Writing Under The Influence

Photo by Douglas Jordan, M.A.

This post is being brought to you today by…the flu.

Hit hard on Tuesday, tried to rally on Wednesday, and now it’s Thursday and I’ve withdrawn from everything, the DayQuil and the cough drops and the Elderberry soothing syrup, and am just riding this out like a chariot in flames through the Coliseum.

In short, I can’t be responsible for anything I write.

Visions are coming…

My fingers turn into pipe cleaners and I go door-to-door to clean people’s pipes ten at a time but everyone’s just had their pipes cleaned a few days ago sorry no thank you but the taxidermist’s son still invites me in saying please help him to reattach the eyes on the walnut then twists my hands into barbed wire and I chase him into the parlor and fall through a trap

door

and land inside a room filled with my childhood toys and they all come to life and perform my favorite play “The Simpleton’s Hamstring” and to their faces after the performance I offer nothing but effusive praise but in my review for Entertainment Weekly I give them a C-minus and thus am stricken with terrible guilt which manifests as me pushing an ox in a wheelbarrow too small for an ox but yet I truck the whole enterprise  through a rent-a-car parking lot looking for the ox’s wallet when the asphalt

gives way

and I fall through the earth until I’m home again and my wife is here hello there what? forcing my mouth open and shoving DayQuil and cough drops and Elderberry soothing syrup down my throat and shutting down the computer and whisking me off to bed

but

one pipe cleaner finger is still stuck to the mouse and still listens to my command and moves the arrow to hover over the blue Publish tab…

(Wet Your) Whistle While You Work

Steamwhistle-University of Kansas

Hey, guess what?

I’m a morning writer and keep to a routine on my writing days: shower, normal dress (i.e. no bathrobe or Zumbaz), cereal, newspaper, and then a mug of something warm while I tickle my brain along with the computer keys. For years my beverage of choice was regular, black coffee and my m.o. was to overdo it; I probably drank half a pot during the course of every writing day. Eventually my body became so accustomed to the stuff it might as well have been black water. I could have enjoyed a few cups before bed and slept soundly through the night.

Finally, it was my stomach that let me know it was time to quit, so I downgraded to something gentler, green tea. I had a good run there as well, but my body was ultimately displeased with any caffeine, so I had a decision to make. Herbal decaf teas, especially chamomile, make me drowsy, and while a good writing day is often like a waking dream, it’s none too productive to be constantly fighting droopy eyes and a nodding head.

What to do, right? Well I wasn’t about to give up such an essential element of my morning habit. So I decided to switch to hot water. And no, it’s not to soak my dentures in. Easy there, I’m not even 40 yet. Although I suppose at this rate of reduction, in a year or so I may only need a photograph of steam to get me through the day.

Right now, however, what is it about needing something warm in a mug in the morning? It’s no longer about the jolt that caffeine once gave me. And I live in Southern California and (usually) don’t need to worry about the cold weather creeping in. This is something different. Is it my security blanket? My talisman? A weapon in case any of those feisty squirrels manage to break in?

This is why I have a blog, ladies and gentlemen. A platform from which to cast out my life’s most perplexing questions and hope that they land at the feet of someone wiser than I. Can anyone out there diagnose my behavior?

But hey, I’m not alone, am I? Doesn’t everyone, writer or otherwise, crave a mug of something warm in the morning regardless of what it is?

It’s The First Post Of 2013!

Happy New Year everyone!

So here it is, my very first post of 2013. Look at it, glistening in all of its newborn juices.

Okay, okay, let me clean it up a bit…there we go. Hello first post of 2013, what have you got for us?

Thanks Bryan, what we’ve got today is–wait, can you catch that dribble off my chin? Thanks. What we’ve got today is a little preview of what your blog’s going to bring us this year. According to my sources, Build A Story With Bryan will return with some new twists, and there will be posts about finding a book agent and film projects coming to fruition and a second take on your second novel. And word on the street is there will be more guest bloggers, including a new video from another neglected sibling of a powerful celebrity.

In addition, and no offense intended by the way, but there’s a strong possibility that the blog will have to write itself at least once or twice this year. But that’s actually a good thing, isn’t it, Bryan?

Indeed, first post of 2013, that is a good thing. Means that–

–hold on, Bryan, a bird wearing a green eyeshade just landed on my shoulder. Apparently, the odds are good that a new look for the home page is coming this year. Is that accurate?

Yep, I think you may want to bet on it, first post of 2013. And you may also want to lay your chips down on the possibility there will be a post about the correct type of lacquer finish to apply to a wooden lazing bureau.

Dynamite! Okay, well that’s it for me, time for a nap. Anything you want to add, Bryan?

Just that I’m looking forward to sharing the year with everyone out there. And I’d love to hear what you have planned for yourself in 2013. Maybe a few more hours a week spent inside your own lazing bureaus?

What A Blog Wants For Christmas

Photo by Karyn Sig

Okay, seeing that Bryan hasn’t been at the helm for a few weeks and hasn’t responded to my SOS,  I guess it’s up to me to steer this ship before it runs aground. Translation: I’ve got write myself again and in the process stretch a metaphor to its breaking point.

Hello everybody, if we haven’t met before, I’m Bryan’s blog.  The last time I wrote myself, it came off as kind of a bitch-fest, and I don’t want to replicate that here. Of course, this post is still all about me, but effort has been made to tailor it to what’s happening out there in the human world.

And what’s happening right now is kids young and old are busy making their Christmas lists, and why should a blog be any different? Cut to: Here’s what Bryan’s blog wants for Christmas.

1) More attention from the “blogmaster” – Still finishing my social media version of “A Christmas Carol” to slip under Bryan’s tree this year. If that doesn’t work, me and his Facebook page and Twitter account will literally put on ghost costumes and scare the bejeezus out of him.

2) An ad linked to an online gambling service – Maybe we only make 2 cents every click, but it adds up and suddenly the items on this list become a reality. Of course, if you have a gambling addiction, only click on this ad two or three or times a week.

3) A Mrs. Bryan’s Blog – Hey, it’s not only animals, vegetables, and minerals who have “needs.”

4) Flashing tabs – Spectacle sells, my friends. Who doesn’t want to click on a “Blog” tab that’s lit up like Times Square?

5) An afternoon with Google Analytics (for a little “Search Engine Optimization,” if you get my meaning) – FYI, this is about as close as I get to paying someone to service those aforementioned “needs.” Here’s hoping someone comes through on #3.

6) A few more reader comments – Yeah, if I could put on a Santa suit and set up a bucket and ring a bell outside your house I would.

7) Dearfoam slippers – No explanation necessary.

8) World peace -It’s still cool to want that, right?

9) A theme song – Something that suggests an air of danger but also folksy-wholesomeness,  so obviously it’ll need castanets and hand-claps.

10) Insert your gift idea for Bryan’s blog this Christmas. Translation: more pandering for reader comments. Ring! Ring!

All right then everyone, go safely forth this holiday season and keep a certain blog (and maybe $30-$40) in mind during all this giving and receiving business. Thank you in advance.

Are You An 8-Armed Creator?

Photo by Terrance McNally

Was trapping my wife recently in a conversation about time management and multitasking and what I should do about advancing the various writing projects I’m working on that are in various states of development.

Do I stick with my tried and true approach of  focusing (obsessing) on one thing at a time and seeing it through to its next stage of completion? Or do I challenge myself and split my writing days in half, one project in the morning, another in the afternoon? Or, do I split the week up, odds are for Project A, evens for Project B? Or, do I keep all my computer files open and set an alarm for 15 minutes, and every time it goes off I work on something different all the while putting on the special hat I’ve picked out for each project?

Interestingly, my wife and I do not have similar conversations when it comes to my ability to vacuum the apartment or clean the bathroom.

Anyway.

Obviously there’s prioritizing involved. Is any project on a deadline? And a passion test. Is this short story about the opening of a Ziploc bag lighting my fire today? But mostly this is a general process issue. Very subjective and every writer’s going to have a different approach.

So what about it, fellow writers or other creative types out there? Are you more like me or do you multitask? How many projects do you have going simultaneously? Do you split time in each day/week to work on more than one project?

And of course, most importantly…do you wear special hats?

Guest Blogger: The Number 6

Photo by Liferunner 100

It’s not every day you get a request from an icon to use your blog to spread an important message. Introducing the latest guest blogger to bryanhilson.com: The Number 6, everybody!

 

Yeah 6 here, and by the way, it’s the ORIGINAL 6, as in the “6” Yahweh used in her diary when she wrote about creating, oh, a little something called the  ENTIRE FREAKING UNIVERSE. The other sixes out there? All clones of me. Oh, you wanna see my birth certificate? Fine, fine, I’ll send it to you for review. Yeah, just look under the section that says SHUT YOUR FREAKING PIEHOLE.

Anyway, I gotta make this thing quick.  There’s a financial report missing me right now and some Wall Street hoohas could go to jail if I don’t show up. Or maybe they won’t. Those guys are some pretty slippery bastards. You know what I’m talking about.

Okay, what I’m here for. My beef with the Internet: What’s up with all the Top 5 lists?

Fine, you want ’em so bad, here’s a couple for you: Top 5 Ways Number 5’s A Navel Gazer, Top 5 Ways To Stroke Number 5’s Ego. News alert, Internet, the cool stuff doesn’t revolve around Number 5. It’s not a five-shooter, it’s a FREAKING SIX-SHOOTER. YOU PICK UP THE LADIES WITH A FREAKING SIX-STRING.

And don’t patronize me with “Well gee, 6, there’s soooo many Top Ten lists out there.” Please. You know as well as I do that people get bored by the time they get to 3, and by 5 they’re flat-lining until something shiny and new comes along.  And that ain’t how Number 6 rolls. You know what I’m talking about.  So save the lists, World Wide Web, and show 6 some love.

But do not give me that 666 bs. Everybody knows the Number of the Beast begins with 1-900.

Bottomline: I’m tired of the disrespect. Maybe one day all us 6’s are gonna TAKE OUR FREAKING BALLS AND GO HOME. Think about that world. TOTAL FREAKING COLLAPSE OF THE WHOLE SYSTEM. I’m the first perfect number. If I drop out you think 5’s gonna pick up that slack? 7?

Yeah, good luck with that.

A Demon’s Diary

Photo by M.O. Stevens

In the course of doing research for my supernatural YA novel, I recently attended an estate sale for the late, obscure occultist Jarvin Vucklebog. Vucklebog, a contemporary of Anton LaVey impersonators, was the rare purveyor of black magic who shunned the spotlight, so good luck finding anything written about him.

Anyway, I’d only planned on browsing that day; I wasn’t in the market for foam pentagram hats, or Ouija board TV trays, or Jack Parsons’ mustache.

But there was a recent Vucklebog acquisition that did interest me, and the price, surprisingly, was just right. For $20, I picked up a black iron obelisk, about three feet tall, engraved from base to tapered peak on its four sides with several rows of mystic symbols, signs and ciphers. According to the sale guide, the obelisk was the diary of the demon-being commonly known as Xyzeethulu, no relation to Quezeethulu, though both entities frequented the Plegorthian sector of the Fourth Crusted Layer of sub-Hades.

I was at a loss to translate it, of course, but opportunity soon arrived when it was announced that everyone who had purchased an item from the sale was invited to a group seance to communicate with Vucklebog’s spirit. After an eternity of table-rapping and bad lemonade, Vucklebog finally announced himself through his beloved lhasa apso Buckles, and I was able to make my question heard over the clamor that ensued. There seemed to be no response when suddenly I was overtaken by a spastic fit of automatic writing and produced a translation key.

As I convalesced in our local asylum, I began the task of deciphering the diary. It’s been slow going, but what I’ve discovered so far offers chilling insight into the demon mind…

DIARY OF XYZEETHULU – January 23, 2012

“I’m so mad at Devon right now I could just spit the River Styx. He knows me (or I thought he did), knows what’s in my wheelhouse. On video I’m going to do one of two things, eat babies as a ritual sacrifice or push the souls of pre-adolescent girls a smidge darker than they already are. Any other YouTube channel, I’m a freaking star, but Devon’s? He won’t even let me audition unless I agree to eat 666 steak burritos on camera, because hi-ho isn’t it funny that when I pass gas hell-fire shoots out of my butt and my eyes. Stupid genetics. Thanks dads. I know I promised Dr. Baralyxneluthu-Legion Class IV no more poltergeists, but Devon is really  pushing my Hot Buttons of Legorah Dominion, burned into my flesh on my 16th Searing.”

To say this has been a real boon for my novel, is an understatement. Stay tuned for more installments of…A Demon’s Diary.

My Late Summer Hiatus

“The Third Man”

I’d like to say that it’s a late summer tradition to embroil myself in some shadowy espionage in the former Soviet bloc. I’d like to say the apple trees in Minsk are burning this time of year. (I’d also like to say that yes, Yuri Andropov, that last line might be directed at you.)

Sure, I’d like to say all of that, but then the “Agency” would “disavow” any “knowledge” of my “overseas rubber shoe factory,” my “credentials” would be “stamped” “MEDICAL LEAVE,” and I’d have to “vacation” in “Kurdistan” selling “figs” and “plums” at a “bazaar” until the “weather” “improved.”

Ha-ha. Let’s be clear. I am “not” a “spy.”

What my “handlers” would prefer me to say (I mean, of course, if I had handlers) is that what’s been taking me away from the blog the past few weeks is that both The Wrinkleman and Ensnared film projects are advancing in a very positive and exciting direction. Yes, and—excuse me I need to rub some salve on these electrical burns—yes, and because both are moving forward at the same time some of my other creative interests have received less attention.

Okay, I think that “shelters” everybody’s “assets.”

And so with that, in closing, I’d just like to say the dog’s nose is wet when pointed away from the crotch. (It’s possible, Yuri, that this is the line you’ve been waiting for. Again, since I’m not a spy I have no idea. J)

What do you like to do when you’re on “hiatus”?

Build A Story With Bryan #5 – The Final Story

Here it is, in all its Circus Maximus glory, the full and final story for this Circus Maximus of a Build A Story Round 5.  This one’s a doozy, in process for about four months and clocking in at over 3,000 words. Thanks to everyone who contributed and to everyone who’s been following along. And a very special thanks to Scott Ritchie once again for his enthusiastic creativity.

Have a read and let me know what you think!

Mrs. Blendinson had certainly entertained a foolish thought in her day, had even been married to one for twenty-five of them, but never had she been so resolute in her belief that this foolish thought, the one occurring to her now while she rooted through the neighbor’s trash, this was the foolish thought that if acted upon would put her back on top.

“If I can just find that clown nose,” she mused, “I’ll prove once and for all that the circus debacle was all Mr. Freddie’s fault, not mine!”

Mrs. Blendinson’s musings, unlike her foolish thoughts, took on the affect of a nobler woman, usually a duchess of some vague royal lineage, the kind who would never consort with a sad clown and his dim associates, who endured scandal with a stiff upper lip and dry eyes, not a stiff drink and stolen credit card.       

In spite of her contemplative irrational thoughts and ramblings of life on the road with the circus, there were times with Mr. Freddie that were downright playful. Even though there were moments of joy and ecstasy, they somehow turned into long hours of nervous, frightful horror. Mrs. Blendinson remembered the time when she and Issey (Issey was Mr. Freddie’s self-appointed first name) created an impromptu beach setting at midnight behind the pup tent, which was just south of the Big Top. Mrs. Blendinson smiled to herself with the contentment only a woman in her 70’s could understand as she reflected on the unusual foreplay that occurred prior to the laying of the blanket.

But then she remembered that fateful BBQ afterward. She frowned, and her entire visage changed from nobility to something far less regal – vengeful. “That Mr. Freddie, and all the Freddies,” she mumbled. “They won’t know what hit ‘em.”

And with that, the circus was relegated to a forgotten compartment in the portmanteau of her mind, for her new resolve was building, the resolve that drove her to reach inside the hem of her dress and pull out the thin strip of microfilm hidden within the gingham. She slipped it into the clown nose that she’d finally found, planning on the perfect place to leave it, where it would be found “by accident.” She looked around furtively, the microfilm/nose mélange secreted in the pocket that once held recipes for blancmange and other favorites.

“Outta my trash, Blendinson!”

She smiled and checked the diamond-studded watch that had been strapped to her wrist when she’d accidentally fled from Zales the other day. Right on time, her neighbor’s five a.m. ritual, a stumble into the bathroom and back, with a glance out the kitchen window, occasionally to check for raccoons, mostly for her. Mrs. Blendinson waved before she looked up and winced. Ruffy was out of his makeup, but his face still looked painted: purple-black around the eyes, yellowed cheekbones. That and a sweaty fistful of G. Washingtons his likely compensation for starring in another Clown Fight video the area college kids were always staging in the alleyway behind the fried chicken restaurant. Ruffy had fallen on hard times ever since the circus stopped employing sad clowns.

 Mrs. Blendinson wondered if he’d like to help her make a different kind of dishonest wage today, although she couldn’t promise his nose wouldn’t get smashed in with a clown shoe for his trouble.

“Well?” he snapped.

She stuck a quick tongue over her shoulder, and yanked a pink and white cheap leather bag from the bottom of the trash. She could use this, even with one strap broken. She slung the good one over her shoulder and the bag became her shield. Now she turned saucily, determined to put Ruffy back in his clown car for good but the window was empty.

She bent and retrieved her Smirnoff, uncapped it and took a sip, acrid in the morning, trash-laced air. She made a face and began her waddle back to her place. She had plans.

As she approached the caravan she called home, she noticed that the door was slightly ajar. She was certain that she’d shut and locked it. She always triple-checked it every time she went out. If Freddie had used his key to go in without her permission again he was going to be sorry!

She opened her door with some trepidation, calling out, “Hello? Is that you?” in her sing-song lilt. “No, it’s not me,” a strange voice answered back, sending chills down Mrs. Blendinson’s gingham-clad spine.

She stepped inside, sensed a presence in the kitchen, and lifted her new bag to her chest once more. But she paused, still in the hall, when she saw the revolver on the kitchen table next to an open Smirnoff bottle, her last. She stepped fully into the light and the view of a four hundred pound brown bear tossing back a shot of vodka with a raspy snarl.

“Daaaaaaaaamn!” it complained, shaking its massive head at the vodka’s bite. It noticed Mrs. Blendinson and swept up the pistol expertly.

“All right, now, Marjorie, easy does it.” He jerked the gun twice to the empty chair opposite.

Mrs. Blendinson slipped heavily onto it and her whole body seemed to slump in defeat.

“Daisy,” she stated.

“Goddamn right, only I’m done with the dancing.” Daisy the Dancing Bear used both paws to draw back the hammer on the gat. “Have a pop,” he commanded.

“A pop? I don’t think so,” Mrs. Blendinson sneered. “My father disappeared twenty years ago.” Since bears don’t understand puns, especially bad ones, Daisy faltered for a moment. This was Mrs. Blendinson’s only chance. “I have it,” she blurted. “What you want. I know what it is and I know where it is. I have it. I know right where to-

“Allllllright, fer Chrissake, shaddap!” Daisy brought a massive claw to his furry ear and dug at it angrily. “You don’t even know why I’m here,” he grumbled and adjusted his vest and its gleaming watch chain.

“Yes, but…” Then, very softly, daintily, she slid a box of bear treats onto the plaid tablecloth and looked up with a devilish anticipation. Her greasepaint smile grew as she saw she was right.

Daisy’s eyes never left the box. He let his grip on the pistol loosen then set it down altogether. He licked his lips. When Marjorie Blendinson swept up the box, he rose to his massive eight-foot height.

Mrs. Blendinson was wary, her head bent at an unusual angle. She had to be careful. She held the box out shakily even as her foot disappeared into the draped pantry and fished out a massive red circus ball. She shook the box and tapped the ball at Daisy.

“Up you go,” she hissed through her smile.

Daisy leapt upon the ball and balanced perfectly, head erect, paws at Ports de Bras. Mrs. Blendinson shook out a treat and tossed it. Daisy caught it perfectly, took two rolls forward and two back, bumping the table. Mrs. Blendinson’s eyes darted to the pistol. She shook the box into her palm again only… nothing came out. Daisy saw it. She saw it.

Empty.

Daisy crashed onto the tabletop and snagged the gun. He rolled back into his chair, out of breath and disappointed in himself. “Alll right, Blendinson. Think you’re smart. I told you I’m done with that shit.”

“Wait, I have more,” Mrs. Blendinson desperately stammered, “Some sardines, maybe.”

“What am I, a trained seal? I think not.” He paused. “It’s time, toots,” he said with chilling finality.

The words drew her feet under her involuntarily. Her heart skipped a beat as one of them encountered her salvation. She drew that foot forward and certainly rolled over it again. She lifted her foot and stole a glance. One of the bear treats must have been shaken from the box. She dipped quickly at the waist, causing Daisy to re-aim threateningly.

“Hey there, toots. Alright. No sudden moves.” he snarled. And then, “Harry!”

And out of the wash room stepped the sword swallower in top hat, head tilted toward the ceiling, eyes fixed on Mrs. Blendinson. And it was at that point the forgotten compartment of the sealed portmanteau in her mind was blown supernaturally open.

“H…H…Harry?” she stammered. “But I thought you’d burnt up into a colorful cinder! Didn’t I, I mean didn’t someone?”

“You overcharged my flame thrower, Blendinson,” he snarled. “But I faked the cinder part.”

“It’s time for a reckoning,” Daisy growled. “Show time.”

Just then there was a loud banging on the door. “Are you in there, Blendinson?” called a low rumbling voice. No, she thought. It can’t possibly be. And then the door flung open.

The fat man.

Rounder than a wrecking ball, he turned sideways to enter, allowing the midget to scamper past his knees, careful to duck under the thunderous overhanging gut.

“You have to be defecating me!” Blendinson stammered. Her little kitchen was getting crowded.

“Shaddap,” snapped Daisy. “The circus is in town and we ain’t leaving without the photos.”

Mrs. Blendinson produced the clown nose, micro film secreted within, and fixed it firmly on her own.

The fat man swatted it off. Mrs. Blendinson watched it skip out of sight under the stove until the fat man’s sweat-spotted face filled her vision with its foul labored breath.

“You making fun of us, Blendinson?”

Mrs. Blendinson couldn’t answer. Couldn’t figure out how she’d gotten to this point or what she should do next. She cursed Mr. Freddie. Wait until she saw him again. She was planning on pulling out her aristocratic air when her eye was drawn to her wrist, where the midget had just swiped her stolen, diamond-studded watch. The Little Man lifted it to his big ear, an island in his thinning hair, and smiled. She could only watch her watch as he winked and pocketed it. Something had to be done.

“I want you all to know,” she began. “That even though I was flattered you thought of me for our barbecue, I never said cooking was my strong suit. Now, the three pounds of laxatives I left carelessly above the stove must have accidentally fallen into the maplewood baked beans when I had my back turned. ”

Her visitors looked at one another remembering with a certain…discomfort.  And then very conspicuously their eyes settled on Daisy.  

“Yeah, yeah, yeah, so bears don’t just shit in the woods. Satisfied?” Daisy showed her teeth to Mrs. Blendinson. “You got to the count of ten to cough up dem photos. Or I turn your insides into maplewood baked beans.”

The fat man again leered in her face. The short bursts of rancid air he flushed from his nostrils were mind-altering enough for Mrs. Blendinson to wonder if she might be back outside rooting through Ruffy’s garbage.

“I got it, Stanley, please,” she said, trying to close her own nostrils without using her hands and triggering Daisy’s gun. “One…two…three…four…” And then, just to keep things interesting, she started counting again. This time, backwards.

The Sword Swallower advanced, head tipped skyward, voice full of silver menace. “Marjorie, we of the center ring request the photos so impudently snapped in our moment of disrepose…if you please.”

Mrs. Blendinson’s eye twitched. Her foot rolled the bear treat two revolutions. She steeled herself. “Disrepose…is not a word.”

Harry’s eyes flamed and his Adam’s apple convulsed, as a monkey on a stick. His jaw distended and his hand disappeared inside, only to emerge clutching the coiled handle of a saber, drawing its spit streaked length continuously out of his throat until clear. He sliced the air and brought the blade to rest at Marjorie’s cheek.

“Are you feeling us, madam? Your act is drawing to a close.”

“Under the stove,” she stammered. “On microfilm inside the clown nose under the stove.”

Daisy’s massive paw sent the table sliding across the room in one move.

Meanwhile, a “Timeless Travel” taxi pulled to a stop in front of the small trailer bungalow. The passenger door creaked open, rusty from disuse.

Inside, Daisy fell to his knees and laid the pistol on the linoleum. His paw wouldn’t fit beneath, and his head was too massive for either eye to see. He swung his snout in irritation.

“You, hors d’oeuvres, get over here,” he commanded.

The midget stomped over angrily, and raised his fist, the one wearing the watch. “You want the time, Gentle Ben?”

Daisy cuffed the midget under the stove with a CLANG! It came back with lint in its little hair and a jujube stuck to its cheek. But it was holding the clown nose.

Daisy’s eye caught something rolling toward him. Could it be?

Marjorie bet it all on this moment.

Harry was distracted, the Fat Man, too labored to react. Mrs. Blendinson swung her pink and white leather bag off the chair behind her and draped it over the sword-swallower’s saber. With all of the act’s momentum, she charged him past the Fat Man and into the laundry room, into shelving that collapsed boxes of detergent onto his head. The midget grabbed up Daisy’s pistol but Daisy didn’t care until after he’d swallowed the treat and, of course, by then it was too late.

The midget smiled at Mrs. Blendinson, signaling their new partnership in crime until she kicked him into the wall at thirty miles an hour with her shoe.
She snatched up the pistol and the clown nose and spun.

“Allllllllllllllllllllllllriiiiiiiiiiiiight,” she hissed.

The moment breathed, short and thin with tension. Marjorie’s focus flit face to face. Every eye glistened with a scheme. Even the midget, splayed oddly in the corner, waited to right himself until the moment played out.

Daisy’s eyes darted to the fat man’s. A conspiracy? Marjorie thought so, so cocked the hammer and swept her aim from man to midget

The second hand on the wall silently bled their diminishing choices, reaching out to grasp fate’s hand when, rooms away, the front screen door springed its coil and then banged its thin metal clap.

Harry’s eyes slid toward the hall. Detergent sifted from his top hat.

And all at once they knew. Everyone knew. It was the squeak of shoe leather, faint at first, but most rhythmic. Squeak…squeak. Squeak…squeak. Coming closer.

It was unmistakable. Those shoes were big.

They wore a hat of their own, a bowler. Following it down the kitchen hall, you couldn’t help but notice the flower, short of stalk, jutting from the band. Beneath, big red wings of hair, a foot in both directions, sculpted to a point like cotton candy. When they all reached the kitchen, the tableau hadn’t changed.

Mr. Freddie had returned.

His jacket was bright yellow, crossed with a blue and red plaid. It draped his pear shape oddly. His gloves were immaculate, white and pleated. His bow tie was huge and blue, matching the eyes in a face that was wide and a little dumpy. The tip of the nose remained unpainted and bare, missing its signature ornament. But it was all offset by a big painted smile that he garnished with a fat, unlit cigar.

“What’s the rumpus?”

And still nobody moved. As if they could not.

Marjorie’s eyes trembled, liquid amber in the morning sunlight. “Issey?”

“The very same.” He produced a big bike horn and squeezed its bulb loudly. Twice.

The pistol tumbled from Marjorie’s hands, which had left for her mouth.

“All right now,” Mr. Freddie looked around shyly. “None of that.” He reached down and removed Harry’s hat, shook the detergent from it and handed it back.

“Stand up, Harry. Everyone, up.”

And each in their own fashion straightened. Mr. Freddie moved the table back to its original position as if it had never been moved.

Daisy seemed worried and moved to explain.

But Mr. Freddie held up his hand. “Uh-uh-uh, shhhhh.” His massive shoes planted either side of the pistol, which he lifted and placed on the table. “It would appear my presence here is sorely needed. I’m guessing all this is about the photos?”

Everyone suddenly found interest in their own feet.

“Well, I’ve seen all three of them and although they leave an indelible mark on the nutter, none of them embarrass you and they certainly don’t call for all this.”

He held out his spotless white palm to Marjorie. Into it she placed three Polaroids. Mr. Freddie frowned. “Hmmm, no microfiche?” he asked.

She shook her head with downcast eyes.

“There never was, was there?”

Another shake. He gently took her head and kissed it.

He spun the cards like an expert dealer, which he was, and held one up to the fat man. “Bert, I dare say this colonic misadventure is less remarkable than your size. Don’t you agree?”

The fat man squinted and, having seen too much, agreed. Mr. Freddie shuffled the pics once more and thrust a photo at Daisy. “This is you in the woods is it not?”

Daisy growled.

“Doing what comes naturally, despite…” he spun the photo for a glance and grimaced. “…the pose.”

He set the photos on the table next to the gun. He pointed at the midget. “Tyler, gimme.” The midget slid off the wall and handed over the watch. Mr. Freddie reached behind him and Harry put the leather bag in his hands. Everything went on the kitchen table, even the sword. Then everyone stepped back.

“Alright now, you know what’s what…” Mr. Freddie intoned. “What has to happen.” And when no one moved he squeezed his horn.

“C’mon. You’ve had your fun and said your piece. Fall in line.”

And slowly they did, each taking their place in a line behind Mr. Freddie who regarded Marjorie tenderly. A kindness shone from his eyes as he moved close and took her by the shoulders.

“Marjorie, are you still blaming me?” he asked skeptically.

“Well, who brought those laxatives to the BBQ in the first place?”

“Yes, but did I spill them in the beans?”

Marjorie wouldn’t meet his eye, trying instead to hide a small, devilish smile.

“Did I?”

She shook her head quickly, twice.

“No. That would be a foolish thought to have, wouldn’t it?”

She nodded and began to giggle. He hugged her and she saw that they were now alone in the kitchen. And when he set her back, tears filled her eyes, tears of love and gratitude.

“But there was another, wasn’t there?” Mr. Freddie began to glow.

Marjorie nodded, faster and faster, the pain pulling the muscles of her face to its center, tears flowing freely down her cheeks.

“I thought…” she tried. “I thought…”

“You can say it.”

“I thought if you saw me rooting though the trash…” Her chest heaved, her shoulders hunched and she let it out. She threw her face into his big blue bowtie. “I thought you’d feel sorry and come back for me. Ohhh, Issey, I’ve missed you so much!”

She sobbed and sobbed. He stroked her hair. “There, there. There, now. I’m here.”

Mr. Freddie’s glow intensified. He set her back and looked between them. “I think you have something that doesn’t belong to you.”

Her hand unfolded. She brought his clown nose up and placed it where it belonged. Mr. Freddie wiggled it into comfort.

“Thank you. Are you ready, my love?”

Marjorie looked around her kitchen of so many years, wiped her nose and nodded. She took Mr. Freddie’s hand. “Ruffy is still sad, in case you were wondering.”

“Well that’s always been his downfall. Why don’t you leave him his credit card.”

Marjorie relented with a grumble and slid it onto the table. The light was almost blinding now, making the kitchen hard to see. Mr. Freddie kissed her smile.

Mrs. Blendinson was found one week later, dead in her bed with the smile still on her face and the all too big shoes of her love on her feet.

What Are You Reading?

Photo by Lienhard Schulz

First let’s take a moment to share a collective gasp over the stunning fact that we’re already seven months into the year 2012. What happened? And why so fast?

Well, what better way to cauterize the pain as we stagger into these remaining dog days than a discussion about what you’ve read this summer so far and what you’re looking forward to reading in the Fall. Are your reading habits different depending on the season? Do you reserve your guilty pleasures for Memorial Day through Labor Day Weekend? I.E., are you chained, right now, literally, to the Fifty Shades of Grey trilogy? Has this been your Summer of S&M, and come September 5th you’ll be wrapping the naughty books up in your white clothes and burying everything in the backyard?

While I haven’t had the pleasure, guilty or otherwise, of reading Fifty Shades, I wouldn’t save it for the summer. I pretty much read whatever no matter the time of year. Although I tend to stick exclusively with literary fiction, I changed things up recently and read Mark Haskell Smith’s Heart of Dankness, a riveting narrative nonfiction work exploring the Cannabis Cup in Amsterdam and the medical marijuana industry in California. Then I dove into John le Carre’s spy-thriller Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy before returning to familiar ground with Jonathan Franzen’s latest “how we live now” novel Freedom. Next up was the YA novel Dark Eden by Patrick Carman, about a group of kids involved in a therapeutic experiment of questionable ethics, and am now currently reading A Visit From The Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan, which won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 2011.

This Fall I’m looking forward to Ian McEwan’s Sweet Tooth, Antoine Wilson’s Panorama City (by the way, I also recommend you check out his first novel, The Interloper) and Barbara Kingsolver’s Flight Behavior.

So what have you read this summer, what are you reading now, and what are you looking forward to in the coming Autumn months?