Monday, July 20, 2009

The Sad Sound of Regret

The thick Atlanta summer night weighed heavily upon my damp skin. It seemed to slow every action down like I suddenly weighed a hundred pounds more. This must be what it’s like to be fat I thought to myself as I sluggishly pushed forwards. The moist evening air was filled with the distant sounds of a sedated, apathetic city turned bitter over the disheartening years of abuse and neglect - car horns and sirens that seemed to be working with the enthusiasm of a gas station attendant, distant murmurs of the drunk wandering the streets looking for the next bar to find cheap, easy, slippery sex, and the occasional bang of a dumpster lid followed by the hissing of fighting ferrell cat’s - undoubtedly quarreling over the prized find of a two day old, half-eaten Mcdonald’s hamburger.
My brain barely registered half of what my senses must be taking in. The stifling humid air must be seeping in through my pours and soaking my fragile, egg-like mind with the stale boredom that now permeated every fiber of my being. My mind only works while dry. This heat sucks.
I am running. Not physically - it’s way to hot to move any faster than the speed of a heroin addict high on some good shit. I was running away from my newly born son. I had just watched his birth twenty minutes ago. I realized as I saw him coming out of my one night stand, stripper acquaintance’s flabby, blown out pussy that I don’t have what it takes to be a father. Who am I kidding? I don’t want to be his father. His mother is a fucking junky - an ugly one at that. I don’t want to be attached to that manipulative, money grubbing whore who is now that poor bastard’s mother. I don’t want to spend every fucking dollar I ever earn on someone else. I don’t want to change diapers. I don’t want to be responsible for someone else. So I run. I run into the hot and sticky night because it will accept me.
As I snuck off silently into the indifferent darkness trying to figure out where I would go, what I do, I heard a faint sound echo up from an alleyway. It was like a metal drum being beaten with a wet noodle or a stick of butter - dull and damp. The sound was loud and quiet at the same time, sloppy yet perfectly precise. It was the same sound over and over again. It was being played at a slow, steady, methodical rhythm. I followed it, my footsteps dragging lazily across the dirty sidewalk. The sidewalk was littered with trash. I stepped in gum - it trailed off behind me leaving a spider web that gave birth to another anchor point on the pavement with every step I took. The heat made the gum melt and thus stick to my shoe. I hated this heat - it was oppressive, constricting, and I couldn’t fucking escape it.
The sound grew louder and a little bit more clear. It still seemed damp though. As I came to the mouth of another alleyway the sound hit my left ear, and I realized it was wafting out from the darkness. I turned and trudged down the desolate alleyway.
I began to see the flicker of fire dancing on the dark, graffitied walls - walls that rose up menacingly on either side of me. The source of the celebrating revelers of the night lay in front of me - a metal drum filled with burning newspaper. It stood spewing the unstoppable dancers that spread and grew on the walls around it. They were guardians - defenders fighting the dark. They were faceless agents fighting a silent battle against an unnamed fear. Maybe that’s why this fire was blazing on such a disgustingly hot night - to protect.
An old man sat next the drum. He was covered head to toe in layers and layers of dirty, old clothes. Clothes filled with holes. Holes that whispered the years of struggle the street forces upon those unlucky, unloved few. His dark matted beard hung gruffly from his sunken, weathered face. He seemed familiar. Was he an old, burned out TV star? One season on a mildly popular sitcom as a character who was lucky if he appeared for a few seconds per episode perhaps? Or maybe he was in a band - the bass player maybe. Not in the spotlight, but always in the pictures.
He gazed vacantly into the distance. I say into the distance not because there was a distance to stare into, but because he had the unmistakable look of desire in his eyes, like he was watching someone intently and didn’t want them to know. He was watching someone who was very, very far away. He strummed a one stringed guitar that looked like it had come from the dumpster. It probably had.
He strummed the guitar in a downward motion without looking at the string, over and over again in a very precise, relaxed rhythm. He strummed with surprising confidence seeing that he had only one string from which to pluck truth and meaning.
“Gloang . . . gloang . . . gloang,” went the guitar. He was calling to someone in the same fashion that warriors are called to battle with a mighty horn blow by their king . . . only it sounded muffled, tired, and worn down. Everything about this man seemed . . . fuzzy. It was like I was watching him on a TV channel that didn’t quite come in, like I was looking at a copy of a copy of a copy, only up close.
“What are you doing?” I asked keeping my distance.
“Gloang . . . gloang . . .gloang,” answered the guitar.
I took a step closer.
“Excuse me. What are you looking at?”
He did not look up. His gaze did not move. His focus remained unbroken.
“Gloang . . . gloang . . .gloang.”
I took another step forwards. My eyes widened a little as I became slightly more aware that I was alive. I felt sweat run down my forehead and around my eyes.
“Who are you waiting for?”
His hand froze in mid strum, the fingers trembling just above the old rusted guitar string. The tempo was broken, and suddenly the air felt different. I became painfully aware of an overwhelming sensation of awkwardness as it filled my shoes. It had the sensation of cold jelly.
I felt like I shouldn’t be here. I was interrupting something intensely private and personal. I felt like a peeping tom. I felt dirty and selfish. Although his eyes remained vacant and lost in another universe his lips moved a little like a child murmuring words in its sleep - but no words came out.
“Gloang . . . gloang . . .gloang,” his guitar spoke for him. His lips pressed back together before he actually made a sound of his own. The distant look of far off concentration spread comfortably back across his wrinkled face as he retreated back into his shell.
I bent down. I was now just a foot away from this man. He smelled of the streets. His fingers were grimy, and the fingernails untrimmed - even torn off in places. He sat cross legged, but one leg seemed to be sneaking out from underneath the other. It made him sit at an angle so one end of the guitar pointed a little upwards towards the sky, while the other pointed down - down to the base of the fire drum. Sitting at a slanted angle like this added to the impression that this life had stopped caring about itself years ago. There must be another reason he was still going through the motions of life, because it wasn’t for himself - he had obviously given up on that.
He sat with his back against the wall. He seemed to be resting against it as if he was tired, but somehow seemed upright and at attention at the same time. It’s strange, hard to describe, but if you can picture someone who was asleep and running an Olympic marathon at the same time you might be able to envision how this man looked. His arms seemed to be moving of their own accord, separate from his face which held strongly to its deadpan stare into nothing.
I cleared my throat.
“Gloang . . . gloang . . .gloang,” interrupted the guitar.
“Are you calling to someone?” I asked, my voice now louder and steadied by my newly peaked interested and the distant feeling of potential danger that seemed to be lurking in the shadows behind me. It felt like something dark and faceless was stalking me, a predator that had just recently smelled fresh blood.
“I don’t have . . . enough strings,” the man replied drearily. His stained yellow teeth - a few of them missing, were peeking our from beneath his cracked lips as he spoke. His eyes remained transfixed with an eery gloss that seemed to emanate sorrow.
“I am trying to call,” he croaked in a desperate, raspy voice. I could hear the decades of cigarette smoke and alcohol abuse tearing at his lungs. His hand shook, and a tear welled up his eye. The methodical strumming was once again interrupted as he halted his song. “I can’t play . . . I can’t play the song. Not enough strings. Not enough strings. Not enough strings,” he repeated as he began to rock slowly back and forth. All the confidence this man had exuded was now gone.
Once again I felt danger creeping up the alleyway behind me, but this time it was close. I could feel it staring at my back, salivating at the smell of my fresh flesh. Somewhere deep in my subconscious my body readied itself to feel the skin of my neck tear as sharp teeth punctured the meat of my neck. I was only aware of this sensation momentarily however, because I was overpowered by an abrupt feeling of sympathy and sadness. This poor old man. I thought of the money I had in my wallet. I would give it to him.
I reached for my wallet, but was stopped as my fingers grazed the top of my pocket. “Tristan,” he said shakily. “Tristan Miller.”
I paused. The hairs on my neck rose to attention.
“My son. He has been lost for so long now. He ran away. I was a bad father. I was a bad, bad father, and he left. I just want to find him, I want to do good. I want to hold my Tristan again and tell him it’s alright, tell him I will take care of him. I want another chance. I want to be a good daddy to my little Tristan.” He began to cry with his head hung low. He shook as quiet sobs rolled over him. His fingers began to strum the lonely string once again forcing it into action as it cried with unhappiness of an elderly instrument coaxed into performing years beyond its duty.
“I’ve been trying for years to play his song,” he murmured over the methodical rhythm. “To call to him . . . to find him. My strings were broken by angry father time, because . . . I made him angry, too. I did bad things and I was punished. Now I can’t play his song. I can’t find him and he can’t find me.” His sobs became louder. “All I can do is play the first note and hope he hears, hope he recognizes it. I can only hope that he comes.” His voice trailed off and was overtaken by the reverberating sound of the old, broken guitar as the noise bounced off the concrete walls around us.
I stood up slowly and backed away, the fire dancing over my sweaty face. The firelight camouflaged my features - made the shadows cast by my nose, ears, and mouth shrink and grow randomly. It made my identity indistinguishable as I sank back into the night. I was a jungle cat stalking it’s prey, only in reverse. His sad strumming continued, and his sobs grew fainter as I moved backwards. The sound of the first note of the sad song that called to a lost child reverberated loudly throughout the alleyway. It was so loud that he could not hear the sound of my footsteps as I escaped.
I stopped. I pulled out my wallet and withdrew the wad of cash - everything I had on me. I set it down in the middle of the alleyway so he would find it - hopefully. I was shaking.
I turned and ran. I ran back towards the hospital. I was really running now. I no longer felt the heat. It had somehow been lifted and was replaced with a smooth, cool breeze.
I was going back to my son. I am a father and I, Tristan Miller, will not make the same mistake as my father. It was to late for him, to late for us, but not to late for my son to have the father I never had.
I will never hear the sad sound of regret cry out of a busted one stringed guitar, and neither will my son.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

When Dreams Turn Into Watery Nightmares - A True Story

The fog had rolled in thick and heavy like an army issue wool blanket. An eerie silence plagued the normally noisy staircase. The thirty or so surfers and onlookers stood quietly as if attending a funeral for a relative that had died unexpectedly - looks of disbelief strewn across their dew soaked faces. Although they lacked any motion or true expression they all wore a look of painful intensity. Their eyes were transfixed on the pounding surf that lie just beyond the bluffs, and their feet were planted firmly on the wooden planks of the rickety staircase that wound down, down, down into the fog below.
Every time one of the waves broke thousands of gallons of angry, salty water would explode downwards and the ground would shake. These were mother ocean’s battle drums, and they were being beaten with a fury few have ever seen. My heart raced.
I slowly walked down the slippery steps descending into the abyss. As I walked by I heard people murmur discouraging words: “What’s he thinking? He must be crazy. His board isn’t big enough for those waves.”
What did they know? They were just too scared to paddle out into an opportunity that doesn’t come many times in a surfer’s life.
The coast of San Diego was being pounded with one of the strongest winter storms it has ever seen creating towering waves the height of a four-story building - waves that were strong and fast enough to take on Zeus himself. I was going to prove to them and to myself that I wasn’t just some crazy, anger-fueled teen. I could handle this.
The freezing water took my breath away. It felt like I was being stabbed all over with a million tiny knives when I duck-dove under the first wave. I looked out past the breaking surf, and saw the battlefield I was about to enter. It was swarming with sleeping giants waiting patiently for the reef to rouse them from their rumbling slumber after which they would be sent foaming and spitting into an angry assault on the innocent shoreline. Wave after wave stacked up charging in one behind the other as if the shore of San Diego was actually the beaches of Normandy. The invasion had begun.
The long paddle out through the channel was lonely and cold. My body rose and fell as wave after wave rolled underneath me. The shore and all the people grew smaller and smaller until they looked to be about the size of a pupil - my pupil dilated from fear. I was alone.
Once I was past where the waves broke into white water I sat on my surfboard waiting. Watching. The long paddle out had exhausted me, and I struggled to catch my breath. There was no rush. I was the only one out here and the waves weren’t letting up anytime soon. Then I saw it.
A massive wave towered up behind all the others. It was a skyscraper jutting up and reaching for the heavens. This was my bull. I scrambled to paddle out and meet my destiny. I made it just as she pitched up and readied herself to spit liquid fire. She was moving fast, and I paddled hard. I could feel my heartbeat throbbing in my neck - my bodies warning of lethal danger. I was faintly aware of the people off in the distance, of the freezing water and cold, foggy air, but completely lost in the moment. I stood up.
I raced down the face of the wave as if I had been shot out of cannon. Water sprayed up stinging my face and eyes, and it was hard to see. I was going too fast and my board started dancing underneath me like John Travolta in Saturday Night Fever - shaking hard left and right. Please no speed wobbles, too late.
My body slammed down hard against the water. I was moving so fast that the normally soft and forgiving water felt rock hard. It was like smashing into pavement from two stories up. All the air in my lungs burst out of my mouth as salt water rushed into my nose and dripped in the back of my throat. The weight of a Volkswagen Bug was dropped on the back of my head, and I was pushed downwards into the dark and turbulent water below. Down, down, down I went. It felt like I had been pushed down at least forty feet before I slammed against the sharp reef on the bottom, was pulled back up again by the surge, and then once again sucked into the raging waterfall which brought me back down to where I had just come from. My lungs burned. I needed air.
I thrashed from one direction to another like a rag doll in a violent washing machine - partially of my own accord because I am panic stricken and desperate to breath, partially because the waters violent movement is much, much stronger than I am. I have no idea which way is up, and even if I did it wouldn’t do me much good as I am trapped and powerless. I am at the mercy of the beast that holds me. I need air. Panic.
My head tingled, and the blackness that consumed me began to lighten. Everything became white as I raced into the bright, bright light. The world around me slowed. The violent shaking faded away as everything became calm. I was suffocating.
I thought to myself: “This is it. Get ready to meet God. Be at peace and let Jesus into your heart so you can go to heaven. I’m ready God. Take me.”
My lungs seared as cold air rushed in, and then another wave hit me sending me back down below again. I was shaken so violently that I could have lost a filling and would never know it. The consuming darkness, complete disorientation, and the unbearable need to breathe reminded of outer space. I had dreams before about being lost in space without a mask or oxygen floating helplessly and panicked through the cosmos, but at least in the dreams I would wake up right before I died.
I’m not sure what happened after this, how long I was under, if I stayed conscious or not, or if another wave hit me. What I am sure of is that I felt a hand drag me up. God had heard me and reached down into the murky abyss that I was consumed in and pulled me up to heaven. The hand of God pulled me up to where I could breathe.
The cold air rushing in was painful but relieving. Someone dragged me over the reef that lay at the edge of the water. Murky voices shouted in the background. I coughed up sea water as someone patted my back. My face was covered in sand, and I was shaking. I looked up.
It turns out that God is actually a forty year old beach bum with a shaggy beard and glowing blue eyes. His name is Fred, he drinks beer out of brown paper bags, and smokes weed all day. He lives on the beach in Encinitas. Fred saved my life.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Frank works in mysterious ways

This summary is not available. Please click here to view the post.

Smuggling a whale

The blue uniforms and shining badges were unmistakable even though the deep blue water and thick plexy glass blurred them into wavy, gyrating blobs. The blobs reminded me of Aunt Helen’s sagging breasts. I shivered.
My heart began to pound as the policemen moved around the edge of Shamu’s show pool. I thought of possibly luring them to the edge for a “private Shamu encounter,” and then commanding the giant black and white whale to eat them leaving no trace of the unwanted inquisitors.
Unfortunately we had not trained Shamu to actually be a KILLER whale. She only ate fish, not nosy cops.
“Mr. Gilroy. We were wondering if you could answer a few questions for us,” the tall black cop asked as he sized me up. My palms were sweaty.
“Do you know where Justine Dramer is?”
“The Mayor’s daughter?” I asked astonished.
“Way to be tactful, John,” the cop on the right said sarcastically to the tall black one. “I thought we were going to ease into this, and probe him for information first.”
My heart rate slowed and my palms began to dry. They were inept. Thank God.
“No, why would I know where she is?” My eyes darted over to Shamu’s food container subconsciously. I thought of the pounds of Chinese white heroin stashed inside underneath a few thin layers of rotting old fish. The words “Freudian slip” drifted into mind.
The black cop noticed.
“We have reason to believe you were the last person with her before she disappeared.”
“What’s with the locked box over there?” Asked the third cop, standing on the right of the other two. He was pointing at the locked container with the mob’s heroin stash that I was . . . temporarily keeping track of.
“Oh, that’s just Shamu’s food. We keep it locked because it’s expensive, and we’re worried about thieves.” Yeah right. Like people would actually want to steal stinking, old rotting fish. Oh well, cops are dumb.
I could tell he was about to ask me to open it, so I did something I unfortunately do rather often. I did something impulsive.
“Hey, have you guys ever experienced the ‘private Shamu encounter?’” I asked as I quoted with my fingers. I must have looked just like Richard Nixon right before he was impeached.
Suddenly the small cop’s eyes lit up. He was standing in the middle of the three of them and he almost knocked one of them over as he jumped forward excitedly starting his story.
“You know, once when I was a kid I got called up to be a part of the show and got to feed Shamu and even give him a hug.” He reminded me of a little kid the way he bounced when he talked and the way his eyes sparkled. “But,” his smile faded, “I heard that Shamu died and you guys didn’t have anything to do with the body so you buried her in the parking lot and just went out and captured an new whale, stole her away from her pod and enslaved her.”
The two other cops were looking at him like he had suddenly sprouted a green tail and was speaking in tongues.
“Well,” I began not really knowing what direction to go in. “I, uh, I remember when I first started working here, maybe twelve years ago or so. This place wasn’t run by the, uh, most savory of people and some not-so-cool practices were in place behind the scenes. One day I came in to find a dead seal floating in the seal tank. My boss made me chop him up into little bits and feed him to Shamu.” I felt tears welling up I my eyes. “Shamu #1 died a week later, but we didn’t have anything big enough to eat her body.”
Damn I was good, my voice was even quivering. The three cops looked like school children who had just seen a live cat skinned with a rusty spoon. Asking me about Shamu’s food would be the last fucking thing on their pea sized brains, let alone the Mayor’s daughter. Not that it mattered. Shamu #3 has a big appetite and he had a full meal last night so there is no evidence other than the small flakes of whale feces floating near the bottom of Shamu’s tank.

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

my first published poem

Vlad

I didn’t want to be Vlad the Impaler,
but Dracula happened to be my middle name.

The morning frost on stiff grass
screeched as I walked across,
as if I killed it
little by little, step by step.

I needed a beer.
Sleeping in a casket is
not as glorious as it might sound.
The stale air violates my sensitive smell sense.

My neighbor was cooking a meal
that stank of burning rubber and onions
and made me think of killing him
slowly, softly,
enjoying every last excruciating minute of agony
as I watched the life leave his eyes.

But not today
I have something to do in fifteen minutes
I’m late for my shift at Kinko’s
For the next eight hours I will make paper copies
of the blurry snow banks,
daydreaming of the night.
--Sean Sprigle