Showing posts with label short stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label short stories. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 4, 2020

"THE MEAT FACTORY" has landed






THE LOST DINER
THE MEAT FACTORY
ZONED INDUSTRIAL
MONSTER KID
SHIT FLAVORED SHIT
RETURN TO THE MEAT FACTORY
HANNIBAL AND SANDI IN THE AFTERGLOW
THURSDAY (The Sound of Tiny Planets Dying)
THE AQUARIUM
GHETTO HEAD
LOVE AND DESPERATION IN THE MEAT FACTORY
THE KING OF MOTHS
THE SCOWL
THE JENNIFER TREE
AFTER THE BATAAN DEATH MARCH
ACQUAINTANCE
MAGGIE AND MERRILL GET REAL
THE MASK
I HEARD HER CALL MY NAME (A Story of Devotion) 
JESUS, SUPERMAN AND RICE PATTIES
SON OF THE MEAT FACTORY
ACTION, REACTION
CARTOON LAND

This protein laden beast available now from the fine folks at Alien Buddha Press (Distributors of fine contemporary literature)



THIS WEEK'S PLAYLIST:
MINIVAN-Debut album
ALICE DONUT-Mule
THE WHO-Tommy

Thursday, February 28, 2019

THE MEAT FACTORY and Etc.


THE MEAT FACTORY


HOBART, read the logo on the big dish washing machine.
On his first night as a dishwasher for the Chalet, Wolf got to know ole Hobart a lot better than he bargained for. Scotty, Bob and Jeremy, the pukes who were supposed to train him, cut out on Wolf at nine thirty, unceremoniously leaving him holding the bag.
It was a lot to be left with. Restaurant dishes landed, no end in sight. Wolf's hours were supposed to be three to eleven. He was alone and the dishes kept coming.
Wolf was excited about being hired. “Your first real job!” His mother said, embracing him. “I'm so proud of you!” Wolf was nineteen. He'd steered clear of a job until after graduation. He felt that any obligation, even part-time, might hurt him scholastically. Beyond a few neighborhood odd jobs, like mowing lawns, Wolf never looked for work.

Post-graduation lofty ideals were abound in Wolf's head. He wanted to go to college and become a journalist, and maybe from there a famous writer. He wanted to attend the Joe Kubert Art School and become a comic book illustrator. He wanted to sing lead for a heavy metal band, and given his name, Wolf, he figured he had a good stab at that enterprise, even if he couldn't sing.
With all these conflicting possibilities dangling before him, Wolf saw the necessity in taking the year off and making a few bucks. Besides, given learning experiences in “the working world”, it all seemed to lean toward the positive.
He originally applied for anything the Chalet would give him---he fancied himself a bellhop in one of those old fashioned hotel monkey suits, running luggage and begging for tips.
When he was called in for an interview with Joseph Barr, he was told to go to the receiving area. Receiving Area. Where applicants are received for interviews, Wolf imagined. He heeded every word of job interview primer ever handed to him in school. Soft-spoken but firm. Good handshake. Radiate confidence. He had it all down.
When he got there, he discovered the Receiving Area was actually “shipping and receiving”---the loading docks. He found out that Mr. Barr, the honorable interviewer, was really the dock supervisor, Joe Barr, a scruffy, no-nonsense type only three years Wolf's senior.
Wolf came to the quick assumption that he had primed himself for the wrong job. It wasn't one you dressed up and spoke softly for; it was a job lugging crates around on dollies, unloading trucks. As he left the interview he knew he wouldn't land the job, that Barr had pegged him as a softy, which Wolf supposed he was.
Two weeks later, Wolf got a call from Bob LaMontagne, who didn't mention what job he wanted Wolf for, but invited him down for an interview.
LaMontagne's interview wasn't so much an interview as it was a sales pitch, a hard-sell. “We gotcha insurance benefits after ninety days, we got free use a' the health club every Tuesday, ya can't find a better place in this town ta work,” he rattled, showing Wolf around the hotel kitchen. Wolf was delighted over actually being ASKED to work a job, as opposed to the disinterested grilling he'd experienced with Barr.
The job, he discovered on the grand tour, was dishwashing. “An easy job,” LaMontagne told him at least twice. Filling out his signature on the ob description form, he read his official title, “kitchen help”. The job was said in the form to consist of cleaning the kitchen and occasionally assisting the culinary crew with food production. LaMontagne shook his hand and told him to come in on Thursday, and so Wolf had been hired.
Wolf's training consisted of the pukes showing him a few keys steps of operation---loading dirty dihes onto the conveyer belt, taking them clean off the unloading end and storing them on the correct shelves---then popping outside for a smoke that lasted an hour or two while Wolf floundered. The pukes blew out the door for good around half past nine, Wolf holding the bag and uninformed as to what happened next. Dining room waitstaff hauled in an endless barrage of dirty dinnerware and garbage----steaks, lobster, salad, cream and cheese spreads---leftovers that mixed and meshed in the disposal trough. Leftovers blobbed off the dishes as Wolf loaded them and would become stuck in the conveyer belt, only to land in the Hobart's washtubs and boil. The stink rose and filled Wolf's senses. The parade of dirty dishes was unending, carried in, over and over. Waiters and waitresses were still hauling in the dirty wares and food scraps. Eleven o'clock, quitting time, had come and gone.Wolf felt like his head was spinning. It's a meat factory, he thought, a dumping ground. When does it stop, and when do I get to go home, like everybody else?
The first lull in the action that occurred, Wolf shut off the machine and ran. Christ, did he imagine it? As that busboy brought that last tray out to the dish machine, was he laughing at him?
'Hey,” yelled one of the fry cooks as Wolf made his break, “where ya goin'?” Wolf didn't reply.

****



On his second night working, Wolf learned a new word and that word was BANQUET.
At the height of the action there were ten guys working on the Hobart. Even LaMontagne was getting his hands dirty at one point.
There was commotion and traffic everywhere. The kitchen was jamming with wait people carrying trays.
Wolf thought it best to stay on the unloading end of the machine, removing and sorting clean dishes.
LaMontagne was animated, rattling off commands like a gattling gun. He shot a big, harried smile at Wolf. “This is it, son---the big one!”
“Whu-what's going on?” Spluttered Wolf, who was genuinely shaken by all the activity.
“I'm not gonna lie to ya, son; we're gonna be buried,” said LaMontagne, scrubbing a few plates.
“Great,” groaned Wolf. LaMontagne's words from a couple of days prior came back to him-- “It's an easy job!”
The scene was claustrophobic; bodies everywhere, hustling, fighting for an inch of space.
FIRST COURSE: Wait people dropped trays full of champagne glasses onto the counter and placed the glasses twenty-five at a time into plastic racks. The glass racks eventually jammed the expanse of the counter. The saucers and the paper doilies that underlined the cocktails were all pushed haphazardly into the disposal trough along with a few stray glasses, which smashed. More trays landed, faster than they could be dealt with. There was no end in sight.
“Let's go, Wolf,” yelled one of the dishwashers on the loading end. Wolf couldn't keep up. He tore as many clean dishes off the conveyer belt as he could. His progress was slowed because the dishes came out hot and they burned his hands. When too many dishes accumulated on the unloading stand, Wolf would have to stop and put them away. When he did, the belt would crowd to capacity and stop moving. Then the yelling would commence.
“Let's go, Wolf! My grandma unloads faster than you!”
Scotty, an effeminate, pimply-faced teenager who was on hand the day before, came down to the unloading end. “Listen,” he seethed, “I know it's hard. But if you keep stopping, we're going to get killed up there! Now, can you please move this thing?!”
“There are ten of you and one of me,” Wolf complained.
“Goddammit,” Scotty pouted, “pick up the pace!” He stormed back to the counter and whined to LaMontagne. Wolf resigned himself to unloading, unloading, unloading. Meanwhile up front, the counter was jam-packed and several waitresses were bitching, telling the dishwashers to hurry up.
LaMontagne turned and headed toward Wolf. Scotty was whimpering some sour interjection that Wolf could not hear. LaMontagne whirled on Scotty and yelled at him, all unintelligible, except for the last sentence, “if you're not happy with it you can go the hell home!”
Scotty turned back to the work, looking sullen. LaMontagne hopped onto the unloading end to help Wolf. “Come on, Wolf,” he shouted, “let's show 'em how to run this thing!” There was a heavy liquor smell on his breath.
The two toiled and managed to stay ahead of things. Wolf was staggered by the mess on the counter. “Is this that banquet I've been hearing about since I got in?”
“Oh,” chuckled LaMontagne, “this is just the beginning!”
Wolf shuddered. The two worked on. The feeders had glutted the belt with saucers, which were now overlapped, ten to a row where only four should have fit, and one or tow would periodically roll off the side of the conveyer and break on the floor.
“Come on, come on!” LaMontagne hollered to the feeders. “You're going too slow, ya bunch of lightweights! Me and Wolf are falling asleep down here!”
Up front somebody yelled, “come on, y'old fart! We'll bury your ass!”
On the counter, the saucers and glass racks gave way to the second course---salad plates.Hundreds of salad plates came back from the banquet. Most of the salads were half-eaten, if touched at all.
Halfway through the salad course, LaMontagne left. “I'll be right back,” he grumbled. He wandered out back and Wolf was alone again.
“Let's go, Wolf,” urged Jeremy, at the helm of the Hobart. On the other side, waitresses complained and shouted. The Banquet Chef harangued the lot of them in his sharp, annoying voice. “Gawdamn dishwashas! Whaddaya here for? Whadda they pay ya for?!”
LaMontagne returned, wearing a light jacket. “Wolf, I'm going home. Do a good job! Hey,” he shouted to everyone else. “I'm leaving, now! One a you c'mon down here, help Wolf out!” And he was gone.
Wolf was helped, thereafter, by Rob and a tall, vacant-looking kid named Steve. The counter was chock full of dirty pots and pans, salad plates, sauce bowls and dinner plates. More trays were landing than could actually fit on the counter.
“I don't believe this,” muttered Wolf. “Does it get any worse?”
“It should,” Steve deadpanned. “We're hitting the busy season, now. It'll be this way every weekend.”
“Oh, my God,” Wolf said. “How late does this shit go? I'm scheduled to leave at eleven-thirty...”
Steve nudged Rob. “Hey,” he grinned. “He thinks he's leaving at eleven-thirty.” They laughed.
“I don't think it's funny,” bittered Wolf. Oboy, Wolf, he thought. Your first real job.
The onslaught kept going. Gooey stacks of dirty dinner plates landed along with hundreds of little monkey dishes that contained half-eaten chocolate sundaes. When the monkey dishes came through, many of them were still soiled with chocolate syrup and had to be sent back. The backup was incredible.
Finally, amidst squawking and bitching from wait people and cooks, Jeremy shut the dish machine off. “We're all going on break,” he announced.

Glasses broke and a waitress whined. Jeremy's call seemed the equivalent to a declaration of mutiny. Wolf didn't know if it was a good idea to pull out; all he knew was that he wanted to.
“Who's in charge?” Asked Rob.
“I dunno,” said Jeremy. “I'll go find out!”
Wolf and the others stood about and waited for Jeremy. Wolf heard more dishes breaking, wait people snapping and yelling, “what's going on back there?”
“The dishwashers stopped!”
“Why?!”
“They say they're all going on break!”
“All of them at once???”
“They're always on break, the sons of bitches!”
“Come on, you guys,” a waitress shouted. “We need room!”
Jeremy returned, grinning. “What'd they say?” Asked Steve.
Jeremy snickered. “They said, 'please don't go!' “
“Should we go?” Asked Wolf.
“What do YOU think? Wolf didn't know what to think---he just knew he had to get out of this.
A stout, tight-lipped woman in a navy blue pantsuit stepped into the dish area. All eyes turned to her.
“What's going on here?” She demanded.
“I don't know,” said Steve.
She looked at Wolf. “I don't know, either,” he answered. Everyone shrugged their shoulders; nobody knew.
“We're on strike,” cracked Jeremy.
“I see,” said the woman. “Would you gentlemen like to keep your jobs?”
“That's questionable,” said Bob.
“Is it?”
Everyone reconsidered the situation. “No,” they all answered. Wolf was actually still on the fence, but he opted to say nothing.
“Well,” she said, “let's get rolling.”
They turned the Hobart back on.
Inconceivably, it got worse. Eleven -thirty, quarter to twelve and Wolf couldn't believe it was all still coming, wouldn't stop, wouldn't even slow. “Jesus,” he kept repeating, “oh, Jesus, oh, Jesus, oh, Jesus.....”
Junk piled in upon junk. He'd gone to an orientation meeting earlier that day. He'd felt somewhat secluded there among the newly-hired waitresses, busboys, sales reps and aerobics instructors, being a lowly dishwasher, bottom of the hotel's caste system---the personnel director, a smiling, maternal woman, was pumping the enthusiastic catechism of heavy business, the Chalet Team Brotherhood spiel, how they were all salesmen and women, working to promote a winning, positive image of the Chalet.
Garbage upon garbage. In the disposal trough, wasted food mingled and clashed with scrapped paper, wads of wax from candles, spent cigarettes and ashes and the occasional broken champagne glass. Big pots, pans and soiled, sticky dinnerware bombarded the counter in heaping, unstable piles. Sections of the mess were systematically wiped out, then replaced by more almost immediately.
The catechism of promotion stops here, thought Wolf. We're the toilet cleaners of the universe. Nothing got sold or promoted here. It's just where they brought the leftovers to be destroyed.
Assortments of burning wares rolled out on the conveyer belt in a relentless procession. Wolf blundered through it and eventually learned there was no place left to put anything. The belt stopped with greater frequency while Wolf had to look further and harder for places to put the dishes and pans.

“Hey,” smiled Steve. “Think this is fun? Look over there. We gotta do all that, too.”
Wolf peered over a storage shelf at the pot sink on the other side of the kitchen. In the three big washing tubs, dozens if not hundreds of pots and pans, in all varying shapes and sizes, formed a jumbled mountain that rose three feet above all three tubs.
“I can't believe this,” moaned Wolf. “I can't. Oh, Jesus, oh, esus, how do we ever get out of here?”
“Just leave,” offered Rob.
“Whu—no. No, I can't! Look at all this!”
“Hey,” said Rob, “you've done your eight measley hours. It's all volunteer from here on in. One more or less person won't get this shit done any faster!”
“But you guys---I can't---”
“Sure you can! You did your eight hours. You can get the hell out! Hey, you're new at this!”
Wolf looked at the scrap disaster again. “Huh. Uhh, you sure?”
“Hell yeah---go!”
“I don't wanna shaft you guys...”
“You're not shafting us. Go!”
Wolf headed out of the kitchen. “Hey,” yelled one of the fry cooks after him, “where ya goin'?” Wolf didn't look back and didn't reply.
He ran down the stairs and clocked out. He headed down the hallway and up those last two flights of stairs at a brisk, fearful getaway pace. He hit the night air and was astounded for a moment by the stillness, the quietude. His first real job. Christ. Wolf ran all the way home, the stench of the garbage and the steamwash sticking hard to his senses.


Copyright 1992 C.F. Roberts/2019 Molotov Editions

                                                          ******************

        As I've kinda been spinning my wheels on several novels in the last couple of years I've decided to put more energy into what's working out for me like gangbusters----short prose and short fiction.
      Shit, a good many writers I know and admire have succeeded in banging out book length product for public consumption at this point. Me? NUTHIN'. I feel like that's gotta change.
      To this end, I've started compiling two book-length collections of short stories, which I hope to have completed by the end of the year. Card is subject to change, as we rasslin' fans like to say, but the rough lineup presently looks like this:


  1. THE MEAT FACTORY AND OTHER STORIES
NOW:
The Lost Diner
---originally published in SHOCKBOX
The Meat Factory
---previously unpublished
Zoned Industrial
-----Originally published in THE BIRDS WE PILED LOOSELY
Monster Kid
Shit Flavored Shit
----Originally published in VAGABONDS: Anthology of the Mad Ones
Hannibal and Sandi in the Afterglow
Thursday (Sound of Tiny Planets Dying)
The Aquarium
-----Originally published in BLIND IGUANAPRESS
The King of Moths
-----Originally published in FEARLESS
The Scowl
-----Originally Published in ILLITERATI
The Jennifer Tree
---Originally published in ALIEN BUDDHA ZINE
After the Bataan Death March
Acquaintance
-----Originally published in THE MOWER
Maggie and Merrill get Real
-----Originally published in PARAPHILIA
The Mask
Superman, Jesus and Rice Patties
----Originally Published in UNLIKELY STORIES V
Cartoon Land

SPECIAL FOR THE COLLECTION:

Return to the Meat Factory
Love and Desperation in the Meat Factory
Son of the Meat Factory
--- In the works


ALSO SOUGHT/PROJECTED FOR BOTH COLLECTIONS
(i.e., I'm presently hunting to locate this stuff!)
Ghetto Head
---Originally Published in MASSACRE ANNEX (Shockbox Press Chapbook)
Seeing
 ---Previously Unpublished
The Second Wound
----Originally Published in BIZARA
Second Coming
--Originally published in FAIRYTALES FROM THE URBAN HOLOCAUST (Yorkville Press), DIMINISHED CAPACITY
The Night is for Lovers
----Shockbox Press Chapbook
Scorched
------Originally published in FAIRYTALES FROM THE URBAN HOLOCAUST (Yorkville Press)



  1. THE EVANGEL: Tales of the Irrational
NOW:
The Great Tradition
---Originally published in FAIRYTALES FROM THE URBAN HOLOCAUST (Yorkville Press)
Snapshot of the Rural Pogroms
Faith
---Originally published in ALIEN BUDDHA ZINE
The Day the Sun got an Eye Gouge
--- Odd Books Chapbook
Boil Order
----Originally Published in CORVUS REVIEW
The Crazy Fuckers
Hubcap Diamond Star Halo
Fat Chance
----Originally Published in THE MOWER
trinityTrinityTRINITY
After Carnival
----Originally published in CRAB FAT MAGAZINE
Hannibal Shooting Fish in a Bucket
Fort Apache the Exchange
Junkyard King
------Originally published in VOX
Old Man Delprete
----Originally Published in GOTHICA
The Windshield of a Moving Car is Hard, especially when you drop on top of it from Thirty Feet
----Originally Published in UNLIKELY STORIES V
The Walk
---Originally published in FAIRYTALES FROM THE URBAN HOLOCAUST (Yorkville Press)
Uncle Drew's Lysergic Backbrain Apocalypse (Slight Return)
Give Up the Sun
----Originally Published in PRESSURE PRESS PRESENTS
Wet
----Originally published in THIS ONE TIME THE ALIEN BUDDHA GOT SO HIGH (Alien Buddha Press)
The Seven Virgins of Eufaula
 ---Presently in the works
The Night they Shut the Geek Show Down
----Molotov Editions Chapbook
The Shrill
-----Originally published in RANT

      Both collections are gonna be bent, because being bent is just in my DNA---but THE MEAT FACTORY will be a little more earthy in tone, whereas THE EVANGEL will be more along the lines of "somebody dropped something in my egg nog---WOAH NELLY!!!"
          Anyway----any takers? 

THIS WEEK'S PLAYLIST:
THE BOLSHOI-Friends
BRIAN JONESTOWN EXPERIENCE-Strung Out in Heaven
Whatever else you got



Friday, February 15, 2019

WRONGDOING WROULETTE


I've been sitting on this one for an inordinate length of time for absolutely NO GOOD REASON other than my own stupid lack of organization and distraction with other (mostly asinine) things. But I've been wanting to do it and there's no time like the (while I've got a brief, sane window) ever-fragile present.......Uncle Chuck has been on an INCREDIBLE ROLL these past few months as far as placing short stories and other sundries....some publishers out there have been VERY KIND to your strooly and I think it's crucially important to help promote these good people and their efforts.
While I'm running hot and cold on a lot of my bigger, more ambitious projects, the art of the short story is one that I've always had a particular liking for, and lately I've glommed on to it, HARD. I like playing with these compact narratives and I feel like I'm producing a lot of good ones. So I'm emphasizing that, but I've got other goodies in store. Anyway, here comes a laundry list of publications, webzines and publishers that kick ass and they deserve both your attention and your support, so pull out yer spiral notebooks and take note......
     We're gonna go back to October 2018 for the first couple. I teased my contributions to UNLIKELY STORIES MARK V a few months back, and they're HERE. I mean, THESE ARE THE LINKS TO THE STORIES.
http://www.unlikelystories.org/content/jesus-superman-and-rice-patties?fbclid=IwAR0up52UbYy4hQNgD80VII3UNReo1zfk5K2wCHCu6r3dw4VlGcZ5c3eupDg

http://www.unlikelystories.org/content/the-windshield-of-a-moving-car-is-hard-especially-when-you-drop-on-top-of-it-from-thirty?fbclid=IwAR0ogh1j0BKouCLK3Nek4h6zBE0gsAt9AEEWBtKv5MBeMAf-HwF4ZyzUg8Y

"Jesus, Superman and Rice Patties" is an OLD story, very early, recently rewritten. "The Windshield of a Moving Car is Hard, especially when you drop on top of it from thirty feet" is FAIRLY NEW. Some friends might remember me threatening to write a story about a guy legally changing his name to "Howard the Duck" YEAH, WELL, I WENT THOUGH WITH IT. You can read it RIGHT THERE.
     In general you need to check out UNLIKELY STORIES MARK V when you get a chance.....Jonathan Penton has put together a fine rolling periodical with piss, verve and color.

      Another person deserving of your interest and support is Sreemanti Sengupta at Odd Books and the ODD MAGAZINE. She puts together a unique pastiche of webzine and tiny-but-mighty publications. Fourteen bucks gets you a year's package, and you really need to experience the joy yourself (as I did) of getting this beautiful stack in the mail...
Not that I'm not part of the cavalcade or anything....
       "The Day the Sun got an Eye Gouge" is a weird one, and you need to consider that in light of the last one I linked to. If you like stories about all-day eclipses, animals wearing sun visors, kids with Asperger's Syndrome and flying, talking pot roasts, then fire up a big spliff and check it out!!!!!! (Not that I advocate that kind of thing or anything). While you're at it, though, check the Odds and their entire catalogue out at length.

https://www.theoddmagazine.com/

      Okay----next up: FEARLESS!!!! Goddamnit, what can I say about FEARLESS???
Kevin Hibshman and I go back, WAY back to the Mesozoic Era, when we both crawled out of the primordial ooze and started lobbing xerographic molotov cocktails around. Somewhere amid that ferocious melee we peered around the swamp at each other and said, "hey, buddy!"
FEARLESS (originally DISTURBING DREAMS AND DRIED BLOOD) is an underground lit INSTITUTION and it's been around forever. Anytime FEARLESS appears in any incarnation it's an event. This time out it's pretty extraordinary, like a little poetic thoughtbomb, and it gives me all the nostalgic feels for the days when we were running out to places like Kinko's or Staples to print up en masse and drop all our sodden product on an unsuspecting public. Despite our current digital mileu Kevin replicates our old DIY, cut-and-paste ethic to PERFECTION.


        https://archive.org/details/Fearless66

THAT'S IT, RIGHT THERE. THAT'S THE LINK TO THE MAG ITSELF. Click that and you can read it and you can download it for your very own. Don't say I never gave you nothin'.
        I've got a few poems in here, although the biggest point of excitement (for me) is the first appearance in publication of the Fugues....little dream logic prose pieces I started doing recently (Actually, the first Fugue seen publicly was Fugue Seven, which I ran back in September and which was written explicitly for this blog). I think my original thought was that the Fugues were going to largely be erotica, but...y'know...I just can't do anything straight down the middle....but I've got more of these things to throw around, so....don't forget your helmets!
https://www.amazon.com/dp/1794097392?fbclid=IwAR2tFbjvm4aw6Z-R94dm1hPclj7gHrHK8C4GFg4gphCjL23ZEsjYOy3reog

        Last but hardly least I need to give a shoutout to the fine folks at ALIEN BUDDHA PRESS who are running a monster of an operation and are more productive than any small press I think I've ever seen. Red Focks and Co. have their game DOWN. I'm appearing in three of Alien Buddha's jams, right now, all of which look great and all of which have emerged at a startlingly fast rate. OH---YEAH---and as you can see from the link above, they're all available through Amazon.

       I was pretty excited when the call went up for a drug-centered anthology as I'd been thinking for a while about a new strain of literature that I referred to as "Pharma-Punk" (and I'm sure there are plenty of folks who've been writing along those lines forever)----in writing this kind of open-ended speculative fiction revolving around substance abuse I'm following the lead of writers like Hank Kirton and Shannon X. Caine, both of whom are exceptional with the pseudo-genre. My entry with Alien Buddha is "Wet", set in a bleak, dystopian future (what a dull, stagnant term) where we follow several sketchy characters in search of their drug of choice. I'm real proud of this one.
         ALIEN BUDDHA ZINE #3  and TALES FROM ALIEN BUDDHA 4 feature my short stories, "The Jennifer Tree" and "Faith",  although I'm actually a little fuzzy on which story appears in which publication. You know what, though? You should pick 'em all up. Chase 'em down on Amazon.
       Anyway, that's the roundup and that's what I've been up to these past few months. So curl up with something good to read and give some of these outfits some much deserved attention.

THIS WEEK'S PLAYLIST:
1. IDLES-Brutalism
2. BRIAN JONESTOWN MASSACRE- Strung Out in Heaven
3. BRIAN JONESTOWN MASSACRE-Thank God for Mental Illness
4. SKINNY PUPPY-Rabies
     


Friday, August 31, 2018

THE MASK

          “Smile, willya?!” Squalled Nadine. “Jesus H. Christ, you'd think your face'd crack open!”

Bailey felt a smirk coming on, but now he had a need to fight it back down, which he did successfully. He, Othmar, Emily, Nadine, Dennis and Darren were together for the usual AM coffee splurge and gab at Denny's---Saturday night drifting into sunrise and no one had to go to work on Sunday morning----even Emily had a week or so to kill before she'd have to catch the shuttle back to New York...

“Jesus,” Nadine bitched, “Don't you EVER smile?! You're doing okay, getting a free ride to all the galleries, getting good meals----what's your problem?!”

“Bailey's got no problems,” Othmar, as usual, coming to his rescue, “he just has a sense of purpose!”

“He'll smile when he has a reason,” said Dennis.

“You have to know ole Bailey as long as we have,” said Emily, “to know that when he's zoning like that it doesn't mean he's got a problem.” She reached over and patted Bailey on the shoulder. “He's a very sensitive boy, and a fine artist in his own right.”

“The best,” helped Othmar. “It's just a matter of our convincing the rest of the world so.”

“We'll get there, ole Bailey,” drawled Dennis, “Do not fret. We're all gonna get where we're goin' someday.”

“I know,” said Bailey, and rode with it—Othmar and Emily and the gang were good friends, but as ever, he could have done without the testimonials.

Nadine harped on. “I don't know----I don't get it---we're all having a good time and there you are, pal, off in the doldrums!”

“I'm having a good time,” Bailey offered weakly.

“And you just--”

“You see?” Darren barked. “You see?! He's having a good time, dear! Now, willya get off the poor guy's case?”

Subject matter picked up and moved on---there was no sense in killing a whole evening/morning arguing about Bailey's facial expression.

Dennis was clipping off on one of his college-era road rambles. “So, anyway, Texas, down to the border, right? There are six of us, all crazy and half-in-the-bag in that one tiny car.....”

“Must smelled dandy,” Nadine editorialized.

“So, what do you figure a cop would have to say about it?” Continued Dennis.

The booth was situated beside the picture window and Bailey found himself drawn to stare out into the parking lot---it was three o'clock, give or take, and the asphalt, at least on this side of he building, was empty----dead for a Saturday night, here. It was early September, time of dying sun and heat and Bailey knew the snow wasn't far off, now, that it would be blessing the ground like a sad angel powder...millions of tiny crystals pushing the black out, showering the vacant earth....

“--Hey, Bailey?”

“Huh?”

“I said, 'are you ready to pack it in?' “ Repeated Othmar.

“Oh! Sorry! Sure, I'm all set.”

“Jesus! Earth to Bailey!”

“He looks tired,” said Emily. “C'mon, Bailey, we'll take you home.”

“Later, all.”

“ 'Bye,” the gang saluted, all wired-but-tired and gabhappy.

“And goddammit, try to cheer up, will you?” Yelled Nadine.

A yeah, yeah, yeah would have done, but Bailey opted to retain his dignity with silence. Outside, the wind blew---Bailey was right; Winter, long off, still, but sure, was a shadowy creep aking its overtures to the land.

“Don't listen to Nadine,” grumbled Emily. “She's just a bitch, she doesn't see your inside.”

“Sometimes I wish I couldn't,” joked Bailey.

“Cut the crap,” said Othmar, fishing through his pockets for the car keys. “Man, you bug me when you start talking like that.”

Othmar drove downtown to Bailey's Canal Street apartment---he was animated, as he frequently was on those occasions when Emily was in town, going off ragtime about all things art and sex and machinery. His and Emily's creation-in-the-works was a sculpture of tire irons that were welded together....the whole mess was obviously erotic in nature but maybe the full effect hadn't been fully realized, yet, since at present it still looked like a gnarled patchwork of tire irons. But it was always good to see a surprise unfold, and dammit, Othmar was happy and excited, and that hand to count as a positive, right?

Bailey laughed....he enjoyed Othmar's enthusiasm, but it was hard to get around the fact that he was tired.

Othmar pulled up to the curb. “Need any help getting in the door?”

“No,” said Bailey. “I think I know my way by now.” He loped up to the front door, searched his coat pocket, found the keys, turned momentarily to wave goodbye and let himself in.

Othmar put it into drive.

“Othmar?”

“S'up, babe?”

“I wish you'd put in a word with Bernice for Bailey. I kind of worry about him, living in that dump. I mean, your place isn't THAT much more expensive.”

“Oh, Em,” sighed Othmar, “we're talking Bailey, here, and you've known him as long as I have. You know how he is and you know what he HAS to do----he wants to live in a place that's 'alive', a place where there's a lot going on....it helps him. Somehow. He keeps saying.”

“I know,” Emily grudged. “But I wonder sometimes if it doesn't hurt him, as well. Look at Bailey, in shittown, Bailey, with his candles and his books and his little glass angel figurines----he needs it, or he says he needs it, but there's a big contradiction there. I think he's very frail.”

Othmar shrugged a shoulder. “I know, but it's Bailey, who's on a fixed income, who ain't rich by any stretch, and neither am I, but he thrives on it.”

“He says he thrives on it.”

“Maybe he needs it. Bailey and the glass angels and shittown.”

“Whatever. Still, I worry.”

“Yeah, well....maybe sleep on that worry,.” Othmar pulled into the Dell Street parking lot. “I'll see about talking to him.”

“ 'Kay,” smiled Emily. Obviously no constructive thought was about to transpire before a decent night's sleep at this point.


******

In the dim light of his apartment Bailey admired the decorations on his single end table by the couch he'd fished out of the dumpster last Christmas. He was proud of what was evolving as kind of an interchangeable, free-flowing diorama. There were the candles and all the glass angels, of course, those were a natural given, here, but also the various actors----the Godzilla, Jet Jaguar, Ultraman and King Caesar action figures; Time Traveler, his old, stalwart Micronauts doll from grade school; GI Joe and a few molded plastic ninjas, all forming a phalanx around and on top of his pill organizer. It was almost a political statement for him at this point----no man enters, no man leaves.

He'd had conversations with Bruce and Mike, a couple of the local guys from the neighborhood.

---”hey, Dave, we ain't seen ya much lately!” Everyone in the neighborhood Bailey saw called him “Dave”---not out of any malice, he was sure of that, but everyone, for whatever reason, was sure he was “Dave”, and acted like he should know who they were, even if he didn't.

Was there a guy named “Dave” walking around town that looked exactly like Bailey?

It didn't bother him enough to correct them, though. He was alright with letting it go.

---”we don't never see ya down to the community council no more, Dave! How come you don't go there?”

---”I don't want to.”

----”Aww, you know they got lotsa good drugs, Dave!”

----”Yeah, that's okay, I don't want to.”

----”Aw, everybody misses ya downa community council, Dave!”

Bailey was jarred out of this memory but hooting and hollering from several people outside. It suddenly occurred to him that he was sitting, buck naked, in front of those windows on the side of the house.

Hell, the apartment was like a fishbowl---windows EVERYWHERE. Even here on the second floor, in low light, the neighbors were getting a show.

“WOOO! Shake it for me, baby!!!!” Hollered a woman out in the darkness.

“Getcher pants on, faggot,” snarled a male voice. “You're scaring the children!”

Bailey made to get up and make a run for the bedroom and whatever surgical equivalent to pajamas he could find there but in the end he sat back down. Bolting and getting dressed was almost an admission of guilt, and Bailey wasn't about to play that game with these troglodytes.

The catcalls eventually died down. Bailey made his way to the darkened front room for some peace.

It wasn't that there were less windows in the front room but they mostly faced the street below and the lights were all off.

Bailey sat on a motheaten couch that had been left by a previous tenant. The place, whatever Othmar and Emily wanted to say about it, had no shortage of couches.

Down in the street, some unseen man yelled to some invisible addressee. The man sounded as though at least half his civilized demeanor had somehow taken a slip down the evolutionary board. Scuffle in the dirt, sound of a bottle breaking.

The candles were out. Bailey crouched on the floor and tightened up into a ball.

The man outside screamed in an anguished rage where the last vestiges of his humanity seemed to slip away forever.

Bailey clutched the sides of his head. “Stop,” he groaned.” Make it stop. Make it stop.”


*******


Othmar had a package to pick up at the post office on the South End. Bailey had a few hours to kill---hell----it seemed as though Bailey never had anything but time---and so he accompanied Othmar for the ride.

“Emily get back okay?”

“Yeah....kinda nice, though.....some obligations kinda going by the wayside.....she'll be back up here mid-week.” Othmar looked pretty stoked.

“That's good,” said Bailey. “She gonna be in town for the opening?”

“Yeah, at this point, most likely,” said Othmar.

“I used to go to the South End post office a lot,” said Bailey, “back when I was more into the mail art thing. I'd go out there and then I'd hit the McDonald's and I'd eat my burgers and read my mail. I don't really do that anymore.”

“You look sad, pal, “ said Othmar, “how you been?”

Bailey shrugged. “Okay, I guess. It's just---I don't know---sometimes I wonder what the hell's happening.”

“What do you mean?”

“It's hard to explain.” Bailey's soft voice was more quiet and halting than usual---it sounded funeral parlor to Othmar. “You know....those times when you're moving through a crowded room and you think you heard someone calling your name? Then you turn and you stare at them and you realize they weren't talking to you at all? Then you try to cover up by staring at everyone else in the room in kind of a roundabout way and then you just look confused and stare down at your shoes? Then you laugh to yourself and you shake your head and half the people there are staring at you and wondering what the hell is going on and so you just slink out of the room but halfway out you say, oh, God, what am I doing and you go back in and you look around again but nothing's any different, it's just, like, pffft! Pffft! Pffft!” He made small, sad, explosive gestures with his right hand to accompany each “pfft”, “and there's nothing you can do so you leave anyway, but then it feels...unfinished? You've got this bad feeling deep down but it's like there's nothing you can do? You know those times, Othmar?”

“No,” Othmar frowned.

“Oh,” said Bailey, his fingers roaming delicately, nervously, across his face. “Well, it's not too important.”

They arrived at the post office. There was no line and Othmar mailed off his package. Bailey cut loose and ran down the hall to check his P.O. Box. He rejoined Othmar out the door.

“Anything?”

“Nada,” said Bailey. The two got back in the car.

“Didn't realize you still kept your P.O. Box down here. Thought you'd given up on the Mail Art thing.”

“Oh, yeah, I have,” said Bailey. “I still get my monthly check, you know, and I figured it'd be too early in the month to come looking for it, and I was right, but we were here, and I thought, well, when in Rome....”

“How's that going?”

“It's alright,” said Bailey, “You know, you go down to your appointment every six months or so and they draw your blood and the Chinese guy gropes your balls and tells you to cough and then they ask you questions. 'Have you had any accidents over the last six months?' And you say, 'no,' and they say, 'do you hear voices?' And you tell them, 'no,' and they ask you, 'do you have any special powers---can you turn invisible or fly or read minds?' And you say, 'no, I can't do any of those things,' and they sign a bunch of papers and re-up you on your meds and you keep getting your nut check in the mail.”

Othmar winced. “Dude, don't say that.”

“What---'Nut Check'? Dude, if I can have a sense of humor about this, you can, too.”

“Bailey, ole bud, are you doing okay?”

“Yeah, I guess....why?”

“Emily and I were talking and sometimes we worry about you, living out there on Canal Street and whatnot.”

“I'm okay.”

“We're not real sure. Listen, Bailey, all I'm saying is that if you want to move to, say, where I'm living, I'm sure I can badger Bernice into cutting you a decent deal on the rent...”

Long silence. “That's nice, Othmar, but I'm okay.”

“You sure?”

“Yeah.”

“You SURE you're sure?”

“Yeah.”

“Absolutely, positively, a hundred percent sure?”

“Yeah.”

“Pinky swear?”

“Dude.”

So began the long, quiet drive back to Canal Street. Bailey spoke up first. “Winter's coming, soon.”

“Yeah,” said Othmar. He hated Winter.

“I like the snow,” said Bailey. “When it's virgin snow. It's like angel powder, and I like it when it covers up all the dirt.”

“Yeah,” said Othmar.


*******


It was a long time ago----Bailey remembered he was eight and he and his father sat together on a jetty on the Cape. He was crying and his father was trying to brace his leg, trying to yank a rusty, barbed fishing hook out of his foot. It was painful----blood was all over the rock. “Eeeyeeyeeee,” cried little Bailey.

“Shaddap,” yelled his father. “It'll be out in a second...quit yer yeein'.” His father pulled. It was still caught in his foot. It seemed that blood was everywhere.

“Eeeeeyeeeyeeeyeeeeee,” squealed Bailey.

His father boxed his ears. “Stop that goddamn yeein',” he snarled.

Blood on the jetty and the boy was crying. Seagulls yakked and tittered. Ocean bellowed.

*******

He knew his name was Bailey and that was the end of the discussion. Othmar and Emily knew he was Bailey-----even Nadine knew he was Bailey.

It didn't matter what all the people on the street said, what they said down at the temp agency, what they said down at the neighborhood bar where he cashed his checks. He was BAILEY. And all those check stubs on the kitchen table addressed to “David Sinclair”, whoever had put them there, didn't matter, either.

He was going to make a moral stand and be who he was, regardless of the box people tried to put him in. He grabbed a pair of scissors that he had lying loose on the couch cushion for God knows how long....relic from the mail art days. And goddammit, he thought as a side note, all his friends and colleagues around the country----whatever may have happened to them at this point.....they knew him, too. They knew he was Bailey.

The first things he pulled out of his pocket were his driver's license and his social security card. He cut them both into tiny, jagged pieces.

There were others, of course----the library card was one-----these two were the big ones, though. That was an ideal place to start.

For a hot second it was his plan to take the whole bolus of gnarled, segmented card stock and laminated plastic and dump it all in the trash. He hesitated, though, and thought better of it. If it was all located in the same place it was almost a guarantee that anyone could assemble all the remnants, no matter how erratically he may have cut them, and reassemble them as they'd been before.

He wasn't going to let that happen!

He dropped a few scattered bits in the trashcan....he had a couple of little dustbins around the house----one in the bathroom and one in the den-----he supposed these were options, but even then, were they all too close for comfort?

No----Bailey decided he would dispose of them over a period of several weeks, so as not to arouse suspicion. He played with the idea of dropping various pieces around town----maybe he could take the bus one day, have a little trip around town and deposit the random pieces in various trashcans and dumpsters.

He wished it were more feasible to travel out of state.....that would be even better.

He sat and thought about that for a while.


********


Wednesday, and the TV was going. Some lecherous kiddie show host rasped in a cancerous deadpan while holding a tiny girl on is lap. Bailey winced.

Out in the muddy courtyard, two dogs were tangling and snapping---could it have been that two of the men from Saturday night had become dogs?

He laughed out loud, then scowled. He hurled one of the glass angel figurines at the far wall. It smashed. On the other side of the wall, next door, a fist pounded in response and a man's voice boomed, foreign and judgmental.

Bailey crept over to the broken angel on his hands and knees. Fretting and whimpering, he scooped up the pieces. “You never hurt anyone,” he told the broken glass as he wept.

Bailey felt stray shards digging into his knees and the heel of one hand. He tried to sooth himself. Winter would come soon, it would come soon....

Winter. The snow.

Crystal showers in the dark.

Bailey stood up. He ran over to the figurine shelves, heart beating rapidly, and he yanked the top shelf off its brackets....


********


It was two o'clock Friday afternoon when, after two hours of trying to raise Bailey either by phone or by knocking on the door, Othmar, Emily and Dennis finally got the gumption to get the spare key from Jake, Bailey's landlord, and get into the apartment.

They pulled the bed covers away from him, fearing the worst. Bailey was alive, though locked obstinately in a fetal position. They dragged him out of bed.

Bailey's face was frozen in a horrific grimace that resembled that sad-or-tragic side of the two dramatic personae masks. The corners of his mouth were turned down in a grotesque, exaggerated manner—it was a perfectly formed crying-mouth, matched by two similarly perfect crying-eyes, which were, in turn, complimented by a tragically knit brow.

“Bailey,” whispered Othmar, “what the hell is this?”

Bailey refused to answer Othmar, barely acknowledging anyone else in the apartment. He sat on the foot of his bed, his rueful facial expression gruesome and unmoving.

Dennis sat down beside him. He put a sympathetic hand on Bailey's shoulder. “Buddy, what is it? Huh? Are you okay?”

“Apparently not,” snapped Othmar.

“What's the deal, man?” Asked Dennis, undaunted. “We're your friends, man!”

Bailey shook Dennis off, stood up feebly and hobbled into the kitchen, where he collapsed by the sink. He lay there, imploded and mute in the corner, his back to the other three.

Othmar followed him. “Bailey! Come on, man, talk to me! What's wrong? What's with the face?”

No response.

Emily noticed a small, college ruled notebook on Bailey's reading table. The book was marked, in ballpoint scrawled block letters, “JOURNAL”. She picked it up.

Othmar was in the kitchen, talking softly to Bailey, who wouldn't drop that ugly, wounded facial expression. Dennis sat where he was, on the edge of the bed, quiet, staring at the floor. Emily began thumbing through entries in Bailey's journal.

One simply read,


Despondent.


Emily flipped a few pages. Another one read,


Othmar, Emily, Nadine and all the others. I love them. I am not functioning on their level

of existence, never can, never will. I am everybody's silly child.


More pages. She stopped on another one dated Sunday.


A bunch of neighbors, sitting on the porch, were just hanging out. The one lady's big, black dog started barking at me like it always does. Everyone else was friendly enough. “He still doesn't like you,” she said, referring to the dog. I went inside and I heard her say, “because you're an asshole, that's why he don't like you.” I spent the whole night wondering what I did to deserve that, from her AND the dog.


She felt her eyes filling. More pages. Lots of long raving about his identity, the long fight for it, and moral stands against....she wasn't sure what. His father? People he barely knew around town? It read like a thesis statement. Then the last entry.


The angels are dying! The angels are dying!

It was then that she saw all the smashed crystal on the far side of the living room.

“Oh, God,” moaned Emily, hands to mouth, “I saw it all coming, I saw it all coming....”

Dennis looked up. “Huh? Saw what coming? Hey, Em, you okay?”

“Othmar....”

Othmar was in the kitchen, trying to talk to the unresponsive Bailey.

“Othmar?” Emily's hands were shaking. She dropped the journal with a loud Thak! On the linoleum.

Othmar looked over his shoulder for a second, then turned back to Bailey.

Emily's voice was weak and tremulous now. “Othmar....? Pal....?”

“What?!” He snapped. It was the first time he'd ever raised his voice to her.

“I feel sick,” she said. She was aware of her legs giving way. Othmar bolted halfway across the kitchen and caught her as she pitched forward.


**********


They brought him to the car, almost having to carry him. He wouldn't drop the face.

Their first notion was the emergency room. It turned into a fight at the Admissions Desk.

“Bailey,” said Othmar. “Bailey Sinclair. We don't know what's wrong with him. He won't talk.”

“David,” said Emily.

“What?”

“David Sinclair. That's his name.”

“Bailey. His name is Bailey.”

“No, Othmar, it's David.”

“Bullshit, he's Bailey. We've known him most of our lives. He's Bailey!”

“That's not his legal name, Othmar! You know that!”

“I know who he is!”

“Listen,” scolded the Admissions Nurse. “If this is going to turn into a screaming match you can take it to another hospital in another town, okay?”

Eventually it wound being pointless, anyway. No insurance, no info, no word on any family members. Othmar and Emily were aware that Bailey's father was SOMEWHERE out in the world but they didn't know where and they doubted Bailey had kept tabs on him.

Ultimately the little group were tossed out.

For a couple of days they carried on stoically, hoping that conditions would change and that Bailey would revert back to normal, but his peculiar catatonia persisted. He functioned, but would not change the frozen frown, would not speak and appeared not to listen.

They took turns minding him overnight---Dennis on Friday night, Othmar and Emily on Saturday. They brought him to Denny's Sunday night to sit with the gang. He wouldn't eat or drink. In fact, if he ever ate or drank (or pissed or shat, for that matter) in the state he was in, no one ever saw him do so.

Nadine was her usual pain in the ass self and took it upon herself to wreck the already rough proceedings.

“I told ya,” she harped, “you brought it on yourself. You never listened. I said, 'smile!' And did you? No. What----was your face going to crack open? Now it has! Look at you now, you freak! You're a joke!”

“You watch what you say about him,” said Emily through her teeth. “You don't know him---you never knew him!”

“Go back to New York, miss fancypants! Go back to la-la land! You and your fat, stupid boyfriend have done everything to enable this and look at him!”

“Fuck you,” exploded Othmar, and now the whole room had eyes on their booth.

“Come on,” said Nadine, physically yanking Darren out of the booth with her. “Not dealing with these people and their delusional garbage anymore.”

“'Bye,” called Darren helplessly after them.

“Yeah, 'bye,” hollered Nadine without turning around. “Call me when the UFO lands!”

The remainder of the gang was quiet and somber. Things soon broke up and Othmar and Emily packed up Bailey and dragged him along. There was no point left, nothing to discuss.


*******


The silent, grief-faced golem that was once Bailey stood by the river, staring at it through the chain link fence. Othmar scuffed his feet in the dirt and loitered uncomfortably and spoke to it.

“Emily says it's a waste,” Othmar said. The Bailey-thing, like always, said nothing.

“I don't get you,” Othmar continued. “Why?” He was ready to cry. “We're your friends, man, and we're here! We always have been!”

No reply. Bailey squinted tragically at the polluted river and the old mill district.

“Dammit, Bailey, what's it take? I'm not a mind reader! How do I reach you?”

Nothing.

“Jesus.” Othmar cuffed the Bailey-husk on the shoulder and started crying. “Bailey? Say something, willya? Emily's waiting. I have to go. Bailey?”

Nothing.

Othmar wiped his eyes and touched Bailey's shoulder. “I'm done, man. I love you.” He was halfway down the length of the old, blown-out factory when he turned, looked back, saw no change and kept walking, eventually disappearing around the corner.

The Bailey-thing, now unattended, crumbled into a semi-fetal sitting position and the river burbled beyond the fence. Bailey rested between the corner of the building and the fence, staring through the pained slits of his eyes at the rolling water. Hours passed. The shadow of the fence grew long and cagelike across his form. Bailey calmly hid his face in his hands.

Winter was almost here.

Published in THE MEAT FACTORY AND OTHER STORIES (Alien Buddha Press)


THIS WEEK'S PLAYLIST:
ALICE COOPER-Love It to Death
ALICE COOPER-Goes to Hell
SKINNY PUPPY-Rabies
SKINNY PUPPY-Mind: The Perpetual Intercourse
BLUE OYSTER CULT-Agents of Fortune
THE GUN CLUB-Larger than Live

Thursday, March 26, 2015

ENTRY

THIS POST ORIGINALLY CONTAINED THE SHORT STORY, "FAT CHANCE" “Fat Chance” (circa early 90s) was a tough sell....one editor told me she “couldn't with any kind of conscience” run such a story. I finally placed it in a beautiful German Journal called THE MOWER ('93? '94?) and they ran it both in English and translated into German, along with another story I wrote. It was a great journal----featured gorgeous color plates and a split 7” single with Clutch----and that was my first exposure to that band, whom I liked very much. Still do.
Guy ODs to Johnny Mathis marathon on the radio....cute gimmick. The suicide was fake----the pain was very real and very personal. It was a good picture of my life at that time. Art---whether it was poetry, fiction, music with a band or a picture----its creation, perpetuation and preservation, was the only reason I didn't blow my goddamn fucking head off back in those days. It serves me well even now.
What I would tell anyone going through similar hurt is, put it out there and make it your gift to the world. You could save your own life, and who knows? You might save someone else's.
You never know.