bags and cookies. There is a little bit of dust on the top of the window unit air conditioner so he drags his fingers across it leaving five exactly parallel trails. He thinks about pressing against the A.C. to restore his hard-on, like he does on the washer when it's in spin cycle, but then maybe the cold air would cancel out the vibration and besides how gross would that be if Katie sees him doing that?

She couldn't find the yearbooks she says from the hallway as she walks up behind him smelling like Clinique Happy just like she has been smelling for the past couple of hours only it is stronger now. He turns around and she is almost on top of him and it is an accident when their lips touch because he didn't really realize that she was that close. The buzz travels up inside of him and now his lips are trembling and he definitely does not want that to happen so he presses harder with his lips on her just to ease the buzz and her lips slide across his and he thinks he is going to slide right off and get whiplash. He moves his head back the other way and now her lips are parting and her tongue is coming out and pushing between his lips. Just a little bit. Not being nasty or anything.

This is the first time that any of this has happened to him before, and Saul isn't going to say or do anything to give that away.

He stands there looking into Katie's eyes, which are green flecked with gold and brown and she has a thin irregular trace of eyeliner on each of her eyelids and also there are tiny almost invisible freckles on the bridge of her nose.

Then he kisses her again and he traces the outside of her elbow with his fingers. His fingers are itching to touch her breasts but definitely not sure if that is cool right now.

Then they are sitting on the couch and he is touching her breasts because she has put his hands there. The back of his neck is prickling with sweat so hopefully she doesn't touch him on the back of the neck.

They are leaning on the couch, this ugly woven fake wool with flowers thing that has dark shadows on the armrests. She rubs his shoulders and his biceps, which admittedly are pretty pumped right now.

Then her hand is on his hip, and he's working her breasts well, squeezing them, and she's making noises, like little sighing noises, and then her fingers brush his junk, and a shock runs through him from his lower back to meet the tips of her fingers on the front of his pants, and now the inside of his baggies are wet, and Saul feels really cold.

Uh, sorry, I gotta go to the bathroom.”

Cool..okay.”

Not exactly like she's cool with it at all, but the first thing is to get out of there and to somewhere else where he can check out the damage.

And he's in there with the fake flowers and the Renuzit and drops his pants and boxers and there it is, a wet spot all over the inside of his boxers, shining slick in the light.

Saul stares at his fuck-up. Figuring out what to do.

He uses toilet paper to scrape most of the fuck-up off the inside of the boxers and flushes the t.p. down the toilet. Nothing on the inside of his baggies.

So he pulls everything back up again, washes his hands, and goes out into the living room.

Katie's in the kitchen taking brownies out of a plastic container and putting them on a plate. Saul teases her, saying he didn't know that she was a baker, but in fact he definitely knows that her mom bakes brownies all the time, Katie brings them to school like she did last week on the last day of school.

Katie says: “Want a brownie?”

Yeah.”

He takes the brownie. Her mom's brownies are good.

He eats it.

This is the best brownie ever.

Saul leans forward a bit, so his baggies hang right, that is: so the wet spot doesn't touch him as much.

Katie says: “You wanna watch the Yankees beat the Angels? My Dad just hooked us up.”

He looks into her eyes, the green flecked with gold and brown, looks for any sign that she's going to make fun of him. But she's just looking right back at him, steady, whatever that means.

Yeah, I do, but I got to get home.”

Okay.”

Saul scoops up his backpack, throws it over his shoulder.

Now he's standing at the door. She's eating a brownie and breathing its scent on his face. She puts the brownie down and gives him a bro-hug and then he tries to kiss her on the lips but kind of gets the side of her cheek. She hugs him for real and he finds his hands on her hips pulling her to him. Her breasts are on his chest, which is nice, but he can feel his wet spot and after a second he lets go.

See you tomorrow?” he asks.

No,” she says. “We're leaving for Greenport tomorrow morning.”

Oh, right.”

Text me.”

Yeah.”

Then she closes the door.

He rattles down the stairs to the outside. He slips out and grabs his phone and sends a text to Esteban.

.wat up
.nothin bro you peg katie?
.sure. want to catch yankies
.you mak enny promizez?
.nup free man
.cool bro common over

Saul walks down the street toward the bus stop.

He passes Caitlin Estevez, Katie's best friend who looks almost exactly like her, walking the other way.

Caitlin smiles at him, and he feels hot and cold all over.

(C) 2011 Michael Bernstein