Monday, July 27, 2009

Do Not Go Dangling Into That Good Night



Do Not Go Dangling Into That Good Night




The following is a work of fiction, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is purely coincidental.

Lucas Backwaterblue was a full-blooded Apache Indian. He could trace his ancestry nearly all the way back to Geronimo. So it came as something of a surprise to the elders of his community when he married Leona O'Hare, a white girl, and just a sprig of a lass who was drifting across the south from Myrtle Beach and looking to find her way to Hollywood, where she hoped to become a TV star on one of the daytime soaps she loved so much.

When Leona pulled her musty green '91 Chevy into Turkey Creek, Louisiana, she hoped to get simply a cold beer and a fried egg sandwich. Little did she know what fate had waiting for her as she stepped into the tiny foyer of the Chicot Lodge, out there on the Saint Landry Highway. There, she bumped headlong into Lucas Backwaterblue on his way out of the men's room, because the tall and rangy First Nations American was still sorting things out in his Levis before he looked up. When one of Lucas's size 12 alligator boots stepped on Leona's sandled right foot, she swayed backward from the pain of her foot being crushed, but instead of being able to step away from him, her foot was pinned, and she bobbed and weaved like one of those blow-up, plastic punch-the-clowns until finally Lucas lifted his foot and released her. She collapsed backwards into a small settee, and her foot blew up to the size of a red birthday balloon. Leona's agony whipped up a scream in her mind, which began working its way through a fifth of amazement mixed with a shot of puzzlement, until finally it exploded from her lips as possibly the worst curse and racial slur the good folk of Turkey Creek had ever heard.

Maybe it was this whoop of her scream, maybe it was the sight of her frailty, maybe it was the green of her eyes, but whatever the reason, Lucas Backwaterblue suddenly felt a wave, no check that, he felt a levee-busting flood of love for Leona O'Hare wash over him and deep into his heart.

Three days later, the two were married in the County Coroner's office, Doc Watschoken being the closest thing to a public official around at the time.

Now, you might be wondering how Leona could marry a man who had nearly sent her shopping for a prosthetic foot, but who can really understand the mysteries of love? Certainly, the man was full of anguish and guilt when he lifted her up in his arms and drove her to the small Humana Hospital in Ville Platte, and so she figured he would be obliging to her for years to come. Anyway, Leona knew the Chevy was never going to make it through the deserts of New Mexico and Arizona, and Lucas Backwaterblue drove one fine looking pickup, smoky red with black detailing with an in-bed hydraulic camper on the back.

The marriage of Lucas and Leona Backwaterblue had a shaky beginning. Leona never expected Lucas to be all the man he was, and after sex, she felt like a Thanksgiving turkey, stuffed and basted, with enough leftovers for the next two days. Worse still, Lucas had a habit of dangling. Be it night or day, he liked to walk around naked, because as he would say, "I need air out my tomahawk." Mostly Leona ignored his dangling, until one afternoon, she woke from a nap to find Lucas standing over her and dangling just above her left nostril. Needless to say, she was not amused. No one likes to wake up to what appears to be a hooded cruise missile on a heat seeking mission so close to yesterday's green tea and cucumber facial at the Robinnette Beauty Pampery.

Leona tired of Turkey Creek in a matter of hours, but Lucas was not about to leave without some reason. So Leona convinced him that no marriage was really able to get going without a honeymoon. When Lucas offered to take her to Kisatchie National Forest for a week, she vigorously declined, and that night, while well above him in bed, she told him that, for all the world, she wanted to see Disneyland in California. She gave him her most longing look, but she could tell he wasn't so sure about such a long and hard trip. So she made him sure by taking the long and hard out of the equation, and they set off the very next evening.

Once Lucas and Leona were on the road, Lucas discovered the tourist in his soul. He stopped at every Lookout Point along the highway and at every backwater, roadside attraction, be it Farley's Fabulous Flea Circus or Everything's Yummy at Everything's Honey. Of all these revenue roto-rooters, he liked the Reptile Museum the best, where he spent almost two hours fidgeting with the plastic lizards and iguanas, and worrying Leona about whether he should buy the alligator hat or the tie-dyed T-shirt with the snake imprinted across the back.

Leona left him to his shopping and waited for him in the cab of the truck. She turned on the engine and blasted the air-conditioning directly into her face. Her eyes drooped from fatigue, and her tongue slipped slightly out the side of her mouth just as she fell asleep in a stream of gas-guzzling cool air. When Lucas came from the shop and peeked at her through the window, he knew she would be the only woman in his life. She looked like Jack Twofeather's golden lab hanging its tongue out the side window of Jack's truck on a hot summer's joyride into town, but to Lucas, she was a angel who had dropped from Heaven and right into his lap.

Leona woke with a start when the hot air from outside rushed in the cab. She looked over to see Lucas dangling by the driver's side door. More precisely, he was dangling and urinating in the dusty parking lot.

"Men are lucky" he crooned to Leona with a smile that one could have easily mistaken for a smirk. "We can pee anywhere."

The days and the miles rolled by slowly. Then, seemingly out of nowhere, Leona saw the "Welcome To Arizona" sign, and she was suddenly full of hope. One more state to cross, and she would be in California. She turned to Lucas and asked him if they would be in California by the end of the day. He looked at her like she had suddenly gone stark raving mad.

"Could be done, but can't be done," he said blankly. "We have to see the Grand Canyon, woman. It's a national monumentality."

So just as the sun was setting that evening, the honeymooners pulled into a camp ground on the very ledge of the Grand Canyon. The view was truly impressive, and even Leona was glad they had gone out of their way to see it. She felt as though she were standing at the edge of a brave new world.

That night, Lucas built a fire, and he and Leona sat around it watching the flames flicker in the dark. There was an air of magic that drew them closer together than they had ever been before. Leona nestled into the crook of Lucas's arm, and the night seemed dead quiet, until a small man in a blue fedora stepped out of a beat up Volkswagen van parked in the camp site beside theirs. He carried a kerosene lantern, which he placed on the picnic table chained to a slab of concrete. There he sat and looked up at the stars with the fixed studious gaze of an astronomer. Leona thought him comical, and she giggled as she watched him, but Lucas called to him to come share their fire. The man turned his head towards them, and sure enough, he got up slowly and walked towards them. When he came within the glow of the fire, Lucas introduced himself and his wife.

"Nice to meet you," the man said in a kind of deep, monotone voice. "You must be honeymooners."

"We are," Lucas confirmed. "We're on our way to Disneyland."

"Disneyland?" the man asked with a look of surprise.

"Yes, Disneyland," Leona piped in with the firmest voice she could muster, suddenly unsure of this little man who seemed to measure her with his beady, intense eyes.

"In Disneyland, everything is what it is," the man said in a low voice. "Out here, nothing is what it is and everything is what it isn't. Disneyland is where you will discover the truth about one another."

Even as he was speaking, the stranger had begun a slow walk back to his own camp site. Just as he was about to open the side door of his van, Lucas, who was still mulling over what the man had said, called over to him.

"Mister ... uh," Lucas shouted, "sorry, I didn't get your name ..."

"Bob," the man said just loud enough to be heard above the crackling fire.

"Nice to meet you, Bob," Lucas replied. "Come over for breakfast, if you like."

The man mumbled something, then merely waved, climbed into his van, and pulled the door shut.

"Interesting man," Lucas said to Leona.

"Interesting asshole," Leona blurted out. "No way he's coming for breakfast, Chief, no way, you hear?"

Lucas watched as the closest moment he had ever shared with his wife dissolved into a rant. Leona threw a Styrofoam cup, half full of coffee, into the fire, and she stormed off the bed.

For a moment, Lucas wasn't sure what to do. He stood up and walked towards the canyon. He wanted to dangle over the edge and urinate into what he imagined the largest outhouse dig in all of creation.

Sadly, perhaps because of the dark or perhaps because his mind was filled with confusion, he took a step too many. His luck, as a man, had run out.


Copyright © Kennedy James, 2009. All rights reserved.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Summer of '61 Revisited ...



Summer of '61 Revisited ...




When school spit us out for the summer, the streets would fill with kids who were trying to negotiate their way into puberty. Some of my friends would be banished to summer camps, where they became harmless in their absence. I never went. Instead, I was wheeling and reeling around the neighbourhood, sneaking smokes and kisses and sometimes a swig of a beer some kid stole from his parents 24 by the back door. We'd gather behind the hockey rinks that were overgrown with weeds and wild summer lilies. Some days, David Brousseau's mother would invite us all to have a swim in the Brousseau's backyard pool, but those days were few and far between. Most days, we melted into the heat and watched ants scurry into the cracks of the sidewalks.

Then there were the Saturdays.

On Saturdays, the Uptown Theatre would have a matinée for kids with loose change in their pockets and Hollywood dreams in their heads. By noon, rain or shine, we would easily waltz the two block walk to the theatre, where for the price of a quarter, we got to spend the day in the cool dark of an air-conditioned palace, and for a few nickels more, we sipped on syrupy drinks and ate buttery popcorn from plastic buckets. There, we watched Elvis Presley croon his way through Love Me Tender, GI Blues, or Blue Hawaii. Elvis was king, then, our king, the king of everything cool. Elvis never seemed bored for a moment, and always, always, got the girl to fall into his arms by the movie's end.

Some of the older kids would double up in the back rows of the theatre, and you knew they were making out, the guys sneaking their hands up a girl's blouse, the girls pushing those hands away, all in the span of a seemingly never-ending kiss. You could peak back through the cracks in the seats, but if you got caught looking, you were sure to get a beating on your way home. That was just the rule. Usually, you just got pushed to the ground or into the Henderson's thorny hedge. Once in awhile, a kid might get a black eye or a bloody nose, but nothing more. You knew what was coming and why, so you took it.

Between the feature movies, there was a serial adventure, a short film featuring the demoniac intentions of The Claw or the adventures of Flash Gordon, with the greatest cliffhanger ending you could imagine. For most kids, the serial was a time to get more popcorn for the second feature, but I was always locked to my seat as I watched last week's sure death scene transformed to a remarkable escape from disaster.

Before the first feature movie and at the end of the second feature, there was always a couple of cartoons. Woody Woodpecker would peck his way through the screen, and usually there would be a Bugs Bunny cartoon, with the inept Elmer Fudd taking the brunt of the rascally rabbit's ingenuity. The neat thing was that everyone laughed and squealed at the anti-social antics of the red-headed woodpecker or at how Elmer Fudd's shotgun would explode in his own face. We shared a delight in being alive, and young, and innocent.

When the house lights came up and ushers told us to buzz off, we would spill out into the streets, and the lingering rays of the afternoon sun would blind us for a moment, before we dawdled on what seemed a doubly long walk home and into a brooding future.


Copyright © Kennedy James, 2009. All rights reserved.

lay down by my side



lay down by my side




lay down by my side
here beneath the dust and the rust of lost loves
that drift in through the window of memory
and swirl away like the sparks
of a summer's fire on the beach
the shards and freckles of light licked up by the skies
to create starry maps for other lovers
who toss and turn in their longing
who toss and turn and fear drowning

lay down by my side
and drown me in the creases of your body
the wet dew of sex that stops my breath
and stills my longing
rocking here and here until we capsize
and sink into so deep a passion
that the moon blinks out
and all i have left is darkness
and a pleasure so surreal
that i am lost to you in frantic hazy romance
until your lips brush mine
and with the rarest air
that you breathe softly into me
my dream of you becomes my reality

lay down by my side
and drift with me into the future
that carries us through uncharted currents
into a sunrise or sunset
who knows which is which
and know that i will love you
when love is best
and know that i will love you
even when love tips from the parlor pedestal
and shatters into a million regrets
and know that i will love you
beyond the measure of time
beyond when you dance across the sand with other men
beyond when i can no longer find your saving breath
know that i will love you even beyond my death


Copyright © Kennedy James, 2009. All rights reserved.

Summer of '61 Revisted ...



Summer of '61 Revisted ...




It seems like yesterday that I was riding my big blue bicycle to Tamblyn's Drug Store on Stafford Street. In the company of a few comrades from the burbs, I would frequent Tamblyn's for a summer milkshake or a root beer float, easily my favourite at the time. Then, there was the day I ordered a lime Coke.

Now, I know that the usual Coke Cocktail is a cherry Coke, but I refused to order one of those. I'm not sure why. The cherry just seemed ... I don't know ... so red and so sweet ... so right there ... I don't know ... So, instead, I ordered a lime Coke that day, and I must admit it was heavenly.

Well, today I bought some lime cordial and decided to make my own lime Coke. It was a poor imitation, I'm afraid, despite the fact that it contained enough sugar to keep the Hezbollah humming long through the darkest night of the soul. I was completely disappointed.

So that got me wondering if some of our past experiences aren't all they're made out to be by that little memory publishing house in our heads. Maybe, my memory of that lime Coke, the one which I remember so fondly drinking in Tamblyn's Drug Store, is a memory thief, sort of stealing the WOW from other memories to make itself seem more important. Maybe, it wasn't the drink that was so good, but the fact that Louise Fennton (Louise, if you're reading this, I am not really referring to you, so don't call your lawyer) was sitting at the soda counter where I couldn't help but notice that she was wearing the shortest shorts I had ever seen. Maybe that spill of lime cordial topped up with Coke and ice has ripped off what really caught my eye that day, because, to be honest, the world as I knew it almost ended that summer, when Louise (again, not you Louise) swung her stool around to face me, and deliberately opened the pool at the Y like she was sure I would be wanting to go for a swim.

The point is that sometimes what we remember is not always what really happened or what really piqued our interest. I mean, today I was thinking that I wanted a lime Coke to catch a little nostalgic buzz from the the summer of '61, but I was completely disappointed in the experience. Something tells me that there is no such thing as a singular and simple memory. I suspect all of our memories are all twisted and entwined with one another to the extent that I may have confused one memory with another.

Oh, it's all so mixed up ... I wonder if I should have gone for the cherry Coke after all ...


Copyright © Kennedy James, 2009. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

360 ... A Circle Broken ...



360 ... A Circle Broken ...




A final salute to Yahoo! 360. It was always a wild ride, and I am happy I had the chance to be a part of it. Things change, of course, and so we move on to new experiences. That is the way it should be. So, one last look back ...



Kids, vids, a red birthday balloon, trips to South Dakota and the moon,
Cancers, dancers, blog-romancers, second-chancers,
A holiday greeting, a clandestine meeting, things not worth repeating,
Kittens and cats, hamsters and rats, a new puppy named Cher, precious pets everywhere,
Hopeful starts, broken hearts, flirts and men without shirts,
Blasts, mysterious pasts, profile boobs, You-Tubes,
Sudden deaths, newborn breaths, cyber-hugs and heart-string tugs,
The ex, having sex, my crappy divorce, my new college course,
The battered, shattered, flattered and scattered,
The word of God, the holier-than-thou squad, some I-found-Jesus preachers, some Sunday school teachers, grace for the human race,
Words poetic, words pathetic, words prophetic, words synthetic,
Artwork, homework, true stories, blue stories, scribblers and woe-is-me dribblers,
Jokes, pokes, blog ploys and toys, what kind of tree are you, my elfin name is Granbridlemew,
Polls, trolls, comments, circumvents, shake of the head, stuff never read,
Photographers, pornographers, snapshots, crapshots, sunsets and faces full of regrets,
Profiles, nofiles, fakes and flakes,
Nights alone, suicide-prone, skimming through the same old moan and groan,
Drama, Obama, who's your mama, who's your mama,
Yahell, no-tell, blogs tossed, friends lost, and, no, you just can't measure the cost,
My life, your life, here, there, everywhere, and so suddenly nowhere,
Stay in touch, will miss you so much, so long, stay strong, no, nothing's wrong, but
Today, I'm not so sure I know where I belong.






Copyright © Kennedy James, 2009. All rights reserved.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Living on 25 ... Further Adventures With The Spirit World



Living on 25 ... Further Adventures With The Spirit World





Ever since moving to my little space in the sky, I have been in the company of ghosts.

I don't really believe in ghosts, but then there is Larry, a lingering spirit from times past, who has a love-hate relationship with me. I suspect he was a nice enough chap at one time, but now, he seems a bit cranky and has a penchant for breaking stuff. Well, he doesn't do the breaking, but he somehow manages to manipulate me into breaking things.

Last week, I was making lemonade in an antique pitcher. For some reason, I placed the pitcher on a small counter, which I would never normally use, and wouldn't you know it, as I was running cold water, I turned to get the pitcher, and as I turned, my elbow caught it just ever so slightly, and it went crashing to the floor.

I simply smirked. This "accident" was merely one in a long line of similar "accidents" that have pretty much destroyed all the glassware that comes from my family's past.

So yesterday, I went out to a flea market to find a new/old pitcher, and I did find one for about $3.00, a good deal. It's pretty nondescript. Clear glass, but tall and nice, with a handle. Something one might mix martinis in, if one had a bottle of Vermouth around and one of those long glass stir sticks.

My real delight was finding a funky bowl. The vendor who sold me my new/old pitcher also had this wacky tricolour bowl for a mere $6.00. It's either a work of art or an abomination. I can't be sure, but I had to have it, and I'm not sure why. Perhaps it was the red, white, and blue that caught my eye, although the red is more a red-orange.

I would use it for fruit, I guess, but that might send me into another war with the fruit fly population of Toronto.




I suspect, I'll just leave it empty for the time being and hope Larry is cool with having it around for awhile.

Copyright © Kennedy James, 2009. All rights reserved.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Dream Fragments of a Holiday Weekend ... and A Happy Fourth of July



Dream Fragments of a Holiday Weekend ... and A Happy Fourth of July





hot dog
two-bits
a real Picasso a la mustard
on a new white T
corn-on-a-cob
butter lips
but
oh how i love your typewriter teeth

beach blanket
flannel grey
with a single red stripe
working class flag
put it there, Al, put it there
a little in the shade
by Bill and Marcy-Ann

KFC would have been easy
but Suzy made our lunch
there
in the brown paper bag
oops
grampa takes a tumble
cousin Frank does the wax paper fumble
and
hey, that's mine
which?
the pb&j
sand sandwich
mmmm ... nice and crunchy
yes, well, i only buy organic

cool breeze
kid with a wheeze
and a bad sneeze
tosses the top
off his ice cream cone
same old flop and drop
oh dear
let gramma brush it off
and come here
sit by me
on the warm sand
warm sand
and crack of an ass
owww damn
crikey that's one raw
beach bum
pass me a little of that penaten, would ya?

hey mom
auntie Marie has the shits
Ruthie, please
mind your manners
well she does
and she wants you to come help
help how? hold her hand?
i dunno
well, neither do i
she does this every time

that transistor radio
how many stations you get?
yeah, well Sylvie forgot
to buy batteries
huh? and huh?

and

back to pass
looking long
and
he's got it
the Bonifuco kid
touchdown

life is good, Mitch
life is good
can't buy
all that family
no, can't buy all that love
just wish
you hadn't screwed around
with that real estate bitch

touchdown
Houston we have touchdown
the eagle has landed
high five
low five
jitter jive

My fellow Americans, we are facing an economic crisis of extraordinary ...

Houston we have a problem

finally fireworks
crackle and boom
and gunpowder flowers bloom
their colours glowing
under the rocket's red glare
and the fiery hue
softens the gloom
of bills owing
kids growing
and yep
soon it'll be snowing

quiet night blue
under big yellow moon
and on the slow drive home
little angels with sleepy eyes
drift into dreams
and once you hit the turnpike
follow highway #1
down to the junction of
some place
some day
and somehow
because that, my friend, that is where
you will hear the shout and call
of God Bless America
and you will know
when you arrive
how the love of country
enriches one and all

Copyright © Kennedy James, 2009. All rights reserved.





© Kennedy James. All rights reserved.
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