Sunday, September 2, 2007

Rolling Snake Eyes

letters from the future by dune loring
Swaggering through!
(c) Copyrighted 2007, All Rights Reserved


At seventeen I graduated high school and lived at home until I was nineteen. Life was easy and simple. I had fun. Things were cool.

I took a job now and then, to pay for the beer and to stake myself at poker. I handed out papers for two local Republican candidates. The Democrats wanted volunteers. The Republicans paid. Mom and dad were scandalized when they knew. Mom found a flyer in my room. How it got there? I'd written chicks phone numbers on it. Handing out flyers was a way to meet chicks. You're smiling, showing the charm. Chicks didn't read the darn flyers. Most didn't see the flyers. They saw a pleasant, cool young male with a cheerful demeanor.

Mom didn't break down in tears, but she looked embarrassed, like I had farted in church, at her favorite old aunt's funeral. She said, "Son, what is this?"
I said, "From work, mom."
"Work? You are working for them? Honey, Republicans are haters! They hate poor people and immigrants!"

"Uh oh. Not really, Mom. They don't. They hate people who won't vote for them." I grinned. "That's seventy percent of the people, according to the latest poll. Mom, Republicans aren't bigots; they're political."

There was no telling mom. She got hysterical, "Not my son is working for Republicans!"

Mom was making something big out of something that was very small, but it could have gotten a lot bigger, if I hadn't stopped and remembered to ask myself: What would Frank do?

The job was for a week, had a couple of days left. I said, "Well okay, mom. I won't work for them anymore."

She gave me a big smile, a big hug and money.


I went to work for this Chinese Restaurant. Chinese people generally hire only Chinese. The boss, Mr. Lee, liked the way I handed out flyers. I think he voted Republican. He hired me to hand-out flyers for him.

First rule: Daughter off-limits.
Second rule: Niece off-limits.
Third rule: Girls who work at the restaurant off-limits.

I asked Mr. Lee, "What about female customers?"
He smiled. "Boys need to play."

Mr. Lee was a businessman. He was a father, an uncle, an educator, taught political science at the University. I brought him customers, lots of young lady customers. Mr. Lee's food was good and cheap. Getting him customers wasn't that hard. But, Mr. Lee paid cheap, and that was no good. All the noodles I wanted, but very little cheese. I worked a week for him, right up until I saw my "weak" paycheck. I didn't have to ask what would Frank do?


Miss Double D, was a rather large lady. I wouldn't call her fat, but she was large, named for her bra size. She hired me at the dollar store. My nice smile and my good looks got me hired without needing to fill out a completed application form. What I did in the store? I swept, cleaned, dusted, and restocked the shelves, ran errands for my supervisor, provided a view, something she liked looking, staring, at kook-eyed. I caught her staring when I had my back turned, was bent over picking something up. She was an older woman, between boyfriends --I learned, from overhearing her and one of her girlfriends, whom came into the store. Miss Double D was twelve years older, a little too old to interest me as a chick. I was a kid, and what did I know. She was the supervisor. I couldn't see myself telling her to take off her dress.

Well, the work wasn't hard, nothing that I couldn't do. My supervisor was easy. She didn't try to touch me. She just stared. I would have worked at the dollar store for more than a week, if not for the two screwed-up robbers.

I half knew one of the robbers. I'd been in a poker game where he lost. I didn't know his name. I pretended amnesia. He didn't. I told him, "Dude, I just work here. The store's money isn't my money. You have a gun. I am furniture."

If his buddy hadn't talked about Miss Double D's tits. Talked and talked about them, and taunted her, while he pointed a gun in her face, I would have remained furniture.

"Tits, put all of the money in that bag, and while you are doing it, wiggle a little, and show me some jiggle." Just for the heck of it, he touch her left tit.

That was uncalled for! Was intolerable. Was he a thief or a pervert? I glanced at his buddy. My eye told him to control that clown. Neither of the them wanted to hear what I said. I was running a mop and a broom in a dollar store. They were big time robbers. The one I half knew got a butt face on, like a bully in jail lock-up, and told me he would put a dress on me, if I didn't shut up. What was he? A pervert too? Had he lost so badly at cards? What was this? Megalomania, because he had a gun on me? Had he gone crazy? Right now it didn't matter what his problem was. His slur could not be overlooked.

I heard my brother's voice. I heard more. I heard screaming. Two robbers screaming.

Young men act. Adults think -- of insurance costs, liability, law suits. Miss Double D told me that I was a hero. Mr. Big Boss man, the store owner, told me that I was fired.

Miss Double D called him, told him of the robbery attempt. He ran to the store. Drove, I am sure. He came in wearing just a pair of red running shorts, t-shirt and tennis shoes. Asked if the money was safe, asked if any employee was injured, asked what exactly happened, and Miss Double D did her best to re-assure him that everything was alright now. I had begun with the clean-up, straightening up merchandise knocked to the floor during the confrontation with the robbers. I caught the way he looked at me, felt his growing anger, and I would have totally ignored him, but he yelled out, "Hey dumb ass, I am talking to you!" He told me that I had put the store into jeopardy, by going loco on two armed robbers.

I am a lover, not a fighter. so I won't describe the details. The robbers needed hospitalization. The store owner did not. But one thing: Crystal cool, I did swagger over to him, did ask, "Who are you calling a dumb ass?" I didn't want to give the impression that I planned to go loco with him, so I grinned. "You have my address, mail my paycheck." I think Frank might have approved.

Mom was horrified that I'd been exposed to such danger. "They pointed guns at you!" She was pleased to hear that I wouldn't be working anymore at that dollar store.

Dad asked how had I disarmed the robbers. The police asked that too. Miss Double D told what she remembered. An entire version of the incident was caught on tape by the store's surveillance cameras.

The detective Sergeant took me aside, said, "You're too young to have been in the service. You should join. The marines could use you."

Well, I am not here to get spooky. Let's get back to Mom.


I kept money in my pocket and a chick in my ride. I didn't have a job. I had mom. I really lucked out to have her. My day began at about ten o'clock. I got up, went in the kitchen, where mom always had breakfast waiting. I spent the first part of my day watching Mom do things around the house, and watching her work on her at home business. I sat back in a kitchen chair and I watched mom. That was cool with mom. My parents sent me to community college. Me going to CC was like repeating high school, that wasn't cool, and mom saw that CC was really bumming me out, and she said, "Son --."

My mom had lost one son and she didn't want to lose another.

By the time the afternoon rolled around, she had enough of me. She smiled, and said something like, "Son, what are you doing hanging around your mama all day? Go out side and get some air." She gave me money. I went upstairs and changed. I had clothes. I dressed in style. The allowances from mom were generous. She had lost her baby. I was the only son she had to turn to, and -- well, I looked good in the mirror, projected an aura. I spoke to that handsome face, said, "I see why the chicks adore you."

I got in my car and went hunting for chicks, if I was between chicks. If I had a current steady, that chick and I went riding. I stayed out of the house, drinking, a few times, but not often like a fish, dancing, sometimes just rubbing against a good looking chick, having cool fun, until midnight, sometimes past midnight, until I was tired and worn out, from drinking with my buds. The chicks never left me looking haggard. Mom and dad often saw me come-in, and never commented on my appearance. I went to bed, got up at ten the next day, and started the whole routine over again, and probably would have continued with this lite life until I was thirty. but for Mr. Turdle.

Yes, his name was TURDle, like in crap. Thinking on it now, I remember, the day he came banging on the door, it was raining. I hadn't gone out that afternoon. He looked very threatening. To make things worse, I looked guilty. Mom let him in.

Mr. Turdle was the father of a gal whom I only slightly knew. I hardly remember her face now at all. I can't recall if she had a nice ass. Is that chauvinistic? Absolutely. Do I take chicks seriously? Never. Once you've had one naked -- you have crossed that line. Thrill them and be free of them. Anything else is silly.

Turdle accused me of getting his daughter pregnant. Damn! He got so belligerent, He talked loud into mom's face. I thought that his attitude might require a macho display. I said, "No!" I was about to say a lot more: How dare he accuse me! His daughter had forty boyfriends! I could name them! I glanced at mom. When she got mad, she was good at throwing furniture. I considered punching out some of Turdle's teeth. I wanted mom to get ready to back me up, at least with a little parental nod of approval, but judging the look on her face, no matter what I did or what else I said, I could see would not have helped. My future wasn't looking good. Mom frowned like there was a thumb in her heart, mine, Her nose cringed up, like her son was soaked in skunk scent.

Forty minutes passed. Forty long minutes, Mister Turdle sat in the living-room. I stood in a corner like a little punished child. Finally, I heard my dad's car. Mom called him. Mr. Turdle wanted one thousand dollars. Turdle explained to mom, "Your boy's share to help my girl out of this mess."

Mr Turdle had ordered plane tickets, booked a hotel and space in a clinic to take care of the problem, total cost two thousand dollars.

Dad came into the living-room. Mr. Turdle stood. Dad put out his hand, the hand of a man who read books and who ran a successful business. "My name is ---, yours?"

Turdle was slow in responding. He had the hands of a man who drove a truck. He held his hands together, like he was holding back. His hands were connected to massive arms, that were connected to a thick chest, that was connected to a short neck, which was connected to a head that looked hard and very thick. He had come into the house pissing. He was very pissed, but he held himself when faced with mom. He had stopped pissing, announced he would wait for the male parent. The moment dad entered the house, Turdle was ready to pour. Dad is well over six feet, still keeps his hair short in a Marine cut, and still is built like he is only a few years from the corp. I watched, waiting for dad to take Turdle down.

"Turdle!" Turdle finally spoke. He wasn't going to try to take the floor off, and make an opening to hell.

Dad's business was selling people stuff. He knew how, with a look and a tone of voice, to stroke targets, particularly, tight ass ones, until they gave. "Well, first names, I'm ---."

Turdle mumbled his first name. He shook dad's hands. Dad cut me a sour glance. This wasn't cool. I knew I might dread the next few years. I decided to make myself scare. I headed for an exit. Dad barked, "Stay here and sit down."

"I've got to take a leak, can't do it here, dad." I went upstairs. I heard Dad and Turdle talk. Six minutes and dad capitulated.

Turdle was a working, nine-to-five, blue-collar stiff neck, and dad was an eight in the morning to whenever, entrepreneur. Both worked for a living, not for beer and poker stakes. Both were fathers who expected their off-springs and every one else to conform to certain conventional expectations. They were two totally uncool guys.

After dad wrote the check. He walked Turdle to the door. Five minutes, he and Turdle were still in the foyer chatting, babbling, about why kids today kept coming up short. They sounded like two depressed frat brothers. I thought they were going to give each other a big hug. I nearly ran down stairs screaming.

I mumbled, "Great Scott! What would Frank do?"

Turdle left. Mom and dad held a meeting. They discussed the whole matter, and my entire life. Dad's decision -- But before I tell you that, know this: I was not one to convincingly play the sycophant, and never liked keeping my feelings to myself, though I often did. My sack cloth was getting too old to wear. I often wore it. Dad saw all of the holes, but he hadn't seem to care, -- and although I loved / still love/ my parents, like them, I knew that I was not so emotional or otherwise dependent that I couldn't walk out of their door.

Dad was so excited to finally tell me off, that he could hardly get his tone set. He began bellowing, then soften, some, not enough. No chance could I run around him. Mom sat still, like a wooden block. Mom was wearing a poker stare, I knew so well, and learned. It was just a blank look. Effective. She used it to say, "Your dad and I are of one mind." I use it when I play cards --gambling with the boys. Pouting and puppy-eyed looks weren't going to wear well, so I put a sock on that approach.

"Son, you have three choices: Get a job and start paying rent. Enrolled in an accredited college and start working on your future. Get your ass out of my house. Dad didn't put the last option that way. He has class. He quotes long dead philosophers.

He said, "Life is only for a few years, son. But what are you doing, just visiting? At the end of your life, what is going to be your story? Where are you headed? The sad truth is you have no clue, no prospects."

I told you, dad spoke funny. Mom just sat there. But now, she showed some emotion. She looked at me funny. For all the love they were showing, I might as well had hit the freaking road. Hitched-hiked across the country in the automobiles of strangers. What did they want? I didn't set out every day to live the perfect life of a saint, make myself into a pope. The idea is to get through each day without sweating, Sweating isn't cool, and it stinks, ruins your clothes and your prospect with chicks. I hang out with my bros -- the guys. I seek and find fun with chicks. I have a great time. We got to make fun and enjoy life, period. That is what Frank would have said.

I said, "Dad, how can you say this to me? First of all, that Mr. Turdle has no proof! He is going to destroy the evidence! It is my word, you son's word, against his gal, who can't keep herself from getting into a mess."
Dad said, "That is not the issue."
"What is dad? Are you mad at me because you paid out a thousand dollars, you shouldn't have paid?"
Dad said, "That is not the problem."
I said, "I will pay you back, dad."
Dad said, "Why don't you just go to school, get a four-year degree. I'll get you a job in my company."
"Why can't I work there without a degree?"
"I have outside investors."
"A slacker son would be embarrassing, right?"
Mom said, "You are not a slacker."

How was I going to get into a degree program, in an accredited four year college? I barely got out of high school. Got into CC because of open admission, and I didn't fit in, and was constantly hounded by the instructors, because my work was slow in coming. I couldn't keep up with the rest of the class. Okay!


Mom! When God blessed sons he gave them good moms. Mom's home business was mail order marketing. One of the companies she marketed sold guides to getting into the college of your choice. And how to get into any college. Anyhow! I got into a college, accredited too, in the state of Wyoming. I won't embarrass myself by mentioning the name of the school. Suffice to say, the only cool thing about that school was ---. Nothing! The chicks were cold, the weather was either too hot or too cold. The professors, the administrators were --. Well, I didn't, still don't, expect to find coolness among the professional educating crowd. But no kidding, I got a degree.

To be continued.

Buster Flatts 20007

Saturday, August 11, 2007

A Tall Tale, part 3


letters from the future by dune loring
A NATION OF ALIENS
(c) Copyrighted 1999, All Rights Reserved

Have you ever gotten the feeling that everybody has been abducted by aliens and replaced, except you? I have.

The School. I waltzed up to the front door at school, and I thought the WWF had taken over, and wrestlers were working the high school as security guards who were ready to punch you out. I stopped a minute, pinched myself, to see if I was at home asleep. No such luck. The guards were checking for weapons and attitudes. I was gun-less, knife-less, but I still had a buzz and an attitude. A big, ugly, redneck guard shouted, "New rules!"

"Huh?" I spoke. I burped too, gas, beer.

"New rules in dress!" the wrestler-looking, fat boy growled. "Don't look different! Don't look weird!"

Of course, I am summarizing what he said. The quotes are for the benefit of literary reading types who like to see things in quotes.

Overnight the school had imposed a new dress code: No hats, no caps for boys or girls. No trench coats. Nothing black. Bright colors too bright were out too. No red and purple. Nothing disruptive. No jewelry. Kids with pierce ears and noses were told not to draw attention to themselves. Those with tattoos were told to cover them up with long sleeves and closed collars. The guard sent kids home for "being dressed funny."

"You're dressed funny, boy, get!"

One kid, Jacob Ely, federal judge Malcolm Ely's son, was told to take off "that Jewish cap!"

When Jacob objected, the guard screamed, "I told you, you are dressed funny! Go home and change!"

Luckily for the school board, just as the fat guard was about to arrest and handcuff Jacob for not leaving fast enough, the principal, Mr. Price, came running forth, yelling --

"His cap is okay!"

"Okay?" asked the guard.

"Yes!"

"Okay ..."the guard mumbled.

Mr. Price went back to do what ever it was that he did. The school only black kid, Rufus Jones, was stopped. Rufus had a gold front tooth. The guard growled at Rufus. "What did I tell you about jewelry, boy? Show no gold, no brass or tin either."

"My tooth?"

"Take it out or you don't come in."

"I can't take out my tooth!"

"Why not? Is it a gang sign?"

"No!"

"Do you sell drugs, boy?"

"No!"

"You fit the drug selling profile. What are you doing here anyhow?"

"I go to this school."

"You won't sell no drugs here. While I'm here."

"I don't sell drugs!"

"Do you use drugs?"

"No!"

"If I were colored, I might be tempted to use drugs." The guard sneered. "But I wouldn't!"

Rufus yelled, "I'm going to report you!"

"Report me? Because I won't let you sell drugs here?"

Rufus took a deep sigh. "I have a book report that is due."

"You are not coming in here looking like that," the guard said.

"I have a make-up test to take."

"Boy, I don't want to hear your problems. I have a job to do."

Rufus put his hands in his mouth and yanked out his gold tooth. The guard smiled. Rufus kept quiet. The guard spoke. "Put that tooth away, boy."

Rufus put the gold tooth in his shirt pocket.

The guard nodded. "Now you don't look like a gang banger."

"Yes, sir."

"You look like you belong someplace."

"Yes, sir."

"Boy, now you're acting white."

Rufus gulped.

The guard continued, "Just remember that when you're inside to keep acting white."

Rufus went into the school. Then my turn with the guard came. He stared at me. I grinned. I belched again, beer gas. That morning I rinsed with mouth wash. I'd been chewing gun. I swallowed it just as my turn came.

The guard sneered, "Who you trying to fool, boy?"

I grinned. He could tell that I was not quite there yet. I was still hungover, a little bit, back at the one hundred and one yard line. He could see how blurry my baby-blues were and that they weren't quite there yet either. This guy I was certain had been where I was, many times.

He said, almost like a big sloppy brother, "C'mon inside, boy. I hope you learn something."

I grinned again and waltzed pass him.

After kids began disappearing into the Internet, the entire world turned upside down. First, there were so many guards at the school, carrying shotguns, operating metal detectors, patting kids down and doing body searches, and with an attitude that said: kids, we rather that you stay out, drop out, than come in here. The guards at the door told kids: "No guns, no knives, no stick pins --girls, no bobby pins. Nothing sharp." I expected to be issued a pencil with rubber on both ends. And why not? Who needed a pencil? Not to write! I mean, if a kid wrote something, he ran the risk of getting jacked up by the guards, the teachers, the principal, and the guidance counselor, and being forced to defend himself and prove that what he wrote was in no way a threat or incorrect. And a kid certainly didn't need a pencil to do math!

The "A" Students, the college bound crowd, caught hell. All the kids with A's in math got hassled by the school. That didn't bother me. I never in my whole life aced a single math exam. All the kids into computer science were carefully watched. All the smart kids were ordered into counseling. I wasn't a computer nerd; I wasn't a smart kid, so what happened to them, didn't involve me. All the kids at school had to be careful, as to what they said, and they had to dress correctly. Kids could not look like or speak like an odd ball. Kids had to look "correctness," use the "speak correctness," be the "correct correctness," or else --counseling, suspension or expulsion, maybe a trip to the sheriff's office and to youth detention, and be held on suspicion. None of this involved me. As I mentioned last week, my dad, quoted Martin Niemoeller. Martin Niemoeller wasn't me. Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Peter Lawford and Joey Bishop, too, were my philosophical heroes. Only Joey Bishop was still alive, and he was old. But their ideas were young and alive.

I was a kid. I was a little kid when Sammy Davis and Dean Martin died. Peter Lawford went a few years before them. When Frank Sinatra died, I was fifteen. I was grown, really. I knew myself. When Frank died, he was all over the tv, larger than life. The whole world fell over itself explaining Frank and his attitude towards life. Until then, I hadn't thought too much about him. He was retired. His music wasn't mine. I discovered him when he died. I learned that his music was cool, and he and his pals were cool dudes. Frank's main idea was that the key to life is coolness, being cool, maintaining one's cool, that sweating over things is for suckers who suck, that the hip dude looks out for himself, and by doing this enjoys his life. To be cool, all a dude needs are a smile, a drink and a chick.

My beef was with what happened to my girl. She changed completely. She had nice legs, so I put up with her. The girl never had been political. She had wanted what I wanted, to kick it back in my ride, sip a cold Bud and get a little busy with each other. But now, she wanted to protest, picket, spend time doing things that were a waste of what? Energy! We had the duty of making our sweet young years fun and happy, and cool

. My girl joined a protest group, a group of people with too much time on their hands, and helped picketed the subdivision's multiplex movie theater. She got me to picket too. How? Because of her nice legs.

I carried the biggest sign --showing off, showing her, and hoping that afterwards, I could carry her off somewhere. Her mom was on that picket line too. Her dad, who up until then never had a nice word to say to me, said: "Good to see you here, son." So, you see, I had to carry that sign with enthusiasm and devotion to the cause. The cause? My girl, her mom and dad and the fifty other people picketing were against violent flicks. My girl's parents made speeches on the picket line. Her dad said, "Hollywood and the movie industry, and this theater are all equally responsible for the violence manifested in the youth of today. Movies, like the ones shown in this theater, about kids who spend their entire lives on the Internet, are responsible for our kids disappearing into the Internet! Hollywood puts violent and wrong ideas in our children's heads, brainwash, change them, alter their minds in bad ways." My girl's mom spoke after him. She said that violent and Internet theme movies were responsible for the disappearance of three local boys.

Well, I lost a brother to the Internet. I knew movies and Hollywood weren't to blame. I was not for censorship. I knew / know censorship is bad, right? But, I was for my girl, my chick. When she started yelling that violent and Internet theme movies ought to be banned, well, I wasn't going to let her yell louder than me. Her parents were present, and it was a chance for them to see how grown-up thinking I was. I could think and yell just like them.

Was I doing anything wrong, really? Censoring --even boycotting-- is strong stuff. But wait a minute. I wasn't picketing or yelling in a crowd calling for the censoring of Socrates. Hollywood stood for nothing but making moolah. I saw that at that year's Academy Awards show. The show was about the celebration of the making of money. At the show the year before, Titanic, a flick that made a ton of money, walked off with the goose. Titanic was a chicks flick, and a guy's too. I mean, I got about all the way up my chick's leg. There was nothing on the screen that held my interest, and she was swooning over that guy in the flick, forgot completely about me and what my hand was doing. My conscious restrained me.

Hollywood is a billionaires' show, a rich people's performance spectacle. My dad, after he saw that year's awards show, said: Hollywood is nothing. I quote my dad, "Hollywood used to get two things right: the Holocaust and the blacklist. But now -- an Italian guy makes a comedy about the Holocaust. A comedy! -- Ha! Ha! He! He! Jumpy, jumpy! --wins two awards! And the academy gives a honorary award to a dirty waterfront rat, who ratted out writers, and who supported the black list! Hollywood has surrendered its soul."

Dad did not complain, did not quote Martin Niemoeller, when he learned, later, that I was a picketer.

It seems that in time the fantastic chick you dig, the lovely honey you want to squeeze, develops a little of the Mussolini trait. She becomes pretentious, pompous. She issues orders, you know, decrees. She comes up with a grand scheme to bend you to her will. She becomes almost as meddlesome as a mom. But you know the deal. The babe is so comic. Well, this is so normal. You don't pay her any mind. But my honey became obnoxious. The comedy became a tragedy. I liked, still do, greasy cheese burgers and french fries. Most of our dates began with a stop at a burger and fries joint. I knew things were going wrong that evening she stayed in the car while I went inside to get the food. I brought her favorite burger and mine, and a jumbo size fries for us to share. I returned to the car, my arms full of bags of food, my face lit with a grin. She sat glum. She'd been glum all week. A couple of times I'd asked her why and regretted it. Her glumness wasn't my fault. I was good to her. I marched on a picket line for her!

Two evenings before the burger incident, while we sat on her front porch, I tried to get her to smile. "Why don't you smile like you use to?" I asked.

"Current events," she muttered.

"Huh?" I was bewildered.

"The news sucks," she said.

"So what?" I grinned. "The news always sucks."

I wanted to rub her legs. She wanted to have a deep conversation about how to fix the problems of the world. I misquoted Bogart. At the time, I didn't know I had. I thought: what would Frank do in a situation like this? I opened my mouth and out came Bogart. "The problems of the world don't amount to a hill of beans when personal happiness is at stake," I said. I thought I was being profound. She stared and started drilling me.

"What? What do you mean by that? Explain!"

Because I wanted to avoid a fight, my sweet honey's stares made me sweat. I smiled. She looked as though she was about to pounce on me. She gave me a look that I had only seen in my dad's stare, when I was younger and he thought I could benefit from him trying to play Socrates. My dad went at me with questions. No enlightenment, only mental entanglement, the kind that if one is not smart enough to shut the crap out, leaves a person's mind tight like a nut, in a twisted knot. Dad tangled me into a bag of his frustrations. My girl was no Socrates either. She just bugged me like she was trying to be. She had no answers. The news, the kids disappearing, the violence in the country, the lack of values in the media, filled her doe eyes with fog. My honey went Holden Caulfield on me. She took up the cause to right the world. Well, she asked me to join her on the sucker's quest to find "one pure soul in a dirty world," to help right the world, taking that up, is about as smart as when that guy in ancient Greece took a lantern and went out in the dark world looking for a honest man. Oh brother! Yes, the girl went daffy on me. She wanted us to go to meetings. She wanted me to start reading. She'd started listening to people who said they had the answers. The naive girl found nothing but stuff that made her glummer and glummer.

That evening with the burgers, she -- the little faun's eyes got so big and incredulous and demanded, "You are not going to put that stuff in you!" She decreed, "It is greasy and nasty and violent food. If they don't have a veggie sandwich get nothing."

"They don't. We're at a burger joint."

"Get nothing!"

"I have this. I paid for it."

"Toss it away."

"No. I paid for it."

"Don't come near me with that."

"You didn't say anything when I went in --"

"You don't listen!" she shouted.

I wanted to rub her legs. She was raising a sweat, on me, on herself. I thought again: What would Frank do?

"Ex-girlfriend," I said. "Get out of my car."

The female Holden Caulfield was happy to get out of my car. I drove home alone. My parents didn't noticed I'd come in early. I went to my room with a six-pack. Even my Bud didn't taste the same, made me think the brew was being weakened, watered down, by aliens whom wanted to fuzz the bite of the buzz.

[END]

5/17/99

"Letters From the Future by Dune Loring, "A Nation of Aliens", (c) Copyrighted
1999 by Buster T. Flatt, All Rights Reserved

A Tall Tale, part 2


letters from the future by dune loring

THE WITCH FINDER GENERALS

(c) Copyrighted 1999, All Rights Reserved

Last week I wrote of the disappearance of my brother into the Internet.

Well, after my brother disappeared, and after the missing persons bureau was notified, and after a ton of reports were filed, and after the word got out and the press learned of the sad disappearance, and of the circumstances involved, and my family was under siege by tv cameras, and became the object of vicious rumors and slander, and hysteria, after all of this, when it looked like things couldn't get worse, the witch finder generals descended upon us like the Assyrians of old, who came down like wolves upon the fold. Witch finder generals? Grief counselors! Jackals that attack in packs! Fiends out to skin a person alive! Rip off his head! Force a person to spill out all of his insides! Want to know more? Read on.

But first, let me tell you about the hysteria from people whom I knew all of my life and whom my parents had known for years. Let me start with the kids at school. Do you know I couldn't get a date? I went from being very popular with the honeys to rating a zero, becoming the nada kid. My car suddenly developed the case of four flat tires. Nobody would lend me a spare. Nobody knew how my tires got flat, either. Nobody knew a thing. Nobody would give me a lift home. I had to call mom. She told me to catch the bus.

"Mom, will you come pick me up? They won't let me on the school bus. Suddenly, I've become a threat."

"What?" she began to complain about the narrow minds of stupid people. She told me that I should have demanded a seat on the bus.

"Mom, it is sorta useless to fight them all. Ever since Billy went missing, all the kids want to stay away from me."

"That's not fair!" Mom shouted into the phone.

"I know mom, but you are coming?"

Twenty minutes later, Mom pulled up in front of the school building. She started to park. I told her don't. I jumped in the car and told her to please drive.

"No," she said. "I shall have a few choice words with your principal."

"Mom, he's probably gone. Most of the teachers are gone."

There were only a few people milling around. When mom got out of the car, they all began to look at us. They were all obviously concerned about mom's presence. After all, she was the mom whose lonely, introverted son had been lost to the Internet, had disappeared into cyberspace, was physically gone, the son was a left-hander and a heavy downloader. He once used so much time on the school's computers that he crashed them. The principal, the president of the parents-teachers association, and the superintendent of schools had all addressed the school assembly and had warned the kids of the Internet, and of heavy downloading, and of moms and dads who weren't there enough for their own children to protect them from the temptations of cyberspace. The kids were told they had to help protect themselves.

Well, mom tuned-out the kids' stares and went marching "left, right, left" into the school building and towards the principal. "Keep your chin up and follow me," she said. Mom thought she was handling the tragedy of Billy's disappearance into the Internet pretty well, and that she could handle a few hostile stares.

As mom led the way, I noticed how mom-like she looked for a mom in the house, but for a mom coming to school to speak to the principal, well, she wasn't dressed correctly. In her defense, she came racing to school at my urging, because I was being picked-on. She hadn't expected my phone call. She dropped what she was doing and came to help her first born son. Well, she was wearing sweats, not a dress. She didn't have on make-up. Her hair was pushed into one of dad's baseball caps, and what you could see of it looked like a mess. Well, to the kids' minds, she looked just like a neglectful mom who would lose one of her children to the Internet.

I was glad the football coach didn't come running to the door to stop her by planting his big bulk in the doorway. Mom met no real resistance until she got to the principal office. I have a theory about high school teachers which the passing of time, getting older and learning more haven't changed. I believe that all college graduates are given a test and the less able among the graduates are offered jobs as high school teachers, and those who rank at the bottom of the less able, the least able, are made high school principals.

Mr. Price, the high school principal, was a little man right down to his very soul. He wasn't short by height, just short where it counted. I am no brain, myself, I didn't slight him for his limited abilities, where I took offense --and the word is offense-- was with his lack of common sense. When mom entered his office, he nearly had a fit of paranoia. Really. Mom didn't help by scowling when she reminded him whose mom she was, though he didn't need reminding.

"I can't believe what is happening to my son. You know my children?"

"Yes," Mr. Price replied testily.

"My children have gone to schools in this city since kindergarten. They are good kids, never in trouble. My youngest was straight honor roll; my oldest boy excels in sports. My children have won recognition in this school."

Mom went on, said a few more things, then Mr. Price took his turn to speak.

"Well, we had an assembly this morning, and we had a moment of silence for your boy, Billy."

The way he mentioned Billy, the tone of voice he used, didn't go over well with mom. He might as well dropped a bomb on her because she cracked. Though mom had come storming into the Principal's office, dressed to do battle, she wasn't fit to fight a flea. She was a see-through-person, not made of the indifferent material it takes to back into a corner a cockroach like Mr. Price, and to stomp on him. Mr. Price was astute enough to see this. I mean, it takes no smarts to see the obvious. And mom revealed herself, she couldn't help it. Mom could conceal nothing, not even the stress pimple on her neck. She erupted in tears. She boo-hooed so hard, she even scared me. And I have loads of the indifferent material that it takes to fend off attacks from the cockroaches of the world.

Mr. Price took this condescending attitude, asked mom if she considered counseling. Mom didn't answer him. She allowed me to escort her back to the car. I drove us home. Mom cried too hard to drive.

The neighbors were worse than the frightened people at school. We went from being the most popular family in the neighborhood to being the scum of the earth. The next door neighbor, a long-time family friend, a parent too, verbally attacked mom for "losing" Billy. Anyway, things kept getting worse, until came the plague of fat locust, the doctors of grief, and things got so bad that they went beyond worse.

The moment I first laid eyes on this fat woman in the green skirt and blouse, I knew she was going to be bad news. First she was too candy jolly, jolly in a candy way, a hollow jolly. Her face smiled, said, "ho, ho, hi, hi,", but her eyes were all cold business, said, "the meter is ticking, be worthy of my time or get out of my way." And she had a tape recorder. It wasn't on, as far I could tell. The red light wasn't blinking. She had it in a bag strapped around her waist, like it was a weapon of some kind. I thought of being rude. You know, telling her to carry her fat butt someplace else. Mom was in the house and mom wouldn't have liked it if I'd slammed the door in a stranger's face.

Well, the woman put her foot in the door, like she was Willie Loman or something, trying to sell something that nobody needed. I guess she thought I wouldn't dare slam the door on her foot. She didn't know me. If mom wasn't on the pill bottle, put there by my brother's disappearance, I would have showed that candy, smiling fatty.

"You must be Jerry! Hello, I'm Dr. Penny Krautmiller, the sheriff department sent me. Are your parents home?"

Before I could answer no, Mom appeared, right from nowhere, it seemed. In fact, mom had been listening. She nudged me aside, offered the stranger a chair and a cup of coffee. She suggested that I should have a cup too. Well, I was suitably stinking drunk, but standing. I got drunk more often, though my parents never noticed. They were worrying about Billy, and I was drinking more alone, because the kids from school wouldn't drink with me, or have anything to do with me. To them, it was like brother, like brother. -- Like I was going get grabbed by the Internet. They didn't bother to ask me if I knew how to log on.

Minutes passed. The fat woman was seated in the best chair in the living room. Dad and mom were on the sofa. I stood post, my back leaning on the mantel. The stranger repeated her name. Mom asked if she had any news of my brother Billy.

"Sorry, no news of your Billy," the woman said.

"Why are you here?" dad asked.

The stranger took a large yellow envelope from her black bag, opened it by untwisting its clamps. She removed a sheet of white legal size paper, held it as if it held magic. And what magic the paper held!

"This is my charge," the stranger said, as though the paper gave her power and a rush. She extended her arm out. The paper moved in the air, as she held it firmly in her hand. A scent rose from the paper and rushed my parents noses and mine. The paper smelled like the air in the middle of a mob of kids on a hot night, at the gate of a rock concert, where there are too many kids and not enough seats, and a ton of bogus tickets. A suffocating stench!

"What is that?" dad asked.

The stranger smiled. "I am a doctor."

I got ready, steadied myself on my feet. I just knew it was only a matter of time. Dad would have enough of this stranger and kick her out. Her smile now resemble that of a local tv reporter who had dogged us for a week.

"My fees are covered by the state victims fund," the stranger said. "A few years ago, the state, through the local sheriffs and police departments, started a program to assist victims of crime and their families, to cope with tragedy. Coping is a journey filled with dangers. In fact, I, myself, am a survivor of a violent crime, and ..." The stranger continued in this vein for a good while. I guess dad listened as long as he did because the stranger said she had come from the sheriff's department.

Finally, dad interrupted. "What does this have to do with my son?"

The stranger looked surprised by the question. She cleared her throat. "Your son has disappeared. He was obsessed with the Internet." She lifted her hand, as if the answer to dad's question and the need for her presence and services were totally obvious. She answered Dad with, "Tell me, how does that make you feel?"

Dad was angry. "Who are you?"

"Dr. Penny Krautmiller, MD, Ph.D., MBA."

Dad was ready to throw the woman doctor out. I walked to the door and opened it. But Mom was only close to tossing the stranger out. Mom didn't want to do anything to tick off the sheriff department. She was afraid that if she made them mad, they wouldn't look hard enough for Billy. The doctor smiled and began speaking in a tone so earnest that I had to laugh.

"You must let it out. You must purge yourself of your grief. You must have a clear mind. Don't keep the anger inside, express your feelings." She pitched sh--!

"Mom, I want to kick the doctor out of the door," I announced.

The doctor acted insulted. Then she raised her chin ridiculously high. "Mr. and Mrs. ....., and Jerry, you are resisting. This is not healthy, not to yourselves, not to the community."

Dad glared. I grinned. Mom looked glum. The doctor targeted mom.

"Tell me how did you feel when you learned you've lost your son?"

"I haven't lost my son, he's missing," replied mom.

"Do you dream about him?"

"Doctor!" mom's jaw got tight.

"Mrs. ..., I am here for you and your family."

"My son, doctor --"

"Tell me, do you feel you drove him away? Drove him to lock himself in his room? To spend so much time alone on the Internet?"

"Doctor?"

"Look, I am a doctor. I know these things. Get out of denial. Your son is gone. Face the fact. Why did he leave? What did you do? What guilt do you feel? Are you a good cook? "

Dad yelled at the doctor. "What are you saying!"

"I am posing questions. How do you feel about the questions?"

Mom took a deep breath before she said. "Doctor, my son is just missing."

The doctor shook her head. "The Internet has him. I have seen it. I know what I am talking about. A million kids, worldwide, have been taken by the Internet. The Internet steals children."

"Please!" Mom lifted her hand for the doctor to stop.

The doctor wasn't ready to stop. "You are so vulnerable. Forget stoicism. Cary Cooper is dead. Today's hero is Woody Allen. You've got to let it all out. Tell it like it is. Keep nothing back. Unburden yourselves. This is healthy."

As you can see, the doctor wasn't much of a doctor, just a thin skinned, skunk with a lot of letters at the end of her name. The latter 's' for sh-, the letter 'f' for feather head, the letter 'b", well, you know what the 'b' is for. Mom kicked her out.

Well, we thought we were done with her. Wrong! The family got harassed, even more so. Mom got harassed at the supermarket. I got it at school, shovel loads of sh--. Dad on his job. We had more reporters tapping on the window asking us to come out on the front lawn for an interview. You know: Day 3 of Billy's disappearance! How are you holding up, folks? The neighbors started to look at us funny. The doctor had the school guidance counselor called me in for an interview. Doctor Quack interviewed the check-out girls at the supermarket about mom. Dad's boss was questioned about him. The neighbors were warned to be on the look-out for any signs that we might go off. Everybody was told that my family was holding back and needed to vent our feelings, or there might be trouble.

Well, you think that was bad, things got worse.

One morning, while we were having breakfast, three black vans pulled up into our driveway, and onto our lawn. Three dozen people in suits and one uniformed deputy sheriff jumped out. They surrounded the house. The uniformed deputy sheriff knocked on the door.

"Mr. and Mrs. ...., Jerry ....will you open the door?"

Dad went to the door. "What?"

"The door!"

"What is this about?"

"This house is surrounded, will you open the door?"

"Do you have a warrant?"

"Do you want me to speak through the door?"

"Do you have a warrant?"

"We have a complaint that residing in these premises are three unrepentant, unvented, troubled individuals, who may pose a danger to society. Do you want your neighbors to hear the rest? Or will you open this door?"

"You have no warrant?"

"Don't you want your minds vented? To be healthy? To undergo the cleansing ritual?"

Mom said to dad. "Dear, our neighbors are listening."

Dad muttered, "They have no warrant."

Mom told dad to open the door. He shook his head, but started doing what she said. Before he could get the door opened all the way, the deputy and the people in the suits bogarted their way through the door, bum rushing him and the rest of the family.

"What is this?" dad demanded.

Doctor bad Penny stepped through the door. She was the last to enter. She wanted to make a dramatic entrance.

"I have returned," she said, MacArthur-like.

Dad yelled a few choice curse words. I put my hand over my ears and laughed. Dr. Penny wasn't in charge of this group. The man in charge was bald and pink-headed. He was tall and he could growl. He was so angry-looking that dad's face froze in the middle of cursing.

"We are all credentialed professionals. Grief counselors. Experts in the field of grief, " the man said. He made it clear that he could give grief as well as grief counseling. "We are a state and federal strike team of grief counselors. You are not cooperating. This is unhealthy."

Dad crossed his arms and frowned at the lead doctor. "Will you say what you have to say and leave my house?" he asked.

"Leave?" the doctor shook his head. "You are wounded. It is our duty to care for the wounded. We can no more leave you alone than can we leave on the street bleeding, a man who has been hit by a car. We are here to help. We are sworn professionals of medical science."

Dad turned to the deputy sheriff. "Where is my freedom to be secure in my own house? My freedom to speak or not to speak to these hustlers?"

The lead doctor answered, "You do not have to speak. You may just sit quietly and reflect on your grief."

"Aren't we going through enough? Our son is missing!" Mom shouted.

"Good, shout. Vent," the lead doctor smiled.

Heads nodded all around among the grief doctors.

The lead doctor continued, "Stop repressing your grief, please!"

"Get out of my house!" Mom shouted.

The grief doctors smiled, nodded. Mom was on a roll.

"Venting is good. Be open. Tell us what you feel. Talk it out. Let it out. It is good for your mind and body. Heal yourself. Don't remain psychically disabled by this loss."

"My son is missing only!"

"Please, Mrs. .., that is denial."

"Vent, mom!" I said. "Vent!" I swirled around, doing the neat foot work that I remembered seeing somebody on Jerry Springer's show do while ranting and raving at some other person whom had ticked him off. There were looks of approval on the faces of every one of the grief doctors and on the deputy sheriff's. "Vent!" I screamed. I got in the groove of the game.

Dad told me to stop shouting in the house. I inored him.

"I've seen mom cry, I've heard dad too, and me --." I choked.

I'd hit a home run. The lead doctor said, "When the grief builds up, you can't suppress it. You must bleed it out!"

Yeah! I thought. You want people to go out and get a bunch of leeches like you. I said: "I am so sad!"

"No more private sorrow! Keep nothing buried! Let it out!" The lead doctor and the other doctors said or chanted. Which doctor said what, I don't know. I was too much into my own performance to closely follow theirs. I did notice mom. When I forced a tear from my eyes, she stared at me, her mouth agape.

Mom and dad wouldn't play the game. They remained defiant, continued to demand their constitutional rights. Dad started quoting dead European dudes on his rights. Then he told the deputy sheriff and the witch doctors again to leave his house. When they refused, he started quoting this dead German guy, Martin Niemoeller. You know the famous quote: "In Germany they came first for the Communists, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist. Then they came for the Jews, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew. Then they came for the trade unionists, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade nionist ..." You know the quote. "Then they came for the Catholics, and I didn't speak up because I was a Protestant. Then they came for me, and by that time no one was left to speak up." I didn't get dad's point because he was speaking up and was getting "beat down." Maybe what he said could rally liked-minded people. Well, being nobel was dad's game. I was sixteen. All I wanted was to drink beer with my buds and to wrap my hand around my honey's legs. That was all. I wanted to do what I had to do to be accepted again by my peers. Kids know, life is a compromise. It is playing a game, paying the fool, dancing to a fool's tune, at home with your parents, at school with the teachers, and particularly with your peers. I mean, noble stuff aren't for you when you are sixteen, unless you want to windup like my brother, a nerd, an outcast, that nobody really liked, other than his kin, because you are supposed to like your kin, for real. Well, that was me at sixteen. I didn't know any better.

The grief doctors thought my parents were lacking. The grief doctors took me aside and told me I was great and deserved better parents. I was asked if I wanted foster care. The lead doctor, using his most kindly voice, said, "Jerry, you're sixteen and you can decide for yourself."

I told him. "They are the only parents I have." I sobbed. I could have asked that self-assured pompous ass for a hundred bucks and he would have gladly given it. I was a model griever.

"We won't do anything without your approval," he said.

I never told mom and dad how close they came to being declared by the state not good enough for me.

[END]

5/10/99


"Letters From the Future by Dune Loring, The Witch finder Generals", (c)
Copyrighted 1999 by Buster T. Flatt, All Rights Reserved

Friday, August 10, 2007

A Tall Tale

LETTERS FROM THE FUTURE by Dune Loring
(c) Copyrighted 1999, All Rights Reserved

I heard Dad yelling!
Billy had barricaded himself in his room with his computer and the Internet, even though everyday, the Internet produced a fresh pile of meat, the victims, teenage boys who went loco. Billy, quiet, straight A-student, nerd, mamas boy.-- Well, in the day's climate, it seemed I was turning out to be the safe child. D-minus on everything that counted to college recruiters, like Math, Science, History. A plus in gym, B in shop, triple A with the girls. I smoked and I drank beer. Mom and dad were captives of the news. The in-delinquents were the little nerds, the geek boys with computer smarts, who could download everything they needed to make bombs to blow up the world, and suburbia too. And these geeks knew how to buy machine guns over the Internet! The dirt I was doing seemed so Lilliputian that it wasn't seen. The grand crimes were done by kids who, in an earlier time, were given their pick at the family feast. Occasionally, mom and dad's eyes glanced my way, but their intense scrutiny never made it to me. I was almost a grown-up in their house. I became almost like a stranger. I could return home hours after curfew, emerge from my room with a hangover, and my parents would still talk to me like I was an adult. The kid, the problem child, was my brother, the Internet surfing toad. I closed my door. And even with my door closed I could hear my dad's voice booming through my head, shouting his way through the beer buzz. Buzz?
Buzzing!

"Boy, open this door!"

Dad kept knocking. He stayed at it a long time, so long that I hoped even he would grow tired of harassing the nerd. Fooled you, did I? I didn't resent my brother. I certainly didn't dislike him. He couldn't help it that he was born with book smarts. I felt for the poor guy. And I wanted dad to stop shouting. I wanted to curl up in my bed and take a nap until I was no longer under the influence of the buzzing.

Then mom started shouting and pounding on the door too.

Great! I wondered if I could make it to the garage. I thought I might find some quiet in my car. I remembered hiding out in the garage when I was little, pretending it was superman's fortress of solitude. When dad would yell, I would run, sometimes and sometimes not. I would hide in the back seat of the family's car. Dad never found me. I think he didn't want to. When I returned, and I always had to return, he would say, you're back. He would say: Go sit in the corner, and make it easy on yourself, don't whine. I thought it was barbaric to make a hyperactive kid sit in the corner. I sat. It was so uncomfortable to try to sit still in a chair. But I never complained to him.

I guess parents have a right to shout in their own house. The house is always theirs. Their kids just live there.

The effect of my parents shouting was like somebody was rattling rocks in my head. I got off the bed and stood on my feet without shaking, too much. I pulled myself together, gathered my strength to look meaningful. I grinned as though my mouth was full of cookies, like my system with its blood alcohol level, needed more sugar. I waddled out of my room and stationed myself right in front of parents. Mom looked so sad, as though she wanted to sit down and lie on the couch. Dad looked as though he was unhappily exhausted from yelling. But he had this uptight look in his eyes. His face was carpeted in red. Sweat covered his shirt. I knew the shouting wasn't over.

Dad pounded on the door again. "What's he doing in there?" He stared at me.

I leaned on the wall to stand steady. "He's on his computer again, dad."

Mom glanced from the corner of her eyes. I realized how grateful she was to God that her eldest son was too dumb to know much about computers. "The Internet?" she asked, she almost cried.

"I'm afraid so, mom."

I expected more shouting and got it. "Open this door!" Dad rattled the door knob. "Why does he lock the door?"

"He's playing one of those violent shoot 'em up games, dad."

Dad grunted, taken aback by my frankness. He stared, sniffed. I wondered if he could smell the alcohol under my breathy mint breath. Maybe, he was smelling a rat. I was still sporting my meaningful look, like it was a bandage over a wound. I gave him the look I'd given him that day last week when I asked if I could borrow the family car. I told him: "I have a heavy date, dad. A nice girl. I needed a nice car to drive her to the date." Dad sweat-ed me the whole afternoon. In the end he said, no! No loan. But mom said: "He wants the car? To take out a girl? He doesn't spend his whole life locked up in his room, for Heavens sakes!" She took dad's keys from his fingers and gave them to me like they were a trophy. Dad said: "You clean up the car before your return it." The day after the date he had me out in the rain, cleaning out the car. In the rain, not in the garage! The garage wasn't for a car full of kids' junk. I dripped rainwater onto mom's floor. She didn't yell about it. She only said: "Why won't you introduce your brother to some of your friends?" I said: "Mom, I don't know any girls who would like him."

For an entire week, since the latest bunch of nerdy kids began acting stupid, mom cooked my brother's favorites meals. Her reply to her youngest son's anti-social behavior was to try to make him more sociable by getting him to spend more time at the family table, stuffing himself. She cooked stuff reserved for special occasions. My brother, with his dreary self, the salad head, wouldn't get with it. I dressed him down. I told him if he spoiled it, I would pop him in the mouth. Well, many of his favorites were my favorites too. Mom made two homemade dessert a night, and she would have made three, if my brother had showed a little appreciation. But he couldn't wait to leave the table to get back to his room and his computer and the Internet! My brother wasn't an ace.

"Boy! Open this door!" My dad yelled.

"Dad, who knows what he's thinking of --" I said. I felt as if I was being stepped on by my brother, and by my parents' noise.

"I said: Open this door!" Dad shouted. "Stop being an odd ball! You're not in there downloading wacky stuff from the Internet?"

"Billy, are you downloading!" Mom 's mouth looked so sad. Her mouth, her eyes, her entire face.

"Are you in there downloading? Turn off that computer! I've told you to stay off the Internet!"

I thought dad was going to go crashing through the door, butting it with his head. He lunged forward, not quite angry enough. He landed a thunderous blow on the door with his fist. The door shook, didn't shatter, didn't fly open. He struggled with himself, not to pound his head on the door. He had half a look that he might.

I wanted to go, to take-off for the garage, before my legs gave way. It was getting harder to stand up straight. The buzz was getting stronger. And I didn't want to be present, if my dad broke down the door. I knew such a thing would freak my brother. But, I just couldn't slip out. I was about to make an excuse: say I needed to go to the bathroom, that I would use the one downstairs, when dad said.

"Pull the plug, Jerry. Go out back and cut the telephone line leading up to his room."

I didn't think before I replied. My head was buzzing. "Dad, he has his computer hooked up to his cell phone."

"My Lord, my son!" Mom looked as though she might faint. I expected her to fall and to roll on the carpet, and lay there until dad carried her to their room. But mom didn't faint. Well, I could barely think.

"He fits the profile, mom. Loner, loony kid, spends hours on the Internet playing DOOM."

"God!" Mom wept.

Have you ever started saying something and though you knew it was the wrong thing to say, you couldn't stop talking? It is like your head is frozen in place. The rest of you keep going without you. Your mouth races along on its own. A monster anxiety rises in you and you just want to shout: Ouch!

"Mom, dad, you know what is happening." I bent mom's ear and dad's too. I extended my mouth all the way through my arse. I skunked my brother. "Kids who play violent computer games are going crazy," I went on, my mouth couldn't break. "They're shooting everybody, their parents, their siblings, their family dogs. A kid in Utah, dad, even shot the family goldfish. He emptied a TEC-DC9 right into the fish tank. Cops found water and dead fish everywhere."

Mom went pale as a ghost. I asked, "You're okay, mom?"

"Billy is not a loony kid." She said, but didn't believe it.

Dad shouted: "We have to break down the door! Get the electric saw! I'll cut through the door!"

The old electric saw got the door down. Dad quickly rushed through the opening, Mom too. I carefully, waddled in, avoiding the splinters and pieces of jagged wood.

Mom, from behind a face of a hundred worry wrinkles, gasped, "What? He's not here!"

But he was, smiling, cool, before a black drop. There was a figure behind him. It was impossible to make out what it was. I clearly saw something green resting on his shoulder.

"He's on the computer." I said.

"Hi mom. Hi dad. Hi to you too Jerry. I'm gone for a bit. Will be back in a few."

Dad began to shout at the computer. Shout his outrage, pour out his fear. If Dad could have, he would have snatched Billy right out of the computer.

Mom yelled at Billy's image on the computer's screen. "What does that mean?"

Billy smiled, "Say nothing to the men in black."

"Men in black?" I shook my head. "Men in white with a straight jacket!"

Billy smiled and the computer screen went to blue.

That blue screen remained on Billy's computer for two years, then the screen went black. The monitor burned out, and mom and dad replaced it with another. THE CPU lasted for several years. By the time it died, mom and dad had lost faith. They let the computer sit dark. They let it and everything else in Billy's room stay where Billy had left them.

Sometimes, when I am sitting before a screen, tv, computer, movie, a flicker, an image, a flash, pass before my eyes, in an instance, before I can focus, the image is gone. Billy? I swear I hear, or imagine I hear, the words, "Will be back in a few."

[END Of Part One]
5/3/99

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