The Trip…
Nov 30, 2006 in James' Fiction
“That’s a god damn lie.”
“Nope,” I said.
“You are a fucking pathological liar!”
“Look Dave, I could give a shit if you believe me or not, that’s not why I told you the story,” I said, eyebrows raised in the challenge of a man convinced of his own righteousness.
“Amy, dude. You gotta tell Amy what you just told me!”
“Tell me what, Pheltch?” Amy said setting her book down, taking her tiny wire frame glasses off the end of her nose.
“That fucker just told me the damnedest story. Go ahead, tell her,” Hospital Dave said, nudging me with his tattooed arm, hands still jammed in his hoody pockets.
“Ok, I’m ready. Tell me what?” Amy said cocking her head.
“About my first acid trip. Dave just wants me to tell it again to see if I can tell it the same way twice, ain’t that right Dave?”
“You’re god damn right, you fucking liar!”
“OK asshole, I’ll tell it…”
“It was March 20th, 1981, less than a week after my 17th birthday…”
“And the day before my mine.” Dave interrupted.
“Shut up!” I said and continued.
It was spring break at my stupid college in Oklahoma City and like always I was visiting my father’s home in Austin, Texas. My friend and band mate Mike Drum called me up and invited me to a party at this apartment complex in North Austin about 3 miles from where my father lived in Aroyo Seca. I had nothing else going so I told him to give me about an hour and I’d be there. After much difficulty making my way through the bleak North Austin suburbs that all looked the same, I showed up at this little one bedroom flat on the second floor of a Texas style beehive on the extreme north end of Rutland Ave. All of the northern part of Austin was brand new back then so it took me (what seemed like) forever to find the place. Anyway by the time I found the so-called party, it was raining the proverbial cats and dogs so my mood was for shit, I needed a drink, a drug, a girl, or some shit that’s for sure. As I walked in the place I noticed it looked and sounded like someone had just died. All the lights were different opposing colors, red in the front room, blue in the hall, I could see yellow in the bathroom and green was the theme in the little bedroom all the way to the back of the dump. There were shadowed figures of what looked like humans wrapped in blankets all over the floor in each room and the air conditioner was on full blast. The big fancy Japanese stereo that took up the entire wall of living room was blaring out the craziest music I’d ever heard. I later found out the band was called Throbbing Gristle but at the time I didn’t even know that music like that could be found in the States, it was so foreign sounding. None of the people seemed to be moving, just vacillating to the arrhythmic-ness of that crazy shit screaming out of those huge ECI speakers.
I walked into the place and went unopposed straight for the kitchen where stood my friend and band mate, Mike Drum putting the serious mack on this chick. He had her backed all the way up into the opened refrigerator which supplied the only light for the tiny kitchen. At that moment she was quietly giggling and lamely trying to push him off of her.
“Hey can I get in there?” I said.
“Fuck, Pheltch, when did you get here?” Mike said and handed me a Shiner Bach from just under the young lady’s ass.
“How long have you guys been standing there? This beer is warm.” I said smiling her-ward.
“Oh hey Pheltch, this is July, July meet Pheltch Dunderhead, he’s the lead singer of the band RAKE.” Mike said.
“Nice to meet you,” I said then continued, “ July like the month?”
“Yeah, July Polanski. Lead singer, huh, I wish I could sing,” she said stepping out of the fridge, handing me her hand like it was a cold piece of lunchmeat. “Wow man, that’s a crazy-ass name!” she said.
“It’s Finnish. Polanski - is that like the director? It’s not that I can sing, I just do…” I said sniffing her hand then saying, “No thanks, I’m trying the vegetarian thing.” Giving her hand back like it was a thing.
“Director of what? Mike, your friend is weird.” Then she whispered to me, “Dude, you want some acid?”
“You mean like the sulfuric kind? No thanks, I don’t even know what to do with the stuff, well I guess I could etch my name into the hood of a corvette or melt down some electronics for the gold but after driving here through that rain you are seriously over estimating my industrial ingenuity.”
“Mike, tell him to shut up!” July said plopping down in fetal position on the kitchen floor.
“Dude, July‘s got some heavy duty window pane that’s blowing my head off right now - try and be a little kinder to her will you. What the hell are you talking about anyway, sulfuric acid?” Mike wasn’t asking really, then I noticed his pupils were dilated like two pee-holes in the snow.
“Acid huh? You mean like the Timothy Leery kind or Tom Wolf’s Kool-Aid, Hunter S. Thompson’s red Cadillac trunk or the Dark Side of the Moon? Sure, sounds fun I guess, I mean taking something that’s called acid doesn’t really sound that fun really but right now I could give a fuck what goes into my body as long as it’s something strong,” I said closing the refrigerator door, sliding one of the kitchen chairs up and straddling it backward with my hands folded over the chair-back and setting my beer on the floor. The room became suddenly very eerie as the fridge light went out and it was flooded with those limited contrasting colors from all the other rooms in the place.
July was staring at her hand and Mike began to laugh hysterically. July then looked up at me with a great big grin that stretched across a set of perfectly white Osmond-sized teeth and handed me what appeared to be a tiny square of clear-blue candy. “Put this between your cheek and gum, cowboy, and don’t take it out, it’ll dissolve on its own and please, shut the fuck up!” Then she too started to laugh.
I did as I was instructed.
They sat on the floor and laughed and pointed at me. I put up with that for about a second before I got up and went back into the red living room with the strange music and the wrapped writhing bodies. In retrospect it seems almost instantaneous but time and sound seemed to pass at a much slower rate. As I sat down on the floor and a small dark shape made its way over to where I was.
“Joy Division.” Said a tiny voice not male or female coming from the vague direction of the carpet. It was one of the human-ish shaped figures wrapped in a black blanket that had just approached me from within the floor of the red room.
“What?” I asked.
“It was the section of the concentration camp where the Nazis kept all the pretty Jewish girls, the ones they wanted to fuck, it’s also the name of the band we’re listening to, have you heard ‘em?” the little voice said.
“No.” I replied, “I mean not until now that is.” And my mind guided me through the red room that suddenly became a shallow pool of blood. All of the dark, cocooned shapes in the pool became a million beautiful Jewish girls with a million grunting German soldiers on top of them fucking them to death. In my ears was an off-key male baritone voice and the only word I could make out was, “Isolation…” Over and over again.
“They named their band that?” I asked.
“Yeah, isn’t that beautiful?” asked the voice in the cocoon.
“No, that’s a fucking drag!” I barely managed to say, my voice sounding shaky and small inside my head.
“I don’t think you understand the irony man.” The voice said.
“Irony, what does that mean?” I asked and the sound coming from the stereo somehow mixed with the sound of the rain outside as it started to come down even harder. Louder, then louder still, then the sound was joined by the sound of some kind of steam engine slowing down with the beat of the music, slowing… Slowing more.
Above the din, the squeaky little voice yelled, “You know man, like satire, mockery biting wit or insincerity…”
“I know what irony means, you twit, I just wanted to see if you did. I get the joke I just don’t think it’s funny.” I said forcing myself to stand up in the pool of blood. I was ankle deep and steaming with the music that was slowing still like a train screeching into the night. I stumbled backward, my clothes dripping with the blood of a million beautiful dying young women. I tucked my head in my arms and my head hit what felt like a door, the door gave way and I fell through. Louder, steaming, slower, slower…
I looked up and I was holding my ears standing on the balcony in front of the apartment. As the door closed behind me the terrible music came to a sudden and peaceful STOP. The rain was now a quiet sprinkle although the water coming off of the building was still pouring like mad.
Wow, I have got to drive. Is that a bad idea? Nah…
I reached into my right pocket and pulled out my keys and stood there under the awning, out of the rain for what seemed like the length of the Second World War which for some reason (that I couldn’t think of at the time) was on my mind. When I was sure that the war was over and the blood was all dried and mostly forgotten I ducked my head and ran out into the parking lot and made for my car.
Ah, my car, my haven…
Now, although I never considered myself, or was even remotely considered by anyone that knew me, a “Gear-Head”, a “Car-Freak”, or a so-called “Cockpit-Jockey”, my car was an automotive work of art. I bought it from a auto body repair shop. My friend that worked at the body shop told me that it was built by a drug dealer that had run plum out of whatever drug he was into. He so bummed that he blew his brains out in the front seat about an hour after finishing the building the car. The body shop got paid by the insurance company to fix it and then they turned around and sold it to me for a song. Essentially the shop got paid twice for a job well done and I got a totally bad-ass car for about the price of a Chevette. She (the car) was a metal-flake-brown 1978 Z-28 Camaro, her name was Lola! She could do 0 to 80 miles per hour in 6.4 seconds.
L.O.L.A. had a Nitrous Oxide injected chevy 350 with a single Holly 850 double-pumper on an Edelbrock high rise manifold, under that was a ¾ cam, 8 high temperature alloyed titanium pop-up pistons sitting on top of a Hurst four-on-the-floor tranny and ending in a posi-track rear end. She got 6 miles to each of the 80-cent gallons of high-octane fuel that I pumped into her about 20 times a week.
When I turned the key, Lola exploded to life. All of her dashboard lights were aqua-marine and the interior light was whore-house red. That car could attract a pair of 6 inch pumps faster then a slut on a slurpy.
Lola’s stereo was 150 watts of precision German audio engineering bumping through four tri-axles in the back shelf and two co-axles in the front doors. Her tank was full and in the deck was Another Green World. Might as well go back to OKC tonight. I could make it back to campus by the time the acid wore off.
I have got to get out of this rain…
And Eno sang, “I’ll find a place somewhere in the corner…”
Lola didn’t purr, she growled and chopped like you were sitting on top of a piece of machinery. I put her in gear with a clunk and waited to release the clutch for the chorus.
“I’ll come running to tie your shoe…” And off we went (Lola and I) into the wet Texas night.
As high as I was, in my car I was in control of everything in my world, my wet Green World.
Fuck the Nazis, Joy Division wow once again I find out that those mother fuckers can put two cool sounding words together and fuck the lives of so many people. How could so much hate exist? Did they know that they were defining hate for the next 7 generations of monkeys with thumbs. Monkey see, monkey do, kill a generation, yes sir! How many Einsteins were in that 6 million people those fuckers destroyed?
“I’ll come running to tie your shoe…”
STOP!!!
I sat at the stop sign at the corner of Rutland and Quail Creek for an inordinate amount of time, staring at the rain coming down in waves.
Time… Is time going to heal the 6 million open wounds… I know I’ll name my band Treblinka or Aushwitz, how’s about the Hitlers…
STOP!!! Where am I? I was at the corner of Burnett Road and Hwy 183 hummmm.
I wonder if Julie Smith is home? I could go over to her place over on Shoal Creek, say hi, run back over to my Dad’s place after that, pick up my back pack and head out for OKC from there. Yeah!
Acid, LSD, Window-Pane, Blotter, Micro-Dot and on and on mind is running running faster than I had ever been able to make it go on any other drug, this fucking drug was made for ME!
Green light and Lola roars down Burnett Road all by her lonesome.
Nobody is out tonight, weird…
The rain is now, once again, coming down in sheets so thick that Lola’s wipers can’t quite keep up.
Sorry Eno, gotta check the weather…
“This is KLBJ 94.7 fm and that was Icehouse with the song Icehouse. I’m your host for this stormy evening my name is Jody Denberg and I have got a little weather report for all of you travelers out there. Ok it’s not so little, we’ve got a severe thunder storm warning in effect for all of Travis County until 6:00am with flash flood warnings throughout the city of Austin and the outlying areas. Wow and check this out, if you’re in the Shoal Creek area you should know that the White Horse Bridge has collapsed and there is no access from White Horse to Shoal Creek.”
Damn, that’s close, I mean like that’s two blocks away…
“Once again you’re listening to FM 94.7 KLBJ and this is for all you people that have to be out and about tonight, the Kinks with Lola…”
You hear that Lola, it’s your song… What the fuck… Oh shiiiiiii…”
Describing what happened next entails backing out of the acid trip, which by the way was impossible to do at the time, and reviewing a situation that was incomprehensible while it was happening. With that in mind, try and picture this: I was traveling south on Shoal Creek, west of the actual creek called Shoal Creek. Between Shoal Creek the street and White Horse the street was the White Horse bridge that crossed the creek at an angle perpendicular to the street called Shoal Creek. I mean, before10:50 pm that night there had been a bridge. Anyway that bridge that crossed Shoal Creek had collapsed about two blocks in front of me. The street called White Horse, incidentally the street that Julie Smith lived on, was completely flooded out by a wall of water traveling at about 30 MPH heading straight for me and L.O.L.A. Lola. The flood hit us and very effectively endo’ed Lola with me in her. About 40 tons of debris had come screaming through that old suburban neighborhood knocking down about four houses, 6 Cedar fences, 25 telephone poles, a bridge and one 1978 Z-28 Camaro.
L.O.L.A. looooola, la la la-la Lola…
This is not happening to me, This can not be happening Oh my ggggg!!!
Lola flipped end over end once then spun 180 degrees, slammed into a house and then passed through the living room of another home where a very large, shirtless man still sat white knuckled in front of a blank television set in an Easy Boy. A telephone pole suddenly smashed through my windshield on the passenger side and passed effortlessly through the shotgun neck support, continuing through the rear windshield. The massive pole then stuck in the mud behind the car forcing the front-end straight up then pole-vaulting Lola backward four times at, at least 30 miles per hour.
I was strapped in with the quick release seat belt from an F104 (Vietnam-era) Fighter cockpit that came with the car. I wasn’t going anywhere unless I smacked that red button in the center of my chest and I wasn’t going to do that until the fucking car stopped or at least slowed down enough for me to jump out.
Lola was full of muddy water all the way up to my waist and as we pole vaulted along, the water spun around inside the car blinding me every third second or so.
We turned 90 degrees to the left on the pole and hit a very large oak tree that shattered the driver’s side window and stuck me in the face with a thousand tiny branches with fresh spring buds all over them.
I hit the quick release in the center of my chest and grabbed at the tiny branches, pulling me out of the pole-vaulting car and catapulting me into the giant oak tree.
“L.O.L.A. Lola, La La La-La, Lola…”
The music kept coming from that remarkable German stereo as the car was then completely submerged in the mud and whisked away from me by the bubbling, gurgling, rushing flash-flood. As a matter fact I could hear the Kinks singing Lola’s theme song for at least another 30 seconds after the car was completely under water. I had managed to release myself and grab a hold on the tree through the shattered window just in time before Lola went under for the last time. I was now stuck in a 150-year-old Texas white oak tree with my legs submerged to the waist in ice cold muddy creek water, tripping hard on acid for the first time.
Stop!!!
Holly shit, there goes my car,
“L.O.L.A. Lola…”
How am I going to get back to Oklahoma City tonight?
Please stop…
.
I looked up and could barely make out the street that is Shoal Creek about 20 yards from the tree that was now my miserable home. I held on to that sturdy old tree for dear life and watched large chunks of Austin’s oldest suburban neighborhood float by doing about 25 to 30 miles per hour. That’s when I noticed my legs going numb.
One of the most torturous things a person can go through is getting a song stuck in your head that you don’t know. It’s much worse if it’s a song you don’t even like. That used to happen to me a lot with C.J. McCall’s big hit “Convoy”. I’d get that piece of shit firmly wedged in head every time I’d get stuck walking somewhere. Since I didn’t know the words, well, except for: “…So we crashed the gate do’n 98 say’n let them truckers roar, 10-4”, I would have to make up my own words that would lead up the ones I knew. Like say: “’Cuz I’m run’n late and I got’a skate say’n let them…” or something like: “When I masturbate and I mess with fate I got’a let them trucker roar, 10-4…”
Presently, stuck in an oak tree asshole-high in the juice of a city, I was a-wish’n for ‘ol C.J. to come to mind. Instead, what I got was an off-key English baritone voice singing… “Isolation, Isolatio…o…on, Isolation…” Over and over and over again because I couldn’t for the life of me remember any of the other words to that stupid song. Once again I could hear the steam engine sound rise with the strength of the torrential rain and I could see thousands of cocooned bodies floating by with all of the houses, above ground pools, telephone poles, bicycles, scooters, motorcycles, and, of course, cheesy late 70’s muscle cars.
“Isolation…”
Shivering uncontrollably, every part of my body caked with mud, blood, and the detritus of a small town, all I could think of was…
“Isolation, Isola-tio,o,o,on…”
Desperately, with every single part of my being, I held onto that giant tree, my knuckles white as crepe paper and the rest of my body racked with waves of pain and shivers, then I screamed:
“Help!” And with that scream I felt every part of me that wasn’t underwater warm just enough to scream again, and again and again.
Then in my best off-key English baritone I started to sing: “Isolation, Isola-tio,o,o,on…” at the top of my voice until my voice was nothing but a tiny squeak and then I cried, pathetically I bawled like a little-bitty baby until all that was left of me was a grasping, shivering mess mouthing the word Isolation, over and over and over again.
Then there was a blinding white light.
I thought I could smell the fumes of a diesel engine and then I heard an airbrake being set and a bunch of people yelling and running around. I heard someone giving orders in a very authoritative voice, then more yelling and more running about. Some time passed with the sound of heavy machinery being moved, then out of nowhere I saw a large gloved hand right in front of my face. It was a fireman on a fully extended ladder hanging over the rushing water. He was saying something, I just couldn’t hear what it was he was saying. I smiled at him then my body was racked with another bout of shivers.
“You have to give me your hand!” he said but I could clearly see that he didn’t understand that was not an option. I was not going to let go of my tree.
“Please, just give me one of your hands, I’ll do the rest, that’s all you have to do is give me your right hand!”
“No,” I whispered with as much force as I could muster.
“What is your name, son?” he asked with a very nice big smile on his face.
“Ice, I so, Isolation…” I shakily replied.
“Yes, I understand, now give me your hand,” he calmly said over the screaming of the flood.
Finally I pried my right hand off of the tiny branch that held my life and to my relief it felt wonderful but in that instant I was pulled away from my refuge and all I could manage was a sort of stupid surprised look on my face. Just as I was pulled away from the tree the fireman dove in after me. He grabbed me around the neck and tried to swim back to the curb of the street but we were both yanked into the rushing current. We were pulled completely under for what felt like our last painful second when out of nowhere I felt air somehow enter into my lungs. The fireman still had a strangle hold around my neck but I couldn’t see or feel anything else, only the pain and taste of muddy air in my lungs. I coughed uncontrollably and suddenly felt two giant hands grab my tattered shirt and pull me out of the mud. I deeply breathed in sweet diesel fumes, then projectile puked all over my rescuer.
At that point I felt as though I was peaking on the acid and started to laugh. I was completely surrounded by a wall of large do-gooders that suddenly as if on cue started laughing with me. God, my lungs hurt and I coughed like a dog but I just couldn’t stop laughing, none of us could, we all just sat there in the rain and laughed our collective asses off until the ambulance showed up. Still laughing the firemen strapped me in and the ambulance took me away. Being poked and prodded I laughed all the way to the hospital singing: “Isolation, I So Lay shu, u, on…”
I was diagnosed with a severe case of hypothermia below the waist, a broken nose, and a fractured cheekbone. They put an electric blanket on me, put a piece of tape on my nose, some salve on my cheek and all the other cuts and sores all over my body, and kept me on some very expensive monitoring machines for 24 hours, then let me go. They never figured out that I was tripping on acid and I never let them in on the joke.
Two days later I got a call from the Austin P.D. They had found my car standing completely upright inside the second floor of an old house that had been gutted by the flood. The telephone pole was still sticking through both windshields and
someone had wiped away the dried mud where it said Z-28 at the bottom of the driver side door - other than that one clean spot Lola was completely unrecognizable.
I couldn’t wait for the insurance company to settle before I had to get back to school so I got a ride with my older brother, who went to the same school as I did. He had spent spring break with some friends in San Marcus, about 15 miles south of Austin, floating down the San Jacinto River getting sunburn and a hangover. He didn’t even know it had rained.
Two months later my insurance company paid out on my totaled car, giving me enough to buy a beautiful almost new white four-wheel-drive Chevy Silverado monster truck. I was never going to get caught in another Texas flash flood shivering with my pants down again.
Acid? I still think that drug was made for me!
…
“Oh my god! Is that true?” Amy asked
“See, I told you! Is that not the biggest bunch of shit you’ve ever heard?” Dave said but then added. “I have to admit though he tell it the same way both times.”
“Pheltch, come on tell me the truth, did that really happen to you?” Amy asked one last time.
“Let me just ask you this,” I said grinning, “Do you really think I could make something like that up?”
Amy McArbitrary just smiled, shook her head, put her glasses back on the end of her nose, picked up her book and began to read.











