Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Happy Halloween, Xmas and New Year to Phoebe . . . and ME.


Snow and Dark Brown Eyes
Ray Timmins


Dave walked in the early evening down a quiet side road toward the mall. He was bundling up his body to shield himself from the cold; a light snow had just begun to fall and was gently covering the familiar road to the Town Square Mall where his girlfriend Phoebe worked.

When he arrived at the electronics store where she worked he waved. She saw him, smiled and put her finger up, signaling him to wait.

Dave sat down on a bench and watched the mall rats scurry past talking loudly to one another in their little nomadic cliques. No particular conversation was audible by itself, but was merely one badly tuned instrument in a cacophonous symphony of drivel and din in the key of shit. Dave hated the mall more and more every time he went there. If Phoebe hadn’t worked there he wouldn’t go on a dare. Cheesy haircuts bobbed like hollow barnacled buoys in and out of over-priced, supposedly fashionable stores. And he cringed. He reached down to tie his ragged Converse and took his black, faded denim jacket off.

Phoebe walked out with her arms spread, readying for a big hug and kiss. And he gave them to her. She smiled seductively, biting her lower lip. Her eyes brightened as she ran her delicate fingers through his messy brown hair: "How ya been?"

"OK."

She gestured with her eyes toward the door.

"Yeah."

Now they were outside, away from the zombies—all alone with the gentle snow and the quiet glow of the moon. Dave focused all his attention on sipping in every inch of her face with his eyes. Dark hair, nearly black. Her deep brown eyes glowed with optimism and a simple understanding of the joy of living that cast a spotlight on the heavens as she looked upon them. Looking at those eyes sometimes made him want to cry. Sometimes they even made him a bit envious. He knew of no such joy; he could only rationalize its existence, but not actually experience it. The contrast of her glowing white turtle-neck sweater and her black skirt looked splendid in the pale moonlight with the snowflakes meandering down in the background. The only thing paler and more aglow than her sweater—or even the snow—was her skin. Smooth and consistent from her toes up to her forehead, from her ass to her breasts. Dave would dreamily lose himself studying the landscape of her body—or just imagining it.

"Dave!"

"Wha—what?"

"Are you listening?"

"Sorry."

"What were you thinking?" She leaned her mouth in closer to his face and pecked him gently twice, using all of her full lips.

He raised an eyebrow and cast a devilish grin.

Her eyes widened seductively. "Oh, yeah?"

"Yeah," Dave smiled. He placed his hand on her milky thigh and felt deeply.

She rolled her eyes and put her hand on his cheek. "You didn't shave today, didja?"

"No, nor yesterday."

"You're so cute," she said, wrinkling her nose.

"I know," Dave said, blushing, unable to completely pull off the mock conceit.

She kissed him deeply, working her hand into his shirt and across his chest.

"You going to the pep rally tomorrow?"

"I doubt it, Phoeb’, it's during my art class and I actually like that class. I'm not much for school spirit anyway."

"Yeah, I know. You're not much for anything, are you?" She was getting serious now.

"I love you, what about that?"

"Well, what else? You're so damn cynical about everything else it seems. Everything's got to be so logical to you. Must you analyze everything?" She was getting noticeably more upset.

"I dunno. I like art class OK, I suppose. And I like thinking about things. Always have. Find it unsafe to take anything at face value."

"What about your feelings toward me? Have you thought about them?"

"No, I mean, I know I love you."

"How?"

"I just do. That's very simple for me. I'm not sure why, but it is," he said, shrugging his shoulders. "Oh, and I like to read. I love just getting lost in the library. It's a great feeling."

"But you don't do any of the assigned reading in English and you read my notes when the test comes around. I know you're smart and you like to read— what's wrong?"

"I read The Catcher in the Rye. It's the only thing I could get into so far."

"And what about the ten other books? Crime and Punishment, Les Miserables, Don Quixote . . ."

"Just couldn't get into them at the time and within the time limits we were given. I'd like to read them all eventually. But it's hard to keep at something like that everyday without getting distracted."

"Is it me?" Phoebe asked turning her head. "Do I distract you?"

"How? I mean, I'm no worse than before I met you. C'mon Phoeb’, let's not start this again."

"I just can't understand . . ."

"What? What Phoebe? What can't you understand?" he spoke louder, more nervously.

"That you can love me so much and do so much for me while you hate everything else. Including yourself."

He thought a moment as she began to cry.

He stared at the ground: "Well, Phoeb’, I just don't know. I mean, I don't exactly hate myself. I'm not sure much of anybody else likes me, but I do."

"Yeah, so do I," she cast a quick smile through her tears.

"Listen—don't worry about my feelings toward you. I love you, I know that. But you're right, I'm not too crazy about the rest of the world. But that's what's so great about us—we have each other. We could just run away together and forget about the rest of the world."

"But I don't want to run away. I like the world. I want you, but I want you here along with everything else."

Phoebe nestled up against him and put her arms around his waist. He ran his fingers through her silky hair and kissed her gently on the forehead.

"I really do love you," she said, the sound slightly muffled by his jacket.

"So do I."

He put his hand under her chin and brought her head up. Then he lined up his wounded eyes with her eyes. He meant to say "I love you," but instead he let one small tear fall down his cheek. Something about what she had said was right and he knew it. He still thought school spirit was bullshit, but he saw in her eyes that she was concerned about something deeper that she couldn't quite express. She was concerned. He couldn't figure it out either, not exactly, just this vague impression. Something about his ever-present feelings of alienation. Issues going back way before her.

She had become his distraction. She possessed a strength and confidence he had never known. And that's what made him cry. He thought so complexly because he wasn't satisfied with the simple truths of life. She seemed to be content with the way things were in the world—she didn’t have it in her to question things for their own sake.

"I love you, Phoebe. I really, really love you," he finally said, kissing her deeply.

"Time to go," she said softly and sweetly, looking directly into his eyes. She reassured him and put his tormented soul at ease. Gave him courage to walk, to breathe, to smile, to talk, to sleep, to get up in the morning—courage to just live.

"Break's over already?" he said, whining a bit.

She nodded and stood up, pulling on his hand to get him up.

They walked, snuggled closely together, back to the electronics store and kissed one last time. Then she turned and walked away. Dave stood staring at her legs; they hypnotized him with each step.

She turned her head and mouthed, "Call me."

Dave slowly turned around and walked away. He stopped at the bookstore and looked around. For the cold walk home he stopped in the food court and got a steaming hot basket of chili-cheese fries.

Walking outside, his breath puffing into the night air, he ate his fries and stared at the frozen trees around him. And the cars with frosted windows and the darkened store fronts with Christmas lights around their windows. He looked at the half-moon sighing restfully in the sky and pictured himself curled up at home in his blanket.

The walk was about thirty minutes; he mostly stared at the houses and delighted at the charm in the twinkling, multi-colored lights. They were dazzling in the dark, with the gently falling snow, and without a human soul or the noise of a car to distract him from the moment. And even the parked cars were beautiful in their stoic stillness and silence. Everything seemed so quaint that he wondered where all the previous anxiety had gone. The fries seemed like the most delicious things he'd ever tasted. Then he thought about Phoebe and her eyes and her smile and her love and her kisses and her naked body smooth across every rise and fall of its ivory landscape.

He closed his eyes and saw the falling snow that had reflected in her dark brown eyes. And for that night he felt as if he were seeing the world through her holy and blessed eyes. She had given them to him during that long stare when they had both cried for each other. He wondered if she felt his pain in the way that he was now experiencing her joy. And he cried again, but this only made everything seem even more wonderful.






Tuesday, October 20, 2009

YES, I used to fancy myself a rock journalist . . .




pidgen pidgen burning brite in the bus stations beyond the nite . . . 
 
 

Ray-Ray's Morphine Experience in NYC
by:  Ray-Ray

(reprinted with permission from ME:  Bitch Rag! c. 1995)

Morphine @ Irving Plaza, NYC
Saturday, June 3, 1995

  
So, my good buddy from high school, John, invites me to his graduation at West Point, and promised loads of fun in the City if I went up.  The only real problem was money:  $5.25 an hour just doesn't leave much for vacation expenses, you know.  I thought and thought.  I called Greyhound and Amtrak and carefully recorded all the prices and compared them to see what might be my best bet.  Finally, I got another buddy from high school, Nina, to agree to go, too.  Her boyfriend, with whom she lives, was being a real dick and didn't like the idea of her going up there with me.  He has no female friends and doesn't understand how Nina and I could be just friends.  Oh well, fuck him, I thought.
  
She was excited, always loving to go on vacation and get away from her dreary waitressing job in Miami.  I owe much adulation to the fine folks of Discover; without them, I would never have gone to New York, and would never have seen one of my favorite bands, Morphine, who played on Saturday, June 3rd at Irving Plaza.
  
The tickets were charged and Nina and I had round trip tickets for New York; we would be landing at La Guardia airport in northern Queens on June 1st at about 11 a.m.  Good timing, 'cause we had to catch a series of buses and trains in order to reach John at West Point and arriving in the evening might've been a bit intimidating.
  
Well, everything went well and we arrived at La Guardia a few minutes early and scratched our heads when we stood at the gate and wondered what to do next; I knew that our next destination was the Port Authority.  But, I couldn't remember if John had said we could walk that or if we needed to catch a cab, or what.  So we went outside, carrying our bags over our shoulders, probably looking like seriously lost tourists by the way our heads looked all around us in amazement; as if we'd stepped off a spaceship and landed on the Moon.  No, it wasn't the Moon--it was much scarier--it was New York.
  
A skinny little black guy came up to us and asked us where we were going, I said, "Port Authority," trying to sound confident, like I knew full well where I was and where I was going.  I think he saw right through me.  He pressed a few buttons on this hand-held contraption and it spit out two receipts for some chartered bus to the Port Authority.  Ten bucks, each one read:  Nina smiled and said, "No thanks."  Ten bucks--fuck that, we needed to save as much as we could; the plane tickets cost enough, and work for the both of us had been slow the last month and we didn't have much.  Also, dumb-ass me had bounced like three or four checks over the last few weeks at 29 bucks apiece:  no, things would be tight, and we knew it would be expensive once we got to explore the city.  Nina had about 80 bucks on a card, and my Visa was maxed out . . . had to save.  So, the skinny little guy crumbled the receipts up and told us we could catch the public bus--number Q33--for a buck twenty-five and it would take us where we needed to go.  OK.
  
So, we lugged our shit to the bus stop and caught the bus with a portly Asian guy who said he was going our way, too.  We caught a train--the 7--to Grand Central, and walked up the stairs to the railroad station.  It was beautiful--wood-paneled and well-lighted, clean floors and a high, high ceiling.  We got two seven dollar tickets to Garrison station, where John was to meet us at 3 o'clock.  Walking to the train, it looked just like the scene in Carlito's Way, where Al Pacino got killed:  dark, save for the long fluorescent bulbs that ran down the length of the dock.  When we sat down, I ate a granola bar and Nina read Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, by Hunter S. Thompson; a book of mine I'd just finished and told her it was the funniest book I'd ever read.  She reads any book I recommend, I've always liked that about her.
  
We got to Garrison station about forty minutes early, and just sat there enjoying the scenery:  mountains with miles of greenery; and it was pretty hot--no change from the Florida weather.  Too bad, thought:  I'd been hoping for cooler weather.  Nina was happy--just the right temperature for her.
  
John arrived late, as usual, and smiled big and hugged us outside the old green Volvo his folks had borrowed from a friend in Queens.  His little brother and sister were in the back seat; Nina squeezed in next to them.  His mom was in the front seat, passenger side.  We said all our hellos and talked the usual just arrived chit-chat--how we saw the Statue of Liberty and the Empire State Building from the plane, and how we almost got lost at Grand Central.
  
The next few days were pretty uneventful:  had a couple Long Island Iced Teas at the hotel lounge that John's dad bought me; went to the West Point graduation (pretty boring); got to see the campus, which was beautiful, including a graveyard where I saw Custer's tomb.  Wow.  John took us to the Church, which boasted having the world's largest pipe organ.  But there was a bunch of weddings scheduled on Graduation Day, so we got kicked out immediately.  Oh well.
  
It was June 3rd, John had graduated, moved his shit out of his room and we left for the City in the Volvo; we arrived about an hour or so later and were dropped off somewhere, none of us knew, at a subway station.  Just before descending the stairs, I heard an angry voice yelling:  "Git out, I'll kick yo fokin' ass."  Then I saw him kick the back door of a moving car and wave his hands up in the air.  The car drove on and he was apparently going down to catch a train, too.  I was a bit scared; I walked fast, bought our tokens and dropped mine in and hustled to the train which was about to leave.
  
John knew where we were going, I didn't.  I just told him and Nina that we needed to be at Irving Plaza to see Morphine.  The doors were opening at 8:30--so I figured they'd get on after ten some time.  We strolled down the streets of the West Village, passing all sorts of clubs and cafés.  John pointed out Jekyll and Hyde's, and said that he'd been there once and that it was real cool inside--like a torture chamber--but that it was expensive.  There was a long line anyway.  We walked a few more minutes, just soaking up the happening Saturday night scene of the Village--a hell of a lot more exciting than Orlando, and even Miami, in my opinion.  New York was It, all right, no doubt about it.  We stopped in the Mona Lisa Café for something to drink.  Nina and John got some fancy-ass chocolate espresso something-or-other; I got a simple "American Coffee"--the true test of any coffee shop was whether or not their coffee--just a basic, unadorned cup of java--was good.  We also bought an "Assortment of Cookies" for the low, low price of $2.95.  The drinks came, then the cookies:  five cookies.  They were OK--but something you could get at any grocery store bakery--and 3 bucks for 5 cookies; that's 60 cents a cookie!  Shit . . . oh well, I thought.  I'm on vacation, I guess; and Nina paid the tab anyway.  The coffee was bitter--not good, I put lots of sugar in it.  However, I did get a refill that was SUPERB, let me tell you--just right.  I smiled and held my cup in front of me and told John and Nina, "Now this is a good cup of coffee!"  I was in a better mood.
  
It began raining heavily, but stopped by the time we were done, and the manager gave us scarce directions to Irving Plaza, where Morphine were getting on soon, I figured.  It was about nine or so.  We walked in the direction we were told and asked a couple times along the way to make sure we were on the right track.  New Yorkers seem to pride themselves on their directions.  They walk so damn fast everywhere and seem a bit rude, but if you stop someone on the street, you'll more than likely get a smiling, confident face that'll give you directions to Hell, if you ask.
  
We got there and I could hear them playing already; the guy at the door said they'd played about three songs so far.  We bought our tickets and I rushed into the club, John and Nina tagging slowly behind; neither of them had actually even heard of Morphine.  "It's a cool, jazzy band, with a sax and no guitar player--they're pretty dark," I told them.  They didn't care--they were game for anything.  Good, 'cause I'd been  wanting to see them for a while, ever since I heard their Cure for Pain CD, a while back, and their new album which they were on tour for, Yes.  They never came to Florida, so this was my only chance.
  
The club was packed.  We stood on the side downstairs, but thought it better to go upstairs and watch from the balcony.  It was.  I got lost in the dark tones and deep growls of the baritone sax.  On a few songs, he played two saxes at once.  This turned the whole trip around for me.  It grounded me a little and made me forget about everything that was bugging me at home (financial difficulties), and erased the last few boring days surrounded by conservative, uptight West Point parents and relatives who talked about nothing but their experiences in war and how proud they were of their son or daughter for kissing enough ass for the last four years to graduate with honors and receive commissions as second lieutenants.
  
The band performed all my favorites, but one, "I'm Free Now," from Cure for Pain.  Mark Sandman, the bassist and singer was cool throughout the performance, announcing before the first and second encore that they were about to play "technically, the last song of the evening."  They didn't leave the stage till after the second "encore," and came back again for one more song.  It felt so good to be back in touch with something familiar, being so far from home; the concert raised my spirits for the remaining days.  And John and Nina said they enjoyed it, too. Good.
  
I needed a clean shirt for the next day; at least, this was the excuse I used for myself to buy a T-shirt.  But my main objective was done, I saw Morphine.  The rest of the trip was pretty laid-back; we went wherever, whenever:  walked down Times Square; strolled through the East Village and saw junk sculptures; slept on a rock in Central Park and watched ladies walk their well-groomed dogs.
  
The last day, Monday the 5th, John bought Nina and me lunch at this vegetarian joint in Chinatown.  Good meal . . . free meal . . . superb meal!  Nina got a cab in Queens, where we stayed the last few days, to La Guardia.  The cabby was probably younger than me, and spoke little English--fare was $8.50, gave him a ten, and made our way to the terminal.  We got there about 5--an hour before the plane would take off.  Nina called her asshole boyfriend in Miami to tell him she was at the airport and heading home; he told her he was glad she was finally going to be home and that he didn't want her hanging out with me anymore.  He's always hated me, anyhow.  Fuck him.  I told her he was an asshole and had no right, but she was upset and dreaded getting home from a tiring trip just to argue with him 'cause he was jealous she was having fun with two guys in New York.  Hell, she'd called him twice a day for Christ's sake!  I guess that time, drunk off her ass, with me laughing "Bob, I wuv you," from the hotel lounge, didn't make things any better.  Fuck him.  We had a great time. The City ruled, Morphine changed the whole trip around for me, and I can't wait to get back to New York real soon.

 
video of the very show I attended: 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fXnGxASoXn0&feature=PlayList&p=931810529826AA88&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=100 

Sunday, October 4, 2009

for Dad . . .

Swimming
Li'l Raymond

Childhood memories of my natural father are scant. But here’s one I’ll never forget:

I remember my dad made me big cheeseburgers that I could never finish and he loved to drink Mountain Dew. He also had a fondness for Native American tribes and used to tell me stories about them. Specifically, I remember him telling me about Geronimo. I can still see him sitting on that kitchen chair dizzily inhaling from his long-stemmed black pipe with a 2-liter bottle of Mountain Dew and a half-full glass sitting on the kitchen table next to him. Dad.

Mom kicked him out for good when I was six. One of my last memories of him is the day he took me and a couple friends swimming.

It was hot that day—a typical Miami summer day. And it was clear with only a few fluffy white clouds in the sky. These are the days I always hated most; they were just too damn hot and I usually sat in the house and watched TV. Mom was at work—she was always at work. I never saw her. But Dad, he was always there when he was there; that is, when he wasn’t kicked out of the house. He looked over at me from the kitchen where he was getting high and drinking Mountain Dew.

I was bored with the TV, nothing good was on. “I’m bored,” I said to my dad, “there’s nothin’ to do.”

He thought a minute, taking a long draw from his pipe: “How ‘bout we go swimmin’!” he said, smiling wide with a glazed look. Dad was so laid back.

“Yeah!” I said, excitedly.

“OK then. Gimme a few minutes. Go get ready.”

I ran to my room and changed into my bathing suit and got a towel from the closet. There was a knock at the door, it was my friends Mark and Laura; they were brother and sister.

“Me and my dad are going swimming. Wanna go?” I said.

Their eyes lit up. “Yeah!” they said at once.

Dad smiled and nodded his head ethereally. “Sure, that’s alright. Dell get ‘em some towels.”

My dad got changed and we eventually got out the door and he led us up the road to this huge condominium complex with a giant swimming pool. It even had a diving board.

“Here we are,” Dad said.

The condo seemed to house the elderly—at least that’s all I could see in or by the pool. There were a few of them dog-paddling in the pool. The old women with elaborate hairdos stroked from one side of the pool to the other, careful to keep their pink hair dry. Some of them wore swim caps.
There were no kids in the pool or anywhere near the pool for that matter. But we jumped in anyway. Dad brought us here, so it was OK. My dad got in the pool a minute later, just walking down the steps into the shallow end, swaggering and nodding his head silkily.

And my friends and I, well, we were just being kids, splashing and screeching and dunking each other underwater. Dad swam beneath the water, like an eel, toward me and grabbed me by the waist. All in one smooth move he came to the surface lifting me over his head and he tossed me a few feet, growling like a monster. My arms flailed and my legs kicked and I laughed loudly in the air till I splashed down hard into the water. I came up and he did the same to Mark and Laura. Then he threw me again.

Now that I think about it, the old ladies in the pool kept looking over at us with sour faces. But I just figured that’s how they always looked. Finally, one old woman said something aimed at our group: “I just got my hair done,” she whined, “stop all that splashing!”

I was silent. So were Mark and Laura. My dad whispered to us, “Ah, that old hag, don’t worry about her. Just stay away from her.”

Dad got out of the pool a few minutes later: “I’m gonna go lay in the sun and rest. Have fun.” Then he smiled and turned his head the other way.

At first, my friends and I were careful not to splash too much, but after a few minutes we were creating giant tidal waves of chlorinated water with our arms. We jumped from the side of the pool at each other and raced back and forth across the length of the pool with our feet making huge splashes. The old ladies cringed.

The same old hag who bitched at us before dog-paddled a little closer to us and said, “I told you kids not splash, I just got my hair done. You children don’t need to be so rough with each other.”

I wanted to unload a big splash of water right in her face, but I didn’t, of course. She was a bit intimidating. I looked over to where my dad was. He was lying down on his back on the deck with his eyes closed.

It was nearing dusk soon after, the sky was darkening and the temperature was much more tolerable. We got out of the pool; Dad was sitting up now looking at the sky. His eyes weren’t so fresh anymore, and his voice was a little deeper. And he smiled too; not as wide, but just as meaningful.

Mark, Laura and I were shivering a little when the cool breeze of early evening hit us. We wrapped the towels around our wet bodies and began walking home, our bodies bundled up to fight the chill. Dad had been dry for a while and he put his arm around me and asked me if I’d had a good time.

“Yeah, that was great,” I said.

I could see a woman walking toward us, she was frantic. Then Mark spoke, “Oh no, it’s our mom!”

As she got closer I could see that she was clearly not happy. She was downright pissed. She threw her hands up and bit her lower lip and her eyes were frightfully bugged open with heavy mascara.

She screamed from down the block: “Mark! Ooh, Laura! Where the hell have you been?!”

Mark looked as though he were about to cry, Laura just looked down at the sidewalk and kept walking.

“But Mom . . .” Mark said.

She hustled her large frame and swung those huge hips side to side, making her way right in front of us. She never looked at me or my dad.

Mark cried, “Mom, we were just swimming.” His eyes were getting swollen.

His mom screeched, “You two should’ve been home over an hour ago for dinner, like every night.”

“But we were just swimming, Mom.”

“You’re both grounded!”

They gave my dad the towels and as they started to say good-bye, their mom grabbed them each by the ear and started walking them home. They both began wailing and crying.

I stood there and watched my friends being dragged away by their ears and I felt sorry for them. I was even a little scared. But I wasn’t in trouble—it was my dad who had brought me. But I still felt bad for them and wondered when I would see them again.

My dad’s jaw was dropped. He was still looking at the beast drag her kids home and he said something I can still hear. He said, “What a bitch!” He appeared shocked a little while, but then resigned himself back to the usual cool mode, nodding his head and smiling.

The Miami sunset was behind us. It was pink in that sky and slowly turning yellow as it stretched around to the sky in front of us. The chill was subsiding a bit, but I kept the towel tightly around me. My dad and I walked slowly back to the apartment. His arm was still around my shoulder.

“What do you want for supper?” he asked.

“Cheeseburger,” I said, without hesitation.

He smiled wide and warm and shook me gently, rubbing my head with his hand:

“You got it, buddy.”

Tuesday, September 15, 2009


Cradle of the Wallaby

crawl up the walls, struggling

shape-shifting hyper-terrestrial

twisted-eyed amphibious energy

reversed in broken reflections

of a distant cosmic dark.


the frog, as opposed to the toad,

the Eastern man hums

inside.


in each is this like need for

acceleration, fastlane,

top-speed transcendental

upward climb.


the fourth rung in the

exponential monkey ladder is

to turn the doppelganger

part in each of us out

from burning negatively,

stewing deep inside.


to reunite the archetypal

gods and goddesses,

brothers and sisters,

create myth from illusions

that the past tries to pull

away.



Sunday, September 13, 2009

tribute to days long gone but never forgotten . . .


Skipping with Helena

Ray Timmins


“Dude, your parents are outta town, huh?” Ethan said to me, excited and obviously holding back on some great idea that had just popped into his head.


“Yeah, for a few days.”


Then he unleashed the idea: “Let’s skip school tomorrow man, it’ll be great!”


I hadn’t skipped much school before that and the other times had been with him. “Yeah, I guess we could do that.”


“And I could sleep over tonight.”


“Yeah! That’d work.”


“Cool, dude, gimme about an hour—Grey Time, of course.” Grey Time, taken from his last name, meant that he’d be 20 to 30 minutes late; this adjustment was taken into account any time Ethan promised to meet me within a certain time frame.


I hung up the phone and sat and thought for a moment. I decided to call Troy, to see what he was up to. The three of us had known each other since junior high. For high school, we went to three separate schools. Ethan attended the local high school; Troy, an art school downtown; and I attended a dual enrollment program at the local community college.


Troy. He was studying drama. One day, back when he had first started art school, I saw him practicing lines from a Tennessee Williams play—rather good, he seemed serious about it and the performance was believable. May have even shook me a little. I especially liked to watch him argue with his mom—he did it with such passion, waving his arms and bugging his eyes at odd times, reaching for words with his fingers grasping the sky. It called for applause. His mom—a psychologist by profession—would stare at him, wait until he finished and say, quiet and collected, “Now, Troy . . .” and just pause. That would really get him going.


Anyway, I called him up to see how he was and to see if he wanted to hang out with Ethan and me, maybe skip with us the next day. His older brother answered. Once, his brother had convinced me to rent some videos posing as the brother of one of his friends, who had an account at the video store. Said it was a joke on his friend. I told the clerk that I didn’t have a card, but gave him the phone number and address, which Troy’s brother had briefed me on. It actually worked. I got away with like five movies. In return, he stole a computer game for me. Pool of Radiance. Come to think of it, I never even got into the game. oh well. His mom eventually found the videos and made him return them. I kept my game. He was a clever though, and strangely a nice guy—I liked him for those reasons.


He handed the phone to Troy: “Hello?”


“Hey Troy, it’s Dell.”


“Hey man.” He sounded glum. “Arguing with my mom again. I hate this shit! I’m moving out!”


“My parents are outta town man, just come over here. Ethan’ll be here in an hour or so and we can all do something.”


“Really? Cool shit, man!”


“C’mon over, dude.”


“Shit, the busses aren’t running this late. Ah, fuck it—I’ll find a way! See you tonight, alright?”


“Cool. Later.”



About an hour later, I stood outside looking at the stars, my dog Chili scampering around idiotically chasing bugs in the dull suburban night, when Ethan and his twelve speed came clicking down the street. He had his hands in the air and just said, “Hey, dude,” and jumped off the bike. He locked it against our avocado tree.


“I can’t believe your parents are gone for three days. Dude, that’s cool!”


“Yeah, I know. Hey, I called Troy. He says he’s coming, but I don’t know when or how he’s gonna get here.”


“Shit, he lives all the way on County Line Road!”


“Yeah, it’s gotta be like twenty miles. And the bus doesn’t run this late. But he said he’ll be here.”


We went inside and Ethan got a glass of ice water. The phone rang. It was Helena, another friend from junior high. She and I had been talking for a couple weeks now. After junior high, she had moved to another school district. Neither Ethan nor I had seen her since then. Every time she called, I would beam; she had a way of capturing my complete attention with just the sound of her voice. I think I did the same thing to her. Talking on the phone was our shared addiction.


Ethan got on the other line and we all joked around. Helena hit a sore spot when she asked Ethan about his girlfriend, whom he had just broken up with. He’d been skipping school a lot lately and it had a lot to do with her. Helena had also confided in me that she had been skipping school lately. We asked her if she wanted to skip with us tomorrow and she said that she would love to, her voice singing. She made me promise that I wouldn’t tell Katie, a friend of hers who went to school with me because “she just wouldn’t understand.”


We made arrangements to meet in front of the mall at eight. We were bullshitting for a bit more and teasing Ethan about his girlfriend when I heard a knock at the door. I knew it had to be Troy. We all hung up. Ethan and I ran to the door from different rooms; I opened it. A cool night breeze blew in. Troy stood there, his hair in his eyes, covered in sweat. He had a backpack slung over his shoulder. Chucks doused with a multitude of colorful paints.


“I walked,” was all he said as he stepped through the door, threw his backpack on the couch and went to the kitchen to get something to drink. See, we all had this unwritten agreement: whenever we were in one another’s houses, we had free reign on the kitchen. I liked going over Troy’s house because they always had yogurt in the fridge. Troy and his brother hated yogurt. His mother kept buying it because she thought that they were eating it when it had actually been me. And then there was always a rapid loss of peanut butter in each of our houses. It is the food of the gods.


We sat down in the living room and talked about the old times. Times at the beach and about all the people who hated us in junior high because they thought we were weird; when Nay-Nay, as he was called, had taken Troy’s skateboard and tried to ride it on the basketball court; the time Ethan got into a fight with Nay-Nay. We continued to reminisce, sure not to exclude the times Ethan had gotten jumped by like four or five guys or the time he went ape-shit and sprayed the halls with a fire extinguisher.


Then there had been Trish. Trish was this extremely persistent girl who had liked Troy back then. She wasn’t the most attractive girl; but more offensive was the fact that she couldn’t—or wouldn’t—take a hint. Despite much obvious intimation that he was not interested, one time Trish snuck up behind him in the hall and planted a big wet kiss on his cheek. Troy proceeded to scream and slam his head repeatedly into a locker. She then said, “You’re so immature!” and walked away with her nose in the air. Troy began scrawling, “Trish is trash” wherever he could around the school: desks, walls, lockers, cafeteria tables. He encouraged us to look for them when we were around school and to feel free to add a few ourselves here and there.


We told Troy about us skipping the next day but he couldn’t miss school; he asked me to set the alarm for him so he could catch the bus in the morning. I did. He lay down on the couch and put a huge pair of white underwear on his head—he said they helped him sleep and that he wore them every night. He looked like a somnolent Smurf snuggling up to the pillow. It must have been an exhausting walk—he was out instantly.


Ethan and I raided the fridge then called Helena back. She was always up late. We told her Troy was asleep on the couch; we began conspiring ways to torture him in his sleep. Ethan got shaving cream from the bathroom, tip-toed over to the couch where Troy was passed out and sprayed it down the side of his face. With ninja timing, Troy leaped up with a shrieking yell that I’m sure everyone on my block could hear and did this fantastic flying jump-kick at Ethan, missing by an inch. Then, as quickly as he had leapt off the couch, he threw himself back down and fell asleep. I stared, wide-eyed, keeping Helena abreast of the action. Ethan stood for a moment in shock, his jaw dropped, the can of shaving cream dead still in his foamy hand.


“What the fuck?!” he laughed.


Ethan got back on the phone and we all talked for a few minutes before bidding Helena farewell till morning. My sister was staying at a friend’s so Ethan slept in her bed. I went to bed, listening to talk radio. Some lady was asking advice to deal with her daughter who kept skipping school. I chuckled myself to sleep.



The alarm went off and I went into the living room to wake Troy. He got right up, threw on his shirt, said good-bye and told me to have fun skipping. I followed him outside and watched him walk away. The sun was not up yet.


I had inclinations toward the arts, but hadn’t really dedicated myself to anything yet. In some ways, he was a role model. He was zealous in his ideals and deliberate in his actions; he was bold and confident in everything he did, no matter what anybody told him. He didn’t care if he made a mistake or wrinkled any fabric. His passion was the stuff of legend.


I went to the door of my sister’s room and told Ethan it was time to get up. He looked up from the pink pillows and pink sheets with a groggy, confused look—probably trying to orient himself having awoken in that strange, girlish terrain. He said OK. He put his head back down.


“Dude, time to get up!”


“I heard you! OK!”


He wasn’t a morning person, apparently. He still lay there.


Ethan was a cool guy. Everything seemed to go his way. Well, besides the multiple times he’d been jumped in junior high. I guess I envied him sometimes; he seemed cleverer than I, more aware; or, at least, more prone to action than passivity. I had never hesitated in going along with whatever scheme he’d come up with—it was something to do; it was always interesting. Fear and reluctance always melted away around him. It almost seemed as though the angels were on his side.


I decided to take a shower while Ethan woke up. I thought about meeting Helena at the mall; it had been over a year since I’d seen her last. She was pretty cute in junior high. I remembered the last day of school. She had signed my yearbook several times and it seemed as if we were getting closer up until the last day and we had to say good-bye. She told me that if I ever saw her in public to not acknowledge her. I laughed. Then, as she walked down the stairs, out of the school, I thought, I never noticed how pretty she was and how much fun she is to be around. And I had not known until that point that I might have been strangely in love with her. Then she was gone.


We had been talking a lot lately; I thought about her often and enjoyed talking to her. But this would be the first time since that last day in junior high that I would see her. I was anxious.


When I got out of the shower Ethan was watching TV in the living room. He was still bleary from sleep. He hopped in and out of the shower and it seemed to wake him right up. We grabbed some food from the fridge and started the walk to the mall. It was just a couple of miles.


We got to the mall and waited for Helena. We looked around and were amazed: “I’ve never seen the mall so dead,” I said. “There’s not a soul here, not even a car.”


“Yeah, you’re right. How weird, dude.”


We waited a few minutes and still Helena did not show.


“Dude, man, she shoulda been here by now. Where the fuck is she? The cops are gonna come by and bust us, dude.”


“I dunno. She’ll be here. She promised.”


We waited about five more minutes and I saw someone walking toward us.


“Is that her, dude?”


“I think so,” I said, squinting my eyes.


As she got closer, my heart raced. I was intensely curious to see what she looked liked after all this time. She got closer. She was beautiful. Petite, well dressed and with a beaming smile that made my head spin. I wondered how I should greet her, what to say, would she like me?


She hugged both of us. “Haven’t been waiting long, have ya?” she said, coyly—in a certain tone which drove me crazy for some reason. Without even trying, she drew me in closer and closer.


“Not too long,” I said, smiling, looking at her up and down, capturing the dreamy visage in my mind.


“Wasn’t too easy getting off campus once my mom dropped me off. Sorry.”


“Oh no. No problem. It’s good to see you again; I almost forgot what you looked like.”


“We better get going!” Ethan said, taking charge.


We walked toward the bus stop.


Usually quite the talker over the phone, Helena was now rather quiet. She just walked with us, smiled and answered our questions succinctly; occasionally she would make a short comment or giggle—her eyes and her gestures did most of the talking. I kept looking over at her and would suddenly look away; but our eyes did meet several times and it was both uncomfortable and magnetic. Her voice, as much as it had drawn me in on the phone, paled in comparison to being in her proximity. Now her voice was the counterpoint to the intoxicating melody of her image that sang out to my heart with every flutter of her lashes, every step, every smile that came to her face as we walked and talked.


We came to the bus stop and waited. Helena leaned on my shoulder. Naturally, I had no complaints. My body tingled and my heart continued to race.


“Any bus should take us to the beach,” I said.


“Cool,” Ethan said.


A bus finally came; we got on and sat in the back. Helena managed to pay the student rate; Ethan and I, not wanting to procure any unnecessary attention, paid the adult fare. I bought transfers for when we got bored with the beach and wanted to leave.


“This is my first time on a public bus,” Helena said.


Having grown up using public transportation, I was shocked. “Oh, a virgin,” I smiled.


“Yeah,” she teased back, raising an eyebrow.



We got off the bus at the beach and walked along the sand with the sun still low and pink in the chilly Miami winter morning. Ethan was wearing one of my sweaters but was still shivering. I had on a sweater and jeans. Helena told me I looked good which immediately sent my pulse soaring. I thought that she looked great, but was too embarrassed to tell her, so I just smiled and thanked her.


Ethan and I reflected on the times that we’d had on that beach over the years: talking into the night while the black water crashed into the rocks; getting drunk and stranded and sleeping on beach chairs; my slipping on the rocks and tearing my leg up; tripping and hitting my knee, drunk, and having to get stitches; sitting in the lifeguard stand at night and talking about girls. Helena sat back listening, smiling, taking it all in. I looked over every now and then just to check if she was as beautiful as my last glance, which she was.


We got to the jetty and sat on a rock near the foaming tide washing in and the conversation meandered. We talked on a variety of topics mostly centered around how the authoritarian figures in our lives didn’t understand our plight. A sense of camaraderie was building up between the three of us. At that moment it was us against the world. Ethan thought about swimming, but decided it was too cold. Helena sat in between us and still mostly listened, though she was talking a bit more now. She leaned on Ethan’s shoulder some, then on mine. I felt the warmth from her head rush through my shoulder and spread to my chest and arms.


The beach soon got old and we ran up to the street to catch the bus before our transfers expired.


“Let’s go downtown!” I said.


They agreed.


“We can take this bus to South Beach and transfer to a bus going downtown. Then we can take a bus from downtown that’ll take us a block from my house—the one Troy took this morning, but going the other way.”


“You sure know your way around on the bus, dude.”


“Years of practice, man.”


The bus arrived, we boarded and sat in the back. Eventually we were heading down Washington Avenue—familiar territory to me. I showed Ethan and Helena all the places I used to go. There was the pizza place that had the Popeye videogame, the laundromat with Mario Bros., and the movie theater where I saw The Terminator, Bronx Warriors 1999 and Krull, to name a few. We watched old ladies with big purses and big hats scratch around their change purses for fare. They would all sit up front with bags and bags of groceries, exhausted, most of them staring straight at the road in the front of the bus. I joked that they were scrutinizing the driver’s driving skills—a pack of back seat drivers. We giggled and looked back and forth at one another.


The day felt like a great escape; especially for Helena who felt like she had no friends. Every moment was golden, everything smelled of adventure. Over the phone one time she had told me how well she thought we communicated with each other. I told her I felt that way too. We talked about how nothing we did would ever be noticed; we lamented our seeming invisibility to the rest of the world. While thinking about these things—sitting there looking at her as she stared curiously out the window at the unfamiliar streets—I realized I was falling for her. I observed her every movement, studying every nuance of every gesture. She caught my eyes, smiled and looked away, blushing.


We got off at the corner of 5th and Washington and waited for the next bus going downtown; there were two of them.


“There should be about a ten minute wait. Look for the C or the K.”


There were sections of newspaper and other pieces of trash blowing across the sidewalk against abandoned storefronts. Men in drab clothing wearing baseball caps with tired eyes walking in and out of the corner store. I could smell the Cuban coffee and the pastries. I began to feel hungry, but stifled it.


“This place is a dump!” Helena said, looking around, disgusted.


I was mildly offended, having grown up a few blocks away. I had been sorry that my parents had moved us away to the suburbs. But, I figured, she had lived in the sterile ‘burbs her whole life and didn’t know much else.


“It’s not really that bad of a place,” I said.


Ethan looked around, soaking it all in. He’d always seemed real comfortable in new places.


I looked around my old neighborhood and sighed, looking at the old sidewalks I used to bike down weaving in between old ladies with groceries (again, with the groceries) screaming at me to ride on the street before I killed someone.


The bus arrived and we headed downtown. It was full and we had to sit apart, though not far apart. We didn’t talk much. Ethan was staring blankly down the aisle of the bus most of the time. I looked over at Helena every once in a while, just to look at her, capture the image in my head.


There were all the freaks on the bus: the ragged woman mumbling to herself; the old Cuban man in a fisherman’s cap smiling yellow-toothed at the woman sitting next to him—she, well-dressed, heavily made-up, waxy red lips, probably going to work at the mall. So many characters on the bus; it had a certain sideshow appeal.



Arriving downtown, we got off the bus and decided to avoid the mall and go directly to Burger King. Ethan and I scraped up enough change to buy a couple burgers, fries and a drink. Helena bought herself a drink. We picked up the conversation again. I frequently looked over to spy Helena’s lovely lips sipping from her straw, her teeth peeking out from an occasional smile. I had to catch myself a couple times from staring too long. This is Helena? I asked myself several times, astonished. We used to make fun of each other in junior high. I had never noticed it, but perhaps our taunts were swathed in some underlying sexual tension.


“Mr. Faltman was such a dork!” Ethan was saying. “Remember the last day of school when we all threw paper balls at him?”


“And he just stood there like an idiot with that big goofy smile of his and took it,” Helena said, laughing hysterically.


“Yeah, then he said, ‘OK, OK, let’s stop now,’ trying to act all cool and shit about it.”


“Then everybody stopped,” I said, “and you stood up, Ethan, and beamed him right between the eyes.”


We laughed and laughed. When we finished we got on the bus that stopped near my house. Along the way we passed through Little Haiti and saw lanky, dark-skinned dudes strolling down battered sidewalks. Many of them wore beige pants and white shirts. There were corner stores with signs in Creole. Ethan told us how his grandparents had owned a sugar plantation in Haiti and he taught us a couple of curse words in Creole that his dad had taught him. I leaned my head against the window and watched the streets rush by and fell half asleep. I closed my eyes and saw an image Helena sipping her drink and smiling at me, her eyes not looking away for a second.


Before we knew it we were at our stop. We walked down my block and came to my house. Once inside, we plopped down on the couch, exhausted. I offered Ethan and Helena milk and cookies. Yes, I actually offered them milk and cookies. I felt like a grandma. Helena took a couple cookies and said that she would like a glass of milk. Ethan stuffed his mouth full of cookies, crumbs tumbling onto his lap and the couch. Watching Ethan eat had always been a sight to behold. I recall a time that he was eating a cheeseburger loaded with supple amounts of ketchup, mustard and mayo. He took a huge bite, giggling like an idiot while he chewed; the toxic mixture of condiments ran from his burger, down his arm, almost to his elbow. He swallowed his bite then licked the length of his arm clean. Then he looked up at me and giggled again.


I poured three tall glasses of milk and set them down on the coffee table.


“Geez,” Helena said, “this is a big glass!”


“These are the glasses we use.”


“No wonder you’re so big!”


The phone rang. I leaped up and answered it: “Hello?”


“Yes, this is Ms. Eastman from Dell’s school.”


“Hi, Ms. Eastman, this is Dell.”


“Oh Dell,” she said, sounding sympathetic, “how are you feeling?”



Just play it off, I told myself. “Oh, OK, I suppose. Just a little cough and a sore throat. My headache and nausea are gone.”


“Alright then, just checking. Hope you feel better.” She said it in such a dear tone. I almost felt bad for lying. Almost.


We finished our milk and cookies and headed back to Helena’s school to drop her off before her mother arrived. We had just enough time to get there.


At her school we sat in the spot where she said she waited every afternoon. Ethan and I blended in easily, as if we were students there as well. Her mom came and Helena said good-bye.


“I’ll call you tonight,” I said.


“OK,” she smiled and turned away; she disappeared into the car and drove away.


Ethan and I started walking back to my place.


Ethan looked at me and said, “Helena got pretty cute, huh?”


“Yeah, I know,” I said, staring at the sidewalk.


“Dude, you should ask her out.”


“Ah, she don’t like me like that.”


“You don’t know that.”


There was a brief silence. I thought about Helena in junior high when she was so girlish. We’d insult each other just to see how much the other could take. Push each other’s limits constantly. She was one of the first friends I had made upon transferring to the school in the middle of the seventh grade. And now she was turning into a beautiful young woman. We were now confiding in each other over the phone, like soldiers in a foxhole. She told me how she hated her father and how she thought about killing herself; how she hated the snobs at her school. And she told me about the time she had skipped school and talked to a store clerk all day.


Then I thought about Troy and how much time we used to spend together that summer we took Driver’s Ed—the summer before he went to art school. Now it was just Ethan and me. We did just about everything together: journeyed by bus, bike or foot around the city; drank wine coolers under the moon at the beach at midnight talking about God or love or history or whatever came to mind—just spontaneous free-form discussions that went well into the night till we passed out; skipped school during lunch and walked to the beach where he broke his hackey-sack record; saw bad movies and bitched about them while walking down dark suburban streets with dogs growling behind tall fences. And how long would it all last? I wondered. When would we grow apart and move on to different things and different people. I felt alone for the moment, unable to see past my presumed future and enjoy the present.


I knew that every step forward would bring me further and further away from them both.


“Dude,” Ethan broke the silence, “you should ask her out. Or at least just tell her how you feel.”


“Yeah . . . I will, Ethan. And thanks for always listening and being there for me, man.”


"Not a problem, brother."


Saturday, September 5, 2009

revival of an ancient story written just after high school (let's just say it was a while ago).


Crosstown Metro

Ray Timmins


The bus cruised down Lollins Avenue, along the same route as it had for the last ten years he’d been driving. In all that time, the bus driver had become accustomed to driving and listening to the symphony of voices in the background. But he’d made it a policy long ago to not get involved in the passengers’ affairs. Amongst his fellow drivers, there were different schools of thought on this matter. Some were sociable: talk about current events, pick up dates sometimes. Some were comedians and liked to entertain their regular passengers with a new joke everyday. But he preferred to listen and silently observe the soap opera. His wife had her stories and he had his. Every day. Hands off, he always told himself. Still, he was fascinated by the endless array of characters who’d stepped onto his bus over the years, over the thousands and thousands of miles of wear and tear on his spirit and the three buses that got driven into the ground. He remembered the gum stains that wouldn’t clean; mysterious smears he wouldn’t touch; the abandoned newspapers scattered in sections across the tomb of his empty bus at the end of shift; the drama, the comedy, the absurdity and the occasional tragedy. Many times he preferred things to remain the same—it was a safety net—but it would get dull. Sometimes, he felt that driving the bus actually transported him through the days and weeks, the years like a slow time machine to retirement. And sometimes, the bus seemed like the only thing that kept him going.


In the seat nearly directly behind him, Fiona, a high school junior, sat every day. She dressed plainly, and never seemed to pay much mind to her long, tawny hair. She never wore makeup. Still, she was very pretty. She had a glow about her and always a pleasant smile. A classical beauty. Just as much mathematical resonance in her aesthetic appeal as a work of Michelangelo or da Vinci.


Tim went to the elementary school on Fourteenth Street. On Tuesdays and Thursdays he took the bus from his regular school to Hebrew school. He was a shy and polite child. He always said hello to the bus driver, often looking away as he mumbled it.


For a couple of months he and Fiona had been talking. Tim had opened up, flattered by her attention—the fog of his shyness having slowly lifted over the weeks of their acquaintance.


Fiona turned to Tim: “How have you been? Anything new?”


Not much, but—oh—I got a new bike.”


That’s cool. I bet you liked that, huh?”


Oh, yeah, but you know what? I was riding my new bike to the laundromat yesterday to play Mario Bros. and Elvis tried to steal it from me.”


Elvis?” she giggled.


Yeah, he’s a mean kid.”


His name is Elvis?” she asked, putting her hands over her mouth trying to conceal her amusement.


The bus driver laughed quietly as well.


Yeah! And Elvis was hitting my bike lock with a stick saying that he was going to steal my bike, but my friend Joe calmed him down and made him stop.”


Is that his real name?”


Yeah, I guess so. Why?” he shrugged.


Never mind.”


There was a brief silence, then Tim asked, “What did you do in school today?”


I took a couple of tests: math and English. I think I did well, though I’m not too sure about my math test. Oh—and I had a recital in my piano class. My teacher said that my technique was improving.”


That’s good,” Tim smiled.


Fiona smiled deeply and said, “I’m really glad I have you to talk to, Tim.”


He blushed: “Yeah, me too.”



It was that time again. The bus driver grimaced as he pulled up to the bus stop. He grabbed the cold metal handle with his pudgy hand and the doors hissed open. “There she is: Miss America,” he mused to himself.


Rita was a comical sight. She was an ancient widow and probably the most demonic old woman who had ever stepped onto his bus. She was short—very short—and hunchbacked like a troll. She looked like a wrinkled old question mark. The most comical feature she bore was a pair of pointed, metal-rimmed, green-tinted glasses. And, as usual, she had a cigarette dangling from the trembling lips of her gummy mouth. The trail of smoke swam up the bus driver’s nose.


He hated cigarette smoke; and besides, it was against the rules. In accordance with policy he acted in a polite and civil manner, as he always did: “Please, Ma’m, extinguish the cigarette before boarding the bus.”


Classical conditioning is a process by which creatures are conditioned, through repetition, to respond to a certain stimulus, or stimuli, in a desired manner. It works on rats and chimps, but not on Rita. Everyday was the same. She would argue the reasons she should be allowed to smoke on the bus: “How come you bother me with the same ol’ crap?!”


Ma’m, I only ask that you kindly extinguish the cigarette out of courtesy for your fellow passengers,” he said, professionally.


She turned her head and stared down the aisle of the bus and pointed a bony finger toward the other passengers and yelled, as if casting an evil hex, “Does anyone mind if I smoke?”


Ma’m, it is policy: no smoking on the bus. It is to ensure a comfortable ride for everyone.” He held his ground.


I have nerves!”


Several regular passengers recognized the old speech and could lip-sync.


Nerves, ya hear? I can’t sit still without a cigarette.” Then she took on a sweet, grandmotherly tone, “Please lemme finish my one little cigarette?”


Nope!”


Damn you, you stubborn ox!” Then another familiar line came. “I’ve been on this godforsaken planet for seventy two years—seventy two years, ya hear? I deserve to smoke when and where I damn please!”


The cigarette had burned down almost to the filter. “See!” She took one last wheezing puff and cast the butt out the door, onto the grass. “It’s done now! Ya happy?”


In fact, he was happy. It was just like it had been every day. It seemed sad, to him, that he had to go through this nearly every day with her. Though a bit annoying, part of it still amused him at times; particularly the looks on the faces of those who hadn’t seen the little display before.


She put her change in the machine and sat in her usual seat—in the aisle so no one would sit next to her. The bus driver smiled, closed the door and looked at the change she had deposited. She was a dime short.


Um, Ma’m . . .”


He’d seen it all before.




Blaine got on the bus every day with Fiona; they went to the same high school. At the beginning of the school year, Blaine got off two stops after Fiona, but for some time now he had gotten off at her stop. Blaine also had long brown hair. He always carried a beat up guitar case with him. He often bragged about his band, Psychasm.


Do you love me yet?” was his usual opening line.


Blaine, not again!”


It was ritual for Blaine to hit on Fiona for a few minutes each day. He had almost perfected his arrogant approach. Tim would eye Blaine suspiciously with perhaps a hint of jealousy.


I really do love you, Fiona. I mean really. I’ll dedicate my first album to you. Then you’ll love me, won’t you? I mean, I’m a good-looking guy, ain’t I. I know—my hair’s longer than yours, huh? Does that bother you?”


No, Blaine, it’s just you in general who bothers me. Please leave me alone.”


Usually, after Fiona had blown Blaine off, he would make his way to “Spaceman.” Spaceman was a peculiar regular. He was a middle-aged man with black eyes, thick black-rimmed glasses and black, greasy hair. He had on the same blue knit shirt that he wore every day.


Dude, Spaceman,” Blaine began, “What’s new in the universe today?”


Spaceman either ignored him or simply did not hear him, one couldn’t be sure. He was talking to an unseen man next to him. “But the Magellan is only capable of hyper-spatial jumps, Commander. I fail to see any relevant data to support your theory . . . no, we mustn’t forget to fold space at that point, Commander,” he spoke authoritatively to the air. “Do as you must . . .”

Doo-hood, Spaceman, take me with you, babe!” Blaine laughed.


Meanwhile, Fiona was conversing with Tim.


How’s Hebrew school coming along?”


Same as usual, I guess: kinda boring.”


You don’t like going too much, do you?”


No too much. Sometimes I like it, like when we go on field trips and stuff. And I like ceramics. But the other kids don’t like me.”


Why not, you’re a nice boy.”


Cuz they’re all rich and have nicer clothes than me. And after school, they get picked up by their parents in nice cars and I have to walk to the bus stop. I didn’t even know I was really Jewish till my parents sent me to Hebrew school. My great aunt says that I’m half Jewish—cuz my mother is Jewish and my father is Catholic, but I’m still not sure what that’s supposed to mean.”


No, me neither,” she said with sullen eyes. “But I wouldn’t let what those kids say bother you. Just ignore them. Aren’t there other kids you’ve made friends with there?”


Yeah, a couple only.”


Well, I’m your friend. Are you my friend?”


Yeah, you’re nice!”


Yeah, you’re nice,” Blaine bellowed, “real nice!”



The doors of the bus hissed open again and Bernie stepped in. Bernie was an older gentleman with a great sense of humor. He always wore plaid pants. He looked like an old-time comic. The only thing he needed to complete the look was a fat stogie sticking out of his mouth (but that, of course, would be against the rules). He sat down next to Tim and Fiona, put his groceries down and breathed in deeply.


The bus was quiet for a couple blocks save for Spaceman’s rambling: “Can you begin to imagine traveling at light speed, Captain Krig? Sailing through nebulous dust, enveloped in star stuff . . . we can’t possibly reach Alpha Centauri by then!”


Every now and then Blaine would flick Spaceman’s ear and look away. He had done this often and seemed to enjoy it as much as hitting on Fiona.


The bus reached Blaine and Fiona’s stop. Fiona smiled and waved good-bye to Tim and the bus driver and walked off the bus. Blaine followed closely behind her and blew kisses at Rita. The bus driver could see Blaine running to keep up with Fiona, who was briskly walking ahead of him.


What a fool,’’ the bus driver muttered, shaking his head.


Bernie said to Tim, “That burnt out, drug-dealing hippie-freak is finally off the bus! Fiona though, she’s a nice girl, real sweet.”


Yeah,” Tim said, staring aimlessly out the window.


When Mildred (rest her soul) was that age she was just as beautiful, except a little shorter . . . and a bit heavier . . . and of course she had red hair. But just as beautiful!”


Yeah?”


Really! I remember the time . . .”


Tim’s eyes slowly panned with the moving picture of Fiona drifting away.


The bus driver noticed this. He’d noticed it every time. Tim had become quite attached to her over the last few weeks.


He’d seen it all before.


OK buddy, this is where you get off,” the bus driver said to Tim.


Tim grabbed his backpack with one hand and his jacket with the other. He cast a wan smile to the bus driver, to Bernie, and walked off the bus. The door hissed shut and puttered off.




Two days later, Tim was on the bus in his usual seat. He overheard Spaceman’s ramblings:


Once again, Admiral Shindar—we meet once again! How long has it been? Eons, it seems.”


Tim noticed Blaine and Fiona about a block before the bus pulled into their stop. Fiona had a disgusted look on her face and Blaine was laughing wildly as the door opened. Fiona quickly deposited her change and took the seat next to Tim. Blaine, struggling with his book bag and guitar case, found it difficult to come up with the change, but eventually did.


I really wrote a song for you, Fiona! Wanna hear it?”


No, that’s OK. Really. It’s alright—just go bug Spaceman or something,” Fiona said, nostrils flaring.


I was kidding about the song being about you giving me h—“


Please stop.”


Alright then.” A small pause, then, “Do you love me yet?”


Damn you, Blaine!” She waved a huge math book at him: “Leave me alone! I’m not in the mood for your crap today!”


Blaine began making his way back to Spaceman. “She wants me,” he said with a smirk.


Spaceman was talking about impending death as his ship was being pulled into a black hole when Blaine sat down behind him and flicked his ear. Spaceman rubbed his ear as if it were a bug that had flown into it, his head tossed and ticked in a small fit. Then he was back aboard his ship and dealing with the black hole again. Blaine pulled his guitar out of its case and began strumming some chords.


Fiona turned to Tim. Her look of disgust immediately into one of delight: “Hi, Tim,” she chirped.


Hello,” he smiled.


How was school today?”


It was kinda fun, except for lunch.”


Lunch, not fun? How is that?”


We got this new lunchroom monitor, Miss Jackson . . .”


Yeah.”


. . . and she won’t let us talk. We just gotta sit and eat and be quiet. I don’t get it. And if she catches you talking, she makes you stand against the wall and finish your lunch.”


Lunchtime is when you’re supposed to be able to talk,” she said.


Not in my school. Not anymore. Not with Miss Jackson.”


What a bitch!” Blaine yelled from behind.


Fiona rolled her eyes, but produced a tiny smile as well.


My father says that if I get a job, he’ll get me a car. Isn’t that cool?” Fiona said to Tim.


Really?” Tim said, beginning to frown.


Oh honey,” she said, stroking his hair, “don’t worry. Maybe I’ll surprise you one day and pick you up from Hebrew school. Then all the kids will see a teenage girl picking you up. Wouldn’t that be awesome?”


Yeah, I guess so.”


I’ve been looking for a job for a little while now anyway. Ya know, for extra money and all. But between homework, school and piano practice I have a real limited schedule.”


Why do you want a job?”


Like I said, for extra money. For clothes or movies, to save for college—and now so my dad will buy me a car. Pretty cool, huh?”


Oh,” he pursed his lips and looked down.



It was Rita’s stop again.


Only the good die young,” the bus driver said under his breath.


The door hissed open and Rita climbed the stairs, putting both feet on each step to provide a maximum of waiting time. The ubiquitous cigarette smeared with lipstick was in her shaking hand. Today was no different than any other.


Spaceman could be overheard: “The gravity is too fierce, Captain!”


Blaine began strumming and singing: “The gravity is toooo fierce, Cap’n.”


We’ll ultimately succumb to the spaghettification process and our bodies will stretch—”


We’ll ultimately suck on the spaghetti!” Blaine continued to sing.


I’ve been on this godforsaken planet . . .” Rita screeched.


I wish Blaine would shut up!” Fiona said.


Blaine stopped to blow a kiss at Rita as she walked to her seat.


Ah, go to hell ya little punk!” she snapped.


Ah! The beautiful purple planet! Breathtaking, is it not, Commander?” Spaceman said, eyes wide and glaring aimlessly.


Blaine stopped singing eventually, Rita settled down, Spaceman ran out of things to say and Tim and Fiona sat silently. There was a capricious silence until Bernie came on.


Tim,” he said, “how’s it going?” He put out his hand and Tim shook it.


OK, I suppose.”


Fiona smiled, “Hi, Bernie.”


Hi, sweetheart,” he smiled back.


In the background Blaine could be heard singing again: “Fi-ooo-ionaaaa-huh!”


Shut up, already!” Rita screamed.


Drugs!” Bernie grunted.


Geek!” Fiona sneered.


It was Fiona and Blaine’s stop. They got off the bus and Tim sighed. The bus slowly pulled away.




It wasn’t until the following Tuesday that Tim rode the bus again. The driver pulled into his stop and gave Tim a smile as he boarded. Tim seemed to be in a good mood. It seemed a typical day. Spaceman was rambling, as usual, and Tim appeared eager, awaiting Fiona’s stop.


He’d seen it all before.


And I was awaiting the enemy ship with great anticipation,” Spaceman began speaking.


Three more blocks: Tim’s wide smile and eager eyes—a pitiful cast of magical innocence across his face.


Then we entered the Aurora star system . . .”


Two more blocks: Tim continued to smile.


We looked out over the horizon of an enormous ringed planet.”


One more block: Tim’s smile quavered slightly.


And . . .”


Tim adjusted his glasses.


. . . there was nothing, Captain!”


Fiona was not there.


Blaine was there, although he wasn’t quite as cheerful as usual. The door of the Crosstown Metro, route C, hissed open and allowed Blaine to enter. Blaine sat by himself in the back of the bus, far from Spaceman, and was silent, cold as stone.

You gotta wait till she comes! Moe! You gotta wait, don’t you?” Tim pleaded.


The bus driver knew that Fiona would not show up. He knew that she had gotten a car. Hearing him say his name shook him in his seat a bit—he couldn’t remember ever having told the boy his name. He regained his strength, recalling his policy, donning his armor once again. It wasn’t his job to interfere, so he said nothing to Tim except, “I’m sure she’s alright. Now have a seat, son.”


Tim sat back down, lowered his head and pouted for the rest of the ride. Moe stopped Tim as he was getting off the bus.


Hey kid, I’m sure she’ll surprise you one day and pick you up at school, like she said.”


Yeah, maybe.”


I’m sure she will,” he said with a warm smile.


Tim smiled back.


Hey your name is Moe. Like in the Three Stooges! Did you know they’re Jewish?”


Nyuk, nyuk, nyuk!”


Hey, that’s not Moe, that’s Curley!”


Whatever. Take care, son.”


G’night, Moe.”


He shook his head and grasped the cold metal handle with his pudgy hand. The door hissed closed. He shook his head again and put his hands on the wheel. Dusk was noticeably settling in earlier today. There was a sliver of a crescent moon with Venus shining brilliantly in the sky. He saw Tim skipping his way home.


He’d seen it all before. Well, maybe not all of it.