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Entries in Short Story / Unfinished Novel (6)

Thursday
Jul122012

A novel I won't write - Bike Mike and Samantha Jones

 

 

 

 

 

 

I have ideas. I write them down. And then I do nothing. Because it takes too much self-discipline and time to write a book. So here it is...

Maybe it's a story. Maybe it's part of a novel I won't write.

      

       

It was 2:30 am and purely coincidental.
 
No, thinking about it, it probably wasn't.
 
It was more likely that divine provenance had puppeteered all of it, that it was - cue the music: Dun-dun DUN! - meant to be.
 
Let's examine it and decide for ourselves.
 
2:30 am and she was wide awake again, finding patterns behind her eyelids if she looked really hard into the dark and then blinked, hard.  It's a pretty boring game.
 
Losing the battle between relaxation techniques and medication, she headed to the medicine cabinet and wrestled the lid off the orange bottle, shook out some pills, put one between her teeth, shook the rest back in again and then took care to wind and press the lid just right to get it all closed up again.  She flipped the pill into her mouth with her tongue and bent over the faucet, lapping water from her cupped hand.
That's about the exact moment, as well as she can remember, that she heard it.
 
First there was the whining noise that those kinds of motorbikes make, the ones that go too fast.  She heard the change of key in the gearing and, just about to sail down a thought-stream of indignation and arseholes on fast bikes riding like the clappers on residential roads late at night, she heard the bang.  
 
That horrible bang that always comes as part of a quartet along with the crunch of metal, the squeal of brakes and some kind of low, frightening thudding noise.
 
She didn't really think through her actions. No plan, just reaction.
 
She put on slippers, grabbed a jacket, found her keys and left the house before the dogs even realized she was going somewhere.  Neither of them even came to the door.
 
She could walk, of course, the two blocks behind her house to where she knew it happened, but the car would give her light, so she clambered into it and took off, not bothering to put on her seatbelt.
 
She found the bike easily enough.  It was on the side of the road, perfectly parked in a 4 hour maximum parking zone... it was just lying on its side.
 
She drove past it, knowing he must have come off before the bike skidded away from him, and drove in a circle at 90 degrees to the road lanes, her lights scanning the park.  He was collapsed against the trunk of a tree.
 
Now that she had him, she called 911, explaining what had happened - or what she thought might have happened - and asking for an ambulance to come to the North East corner of the park as quickly as possible.
 
She got the courage to walk over to him - the body was big, it had to be a man - and see him.  She knew she couldn't move him, shouldnt touch him, even.  
 
Holy shit.... was he dead?
 
"The ambulance is coming.  It's coming."  She started to cry.
 
A grrrrmph sound came from inside his helmet, startling her.
 
"Don't move, don't!" She knelt down at his side.  "In the movies they always say never to move the head or neck..."
 
Another grrrrmph, quieter this time.
 
He was lying on his back, in full protective biker gear.  Gently, very gently, she took his left hand in hers, and they waited together.
 
The rest of it all was kind of a blur.  Having the EMTs shoo her away so they could stabilize him.  Explaining to the police officer that she didn't know the man, but could he please giver her cell number to the hospital so that any family might let her know how he was doing.  Getting into her car and very, very gingerly, driving around the block to go home, now that the sleeping tablets she'd taken were really kicking in.  Then.... bed.  Blissful bed.
 
It must have been at least two weeks till she got the phone call - probably three.  She was at work, bantering with her colleagues over something or other, all standing up so they could peer over the cube walls and have a conversation.  
 
"Hello?"
 
"Hi.  Is this... Samantha Jones?"
   
"Yes."
 
"I'm Mike.  The guy you saved at the motorbike accident."
 
He was still in hospital, and he wanted to thank her for what she did.  Because he was going to be in a rehab facility for a while, could she visit him sometime?
 
And so, possibly despite her better judgement, a few days later, Sam arrived to the swish of the automated lobby doors.  Once it was confirmed that she was on the list of approved guests - for that day only and only until 4pm - she was directed to his room.
 
She wasn't quite sure what she'd expected, but it wasn't this.  It wasn't to start to cry, long, silent rivulets down her face, as soon as his eyes met hers.  Standing next to his bed, she felt humiliated at her reaction, rubbing her cheeks with her sleeves and sniffing loudly.  Then she saw that he was crying too, and that was strangely calming.
 
"These are for you," she whispered hoarsely, holding out a bright bunch of flowers in a vase.  "I said you were a biker guy and asked them to not do something too feminine..."she turned the vase so he could see the rest of the arrangement, then set it down on a table at the side of the room.  
 
"It's lovely," he said, "and... these are for you."  He pointed to a very large bouquet standing on the same table.
 
"Oh," she stammered, "you didn't---"
 
"I did.  I want to thank you.  You saved my life."
 
"Don't be silly," she blushed.  "Someone would have seen..."
But they both knew it wasn't true.  He'd been thrown into the shadows of the trees in the park, and his bike had ended up 30 feet away in a legitimate parking space.  Anyone who saw it would have just thought it had been vandalized because it was on it's side.  In the time that they had waited for the ambulance, noone else had come out of their houses to see what was going on, no lights in the windows came on at all. 
 
She started to cry again, all the trauma of that night resurfacing, and turned back to the bed, taking his hand just like she had done in the park.  
 
"I was so scared," she whispered.
 
"Me too," he said.  "But you didn't seem scared at all."
  
"I'd taken a sleeping pill.  By the time I drove myself home I was probably as high as a kite."
They both started giggling and he squeezed her hand, softly.
 
"I'm Samantha, by the way," she said, moving her hand so that she shook his, formally.
 
"Mike," he said, grinning.
And so it began.
To read more in this series, click the Category link below.
Monday
Mar122012

A Novel I Won't Write - The Children


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

I have ideas. I write them down. And then I do nothing. Because it takes too much self-discipline and time to write a book. So here it is...

Maybe it's a story. Maybe it's part of a novel I won't write.

 
 
 
It was bizarre - they'd had the photograph at least two years before she saw them.  
 
It was taken just before Christmas, a charity thing at work where a colleague who dabbled in portrait photography set up a mini-studio and took donations for some local charity or other.  Her colleagues had looked askance at her because she had brought not only her husband, but her three dogs.  Well, they were her children, these little dachshunds, so there.
 
It turned out very well.  She and hubby were smiling, the dogs were all looking at the camera...
 
But now, as she looked at the picture, two actual children hovered there, pale and ghostlike, but clearly visible behind and between her husband and her.  
 
They were both blonde - which made no sense seeing as she and Mike were brunettes - and robust looking.  The boy seemed about eight or nine, and the girl about six.  They both had glasses.  Now that made sense.
 
Wait.
 
Made sense?
 
What the fuck?
 
None of this made sense, she chided herself, turning away from the wall where the framed photograph hung.  It's an illusion, it's a dream, it's the new anti-anxiety medication.  It's something.  Because it sure as hell isn't real.
 
But they were still there when she turned around again.  
 
And then she found herself vomiting on the dining room table.  They'd both waved at her.
 
 
--- " ---
  
  
It took a few minutes to run to the bathroom, vomit more, calm down, clean it all up, then calm down some more.  
 
So much for the new meds.
 
Then she slowly walked back to look at the photograph again.  
 
They were still there.  They seemed different... concerned.
 
"We're sorry, Mum," the girl said.  "That was mean of us."
 
She was self-possessed enough to pull at a dining room chair to plunk herself down.
 
"What the fuck is this?" she breathed at them.
 
"We're the children you chose not to have," the boy said.  He seemed slightly bitter, not kind, like the girl.
 
"I'm Sarah," said the girl.
 
"Oh, please," she said, laughing.  "I'd never call my daughter Sarah."
 
"You wouldn't have a choice, Mum.  I would have been born two weeks after grandma died.  Dad would have asked you and you wouldn't have been able to refuse."
 
"I still feel sick," she said, to noone in particular.
 
"I'm Declan," said the boy.  "Dad would've won that battle too."
 
"Why are you here?" She stared the boy down, not interested in dealing with his beligerence on top of everything else.
 
"We're here to ask you to release us," Sarah said.  You could tell it was hard for her to say, and that she'd practiced it in her head many times.  Maybe they'd discussed it.  Agreed on just the right wording.
 "There's a couple we found.  They can't have kids.  We want to go to them. You had a hysterectomy, anyway.  You chose to grow a fibroid instead of me."  The boy clearly wasn't in the same psychological place his sister was.
 "I didn't choose to grow anything!" she snapped.  "Why do I have to defend myself to you?"
"Ignore him," said Sarah.  "He doesn't get that women have a choice."
 
"And men," she said.  "Your father is part of this too, you know."
 
"Not if you really ask him, and really listen," Declan snapped back.
 
"Listen," said Sarah in a calm-the-waters voice.  "Please.  Let's just resolve this."
 
"Resolve what?"  She started to cry.
 
"Let us go," said Declan, his voice slightly softer now.  "Let us go to another family.  Let us live."
 
"Of course you can live," she said, her voice catching.  She was almost sobbing now.
 
"You have to ask for it to happen.  You have to pray," explained Sarah.
 
"Pray? To who?" 
 
"It doesn't matter what the name is.  None of us know the name.  Just ask."
 
"Where will you go?"  She struggled to control herself.
 
"I can't tell you that," said Sarah.  "Besides, we won't remember anything.  Fresh start, new genes and all that.  What you are giving away is the potential of us, not us as we are."
 
She got up and turned her back on them, going into the kitchen and letting the door swing closed behind her.  She could hear them whispering urgently to each other as she walked away.  
 
Of course she'd let them go.  Of course she'd pray.  But how to deal with this?
 
It was just all so ridiculous.  
 
She thought back to that silly game you played with a silver necklace as a teenager.  Your friend held it above your palm and you asked what your first child would be.  If it swung back and forth it was a boy, and if it swung in circle it was a girl.  She'd had line, circle, then nothing.  A boy and a girl.  Two kids.  
 
"Whatever," she'd said to her BFF.  "I'm not having kids."
 
Even at  13 years old, she knew.
 
But - fuck! - to actually be confronted with them?  She hadn't been ready for that.  
 
The sobbing was slowly subsiding now, into dry heaves.  She had to do it.  She knew she had to do it.  She just couldn't do it in front of them.
 
So she knelt down, there and then, on the kitchen floor, and prayed so hard she felt she might burst.  All the emotion poured out of her.  Regret for a life lost - a parallel universe where motherhood danced.  Guilt and rebellion, for and against the feeling embedded in her by society about what she should have done, what she was supposed to be.  Relief and gratitude for her life lived - her career, her freedom, her knowledge that she was never meant to be a mother, never wanted it, not the reality of it, not really.  She asked forgiveness but, she explained to whoever was listening, she had done the right thing for her, for her husband even, if they went to a home that wanted them, for Sarah and Declan.  
 
Her knees hurt and she was cold when she came to.  How long had she been on the floor?  And, another thing... where had her kids been all these years?  Why did they look the ages they would have been and not still potential babies?  Was limbo real?  Had they been in heaven?
 
Questions reeled through her head as she burst out of the kitchen, lurching back to the photograph.  She lost her footing on the slick wooden floor and began to fall, twisting her head frantically to see them, to ask them.
 
She saw Declan smile softly, and Sarah blow a kiss, as they faded away.
    
  
 
To read more in this series, click the tag below.
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Sunday
Feb122012

Short Story / Unfinished Novel - Simon Says 

 
 
 
 
 

 

I have ideas. I write them down. And then I do nothing. Because it takes too much self-discipline and time to write a book. So here it is...

Maybe it's a story. Maybe it's part of a novel I won't write.

  
 
 
 
 
It had been a wonderful holiday, until someone grabbed him around the neck.
 
Simon had compared his hand and foot size to his idols at the Chinese Theatre, walked along Rodeo drive and finally - after endless driving up side streets and illegal parking - got a decent picture of the Hollywood sign.  As he walked back to his hotel room, his mind had been full of thoughts of the VIP Universal Studios tour he was booked on the following day.  He was therefore completely oblivious to the fact that this hotel corridor should be any different to the thousands of bland, instantly forgettable passage ways in the rest of the building.  
 
One doesn't expect to be grabbed from behind.  Simon froze, then flailed a little, then froze again.  The man was big, and well built.  He smelt of sweat, with the metallic tinge of blood.
 
"I'm not going to hurt you," he panted in Simon's ear.
   
Isn't it funny where your thoughts go in these moments?  Simon found himself thinking that he'd rather prefer the last words he heard not be such a damn cliche.
 
The man threw Simon into the room, falling backwards to close the door, then lurched after Simon, who was crawling backwards and kept on doing so until he hit the bedroom wall.  
 
Simon did a mental inventory of the contents of his backpack, which he had somehow held onto through all this:
 
  • Let's Go California guide book
  • Sunscreen
  • LA Angels Baseball Cap
  • Sunglasses
  • Starbucks water bottle, empty
  • Moleskin notebook
  • iPhone charger
  • US plug adapter
  • Passport
  • Wallet
    • $43
    • £20
    • Oyster card
    • Mastercard
    • Lottery ticket 
  • Plain white T shirt from the GAP
 
All useless in his current situation.
 
Fuck it.
 
"Don't wet your pants," he muttered to himself.  "Don't be a hero.  Don't wet your pants."
 "What the fuck you sayin'?" panted the man, as he half fell, half sat on the bed.
 
Simon looked over at him, this man dressed in only a hotel bathrobe, breathing heavily, slumped a little to the right.  Then Simon saw him.  
 
"Bloody hell!" he spat.  "Are you Denzel Washington?"
   
There was a long pause.
  
"Sure," the man said, "I'm Denzel Washington, and I need your help."
  
Simon stood up and helped Denzel Washington lie backwards.  He didn't quite know what to say when Denzel Washington opened his robe, revealing his belly and... other things.
 
"I'm not gay!" Simon blurted.
 "I don't give a fuck what you are," Denzel Washington spat.  "Just take this."
   
He was pinching a bit of flesh and skin just above his hip.  Simon leant forward.  There seemed to be a small incision, bleeding slightly.  
  
 "I'm not quite sure what you---"
"Squeeze it out of me.  Squeeze it out.  Take it.  Go.  Take it to the nearest CIA building.  Tell them Orchid 73.  That's all you say.  Orchid 73, until they get you Pat Baird.  B. A. I. R. D.  No one else.  Make him show you his tattoo on his shoulder.  Betty Boop.  Say Orchid 73."
"Squeeze it?  You're, um, you're bleeding."
"Fucking do it, Motherfucker!"   
  
It was a small cylinder.  Simon washed the blood off it in the bathroom, panicking when he dropped it, then grateful he'd thought to close the plug in the basin.  
  
"Keep it safe.  Somewhere safe," Denzel Washington stage whispered from the bed.
"I am --- look."
  
He stood in front of Denzel Washington and took the ink cartridge out of his favorite pen and stuck the cylinder in it and dropped it into the inside zip pocket of his backpack.  
  
"Aspiring script writer," he explained, with an apologetic shrug that only those born and bred in England can perfect.
"Get out," replied Denzel Washington.  "Go. Go."
 "Right."  Simon switched to his Get Things Done Voice.  "Right."
   
The pop was practically inaudible.  In some part of his brain, Simon actually wasted time being disappointed that the whole window hadn't exploded inwards, showering him and Denzel Washington with a musical tinkling sound.  
 
No.  There was just a twitch from Denzel Washington, and a change in the sunlight through the window because of a small hole in the pane.  But it was enough to trigger the right reaction in Simon.
 
He dropped to his knees.  He scrabbled towards the door, grabbing his backpack.  He lurched into the corridor.  He ran into the fire escape stairwell.  
 
"The roof," he told himself as he pitter pattered upwards, taking one step at a time in an awkward jog.  "Always go to the roof."
  
The sunlight was jarring.  Simon mentally calculated the risk vs. reward of stopping to get his sunglasses out of his backpack, and decided being able to see was a definite strategic advantage.  
  
Unlike the shot through the window, this time, it was exactly like the sound in the movies.  There was the DOOF! and soft mini-hiss of the dirt on the rooftop rising when the shots hit a few yards in front of him.  
 
Shit.
  
He scurried between the wall and some kind of massive outlet pipe.
  
"I need help," he whimpered.
  
The voice came from under a massive satellite dish.
  
"Time to gooh, laddie!" 
  
Simon spotted his fellow roof mate.
  
"Sean Connery!"
"No, lad.  Bond, James Bond."
"Of course of course!  Um, how are we going to get out of here?"
"Jet pack."
  
There was a high pitched sound as James Bond activated a switch in his backpack (way cooler than Simon's), which then contorted to reveal a shining silver contraption.  James Bond gave Simon the thumbs up.
   
"You rrrrready?"
"Wait!"
"Wha'?"
"I don't have a jet pack."
"Bad luck."
"Can I come with you on yours?"
"Nae, Lad.  M made it ferrr me anna maximum a size 0, double D wiman under 120 pounds.  Goo luck!"
   
 
 
There's a flash as Sean Connery takes off into the sun.
  
Then Simon encounters Jason Bourne, who encourages him to jump across the alleyway onto the roof of the next building.  They run together, but Jason makes it across and Simon doesn't.  He ends up hanging onto the edge of the building, crying because it hurts his hands so much.  He looks up and asks Jason Bourne to help him, but Jason says he can't because he isn't real.
 
Simon bumbles through a spy situation, encountering major spy characters along the way who help him somewhat, but tend to stick more to their cliches.
  
When Simon finally does get to a CIA office, he gets put into an interrogation room, but they send him junior person.  He refuses to speak until Baird comes, and we see the CIA staff in a situation room looking Simon up.  They say that he has a history of mentall illness and just gave up a job at an Amazon warehouse West of London.   We hear Timothy Dalton and Pierce Brosan have restraining orders out on him.  
 
As Baird debriefs him, we slowly separate fact from fantasy, but Simon never does.
   
To read more unfinished stories, click here.
  
Monday
Mar212011

Short Story / Unfinished Novel - Casino Girl

 

 

 

 

I have ideas.  I write them down.  And then I do nothing.  Because it takes too much self-discipline and time to write a book.  So here it is...

Maybe it's a story.  Maybe it's part of a novel I won't write. 

 

 

 

"Table 17," Chad said, zooming in.

"Who?" she asked.

"The woman in the sequined jacket thing."

"It's a bolero."

He ignored her fashion tip and tapped the screen to the right, which had wider angle shot.

"There's Larry."

The Pit Boss was standing on the far side of the Roulette table, discretely keeping an eye on the woman who was winning.

Susan sighed.  "It's hardly like she's struck gold, the poor woman," she thought.  This wasn't a high end Vegas joint.  It only took $500 in consecutive winnings at a $5 table for the dealer to quickly and quietly press the button that alerted the control room.

No, this really, really wasn't Vegas.

Susan knew her old gang would laugh if they saw the equipment here.  Hell, they' wouldn't even get that far - they'd be sniggering at the carpet when they hit the lobby.  And none of them would eat in that pathetic excuse for a restaurant upstairs.

"Focus!" she chided herself, leaning into the screens.

 "So, uh, how's your mom?" Chad asked.

"Fine," Susan said, her voice flat, signalling that she'd wouldn't elaborate if asked.  

Her mother wasn't fine and everyone knew it.  

This was a shitbag casino on a highway and everyone who worked here came from the same goddamn pissant little town.  They all knew how her mother was, they all knew Susan didn't want to be here and they sure as hell all knew that 30 seconds after her mother's funeral, she'd be putting her Porsche into Flight Mode and hurtling back to the Strip.  Before they could say "Buh-bye" she'd be back at her old job where, if she was watching a woman on an unusual winning streak at a Roulette table, that woman would've won at least ten grand by now.

Susan ran through all the standard checks.  Servers sent to walk past the table signalled there was no cellphone, nothing visible in the woman's ears.  The woman's purse was one of those tiny things you bring to a fancy party, and hung on a long silver chain from her shoulder down to her hip.  The dealer had already been swapped out. 

"The report says she's here with her husband and two friends," Chad said, reading from a third screen.  "They had dinner upstairs, ordered pretty fancy wine.  All four of them are very dressed up.  They told the server it was a celebration for the husband."

"Well," Susan said, "I've seen cheaters use all sorts of ways of looking innocent."

"Yeah," Chad said, "but the server said they bought a wine called Malbuck, and hardly anyone does that."

"Malbec," Susan sighed.

"Whatever."

Susan knew she shouldn't have done that.  The bolero thing was OK, because it was a woman explaining the name of a garment to a man.  But correcting Chad's pronounciation of a type of wine was taking it too far.  His tone said the same thing she heard from everyone in town: "Don't think you're so fancy now, Missy, just 'cos you left to go live in Vegas and drive a sportscar.  You were born here.  You were raised here, just like us."

Distractions!  Focus!

"How much did she start out with?" she asked.

"I told you already," snapped Chad.  "A hundred."

The woman at the Roulette table was definitely not behaving like your average gambler.  She wasn't leaning in or watching what other players were doing or even looking at the table to choose where to put her bet.  She stood, breathing very slowly, eyes closed, all her chips in her hands and, when the wheel was already spinning, she'd lay down a bet on either black or red, a little before No More Bets was called.  Then she'd close her eyes again and breathe, waiting.  When the dealer called the win, she'd open her eyes and watch him add to her pile of chips, then pick them all up.  She'd close her eyes again, take deep slow breaths, and the whole process would restart.

Except... Susan leaned in a little further.

Every now and then, she didn't bet at all.

"How long? she asked.

"Only the last twenty minutes," replied Chad.

"I really don't see anything, apart from she's just a bit weird," she said, pressing the button on the console so that Larry, the Pit Boss, and the Spotters could hear her.

Susan saw Larry shrug his right shoulder, ever so slightly, on the monitor.  He didn't see anything either, then.  Same move from both Spotters, one pretending to play at the same table, and another standing behind the woman, a little to the right, holding a fake Whiskey Sour.

The woman didn't play for three rounds.  The slow, deliberate breathing, the closed eyes... more than a few of the other players at the table had noticed her strange behavior.  Only two of them were following her bets - the rest were too freaked out by her.

The wheel spun, the ball was spun in the opposite direction.  The woman put everything on Red.  She closed her eyes and put her palms together, as if she was praying.

Again, she won. 

But she also completely lost her composure.  Her shoulders started to heave, she took her winnings and turned to leave the table.

Susan quickly pushed the button to talk to Larry.

"Is she going to throw up?" she asked.

"Crying," said Larry quietly, into his mike.

"I'm coming down there," said Susan.  "Let me know where she goes."

Susan ignored the fact that Chad was whispering directions into her earpiece, pretending to be James Bond, and soon found the woman cashing in her chips.  Susan followed her to one of the sofas just off the North side of the casino floor.

The woman was still crying.  She was holding her little purse tightly to her chest.  "They always do that," thought Susan.  "Makes no sense.  As if we'd let anyone steal from anyone else in here."

Susan sat down next to the woman on the sofa, putting a hand on her shoulder.

"My name is Susan," she said softly, "and I work for the casino.  Are you OK?  Can I help with anything?"

"No."  The woman sniffed, blotting her nostrils with the back of her hand.

"Are you sure?  You seem very upset.  Did you have an argument with someone?  Lost a lot of money?"

"I won," the woman said, launching into a fresh flood of tears.

"Isn't that a happy thing?" asked Susan, taking some Kleenex from a helpful server, and handing them to the woman.

"Yes, yes." said the woman, her voice husky from the tears.  "It is."

"Congratulations..." Susan kept her voice moderated.  "How much?"

"$6,400.  I know it doesn't sound like a lot --" the woman blew her nose a little, took a few shaky breaths, "but my husband hasn't worked for eight months and he got a job two weeks ago and we're here to celebrate with our friends but we still have so many credit card bills and medical bills and they almost repossesed our car.  We're twenty grand in the hole."

"I'm so happy this is going to help you."  Susan rubbed the woman's back.  "But you still seem so very upset.  These don't seem like tears of happiness."

From the corner of her eye, Susan saw Larry on the casino floor escorting the woman's husband through the tables, coming over to meet them.  Larry kept looking over to check with Susan, but he also had his hand on the husband's arm and seemed to be reassuring him.

Susan gave an almost imperceptible wave, and Larry directed the husband round a table at a 90 degree angle, taking him on a detour to give the two women more time alone together.

"I closed my eyes," said the woman, starting to cry again "and then a voice told me what to bet."

"It's OK," said Susan, "a lot of people here bet by gut instinct or take time to get in touch with their inner voice."  

The woman snorted - half laugh, half sob - and blew her nose.  She dabbed her eyes, smudging her mascara even more.  

She turned on the couch to face Susan, looking her in the eye.  The woman placed her hand on Susan's arm, and squeezed it.

"You don't understand," she said.  "It was my mother.  She said red.  She said black.  She said when not to play."  

Susan flinched, but she had to push a little more.  She'd need to have the detail for her report.

"Why did you stop?  Two more bets and you would've been able to pay off almost all your debt." 

"My mother always said the same thing," the woman answered, starting to cry harder again. " Same thing.  When I sewed my wedding dress, when I had my first baby.  Even when I was a kid doing my homework.  She said: 'I'll help you, but I won't do it all for you'."

Susan started to cry.

 

To read more in the Short Story / Unfinished Novel series, click the Tag below or the Category link on the left.

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Tuesday
Oct262010

Short Story / Unfinished Novel - The Nose 

  
  
  
 
 
 
 

I have ideas.  I write them down.  And then I do nothing.  Because it takes too much self-discipline and time to write a book.  So here it is...

Maybe it's a short story.  Maybe it's part of a novel I won't write. 

 
 
 
 
 
 
Horatio had always been a weird boy although - to be fair - it wasn't really his fault.  
  
It wasn't his fault that, while other people were chatting amiably, he had a disgusted expression on his face.  It wasn't his fault that, in the middle of a boring history lesson, while his classmates were bored to death, he sat with a blissful expression on his face.
 
You see, Horatio had a Nose.  
 
No, not a "nose".  A "Nose".
Horatio's nose was a super-nose, an uber-nose, a dog-like nose.  He could tune into an odor three miles away.  Scents that went undetected by others were thick, heady, almost palpable wafts to Horatio.  
 
You'd never know it to look at him.  His nose looked completely normal.  In fact, that was probably part of the problem, for if he'd had a bulbous, oversized probiscus, others may have understood why his facial expression was sometimes completely at odds with human interaction taking place around him.  Perhaps they would have sniffed a little harder and realized "Ah!  He's smelling dinner cooking!" or "Oh dear.  Horatio's picked up on the smell of that dead rat we cleaned out yesterday."
 
But, unfortunately for Horatio, his face gave no such visual clue.
 
Perhaps it wasn't the nose at all.  Perhaps it was all in his brain.  Receptors which, for the rest of us, lie dormant, may have been firing on all cylinders in Horatio's head.
 
Whatever the reason, you can see why Horatio ended up as a bit of an outsider.  At a pleasant dinner party, he was scowling at the smell of burnt creme brulee.  During intense political debate with fellow lefty college students, he succumbed to the blissful aroma of a neighbor's fresh baked chocolate-chip cookies massaging his facial muscles into a squidgy mass.  
 
Because other's could rarely smell what he did, his expressions were always misinterpreted.  
 
"Horatio's high as a kite."
"What the hell is up with Horatio?  Anything we talked about tonight seemed to just piss him off."
 
Even worse were the questions people didn't ask out loud, prompted by misunderstanding and insecurity.  
 
Does Horatio hate me?
Does Horatio think I'm stupid?  Well, who the fuck is HE, anyway?  He can go to hell!
 
And so, without him ever quite understanding why, people distanced themselves from Horatio.  Even when he tried to explain his nasal prowess, or to develop a better poker face, the mitigations were never truly effective.  Like anyone with a visible handicap, Horatio was "other."  Different.  An outsider.
 
Horatio took refuge in books and learning.  He studied hard, he read prolifically and, the more he did, the more he discovered that chemistry was his favorite subject.  Atoms and elements and bonds became fascinating puzzles which, when solved, helped Horatio understand the thing that had such a massive influence on his life... Smell.
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

And so our hero immersed himself in particles and how they bonded with each other.

I'm sure it won't come as a surprise to you that there was no other kind of bonding in his life.  Friendships petered out after a few weeks, and so Horatio gave up trying.  As for women, well... he didn't have a chance in hell.  Wrinkle your nose at the wrong moment on a first date and you're done.  Get distracted by perfume and sit through an initial conversation with an expression of ecstasy on your face, and that conversation isn't going to last very long.  Word went around the college underground and Horatio was labelled, in large scarlet letters, with AVOID.

His academic career, on the other hand, flourished.  Chemistry became his refuge, and he excelled.  One of the professors, also interested in scents, took Horatio under his wing and, like all mentors, encouraged him to excel in an area where the professor himself had failed - to become a Nez.  

Professor Blanchard explained that France held umpteen opportunities for Horatio to be the official tester and, eventually, creator of perfumes and scents that men would shell out inordinate amounts of money for, and women would use to seduce these men in the first place.  (Blanchard was not the most progressive man when it came to gender issues.)

 

"I leave that crap to the hairy-pitted, Croc-wearing lesbian professors!" he'd spit.

 

But I digress.... Back to Horatio.

He was intrigued by the prospect of working in a parfumerie but, sadly, he absorbed more than just knowledge from Prof Blanchard.  The rejection of his college cohorts created fertile ground for the professor's outdated views on women, and Horatio chose to embrace those too.  

With that in mind, he didn't want to enable harlots to be more seductive.  So many men like him, Horatio thought, falling prey to the seduction of these harpies, only to suffer rejection again and again, as he had.

No.

Horatio wanted to turn the tables.

Horatio wanted to make perfume for MEN.

 

 

 

 

It didn't take Horatio long to get snapped up by a major American brand.  A combination of Prof Blanchard's contacts, Horatio's sterling academic record and a sample of a scent he had created himself (a spicy blend with notes of cinnamon and Ameroni), ensured an obscenely high salary, joining bonus and three months of luxury corporate accommodation.  Horatio soon proved his worth, developing a best selling deodorant range, and an even better selling aftershave.

Promotion was rapid, and Horatio found himself, at 28 years old, running the Men's Toiletries department. 

Ben, the CEO and face of the brand, asked to meet Horatio and, being somewhat of a gormless geek himself, stepped into the shoes of Prof Blanchard and became Horatio's new mentor.  This new friendship, however, was a lot different to the relationship with Blanchard.  Horatio found himself at swanky promotion parties, attending New York Fashion Week and strolling down the red carpet at movie premieres.  

Of course he didn't jump straight into the social big time.  Ben tested Horatio in a few low risk situations, and then advised him on how best to fit in in future.  Horatio began using the company's facial products, having regular manicures and pedicures and consulting a personal stylist.  

But the facial expression issue remained.  Horatio had made considerable progress developing a better poker face, but his brain was not wired to ignore overwhelming wafts of scents, good or bad.  Ben watched closely and put two and two together.  When Horatio grimaced, if Ben tuned into his surroundings, he too would pick up on the offensive odor.  If Horatio zoned out, Ben isolated the source - steam from a hot apple pie, perfume on a female companion or the glug of a fine wine being poured. 

And so Ben took Horatio aside and offered a solution.  So simple, so obvious, but still genius.

Botox.

Overnight,  Horatio turned from someone who would scowl or smile inexplicably, to a man at the top of his game who was "understandably" aloof.  This had the added advantage of making others try even harder to please him.  His staff worked harder, and his social interactions improved immensely.  It was a win-win.

Ben, noticing this improvement, took Horatio with him to more and more social events, both public and private.  Horatio became a regular at Ben's monthly poker game.  They played golf at least once a week.  And then - the ultimate endorsement - Ben sponsored Horatio to become a member of his Whiskey and Cigar club.  

Horatio was "in."

 

 

 

Although Ben had witnessed his prodigy's rapid ascent to ubermenschdom, he noticed that there was one area in which Horatio was still rather lacking - women.  No amount of paralyzed facial muscles and snappy dressing could heal the scars of years of rejection.  Horatio just didn't know how to talk to women.

But, as with everything else.  Ben had an answer.  

One Friday night, after a pleasant dinner with a supplier, Ben bundled the amiably inebriated party into a limousine and instructed the driver to take them to an exclusive and secret location.  In the ornate lobby, they were met by an impeccably groomed woman in her forties (sixties, actually, but not that you could tell) who greeted Ben enthusiastically and then turned to introduce herself - in a soft, slightly accented voice - as Veronica.

The men were ensconced in a lounge area and served drinks as the room was slowly invaded by beautiful women.  Even two sheets to the wind, Horatio got it immediately.  Brothel.

It didn't take long for him to end up in a room with an impossibly leggy and busty woman.  Horatio didn't leave until late Sunday afternoon.

On his way out, Veronica beckoned Horatio into her office, where his credit card was extracted, charged and returned with the speed, subtlety and grace of a pickpocket.  Horatio learned that he could access Veronica's buffet of delights at his convenience, in the location of his choice.

On the way home, Horatio did some rapid mental calculations and realized that, due to his well compensated job and Ben having funded his entire social life so far, his disposable income was substantial.  Substantial enough, in fact, that he could indulge in the buffet every weekend.

And so he did. 

He worked his way through blondes, redheads, brunettes, A-cups, D-cups, flowing curly locks and shaved heads.  But most of all, he worked his way through smells.  Armpits, necks, hair, feet, asses and, of course, vaginas.

The complexity of smells from a woman's vagina fascinated him.  More and more he concentrated his time with the women on contemplating, analyzing and enjoying that one specific area.  He looked, he sniffed and, eventually, he licked.

And then something amazing happened.

One of the women came.

The gush of fluid was unlike anything Horatio had ever experienced in his life.  The notes in the scent were so complex that he was utterly and completely overwhelmed.

He nearly passed out.

 

 

 

Afterwards, Horatio thought for a very long time about his experience.  In life full of scents, this one had struck him like never before.  Was it like this for other men?  And, if it was, how did they function?  Why were they not with women every second of every day trying, in every way they could, to milk that juice, that smell, from a woman?

Wait.  

Maybe it was just THIS woman.  Maybe it was different for every one. 

And so the experiment began.

 

 

 

Horatio took two weeks vacation and spent each night with a different woman.  Veronica had to sub-contract to find him new stock.  He hid sample bottles at the side of his bed and, once the woman was in the throes of ecstasy, collected some of the excretion from her labia.

In an impromptu lab set up in his study, he documented the scents.  He described the notes, rated the overall experience and looked for common elements.  

The vacation time had to be extended with a lie about a family emergency to continue the experiment.  Variables had to be controlled, and so the women were asked to fast for 24 hours before meeting him.  

Horatio eventually had to go back to work, but all this did was slow the pace of the research.  He continued evenings after normal work hours, and narrowed the women down to four types (it was on racial lines, but Horatio didn't really even realize this), choosing a representative for each, and then experimenting with inputs.  

"This week," he instructed Veronica, "they must eat only pineapple for 24 hours before they see me."

"This week, only pancakes, with a lot of sugar and cinnamon."

 

And so it went on.  

Horatio was sleeping less than four hours a night, he had to dip into his 401K to keep funding the women, but he didn't care.  The end was almost in sight... formulae don't lie.

Horatio had isolated four essential scent groups which could be added to a standard toiletry pack - aftershave, deodorant and cologne.  They each contained common notes from his samples, infused with some of the more appealing dietary additions - cinnamon for group 1, vanilla for group 2, five spice for group 3 and licorice for group 4.   Finally, to honor his four favorite women, he added the specific essence which belonged to her, and her alone, to each of the groups.

And this was his fatal mistake.

 

 

 

Adding the scent groups to a new line of toiletries was easy.  He created samples and took them to Ben, who authorized him to proceed immediately and get the products out in time for Christmas.  Operations made his creations a reality, the Product Design Team made manly packaging and Marketing pulled a nationwide launch together in record time.

January figures showed that one in every 14 houses in metropolitan areas in the US had bought one of the new product ranges during December.  The line was a hit, and Horatio was the conquering hero.

Until March.

 

 

 

The first complaint sounded so ridiculous that Customer Service filed it away with a special code - 999 - which meant "crazy person."

 

"Some guy said his wife slapped him when he got home and he wants a refund!" scoffed the Call
Center Operator, enjoying finally being the one to have the funniest story at lunch break.

 

But the volume of complaints increased and, finally, they could not be ignored.  It became very clear that, although men loved the range, women hated it.  Even gay male partners hated it, and said so very loudly, all the while never daring to voice the nagging doubts which they'd never think to link to an aftershave - that their man was secretly bisexual.

By mid-February it became clear that production would have to stop, and the dreaded "Product Recall" phrase was whispered in watercooler conversations.  

Ben called Horatio into an emergency meeting and, for the first time, found his mentee's impassive facial expression to be utterly infuriating at best, and sociopathic at worst.  

Horatio assured Ben that he could fix things.  He knew exactly where he'd gone wrong.  Putting in the unique identifiers of Sasha, Chloe, whatsername 1 and whatsername 2 was the mistake.  Women could obviously pick up, on some subconscious level, on the scent of another woman.  It must be an evolutionary survival thing.  He ought to have known that women were still so unevolved, so utterly primal under all that bouffant hair and make up.

He explain things to Ben in those terms, of course.  He spoke in chemistry terms, and tried to sound confident and professional.

But Ben was hundreds of thousands of dollars in the hole and facing pending law suits.  He wasn't in the mood to listen to science geek babble from a man who didn't seem to give a rat's ass about the shitstorm he'd caused.

Horatio was accompanied by 2 burly security guards to his desk, closely observed as he collected a few personal belongings, and escorted from the building.

A week later, Horatio received a notice from the Whiskey and Cigars club which said that, regretfully, due to a member vote, his membership could not be renewed.

Horatio was out. 

 

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Sunday
Apr252010

Short Story / Unfinished Novel - I Died

 

I have ideas.  I write them down.  And then I do nothing.  Because it takes too much self-discipline and time to write a book.  So here it is...

Maybe it's a story.  Maybe it's part of a novel I won't write. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I died on the 6th of January, 2010.  I was 40 years old.  They say life begins at 40.  HAH!

Death.  Bizarre.

I remember there was a man.  At least, I think he was a man.  I don't remember his face, though.  

He didn't introduce himself or take my hand or anything, but - somehow - I knew.  I just knew.  He was there to guide me... to what?

"Beyond?"

"God?"

I didn't know and, for the first time in my life, it didn't bother me that I didn't know.  I don't fulfill one of those key success criteria that management books talk about these days:  I was never comfortable with ambiguity.  But, strangely, at that moment, I felt just fine.

"Can I go to my funeral?" I asked him.

"You're not having one," he replied.  "You asked your husband for a New Orleans style procession to a bar and then an Irish wake, remember?"

"Oh yeah!  That's even better!  Can I go?"

"No."

"Why not?"  I was more confused than angry.

"You can't go back," he said, his tone laying out a clear non-negotiation zone.  "Now,  moving on."

"Moving on?  Is that you changing the subject, or are you about to tell me how this all works?"

"I was being sarcastic."

"Well," I said, starting to get annoyed, "it's irritating."

"What do you want me to say?"  His voice was overly patient, like a parent placating a child in public.

"How about: 'I can say, but I can't share that information with you'?"

"Too many words," he snapped.  "Moving on."

"If I have to move on, how do you explain ghosts then?"

"That's all bullshit," he snapped.  "Vampires, werewolves, bla bla bla.  Just fantasies that spawn crappy movies."

"Well, then can I do your job sometime in the future?" I asked, starting to sink to his level.  "I always wanted to be a psychologist.  You know... comforting people."

He ignored me.  I don't remember the color of his eyes, but I do remember they looked straight into mine, unflinching.

"So..." I decided to try again: "How do you understand people in different languages?"

We were walking now.

"We can reflect the person we're talking to."

"Reflect?"

"Reflect."

"Um... OK."

"It's so that we can build a relationship," he explained.  "So, if you're Spanish, I speak and understand Spanish."

"Wow!  That's a cool ability!  I love languages!"

I paused.  

"Um... I loved languages.  Do I have to speak in the past tense now I'm dead?"

This small thing, explaining something I liked, was what made me realize my situation.  I expected to feel sad, regretful, resentful.

Nothing.

He didn't reply immediately, as if he knew I was processing, pondering, at that moment.

"You're still you," he said eventually, his tone warming slightly.

"OK.  I love languages.  I'd love to be able to... reflect like that."

"It's no big deal," he shrugged.  "We can all do it."

"Even me?"

"Even you."

"Wow!"  Finally, something to enjoy about all this!  Maybe itwas a sign.  Maybe I'd be able to do other things.  Fly!  Cook!  Sing in tune!

"How do I do it?" I asked him.

"Just feel Spanish, and you'll be there."

"Cómo lo hago sienta el español?" I snapped, annoyed.  I mean, what the hell did "feel Spanish" mean, and how was I supposed to do it?

He looked at me, waiting.

"HOLY SHIT!" I yelled.  "I just said that in Spanish, didn't I?"

"Si."

"I LOVE IT!"

He smiled.  Well, I think he did.

"Wait a minute."  I stopped walking, and turned towards him.

"If you're 'reflecting' me, what are you right now?"

"I believe I'm a combination of British sarcasm, American chutzpah and a warped South African sense of humor."

For the first time in a very, very long time, I laughed out loud.

 

To read more in the Short Story / Unfinished Novel series, click the Tag below or the Category Link on the left.

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