012

The Last Night on “This” Earth

bodies of water [e.g. lakes] can/do sing {at min-maxed volumes}

Today, early this morning, I sit inside what a civilized human might term a “coffee shop.” As a business, even in “Trump’s economy” [LOL], it’s clearly struggling; a little too hip for this sleepy, drab town.

And these people. God. Damn. What the hell are they doing? Look at ’em go. Rubbing elbows. Being seen. “Networking.” Acting a part, feigning glad interest, displaying their recently polished pearly whites, and then sipping carefully brewed black coffee of a South American dark roast boasting three tasting notes such as mocha, mandarin, magic.

Anyway, I’m trying to blog or whatever due to a disastrous case of misguided self-importance, and I overhear an old man (of about seventy) talking to an older woman (of about seventy-five). Mister 70, while bursting down a large latte between lengthy breaks spent blabbing animatedly, seems to be presenting a paper [entitled On the Impossibility of Determining the Heat Energy Content of Earth’s Climate System] to the lady across from him nursing a matcha-inspired concoction, Madam 75, who might occupy a position of note related to the possibility of noteworthy publication.

Let’s just pretend I’m a Matrix fan and call this guy “Mr. Anderson.” [We need labels in order to keep up with each other.] Mr. Anderson was pushing his paper as if it were proof that “global warming [‘climate change’] is a hoax.” He used to teach high school, so he would know, probably, right?

“Even a stopped clock is right twice a day.”

I think he ran a marathon at least once, too. Possibly even visited Nepal. Maybe flew a single-engine plane at age 15.

Hey, I’m glad you’re just trusting me lately with regard to my virtually infallible inferences {as above and so below}!

Mrs. Higginbottom is the dean of a nearby [within 50 miles] community college, possibly a private prep school. Her ethnicity is irrelevant. There’s your background on her; it’s plenty. She simply wasn’t buying it from her old friend, former colleague, fellow community member and concerned citizen, as well as her terribly evident, off-and-on-again, occasionally frequent fuck-buddy. Thank god. I might’ve had to intervene, otherwise.

The reason I mention this: I’m getting sloppy.

The more Ms. Higginbottom capsized Mr. Anderson’s “arguments,” the less I became able to control my laughter. They noticed me. A neighboring couple {of “Bumpkins”} mentioned the word “schizo.” Another nearby couple kept looking my way as well. What can I say? Eventually I just had to leave, dying, making an ass of myself, but fuck, the old dude with the braided beard was arguing (essentially) that the sky isn’t blue 100% of the time because apples aren’t always red.

WHAT!?

This exchange illustrates a fundamental difference between male and female patterns in thinking. Mrs. H. gets it; she’s emotionally “in tune.” Mr. A. thinks like a privileged old white man, which he is. He doesn’t grasp the difference between climate and weather. You must grasp the difference. [Let Thierry help!]

This is a real place on Earth. Have you any idea (where {this is})?

The frequency of my communication with TNT has taken a noticeable dip in the last few days. Not coincidentally, Doyle has been scheduling us apart whenever possible. No matter, we’re both off tonight and have plans to play that certain MMORPG together. In the same room; hers [I bought a gaming laptop]. When I control more of the world’s wealth, I assure you: I won’t be so quick to burn it.

I’m growing paranoid. How sloppy have I gotten? Have I been detected by The Belanoc or The Empire of Galacia??

Quite sincerely, I do hope not.

Let’s not worry about that right now. Let’s do something else. This could be fun. Here are 10 things you might not have known about The Ten [from before (at the end)]:

BK: will inherit over 4 mil. when his father dies
Caleb:
sells his (full monthly supply of) Adderall to Kristyn
Boogie:
weighs about 420 pounds, most days
Doyle:
licensed to practice law in the state of Alabama
Doug:
former Paddleball National Champion [1983]
Annette:
concert Violinist, once upon a time
You:
bipolar!
Huron [Kristyn]:
type I diabetic
TNT:
admitted to what she termed “an intrusive sexual attraction” to Doyle while he recovered from a compound clavicle fracture after a costly automobile accident a couple years ago

The existence of being: a quintessential balancing act between opposite poles.

Liana Rex Knight

And that’s all she had to say about that. Just a note she jotted down casually one afternoon in 1919, inspired by a gentle breeze that split a “noxious weed” [i.e. a dandelion] (roughly) in half.

Thankfully, my mother wrote quite a lot once she allied with Elvyn/Bessi and before my costly birth—about two year’s worth of free-flowing brilliance. Almost 90,000 words all in Sumerian for whatever fucking reason. I would give anything to ask her. Sumerian is a rather difficult language to translate to English. Thankfully, too, she left behind nearly a million words in English. She believed it to be the most potentially colorful language to ever exist, and Shakespeare’s output solidified it as her preferred tongue with which to communicate.

Wonder if that made/makes Magnus feel anything. Like…at all.

I have read all of LRK’s words more than once. Some of them, I have read thousands of times. Why would I keep an official count?

It’s really late/early. I am sleep-deprived. There, I’ve admitted it. I think, too, that I’m experiencing the persistent presence of impressively depressing anxiety. I’m supposed to be better than this.

I’m up in Sam again, this time a new branch, probably 42 feet aloft; meanwhile I just now noticed that Thierry posted on Twitter for the first time in a hot minute earlier today around lunchtime. Um, let’s just say it has me on RED FUCKING ALERT:

I’m glad his name is Dick Purdy. Christ. What a stupid name for a stupid man.

#dickpurdy

@photonycto

She just had to hashtag his ass. Woman’s been asleep for at least 38 minutes, by the way. But everything about her post tells me [confirms that] she was kinda drunk on the clock today during the lunch service at Dinner’s [I wasn’t there]. Quickly confident conclusion: she was drunk for 16 hours today. The point is that I’ve calculated a conservative 94% chance that this tweet will be seen by Purdy’s people. He has Belanockian ties, remember.

In all seriousness, Halcyon has never been sharper than she is at this moment.

Also, I’m not sure if I knew Halcyon was a she until right now.

Also, I’m not sure if this matters, but I carried 6 bottles of cheap Malbec up in this tree with me. That was, what, 160 minutes ago? Anyhoo, I’m halfway through my seventh bottle. Not sure how this happened, exactly. Yeah, I’m getting sloppy.

I will recycle all of the green glass, though.

Maybe Hal’s actually a dude. He could be a she, though. Could be both.

Nothing will happen tonight. Next 3 nights, yeah, maybe, probably. Tomorrow the temperature is supposed to dip significantly. My lungs have already felt the change in barometric pressure.

This way comes a cold darkness. I can feel it.

And I am on edge.

Additionally, I’m starting to think I’ve fucked up (royally). Faustina should not have disappeared; moreover, Fausta shouldn’t have vanished without a goddamn trace. Shit, they are not dumb; duh! This is not The Belanoc’s stupid Bermuda Triangle. They are aware that when converging upon the brightest human being to ever live [not me, dummy—T; I can’t quite claim to be a human being (without the DNA-related asterisk), and surely by now you’re aware of my OCD regarding accuracy of information], the variables must be enormously different.

It’s funny to think that I, among all beings to ever traverse the earth, should need to learn patience. My god, forgive me whilst I laugh my ass off until possibly sacrificing respiratory function to bodily death.

I made it.

I’m still here.

I need to be more patient. That’s the only logical takeaway here.

I hate life.

And I love that you’re alive (and cognizant)!

“Opinions, man.” You know what they’re like? They’re like a “blowhole” that every living thing’s got and relieves the part which fills up with shit first{/fastest}.

Let’s make one thing very clear. The next time an attempt is made to control (and eventually end) Thierry’s presence/life, it will be executed by one of the top-ranking belanockian officials, at which point, one of two outcomes will eventuate.

One, they will win. Meaning I/Thierry will be murdered.

Two, I/we will win. Meaning either Vilfred or Severus [maybe Primus] will perish, and I’ll be “on the run” with a human female while the galacians scramble to orchestrate cataclysms that result in a worldwide, decade(s)-long volcanic winter while pretty much all belanoc stop giving a fuck and start slurping brains at will.

Gee, which sounds better!?

I guess there’s a third possible outcome: nobody wins. Is that possible?

In any event, tonight is not the night. I’m certain of that by now.

Tomorrow might be the night.

Oh, the suspense. 🙄

Your lens can make all the difference.

When you are lost and don’t know what to do, think of something you actually want to do. But not just anything. Something inspiring, incredible, superhuman. Something impossible. Then work backward in your mind from that point until you arrive at a goal that maybe—just maybe—you can realize. Then try your best to make it happen. You can’t cross a bridge until you come upon it.

Are you more inclined to believe something you hear, or something you see? When you need people to believe something unbelievable, do not tell them about it first. Instead, show them unmistakable evidence of its reality. From there the telling will naturally follow, usually the at the excited behest/request of the former nonbeliever.

Those last two blocks? That’s my Ma. What’s she gonna do—sue me (for plagiarism and/or copyright infringement)? Hmm, suddenly I wonder (uselessly) if one must be fully human before the Library of Congress will “honor” one’s work.

Somewhere in/out there, somebody will come up with a fun saying about bridging crosses, too.

Sometimes, I can’t even brain how nobody figured out this shit already.

An hour until closing time. Plastic saloon doors separate the kitchen from the small bar. Carrying a filthy apron, I approach the threshold and take a peek into the dining room, which is populated by approximately twelve customers of all shapes and sizes.

Thierry shuffles up next to me, her rosy cheeks, disintegrating ponytail, and pouty eyes suggest that she’s had a rough night. I can attest. It got weird in the kitchen for a minute there.

“On the bright side,” I point out, “your eyeballs allow light to filter through your mental prism and emerge as something else.”

She just eyes me. She has this way of doing that. I’m not sure what she’s saying right now but I’ve got it narrowed to 2 possibilities:

  • “I love you.”
  • “I hate you.”

Finally she jokes, “What the hell do you know about my eyes?”

“They are orbs, and they work, and each one—”

Issuing a merciful interruption, she closes them [her eye{lid}s] and asks, “What color are they?”

This is confusing. “Is this supposed to be a hard question?”

Thierry shrugs. “I’m not the one who hasn’t answered it.”

“You’ve seen your eyes, right?” Her brow furrows as a grin threatens to emerge. She’s waiting for my continuance, thus: “Uniquely vibrant colors are hard to forget.” In retrospect, maybe that sounded stupid. Truthfully, I was merely trying to speak frankly and honestly.

It’s so weird how much cheese you people eat. Like…have you actually thought about where it comes from?

It’s fine. She (opens up and) hits me with a devastating look that absolutely confirms that she loves/hates me.

Fondly I watch her scamper away as Beaver King brings an urgent inquiry: “Did you know there’s such a thing as an immortal jellyfish?”

“Turritopsis dohrnii.” It just popped out. Thierry was distracting me with her scampering and her glute-accentuating white mom jorts. I should have just been like, “What?? No way!” But that’s not what happened.

“Damn, bro,” BK gives me a friendly, light slug on the arm, “do you know everything?”

“Not quite.”

Ugh.

Starting to think I’m going about this all wrong. This is, what, the umpteenth day since my encounter with Faust{in}a? I’m being harassed by this feeling I can’t shake. It’s like I’m forgetting something vital. Where are you right now? Seventy percent of the shit in this room should be discarded or burned. Where am I? I’m “taking a break” alone in Dinner’s small messy office, lost in thought, by the way.

Hell. It’s almost as if I’m thinking backwards.

Thierry brings in two bottles of (“craft”) beer, immediately opens them bare-handed, gives one to me and turns the other one upside-down until half the liquid is gone; conversely, I savor a single sip.

“You look like you could use a vacation,” I blurt. [Fuck off.]

Thierry groans. “I’m not even excited about it anymore.”

Bright and early tomorrow, Thierry and Joan are supposed to be going on a five-day girl’s getaway to the USVI [Hawksnest Beach]. Joan has connections. I dunno. Something to do with a Senator. Sounds kinda like an elaborate Rape Trap.

I kinda wonder why she’s no longer excited about the getaway. I suppose it would make sense to base an inquiry upon that curiosity. Here we go: “Why not?”

She shrugs and knocks back the remaining half of her beer. “Did you listen to that song?”

“I was about to do that right before you walked in.” I really was.

“So you didn’t.” Can’t slip anything by her.

“I did not.” Sometimes there’s nothing left to tell but the truth.

“Good.” She kneels down by her bulky purse on the ground near my feet, accidentally touches my leg with her arm as she accesses the contents and removes expensive, rather obtrusive noise-canceling headphones. “This is the only way to hear it for the first time.” She hands me her device then scoots her bag back to its previous spot.

Doyle Dinner pops in almost wincing. He looks about 47. “Table of three,” he informs Thierry with a soft, empathetic tone.

“Double D, that’s not funny.” He mistakenly takes this as flirtatious.

“Yeah, I’m sorry. I know it’s been one of those nights. I think school might’ve let out for Fall Break today.”

“Can you just get their order and then I’ll take over?”

“I gave them menus and they’re fine with water.” He’s terribly pleased with himself for having thought ahead on her emotional behalf. “Plus they all look like large men who will want to eat and tip a lot.”

“Thanks. I need like five minutes. Brain is mush.”

Doyle notices the beers on the desk. It’s evident that he’s not thrilled by this, but he’s a frail, goodhearted, timid fellow, so he’s not about to voice any displeasure. In any case, I choose to add justification: “I went off the clock at nine.”

“Oh, yeah, yeah, I know, no worries; you’re fine.” (She already knew/knows that.)

Thierry grabs my practically full beer, chuckles, verging on delirious. “We close in fifteen minutes.” 

“Eight,” I interject. I’m such an annoying stickler for numerical accuracy. 

Her eyes widen as she takes another drink. “I almost cried twice tonight.” She drinks more. “I don’t understand how some people can be so rude.”

“We might have to reschedule Maraudon.”

She laughs; beer comes out her nose. It wasn’t that funny. This isn’t her first (or second) dose of ethanol (in the last hour or seven).

“I do appreciate your ability to grin and bear it, Miss Tuck. You did a great job tonight. Both of you did.”

Thierry’s train of thought continues, “And why do parents just sit there with blank stares while their kids go absolutely ballistic?” She polishes off the bottle’s foamy remnants.

Doyle goofily claps his hands and rubs them together. “Okey-dokey, I’ll go take care of our guests, and you can just fall in whenever you feel, you know, regulated.”

“Thanks, boss. I’ll buy you one of your beers.”

Doyle chortles on his way out front.

Thierry picks up the other beer and pounds the remaining fourth. Is she coming unhinged? “This one little demon-spawn opened nine Splenda packets and do you know where he poured all nine of them? In his lap. I mean, what else are you supposed to do with Splenda packets when you’re five years old and a complete asshole? Obvious, right?” Of course, I nod. “So then he invents this game. Well, first he unzipped his pants. Then he invented the game. This was the game. You shimmy in your seat,” she explains while conducting a boner-inducing demonstration, “and your objective, without using your hands, is to get all the Splenda in your lap through the hole in your knickers.”

“You’re funny when you’re grumpy.”

“Are you sure I’m not funny all the time?”

“Nope.”

Thierry notices the two empty beer bottles. “I just realized I drank your beer.”

“You were thirsty.”

“You seem off.” She’s not messing around tonight.

Fine, let’s be extra honest. “So do you.”

“Touché.”

A staring contest ensues. Not sure who wins/won.

“You should listen to that song now,” she suggests, her mood now trending favorably.

“I guess I could do that.”

“You’re gonna like it,” she assures me, her voice mellowing. 

“How do you know?”

“Just trust me. I know what you like.”

We share a few more seconds of titillatingly comfortable eye contact before I realize, “Oh, you want me to listen to it right now?”

She nods. “I want to watch you experience it for the first time. Mainly just the opening minute or so. And I need you to tell me what she’s saying in a couple parts because I’m the world’s worst at deciphering sung words, and I refuse to google song lyrics for no good reason.”

Thierry watches intently as I pair her device with mine then put on the cans. She’s happy. She takes a seat on the edge of the desk.

Outside, loud thunder rolls. She visibly enjoys it.

“So much pressure,” say I.

“I detect none whatsoever.” At this point Thierry feels great, relaxed and nervous at the same time.

I press play. She stares confidently. I stare back. I’m not confident. Palpable tension. Familiarity. Uncertainty.

“You should make it louder.” Per her suggestion, I bump up the volume. She enjoys what she hears, feels the rhythm, nods along, slightly sways.

“You were right.” The melody pleases my ears, and the words aren’t completely idiotic. I’m very relieved.

“I know.” She hops up. “I’m gonna go hurry.” She starts to leave but I stop her by requesting:

“Wait.”

I pause the song and lift the headphones off my ears. She gladly waits. 

I ramble, “I don’t really know why I wanted you to wait just now, and I definitely don’t know what I’m saying at the moment, or what I’m about to say. That was only one sentence and already I feel insane for uttering this many words without saying a goddamn thing.”

She laughs but remains attentive. I lean back, sneak a peek into the kitchen, spy only one person: BK, plugging away.

“Anyway, as I was saying, the statement I am making is very wordy.”

She laughs softly, her affection unmistakable. God. I feel like Anakin maybe should’ve felt in Episode II. “I’m trying to say something, but since I clearly don’t know how, I’m not saying anything. I’m still doing it, aren’t I? Don’t answer that. I’m fine.”

“You’re saying everything.” Oh. She means business, indeed. Oh. Oh, fuck. What’s happening? Oh. Fuck. This is happening. At this moment, our mutual attraction becomes crystal clear as eyes lock whilst hearts race; I’d bet my life on it. Thierry opens her mouth and a sincere stream of consciousness bursts forth: “Ever since the first time we spoke, I’ve had this weird feeling about you.”

I want to spill my guts; instead, I echo, “Weird.”

She giggles in complete agreement. “I also don’t really know what to make of whatever is happening between us, but I do know with impressive certainty that I’m drawn to you. Period. You’re a flame and I’m a moth and I just want to be near you.” She takes a shallow breath and lets out a deep one. “Now I need to go do a terrible job at waiting on this table and closing up, and then we can continue hashing this out. If you want.”

“I do.” I want. I really do.

“Good.” After one last giddy look, Thierry forecasts, “I’ll be back.” She shuts the door on her way out, leaving me alone to contend with a relentless barrage of foreign emotions atop longstanding concerns.

I’m fairly certain that from this moment on, I belong to her. Hell, maybe I should tell her my real name, and if all goes well, that my mother wasn’t human.

Existence generates gravity, and the fact of the matter is that materializing energy energizes material, if you will.

TNT
Electromagnetic, physical imperfection.

Outside, the bottom just fell out. I’d be shocked if Boogie hadn’t yet declared it a “turd-floater.” To be fair, this is a really hard Gulf rain, very sudden, even more isolated, and much later in the day than usual.

What’s happening at the moment is not normal.

In my opinion [and I hope yours as well] another fun fact, a sub-item stemming from Beaver King’s tidbit, is that his father is barely 12.5 years his senior.

Also, (co)incidentally, by the by, and in the name of foreshadowing, drama, whatnot, and what have you, the late table of 3 on which Thierry has gotten stuck with “waiting” consists of African-American brothers by the last name of Dent [Darrell {short, darker, stocky} and Francis {tall, lighter, lanky}], under contract with Dick Purdy [basically, they are “henchmen”], and their apparent companion sitting across, none other than my motherfucking fat-ass uncle, Severus Rex.

Mmhmm. Shit’s about to get real.

011

The Foreign Process of Native Familiarization

my personal biggest double handful yet

Here is a sentence which will likely never bow to replacement, especially since it keeps changing, if only slightly.

Oops.

In terms of leadership, there are two ways to epitomize (your position): 

  • command your troops to go to a destination and perform tasks
  • personally visit, alongside your troops, and demonstrate what to do (in your clearly advertised, and thus properly anticipated, eventual absence)

Is there a third way? I can’t think of a third way worth including. Can you? A third way worthy of inclusion would make sense to me. Go, you. Augment us. Tell me us Way #3.

Do you see what I’m saying, though? Ultimately, leadership comes down to the method of showing (why) versus the strategy telling (how). And in any application of this oft overlooked, unnoticed distinction, the difference can’t be overstated. I would know; I just tried and failed.

Show; don’t tell.

said every screenwriting book ever
Most sheep are in search of a leader to follow. Most leaders lack followers; namely, I strongly suspect, because most humans in (significant) positions of power are sheep. Somehow this makes sense!

For the first time in about 2.102e+7 minutes, I find myself around humans with comfortable regularity, folks with whom I have developed {often accidentally} some degree of rapport. I thought about it just now; on a weekly (if not daily) basis, I encounter 10 unique people, and in so doing, we build upon a previous interaction to which we each contributed varying (but usually rather balanced) degrees of substance. I suppose this constitutes forming a relationship. [And I’m including Buddy in this group even though I’m not sure that he’s aware of my existence, but something tells me that someday, I’ll not merely meet him, he’ll play a critical role in all this.]

The overarching, fascinating point here today, evidently, is not simply that I’ve realized I (kinda) know ten whole people, it’s that I think I like it. I think that I like knowing people! What the hell is wrong with me??

Take this kid, Beaver King, for instance. A 20-year-old dishwasher, his only job title ever; he has been working at Dinner’s for just shy of six years. He performs his assigned function literally better than anyone else in the whole restaurant; I’ve been moved over to “cook.” He’s delightfully full of fun facts (as well as misinformation) and, on a daily basis, he initiates at least one pleasing dialogue sequence. Just now, out of left field, he questions, “Do you like cougars, Bo?” If you’re male, he calls you “Bo.” I dunno; it’s one of his quirks. If you’re female, sorry, he has no “Bo-like” name for you. If you’re female, to BK, you’re scary and weird and should only be whispered about while amongst [or “whilst among”; shit, clearly I dunno] the safe company of fellow males.

“I certainly have nothing against cougars,” I answer truthfully.

It’s as if he didn’t hear me: “If you had one for a pet, what would you feed it?”

“That’s a good question. Philosophically, I’m not sure that I could justify owning a pet cougar; therefore, in all likelihood, I would not own a cougar, or any cat for that matter, whether big or domesticated, but if I did—”

“What would you name it?” I never care when BK interrupts me. Invariably, practically always, I welcome it wholeheartedly. It’s like being rescued from a thought going nowhere.

“Male or female?” I clarify.

“Don’t matter,” he spouts.

I pick the first name that hits my head. “Shania.” Why not?

“I’d name mine Singapore and feed him stray cats.” BK didn’t register my statement [not that he should’ve] because he was too excited to make his own, and, in truth, it was yet another welcome interruption [damn, I can always count on BK to interrupt (anybody) when it’s getting awkward].

I reply before thinking [sometimes I forget that my brain functions at a wonky speed], “Cougars are cats.” It’s almost as if I witness his head hiccuping. Dear lord, what have I done? Come on, BK, snap out of it; you can do this; come back to the light—

“What about horses?” Fucking Christ. Yep. What about ’em? Dare I respond? I suppose I dare. “As far as caloric provisions for Singapore, the prospect of feeding it horses seems far too expensive, among other unfavorable adjectives.” This inadvertent “joke” elicits one of BK’s signature silent laughing fits, but I swear to hell, more and more I think he’s gonna burst a blood vessel in his throat. Eventually he manages to communicate, “I meant do you like ’em, Bo?”

Do I like horses? What kind of question is that? I’m neutral. “Situationally, horses have proven to be a useful mode of transportation.”

“When I was a little kid, this one time,” Beaver King lowers his voice, beginning a confession, transcending the space and time of our brief dialogue, before bringing it back down to earth by admitting, “I threw a rock at a cow and made the sumbitch bleed.”

“Cows are female,” I point out. He doesn’t get it; thus, I expand, “Bulls are male.” Still not registering.

“I didn’t expect to hit it!” sincerely he declares. Poor dude. Still regrets it.

I assure him, “We all do stupid shit when we’re kids.” The curse word I’ve just used has distracted him; I think it’s the first time we’ve had the opportunity to establish this level of trust. Hopefully he won’t tell on me.

Nah, he won’t.

“Have you ever thrown half a granola bar through a window on your thirteenth birthday?”

“Let me think.” I legitimately ponder my thirteenth birthday before quickly ruling out the possibility of having slung any portion of a granola bar through liquefied-then-cooled [i.e. hardened] sand. “No, and in fact, I believe you are the only person I know who can claim such a feat.”

He loves it, grinning ear to ear, getting back to work. I take this opportunity to walk away projecting a forced smile, otherwise he’ll just keep fucking talking forever.

Please, don’t misunderstand. Beaver King is a rare sprout in an arid desert. I appreciate his tri-weekly presence.

My, how far we’ve come in so little time. And my, my, how long we’ve stalled over so much time.

The other dishwasher, Caleb, serves as a prime example of why I associate the current teen generation with a shitty work ethic and a weird sense of entitlement. Hugely different from all the generations that came before, it’s like social evolution hit a freakish multiplier and their relative worthlessness has become the most unfortunate outcome. Then I encounter this hotrod-driving kid at my job, and what does he do? Why, he reinforces my belief, of course.

Right now, a day after my most recently eye-opening exchange with BK, mid-afternoon, no orders requiring fulfillment, Caleb is getting paid to be the dishwasher; meanwhile, four full bus tubs and counting need to be washed. But this lad is busy sitting on his squishy ass entranced by a phone. Probably watching porn. Oh, no, he’s laughing, so he’s probably just scrolling through videos of accidental death and impromptu murder. I guess it still could be porn. Murder-porn. Desensitized and disturbed zombie-addicts, these kids today, I tell ya. I saw multiple empty bottles of tanning lotion [SPF 4] in his back seat. He irks me, but I wish no ill will upon him; I figure he’s got it coming anyway.

This is a sudden thought and, disturbing though it may be, I truly would bet (“the farm”) that if Caleb had to walk a mile in the snow to get to school, he would die before reaching the 0.8 mark {assuming a temperature of sub 24°F}.

Wow, I really don’t like being at work when Thierry isn’t on the premises. Come on, “four o’clock,” get here already. [My time is 15:49.]

Speaking of cooking, it’s interesting to watch how various animal proteins respond to heat. But I wouldn’t eat anything “we” serve here at Dinner’s except the mussels. Maybe a side of broccoli.

No offense, Boogie! May you recognize a golden opportunity one day in the future, and then possess the quick-witted wherewithal to capitalize on your fleeting chance to “strike gold”—quite unlike most anyone, sadly.

Boogie’s a friendly blast, in case you wondered. I think he’s gotta be pushing seventy. He’s black; it’s hard to tell how old he is based merely on his racial trait of age camou. He might be 90. Hell, maybe he’s 55. Have you ever heard the expression that “black don’t crack”? Guess why.

Boogie Dinner’s ideally located (and appropriately named) place of business stays open seven days per week, and he’s on site every morning from about 09:30 until 11:15. He just boogies, to be vaguely honest, whirling about, feasting upon interaction with staff and delivery folk, doing stuff that needn’t be done, really, all the while spewing an agreeably contagious energy in all directions. Besides his unwavering attitude, his daily positive force, his grandmother’s seafood gumbo recipe is the (other) sole reason for this place’s persistent existence; it reacts exquisitely with any bud capable of tasting. Were it not for the andouille sausage, I’d eat that, too.

The business itself is very month-to-month.

Boogie’s eldest kid (by 15 years), Doyle Dinner, half black in physical appearance but 100% white in emotional mentality, runs the place officially. I’m not sure exactly what he does, though. I’ve never seen him don an apron. Saw him write an emergency check once after requiring upwards of six minutes to locate the checkbook. He carries around a clipboard upon which he makes blue-penned marks seemingly at random. Always out the door before 14:00 except on {the occasional Friday and} Wednesdays, when, not coincidentally, Thierry’s shift ends at 15:30. He’s overtly “in love” with her and yet he does not notice the way she cringes when he breaches a certain proximity {of about 10 feet, I’d say}. Man, {Doyle,} I get it. She’s an outward goddess and a secret sorceress, and racially they’d [you’d] make a lot more of sense together than I would from her biologically unique perspective in terms of electing to recombine genes with a mammal whose DNA is only half human, for instance at random.

How many people have we covered? Five? Hell, let’s count. BK, Caleb, Boogie, Doyle. Thierry obviously comes last. Oh, Doug. Let’s get Doug outta the way. Remember Doug? He’s the guy with only one dart. It’s still up there, by the way; stuck in that faraway corner of his garage. Give him a break; it’s only been 5 days.

Five seems to be a number that won’t stop recurring.

Hey, should I leave him a pack of darts anonymously? At the time of this thought’s reluctant birth, it was 16:03 on a Monday. Having given you no chance whatsoever to influence my decision in chronologically real time, by 16:39, I had successfully left The Douginator a pack of (6) darts, anonymously. That’s one whole dart, six times. When he finally works out a way to safely recover his main dart, he’ll have 7. At that point, I’m not sure what’ll happen. Doug’s brain might overload. He may need to hurry toward the nearest toilet. He might hurl the darts (in rapidly inaccurate succession) at the snotty kid peddling the painfully noisy Big Wheel every damn night way beyond bedtime. I didn’t leave the pack of darts in the mailbox for fear that Amerphsla would find them and somehow that said discovery would lead to poor D’s ignorance of their presence. I’m not including Amerphsla in this, by the way. I don’t know her well enough. To me, at this point, she’s just an extension of Doug, like an uncontrollable {thus unwanted} third arm growing [yes, still growing {while the body’s entire remainder ages/dies}] from the middle of his lower back. So it’s kinda like an arm-tail you can’t control. Nobody wants that. You don’t want an appendage operating behind your back, independent of your awareness, with four digits and an opposable thumb.

Anyhow, there’s five of them. Number 6 has to be Annette. We’ve spoken a few times now in passing. She sits on her porch playing solitaire quite a bit these days since the scorching heat has fucked off for the season. Well, maybe. Who knows these days? If Thierry is obviously 10 on this list, then, hmm, who’s 7-9? I really don’t know as this exclamatory sentence unfolds! This has evolved to become a mildly amusing thought experiment, and right now, darkness having fully fallen, I know that Thierry is waiting for me to log in and play a game with her. Don’t worry; she’s fine; got plenty of thorium-/gold-farming to do.

I’m giving #7 to Joan Smythe. Her maiden name, notably {apparently [because here we are]}, was Gunn. You might reckon she downgraded. She also votes Republican no matter what, which is weird to me given that her favorite book, at least allegedly, is The Hobbit. She’s also a weekly regular at Dinner’s. Over the last few months, 98% of the time she has taken full advantage of Boogie’s new experiment in deliveries which can be made by a reasonably fit person on foot. It’s not guaranteed. Customers call and question with childlike hope, “Hey, can y’all deliver right now?” Then the staff takes seven minutes to make the determination after an untold sequence of unqualified consults. I don’t think the experiment is working. BK typically returns from his deliveries weighing an extra 5 pounds from sweat (soaked into his tee/shorts). He also gets lost every time. Anyway, Joan only lives diagonally across the main drag, more or less, and Doyle has been “stopping by” a couple times a week at night, and “since he happens to be around anyway,” he delivers her order. Now, Joan, 37, is a recent divorcee having successfully navigated 4 childbirths—her kids are all asshats; shares custody of the whole litter with 3 different men; she’s single and rightly ready to mingle—so I think she earns far less blame in this “affair.” Doyle, childless, has been “happily married” for over 20 years. He’s 43. Or is it 47? Not that any of this really matters.

Does it??

Hell, maybe it does.

Are we “gossipping”? God, I hope not. I’m only trying to relay info that could impact emotional relevance. Far as I know, Thierry is the only other person aware of their shenanigans, but obviously I picked up on it (long before she confirmed my “suspicion”). Obvious shit is obvious. Damn. The main reason I think Joan might be important enough to include in this pointless list is that I’m pretty certain that if Thierry has a “BFF” around here, Joan has earned that title. She’s a good ten years older, (as) if that matters, and in case you didn’t know.

How am I supposed to know which details are most relevant here? I’m quite sure all the blanks will be stuffed full of fluffy filling in other formats at some point in the past/future.

I’m freaking out about 8 and 9 because I have no friggin’ clue who they are. I guess we’ll come back to them when their times come.

I like this pic for some reason. This fish is like, “Hey, what the fuck are y’all doing up there? STAHP.”

Thierry’s car wouldn’t start this morning, so she arrives half an hour late to work on that little cruiser bicycle [the same one that she now borrows occasionally from a sweet kid in the neighborhood]. Later tonight, I’ll learn that she actually purchased the bicycle. I do not know how much she gave (because I did not ask), but I’m aware that she paid far more than it’s worth. She works a double today and I get off at 14:00. We decide that I will go have (another) look at her car.

From Thierry’s cheap rental house to the old car parked in the driveway, her choices in the category of basic necessities—at least, within the context of American society and culture—are all made with function prioritized over form. Her abode is crap, but it provides her with shelter. Her car is a heap of junk, but (sometimes) it gets her from A to B. Her clothes are cheap, but they cover her body.

My covertly fast car occupies curbspace across the street corner two houses down from where Thierry hangs her hat{s}. All the houses in this neighborhood are unique and different from each other in appearance, but they are virtually identical in terms of worth.

Thanks to access provided by a key, now I’m inside Thierry’s kitchen, reading the grocery list stuck to the side of the refrigerator with a magnet shaped in the half-portion of a dog including its ass/tail.

bans
mands
grapes
pineapp
yams & yukes
leafy gees
tee pee
deo
toofbrush
bal vin
gelato?
nuts
eggs

I could spent 10,000 words dissecting this grocery list. I’ll abstain, right? [At least for now.] Also, no idea why I brought in my gym bag. But now that I’ve made this would-be blunder, I should leave it in front of the door I’ll have to open in order to vacate the premises. I doubt I’m going to the gym later.

I don’t know what I’m doing. Like…period. At all.

I don’t know what I’m doing.

I test the motion sensors, which all send alerts to my phone. They’re working as intended. Tremendous news, this. During the just-mentioned sequence of testing, I knew what I was doing the whole time. Go figure.

Thierry’s bedroom is neglected. Not much time spent in here—for any reason. There’s a Nintendo Switch hooked up to the television. Cute. Breath of the Wild in play. Cuter. Ah, upon closer inspection, it’s her only game. Cutest.

“Little dandelion, let your heart keep time,” sings Chris Cornell, and more than once.

It’s amazing to truly realize what a stiff breeze can do.

It’s a nice day. All aspects of weather/climate: moderate. Were I a belanoc, I’d strike tonight. [Let’s go, bitch.]

By free admission, again, reader, I am letting you know that I’ve hidden a small GPS locator amid the mess of guts under her old clunker’s hood. Opening a hidden app on my phone and confirming that the device is sending its location to me, I shut the trunk and send a text message to Thierry:


The life of your fan belt has expired.
Ugh! Got a wild idea how much that will cost to rectify?


Already fixed. Part was 58 dollars. Installed freely and with absurd ease.
Oof! No!

I guess I should warn you that there’s a hefty smorgasbord of other issues that could go wrong any day now.
💔

By now, I’ve strategically placed 21 33 38 motion sensors around the neighborhood, all centered around detecting late-night foot-traffic filtering toward Thierry’s humble abode. None invade the privacy of another. Even I have morals.

Truthfully, I am shocked that The Belanoc [and at this point, TEoG] have delayed action against TNT. In truth, I am wholly uncertain about whether action has indeed been “delayed.”

The time is 21:49 at my secret house. Thierry and I find ourselves in the World of Warcraft. Out of nowhere, she asks, “What’s your place like?”

This question accomplishes many feats; for example(s):

  1. lets me know that she wonders what my home is like (in a general sort of way)
  2. tells me that she would like to know more about me on a personal level
  3. advertises curiosity
  4. invokes naughty thoughts that I can’t help
  5. broadcasts an adventurous spirit

What’s your place like?

Thierry, softly

Such an innocent question, but it made me imagine her being here with me, and now I think my heart is fluttering. The weirdness of that fact can’t be overstated.

“It’s pretty basic. I’m very much a minimalist.” My rent is cheap; my shit is expensive.

Let’s address #8. This is how long it took me to come up with Number Eight. And it’s so obvious. Goddamn, could it be more fucking obvious? It’s you. Eight is you. You are eight. Hey, 8!

Nine is someone who has not yet infiltrated your awareness. She’s a girl/lady/woman currently on Boogie’s payroll. She’s very weird, equally depressed, disarmingly smart, and itching to initiate a divorce. Due to oratorically related reasons that I believe commemorate her centennial date of birth, I’m pretty sure she’s 30 {if not 32} years old. Then again, fucking hell, maybe she’s 19. She’s lived a hard life, methinks. She engages me in confoundingly intelligent conversation when I least expect it. Even now knowing to expect it when I least expect it, she remains one step ahead, entrapping me in smartly deep convos with the thickest of southern accents. This happens once or twice a week.

Her name is Kristyn Huron. She’s very pretty, but she looks like she should be stupid. But stupid, she is not. She’s oddly quick and curiously clever. I think she makes Thierry jealous, but I can’t be sure because I’ve only seen them in the same room once (on my first day of work [for about 3 minutes]). I don’t know what she means (to me) yet, but I’m certain that I must have made her acquaintance for at least one useful reason.

I guess humans aren’t as dumb, overall, as I previously thought. Hooray!

If I’m “flirting with her” [Kristyn], then it is not my intention. Furthermore, I don’t know what the hell Thierry is “doing to” me. Moreover and by possibly unnecessary admission, Kristyn, just by being herself and emanating sexual energy, unwittingly causes physiological responses that make me wish I weren’t wearing gym shorts. I feel like an innocent bystander watching a dreamlike sequence of life unfold before my very eyes.

I want to talk to Thierry. I want to ravage KH. Deeply. Both. Now. That’s all I know. I’m sure it’s impermissible and wrong to think/feel. But there’s a big damn difference between the two, is there not? I can’t help but think these feelings stem from separate sources.

Also, am I thinking or feeling? Do I want or need?

Think about what you want while feeling out and acting upon your needs.

Kristyn Huron
This is a scary moon. It looks like one of the two main “feeding” moons.

See? KH knows a thing or two. She’s got a sneaky-adept brain.

Wee hours of the morning again in Thierry’s neighborhood; 03:16 to be precise. Perched near the top of Sam [not the usual branch; about 9 feet higher and less sturdy], on high alert, I watch over and guard her home. She feels safe in my presence. And excluding my daily morning nap from 7 to 10, she has been in my presence, or at the very least under my protection, constantly for the past twenty-six days and twenty-seven nights. Therefore, regardless of her knowledge, she has felt safe constantly during that timeframe.

By the by, why do I include Kristyn at #9? I’m not entirely sure, but I guess the answer is easy. She works part-time at Boogie’s and is the only other female human to have a noticeable effect on my full-body blood flow. But, by this point, I’m not sure it means anything outside of a viably joint, reproductive capability. In other words, Kristyn and I could fuck and {if she survived} make reliably special babies. Doesn’t mean we should; just means our chemicals are suggesting that we should. She’s also very recently into yoga; whether this means anything at all, I know not, but, regarding yoga, I have recently become curiously curious—before catching wind of her or Thierry’s existence [who also swears by yoga], mind you, for whatever that’s (not) worth.

Anyway, whatever, now it’s time for her, Miss Dynamite, #10 obviously. What the hell should I say about her? Three things, probably. Here comes number one (followed logically {in order} by 2 and 3):

  1. Eat the human brains left and then call it a day, right?
  2. Whether leaning toward either side of the g/b equation, neither is likely to incentivize the destruction of humanity.
  3. Root for the underdog!

Okay, maybe that made no sense. In other words, Thierry confounds me with her feminine wisdom (that seems to pervade her physical years). Perhaps, she’s even smarter than I yet realize, which would be a most welcome addition to the well-balanced cocktail of emotional turbulence that propels my daily mission forward, which is almost always wrought with indecision.

Number 10

Right now she and I are alone, on the clock, chatting in the small office that doubles for a break room [more like a closet]. She’s telling me a rather long story that she told me last week. She has done this before. I always enjoy it. She tells me a previously told story a new way by putting a slightly different spin on it; I didn’t mind then and I don’t mind now. I can tell that she’s excited to tell the story, so I’m happy to hear her retelling. Listening to her talk is fun. She’s funny. I wonder if she could hide her own Easter eggs.

Upon rubbing my eyes without realizing that I’m rubbing my eyes, Thierry notices, “You look tired.”

“Light insomnia,” I explain, truthful enough.

“Wanna smuggle some wine in to a double feature tonight at the new theater with the reclining leather seats?”

Yep! “Sure.”

We have come a long way since before, eh?

22:01. Side-by-side and thoroughly cozy in reclining leather movie theater seats, Thierry and I laugh together at the comedy onscreen. When our eyes meet, laughter gives way to giddy smiles as thoughts drift into pleasant daydreams.

00:08. Credits have been rolling for a minute or two. I have to pee and I’m hungry and I’m thirsty and I really want ice cream. Thierry blurts, “What’s at the top of your bucket list?”

I laugh at the lack of obvious connection to her previous thought, which currently escapes me, but I’m sure I’ll think of it later and edit it in, and that makes me wonder whether you will even notice.

“To go to space and feel zero gravity.” I still feel good about that answer. (I wonder how much time you think has passed since this moment.)

“Yeah, that seems important, relatively speaking. Good answer.”

Even better response. I redirect, “What’s at the top of your list?”

“Just like yours, my number one involves traveling. I want to see a narwhal. Preferably at first from a descending hot air balloon.”

“Interesting.”

“Why?”

“Because your number one is also my number three.”

Her affectionate laughter elicits mine.

While clearly not an actual picture of a (wild) narwhal, the beasts represented by this graphic are very real. [That thing’s a tooth, too, by the way.]

I drive while Thierry taps on her phone next to me. She can tell that I wonder what she’s doing. Oh, well. Can’t conceal curiosity. Upon conclusion, she informs me, “I was just writing something down that I didn’t want to forget.”

“I didn’t mean to appear nosy.”

“You didn’t at all.”

“Do you write down a lot of thoughts that you don’t wanna lose?”

“Yes. Probably too much. I got my first diary from Santa Claus when I was seven.”

“Have you always kept a diary since then?” I’m genuinely interested here. Nothing sinister is afoot.

“Always. From 7 until about 10 or 11, I filled up like 18 diaries, and some of them were thick. Then I got an email account and started emailing myself entries. Now I just do it on my little notepad app. And Google Docs. Hell, I’m writing notes to myself that I’ll never receive.”

“That’s excellent,” I surrender to a small fit of laughter; can’t help it. “Writing down thoughts is largely why humanity has progressed the way it has.”

She smiles at me; thinks it’s funny when I get tickled, evidently. “Guess I’m doing my part then.”

I’m curious: “Do you still have your 18 diaries?”

“No,” she pouts, “I lost them when I moved. It’s the only thing I wish I still had from my childhood.”

I’m a different person around her. I smile involuntarily. I actually laugh. I’ll bet I haven’t laughed regularly since the early nineties when I frequented {for less than 3 months} a certain card game night in a nerdy shop tucked away in a sketchy strip mall.

In my eyes, Thierry is perfection personified in female form.

I hope I’m not mentally ill.

This image evokes a feeling I can’t describe. Luckily, hopefully, and given the image, I don’t have to describe the feeling. Fingers crossed that you can feel it, too. Think back…

I’m beginning to suspect that we’ve seen (some of) this before.

A day passes. Or is it a week? Does it really matter?

Time does that thing where it elapses.

19:14. Near the start of a nature and fitness trail, I convene alongside Thierry in the shade, catching our breath, trying to stay loose in preparation for another 200-meter sprint to the top of the adjacent steep hill. Twenty feet to the left, a thin line of dead grass unfolds straight up the hill, but our relative position indicates (to anyone paying close attention {which would be creepy}) that we’ve plotted a slightly longer and steeper route that provides more of a challenge than the beaten path.

The trail constitutes a small part of the park that anchors the town’s Parks & Recreation department, sprawling across hundreds of acres with a variety of amenities like outdoor basketball, volleyball, disc golf, multiple playgrounds, etc. However, the main focus of the facility self-reveals itself via the centrally located several softball and baseball fields of various dimensions. One adult league softball game winds down and another looks to have recently concluded.

Thierry’s impressive wealth of hair sits pinned atop her head in a loose bun. She wears tight-fitting, functional workout clothes supposedly made from cutting-edge fabric, and she wears them well, anatomically and physiologically broadcasting her comprehensive familiarity with exercise.

Sweating buckets, I repeatedly wipe my brow with one of the two saturated sweatbands on either wrist.

“You’re the sweatiest person I’ve ever met,” Thierry alleges, her endearment plain to see.

“It’s genetic,” I explain. “I come from a long line of sweaters.” Another truthful admission. Shit. I’m afraid I might lose track of my lies soon.

“I only bring it up because in spite of all this sweat, I can tell that you’re holding back.”

“You are a remarkably fast runner,” blatantly I inform her, knowing that she already knows.

“Okay, yes, true,” she jokes. “You got me there. But. I know what running at top speed looks like no matter who’s doing the running, and I haven’t seen you hit fifth yet, let alone sixth.”

She is insanely observant and even smarter than I first realized. Why am I telling myself inside my head what I already know? I don’t know what to do. How much effort should I give? I’ve been going at slightly more than half speed. Bump it up to 70%? That seems too close to the peak of current human potential. God, why didn’t I receive a training manual for this??

Trapped in a tailspin of indecision, I stand ready at the start of our next sprint. She reminds me, “Full speed ahead.” Playfully, I salute her. 

“Ready?” 

“Ready.”

“Set, go.” Off she goes as fast as her body will take her. I follow despite my uncertainty. About 45 seconds later, the sprint is over. I definitely finished more first than I intended. Thierry pants heavily in recovery from our exertive burst of energy. I tap into what little talent I have as an actor to display a level of fatigue comparable to hers. Hands on knees, then on head, back to knees, rinse, repeat. Respiration gradually regulates. “Damn, I am tired, which I find to be unpleasant.” [No, I didn’t say that; I thought it.]

“So here’s the thing,” Thierry blabs, still sucking plenty of wind. “If for some reason you wanted to do it and you got real serious about training, you could compete in the Summer Olympics next year.”

I rustle up an awkward chuckle while stretching my quads needlessly.

“I’m so serious,” she continues and indeed sounds serious. “You could definitely qualify to compete in the 200 and the 400. Shit, maybe the 800. Can you run that fast for 800 meters?”

“Definitely not,” I proclaim. “Couldn’t do 400, to be honest.”

She eyes me. She has this way of eyeing me—very expressive, communicative, layered. And it’s usually when I’m full of shit about something. Yuck. I don’t like lying to her, but I don’t know if she’s ready to know that I ran my fastest mile a decade ago in under 147 seconds. I’ve slacked off on my endurance training in recent years because I loathe it [the training itself {specifically the way it makes me feel}].

Thierry still finds herself surprised and impressed. “I’ve never seen a runner able to hit that many gears. I thought you were at top speed four different times—actually…” she suddenly reroutes her train of thought thanks to a realization, “did you even reach top speed?”

“Starting to think I exceeded it.” Idiot. 60% would have been plenty.

“I’m glad you suck at getting off the blocks, otherwise I’d suspect you of being an alien or superhero or cyborg.”

Ha! I am definitely none of those things.

Thierry was a track star in grade/high school. Turned down a scholarship to her dream university [Middlesex University {London}] to stay home with her longtime boyfriend who had never gone more than 6 months without cheating on her in their 4-year relationship. Once they got to uni, he never wasn’t cheating on her in one way or another. If he wasn’t actively cheating, then he was making plans to cheat or putting himself in positions where cheating was a probable outcome. She has no idea that I know any of this. Now that I’ve thought more about it, I want to find this fool and harm him.

Math is hard.

Need she another introduction? Nay, she need not. You know her and (ought to) already love her. She was born Madeleine Abigail [surname redacted] and became an illegal British transplant to the United States of America, now going by the self-appointed name [since 2012] Thierry Nova Tuck. She and I—we’ve been through some shit{e}. I can’t wait to tell her. Equally, I look forward to her telling me; I know she’ll be glad/eager to spill the beans. We’ve each collected so many beans to spill all over one another. Already I know she won’t be mad [that’s too stupid] at my clearly unavoidable deception [she’s too smart to get angry about sound logic]. She will understand the fateful intersection of our plights with virtual immediacy, feel an overwhelming sense of relief that our paths have led us to cross, and she shall most likely come to believe that we’re bonding in ways I’ll be not able to disprove.

Hidden beneath your most rankless of individuals, TNT is your crusading knight in shining armo{u}r. She wields the word that will save your (human) race. She’s a poet who doesn’t yet really know it.

The shit will surely hit the fan before any of this has a chance to play out.

Where are you these days, Trae?! Would love to catch up over coffee in the city and at the location of your choosing.

The Ten
(in no particular order, probably)

  1. Beaver King [Calvin Samountry]
  2. Caleb Miller
  3. Boogie Dinner
  4. Doyle Dinner
  5. Doug (+ Amerphsla) Expert
  6. Annette Francois
  7. Joan Gunn
  8. You
  9. Kristyn Huron
  10. Thierry Nova Tuck

On this day in 2019, Guy Fawkes Day, waiting for the firestorm of all time to materialize and start wreaking havoc on the foundations of civilization, above are the ten humans with whom I am most frequently in contact—whether from afar or up close and personal—and with whom I have most deeply connected, who I most thoroughly know and have concluded I’d probably (calculatedly) risk my life to save from certain death.

Tomorrow, that list could see significant shifts. I can think of 4 spots easily up for grabs. You haven’t met everyone yet; get real. I mean, the list of ten only includes six of my colleagues. That means I’ve excluded twenty-two of my colleagues.

Who the fuck are they? Where am I? More importantly, where are you?

Today is the fifth day of November. A day I’ll always remember [mainly because of Guy]. I can’t believe I’m still playing the waiting game.

Gosh, maybe, before this day’s conclusion—like, say, oh, about 23:56—I’ll be forced to lop of another head [Fausta’s] to save Thierry from her vengeful fangs, all the while TNT wonder’s why I’ve gone AFK unannounced in the middle of Zul Farrak. Among my myriad motion sensors, I’ve identified #36 as the last one that should be detecting any movement. When #36 alerts me unexpectedly, I don’t even type “brb.” Within half a minute, I’m hiding high in Sam, armed and prepared to die. And here comes Fausta. I wonder if she saw me. Nope, clearly not. She’s not being careful. A thirst for revenge clouds her judgment.

A well-timed, scattered thunderclap camouflages the heavy thud from my aerial assault and the subsequent carnage of the encounter, and it gave my “shoddy” internet a believable reason to crap itself for a while; the weather’s always worse over there by the bay. Five clean slices in less than three seconds; with my trained guidance, Halcyon puts the beastly hag Fausta out of her contagious misery.

By the time I return to my hidden home, I’ve been kicked from my WoW group, as expected. Thierry knew I’d understand. I mean, it only made sense. I wasn’t even pissed. She wasn’t either. One of the tryhard kiddos did send me a salty tell to which I never bothered responding. He was what they call a “huntard.” In the group’s defense, I did fail to mention to that I had run outside (IRL) to decapitate a belanoc before it was able to eat their tank’s brain [again, IRL]. So, yeah, that was on me.

Nonetheless, they completed the dungeon run, Thierry Sêth upgraded two pieces of gear, and I didn’t let Thierry get apprehended and/or murdered. All in all, if I do say so myself, this was a good night!

Good night.

Faustina and Fausta, both down, both disappeared [{in} neighboring watery graves].

The dreaded day of reckoning now looms uncomfortably close, ever-shredding my remaining semblance of sanity.

Never have I been so afraid, nor invigorated. Let’s go.

Any day now, either Vilfred, Severus, or both {plus friends} will be here with the immediate intention of figuring out why TNT still lives, and what the hell happened to F&F. That’s gonna lead someplace with consequences. Consequential traps, to be more specific, that, hopefully, I will be able to set.

A ball is about to start rolling, and soon after, I suspect that it will gather momentum. That’s how these things normally unfold, you see. Snowballs actually have an excellent chance in hell.

We were addressing another matter, however. What was it? Oh, yes…

When you suspect that you’re falling in love, not knowing whether you might die in battle any day now kind of sucks, but it also cultivates an otherwise unattainable appreciation for any time spent meaningfully connecting to/with another sentient being.

Sometimes, when you feel yourself falling, I guess you just have to trust that you’ll be caught.

Otherwise, I suppose the worst thing that can happen is that you learn a valuable lesson about your trust rope.

I think this is what they call a “win/win” situation!

010

TUBULAR TRIBULATION


With the most pivotal crossroads in history looming on the immediate horizon like the blackest of thunderclouds ready to ignite an earth-shattering blaze with a bolt heard round the world, now feels like a half-decent time to revisit the previous sharpest turning point in my life.

24, October, 1979

I’m in the golden years of my physical prime at 60 years old, and I’ve never left the country. Moreover, I’ve only set foot in 7 states. You could say that I’m bored. You could also be lying.

Picture this. It’s someone’s birthday and, logically/as usual, almost no one cares. Elvyn summons 10 of us to an unscheduled meeting in the conference room on Bessi’s bottom floor. She means business. This doesn’t happen often, and it always equates with the same condition: a dangerous job needs to be done, and ours is the only organization equipped to provide the service(s) required.

Sidenote. I only called her Elvyn when no one else could’ve heard it. Otherwise, depending on who was around at the time, I referred to her as:

  • Miss Quinn (62%)
  • Madam Quinn (27%)
  • EQ (8%)
  • Bosslady (2%)
  • Queue (1%)
  • Lenny (0%)

I’m just guessing on the percentages.

Ernest called her Lenny once in a moment of unreasonably cocksure disrespect; promptly in response, his mother thumped him on his laryngeal prominence [Adam’s apple], and thus far in his life, I think [despite having not seen him in 40 years], that was the worst thing that ever happened to him.

I arrive fifth to find Elvyn, Conrad and two others, Carver and Brackett, each of these two his own version of a very physically impressive [for a full-blooded human], overconfident nitwit.

I can feel our fearless leader’s stress level from across the room. This must be a dicey situation that comes with a sequence of tough choices. Oof, I hope no one (important) died already.

And, admittedly, I feel some degree of excitement, I guess. I know that I’m basically a half-human wrecking ball, and I’ve been itching (foolishly) to test my skills in life-threatening combat. While certainly useful, testosterone isn’t smart.

The next to file in {before another minute elapsed} were (in order) Taya, Payton, Riley, Ernest [not last, for once {and on crutches, by the way}], with the one and only Buster Bradley bringing up the rear. BB offers a lone skill to the operation {and, admittedly, a useful one at that}: he can control an automobile like nobody’s business. Whether behind the wheel of a tiny “performance vehicle” or an eighteen-wheeler, he makes all the right decisions while shifting gears. Incredible spatial awareness, impressive knack for thinking lightning-fast, and a cocky little bastard. One day his arrogance will get him killed. Don’t bother marking my words—it already happened.

Incidentally, too, everyone called Taya by her first name, which was “Taya.” Not sure why. Her tremendous surname was/is Skeeter. (The slash stems from the fact that I know not whether she still lives.)

I realize I’m suddenly dropping names like it’s my job, but you’ll remember the personal details as you need them. We’ve no time to waste!

Commencing the meeting with a solemn tone, Elvyn announces, “We have a big fucking problem.” Now that she has seized the entire room’s undivided attention [she almost never “curses”], she elaborates, “In actual fact, it’s an ill-timed tri-convergence of dreadful problems, and based on a sickening abundance of factors from multiple angles, especially politically, there can only be one solution. We, the ten of us, are here to come up with that solution as soon as possible before setting it in stone followed by immediate motion and swift execution.” She’s made no effort to mask her anguished disgust, nor should she have been expected to do so.

And she really talked talks like that. EQ {assumedly still} assembles paragraphs on the fly while orating in a manner which would solidify your thinking that she had been writing and tweaking her speech for a few weeks. Nope, moment by moment, Elvyn’s thoughts often took/take the shape of poetry.

Five percent of my human DNA comes from a region not at all unlike this one.

I’ll make a very long, enormously complex, heatedly {at times} discussed story short (in the past tense). Three wildly divergent, even rogue (perhaps) packs of belanoc were making a wee bit too much noise in three different places at once: London, Afghanistan, and Oslo [possible galacian presence in Afghanistan]. Due to a lifelong inexplicable longing, I wanted to be included in the Oslo squad. Fjords, man. Something about them. But I knew this would/should come down to basic optimization of resources. Factoring in Elvyn’s emotional bias, and lucky for me {as I saw it in that moment} I figured I’d be sent to Oslo, despite Conrad and Ernest pushing for London. In other words, I thought they’d want me to go where I could be most useful. Such complexity. I love theory-crafting.

Queue continues, “Priorities: Oslo 60% London 37%, Afghanistan 3%.”

“Most of you met our English duo last summer during their visit,” Ernest supplements. “We have 11 operatives available currently, three of whom are already stationed in Scandinavia, and—”

“Twelve,” his older brother, Conrad, interrupts with a relevant correction.

“My cast isn’t scheduled to come off tomorrow.” Ernest’s way of being a dick while pointing out that he’s not available for active duty.

“Indeed, and as such, you will need to sit this one out.” Conrad’s way of letting his little bro know that he’s not referring to him; he’s talking about me.

“Oh, I see the confusion.” Despite failing to see the confusion, Ernest projects his signature smart-ass tone; it’s unmistakable; and I would be exceedingly surprised to learn that he has not yet been socked square in the nose for it. “It goes ten, eleven, and then twelve.”

“Remove Afghanistan from consideration,” an impatient Elvyn interjects with finality, her momentous decision carrying more weight than you may be capable of comprehending at this point in time.

Now, I’m sure most of us knew that willful ignorance would be a possibility in this impossible regard, but I don’t reckon anyone figured it’d be such an easy-to-decide, cut-and-dry strategical choice. But, for those of us able to eliminate emotion from the equation, it couldn’t have made any more sense, no? Given the Soviet presence over there, not to mention the nasty terrain and cave-mazes, we decided, essentially, to ignore the huge infestation by an opportunistically packed pod of belanoc, taking advantage of the conflict, having a feeding frenzy, disguising kills as casualties in the chaos, and further adapting to UV radiation. I think they’re gonna end up inciting an actual war.

You haven’t already forgotten that it’s 1979, have you?

“I can’t argue with that,” Conrad replies. “We still need him somewhere. Now, more than ever. We’re undermanned. Bad luck with injuries in recent months.” Before Ernest can begin grumbling his first of many whiny words, Conrad looks my way and addresses me directly, “Atlas, laddie, we need you.”

“I know.” Of course I knew. They’ve needed me for 20 years; could’ve put me in play at a moment’s notice but didn’t. I’m not even bitter. I get it. My value perplexes even the most capable brains. I sure as shit know (not) what I’m worth.

“Are you ready?” checks Conrad for the sake of having it on official/verifiable record (or something of the sort, I guess).

“What do you think?” I assure him (and the room) with supreme confidence. Of course I’m ready. Everyone knows I’m ready. Look at me.

Conrad informs his mother, “I vote Oslo.”

Ah, okay. Now we’re all on the same page. I am being included in an overseas operation. Almost 60 years young, never set foot outside U.S. soil. I’ve been held back, overprotected, underutilized. Again, everyone knows it.

Suddenly, life’s different.

And, by the by, Connie votes Oslo because he deems it the much safer [easier to escape] of the two. The London job will be pretty deep underground and promises a horde of about at least 6-10 [possibly double], as opposed to Oslo, which looks like half that [a family of 4-5]. Shit goes sideways, it’ll be ridiculously easier to evacuate from the open air under moonlit Norwegian skies than it will be to escape the dark underbelly of the London city streets.

Elvyn considers her next words. “Do either of these situations really demand his presence?”

I jump in. “Maybe my presence demands either—no, one of these situations.” She cuts me a quick look that I knew was coming. She probably isn’t entirely sure what I mean. I’m probably not entirely sure what I mean, either. [I’m (still) not/wasn’t.]

“He needs the experience,” Conrad suggests.

“Energy demands release,” I remind her. “It’s time.”

“Mum, he’s ready.” Good ole Ernest, that magnificent fuck-wad, influencing shit now that he can’t affect later. I love him.

“Shut up, dears.” Elvyn’s face can’t hide that she knows my time has come. We allow her a few extra moments to think.

“London needs him,” Taya states, less patient than the rest of us. No one openly disagrees. Elvyn’s annoyed look shoots from Taya to me [at which point I confirm agreement] and then to Conrad, who is coming around to the idea because he knows that’s where each of us will be most useful. “This is a simple math problem with a favorably high ceiling for creative strategy.” I could always count on Taya to back me up before I spoke. Occasionally, I’d wish she weren’t a lesbian; it was an intrusive thought; anyhow, the one skill Taya brought to the table {besides an otherworldly gift for concocting sour cream pound cake}, the reason Bessi recruited her: she was/is a brilliant strategist, and I know this because we agreed 99% of the time; the only two times we didn’t agree was simply because she was wrong (due to no [real] fault of her own).

In late October, 1979, Taya had to be pushing 90 years old. If she still lives, I will freak out. On that note, should the opportunity arise, I might even initiate a hug for the first time in my life.

By the way, that impromptu “meeting” took about 29 hours; you got the short version. The long, live version seemed {in my estimation} to take about 9 days. Oh, time: you hilariously relative, punishing ultimatum of inescapable measurements, you!

31, October, 1979

Not long after waking, this day becomes the worst I’ve yet lived.

Physically, this is not how London appeared 40 years ago; emotionally, however, this image represents a glimpse of how it made me feel upon initial introduction.

The hour at the time: about 13:00.
The jet lag: real.

The moment I step outside into the middle of London (for the first time ever), I can feel all the differences at once. The whirring pace of the place catches me off guard; I don’t know where to look! Shiny objects demand at least brief glances, do they not? And the smell of the city is completely new to me. The damp air breathes differently than the dry climate in which I grew up. So many people talking at once. So many footsteps. So many squeaking brakes. So many routine sounds. I needed at least 75 seconds to adjust, possibly even 80.

Knowing fully well what to expect will never be a substitute for firsthand experience of what actually happens.

Not entirely sure what the moral of this story is, but maybe it’s this: no matter the length of your life, you’ll get lucky about as often as you’ll be unlucky. One supremely key trick to life is learning how to spin whatever luck comes at you in your favor.

Here’s the deal where we are right now in time. There’s an indiscriminately aggressive pack (of belanoc) living in the Tube {London’s “subway system”} [mainly along the Central Line] and feeding on the citizens a hair too freely, and they seem to be getting hungrier and less concerned with “appearances.” We have to stop this before people actually start believing it’s the ghost of Jack the Ripper; or worse, they become aware of the truth.

Again, we’re a squad of six. Besides me and Conrad, there’s Riley, Brackett, and the two locals: McGinnis and Perry. All very physically capable men [besides me, obviously, and Conrad, who benefits from one-fourth g/b DNA]. {Did you know that?} I feel good about this job because it shouldn’t require any strategically fast-thinking adjustments in the heat of battle.

We spend a night in the city being tourists.

I had fun.

Right.

But now it’s 08:00 the next morning. Down {underground} we go just as the rain really starts to pick up. Good timing, as saturation could’ve only diminished our capabilities at this point. Water carries weight, and weight must be carried.

During the majority of our march into a section of forgotten bowels in the London Tube, Conrad talks basic strategy, underscoring the importance of covering flanks, offers examples of situations that call for carefully thrown grenades, etc. Later, the locals are surprised by the weight of Halcyon [3 stone {42 lbs}], but they try to act like they’re not. Later, Brackett laughs at his own fart and I wish we’d brought Carver instead.

Make no mistake: we are expecting a fight. Several fights. To the death. This is dangerous work. If we don’t get off a clean ambush whilst the bulk of the pack slumbers, we might will be in trouble.

The smell down here becomes increasingly foul, and indescribably so. I hope you never smell it, because if you do, then you are in immediate, grave danger.

Now we arrive at a fork in our journey. We can either take a hard left or gently veer right. It’s dark and foreboding in both directions. Instinctively, my inclination is to lean toward the right. But the locals {being locals and all} have all kinds of reasons to go left, and they both make ample sense. Thus, left, we go.

I don’t like it.

Unless I can argue with insurmountable intelligence, I tend to keep quiet.

As we progress down this abandoned corridor, each member of the squad shifts seamlessly into fully focused business mode, silence amplifies, causing tensions to rise, reinforcing the gravity of the silence—oh, goodie, a negative feedback loop. Someone has to say something. Guess it’s me: “Brackett, did you poot again?” That earned a nervously courteous chuckle or two. I can’t lighten this mood. Something’s wrong.

“That reminds me of a joke,” Conrad intervenes in a tone that forecasts his particular brand of always welcome hilarity: “A string walks into a bar—”

Automatic gunfire shreds the silence and launches each of us into the unflinching mentality of a trained soldier. McGinnis and Perry finish gunning down a belanoc that looks like a vagrant crackhead. It writhes in agony as Conrad lops off its head. Old man can still move.

Just now, peripherally, I glimpse a threat lunging through the air at Perry’s back; so, instinctively, I spring into action, intercept the assailant by slicing open its intestines and then blowing its head off at point-blank range.

More splatter than I would’ve liked. Something gross got in my mouth. I spit, and spit again, and then I spit again.

I’m equipped with my typical loadout, by the way: Halcyon and a sawed-off shotgun. A long list of other situationally useful (if not lifesaving) odds and ends stashed about my person.

Fast footsteps echo from all directions. Fear grips all but two of us [Conrad’s the other] in a way that spells doom. Why? Not enough opportunities for training. Perry verges on a panic attack: “This is some kind of fucking trap. They fucking trapped us. I think we’re trapped. We’re dead. I think we’re dead.”

“Stop talking,” Conrad insists.

More footsteps. Other sounds, too. Primal groans. Life. Hunger. Predation.

I notice the tears running down Brackett’s cheeks.

“Atlas…” Conrad implores, asking a question for which I do not have a solid answer.

Stymieing my emotions, I begin breaking down the dilemma logically, “There are fewer of them west, but I think I felt a draft east that might’ve suggested a passage north.”

“We’re all gonna die here,” McGinnis numbly mumbles. Brackett cries audibly. Riley dutifully prepares for suicidal combat.

Conrad grits his teeth and runs east. Riley follows sans deliberation, exemplifying the mindset of a patriot.

At the time, I didn’t understand why, but I just followed, too, because what else was I gonna do? The other three followed as well since, otherwise, they’d have been left alone in the dark.

Down here, we were supposed to find a pack of six belanoc, maybe ten, tops. Now we run into a gang of fifty. Lesson: sometimes your intel is bad. Sometimes, adjustments must be made on the fly. And sometimes it sucks.

Felt kinda like this, only a billion times worse.

I watch Conrad’s face fall as he immediately processes the dire nature of our conundrum. We’re all gonna die, probably; but I might get lucky and survive [obviously I do, but there have been times when I wished I didn’t]. By now, armed in each hand with a live grenade, ICQ‘s decision has been made. He looks at me. “Son, I’m sorry; we don’t have time to talk strategy; now run!” He pulls both pins and charges the hungry pack of certain death.

As has been mentioned elsewhere on this site—and it’ll no doubt be mentioned again—time stands still in the most monumental moment(s) in/of your life.

Brackett, Perry, McGinnis. All their training goes out the window. (A valuable lesson, this.) Each man self-turrets, spraying wildly in a panic. One of them [Brackett, I think] shoots Riley {the only one of them not panicking} in the back of the head, killing him instantly. Ultimately, the three who did panic died horribly gruesome deaths.

All that, whilst Conrad bought me all the time I needed.

As we may have already established, he clutches a pin-less grenade in each hand; not to mention all the explosives strapped to his chest (and all about his body). Plus whatever he always does that no one ever knows about. Conrad was Bessi’s unrivaled demolitions expert, you see; as such, I know that whatever he’s about to do [in like 3 seconds] is going be very loud, very messy, and come with shockwaves that stagger.

My escape route lies east then north.

Armed with Halcyon and furiously eager to devastate, I slice my way through two, five, seven, eight, twelve belanoc. It’s easy. They’re untrained. In their blood, I bathe.

I spy the course of my egress.

That’s when I meet Severus. [Well, I saw him.] Still, I can see him. He doesn’t see me (until about 40 years later). He buries his big battle ax{e} in Conrad’s torso right as the old-timer explodes (in)gloriously. What a shrieking, sloppy mess. In that agonizing moment, part of me died, but my legs did what they were trained to do: they moved my body.

There were at least fifty of them. This was a trap. That’s obvious, right?

This is also the moment Bessi realizes there’s been a breach, i.e. a double-agent lies in our midst. Is that also obvious?

Forgive me—I’ve lost track of what’s obvious (on average).

Currently, in fact, I think we have two moles. Yes, I still say “we” when referring to Bessi. I’m still on their team. Your team, too, as it were.

So many thoughts going through my mind at this point. What sort of ambush has been set up in Norway? Will Elvyn survive? Can I survive this? Honestly, in this moment, yep, it looks easy—Conrad went out with a fucking bang—so I don’t exactly fear for my life, but I definitely run for it.

I’ve never run faster. And I probably never will.

I sprint toward the source of the explosion, deformation, pain, and even death, before darting left, creating a dust cloud by crashing through a boarded-up entryway which promises a path leading north and most quickly to the safety of daylight.

I attract a few aggressors, but their various injuries prevent successful pursuit. They can’t keep up. Long straightaway. I’m gone. Up the tunnel. Almost there…

I’m also dying on the inside. Conrad. Fuck. Not him. Not like that.

A plat-former, of sorts.

Platform ahead on the left. I hurdle the gap, of course—maybe about to burst into tears by this point—and then I get waylaid by Vilfred, and we go skidding across the surface in a skin-burning tussle for advantageous position.

Vilfred fights like a savage animal, clawing and groping, deranged and erratic, trying to pin me {I guess}, searching indiscriminately for a piece of flesh in which to bury his sharp fangs.

Since my opponent demonstrates no knowledge of technique whatsoever, I’m easily able to perform a basic reversal and wrangle this monster into a headlock—because let’s just understate the fact that my strength shocks him, and, during the reversal, when he sees my eyes, he recognizes my mama, his Bossman’s sissy.

Needless to say, this blows his mind. I’m not supposed to be capable of existing.

Yeah, this is not what he expected, and I’d prefer he didn’t pass along this knowledge; thus, I have to kill him.

With all my might, I squeeze his neck, but this wormy rascal is as strong as he is slippery. Deeper, I dig. He unleashes a shriek as his neck crackles before he loses consciousness. Quickly, I rationalize that I will have to tear his head off [which would likely take me in excess of seven seconds], but, then, just up the tunnel, a huge pack of his kindred encroach. Gotta think fast. Death approaches within six seconds; consequently, I can’t complete the execution of Vilfred. (I’m still mad about it.) I have to run or die; therefore, I run.

None of this makes sense.

There was nothing I could do.

I ran. I escaped. I survived.

Just like I promised Conrad that I would and knew in my heart/gut/head that I should. I’m too important. I hate it.

Can you grasp why the thirty-first day in October of the year 1979 was the worst day of my life? [Hint: I lost my entire family.]

The next day was my first as an exile—day one of an utterly underestimated, unfairly extended period of profound solitude.

That was 146,000 days [forty years] ago.

Fuck you, Halloween. And go to hell, November the first.

Thanksgiving, here we come!