Archive for the 'James' Fiction' Category

 

DJ Schlomotion

Oct 09, 2008 in James' Fiction

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Schlomotion sits at the radio console and stares at the soft amber glow of the instrumentation his thick brow is furrowed in concentration and the anger is welling inside.

The song, She brings the Rain by Can is quickly coming to an end, it ends and yet he stares emptily into the dead air as if the aether was somehow speaking to him in a soundless language that only he could understand. The silence drives a painful stake into the dark studio.

The mic is live and through the crackling silence you can hear Schlomotion lick his cracked, bloody dry lips.

Finally, “I can see you.”

Then again, a stunning silence with the occasional pop and crack of the signal as it bounces from one solid structure to another.

“You think I can’t see you but I can see you, you and your lover, you are both lying side by side, naked, panting. I can see your breath, you bitch, you fucking bitch.”

Schlomotion’s heavy Israeli accent, grated to shreds by nicotine and crystal meth bites off the i-n-g and the t-c-h as if it was cut from his tongue, he goes on, “You will pay, yes you both will pay. I will teach you, you fucking cunt, I will teach you, you will pay.”

Presently my pager massages my thigh with my invariable conscientiousness. I lamely excuse myself from the table, drop the quarter with a sigh and a slight “g-by” dial, wait.

“Phelch?”

“Yeah. Dave?”

“Yeah, are you listening?”

“No, I’m eating, what’s up?”

“Where?”

“Snatch and I are at Mini’s why?”

“Which one?”

“Belltown, why, what’s up?”

“Dude, Schlomotion has totally lost his shit and he’s airing his dirty laundry, you better get to a radio quick!”

“Who gives a fuck? If the dude wants to bitch about his fucked up life I know very few people more qualified then Schlomotion.”

“Phelch listen to me, this is different, just do me a favor and get to a radio and tune it in!” Click, silence.

I made my way back to my cold food and cooling girlfriend. “Hospital Dave.”

“Of course, what’s up?” Snatch said not looking up from her pasta.

“He said Schlomotion was freaking out on the air.” I said and yelled over to my friend Don behind the bar. “Hey Don, can we listen to FUCC for a few minutes, I just heard we’re in for quite a show.”

“Sure thing Phelch.” Don said and went over to the radio receiver under the bar. The sound of tuning down to the left side of an F.M. dial runs the gauntlet of frequencies and monosyllabic expletives, stops on…

“… I will cut your dripping cunt out of your body and feed it to your skinless lover before your dying eyes!” Click, and Don says, “Whoa Phelch, I’m a big fan and all but I think that’s a bit much for dinner time!” A shocked staring silence directed at me comes from the packed restaurant around me.

“Yeah umm, I’m sorry about that Don.” I said getting up wiping my face and reaching for my wallet.

“I’ll pay when I’m done; you go get that asshole off the air if you can, I’ll run over to their flat and check on Deloris, call me.” Snatch said toasting me with a glass of water and a blown kiss good-by.

I first met Schlomo Rabinowitz the II and his beautiful wife Deloris after the second Tchkung show at the Weathered Wall’s Tuesday night “Surrealists Magic Theatre”. The two of them approached me after the show and asked me and Snatch if we’d like to come over to their place for some after show refreshments. Snatch and I both fell instantly in love with these two shockingly beautiful people, Schlomo with his black un-wavering stare and thick long multi colored hair and Deloris with her easy touch, ample smile and striking white/blue eyes it seemed as though they were made for each other or as if they were each other.

We told them up front that we had at least an hours worth of unloading to do and they just looked at each other, smiled and said, “Great, the later the better maybe we’ll catch the sunrise through the clouds on our rooftop!” and at that point I just knew that this would be a truly profound friendship.

They lived in a 2,600 square foot studio located at the corner of 1st and Bell streets in the very heart of Belltown, a place that not only would I come to love but would ultimately become my home after Tchkung’s second tour of the Americas later in that same decade. That night after a particularly grueling un-loading session Snatch and I finally went back down to 1st and Bell to Schlomo and Deloris’ place for the most beautifully laid out snack tray that either one of us had ever seen. Deloris had prepared a silver Moroccan platter about the size of a turkey tray with an incredible array of fruits and vegetables, lemon tahini, Hummus and a cucumber raita that was to die for along with four different kinds of bread and crackers. None of us had eaten in many hours so it took no time at all to turn Deloris’s hard work into minute particles of detritus. Shortly there after Schlomo had painstakingly prepared some Turkish coffee that lit us all up like the fourth of July. After about an hour of non-stop jabbering Deloris set to combing Snatches long pink locks so Schlomo and I climbed the fire escape on the side of their building and went up to their roof to smoke a splif that he had been saving all night. As we smoked he told me how he and Deloris had been watching Snatch and I all night and that they had come to the conclusion that two of us were the heart and sole of that band and that he knew after the first few minutes of watching our performance that him and I would become brothers. I was deeply moved by his openness and fucked up off my ass on caffeine, marijuana and a post-performance-rush that is truly impossible to explain so the only response I could muster was a permanently Jamaican grin and a few monosyllabic grunts. After a very long thoughtful silence between us as we looked out over our dark wet city the clouds became that predawn deep purple and Schlomo told me a story that would haunt me to this day, a story that he swore that he’d never told anyone but his trusted partner Deloris and for reasons that he hoped I’d understand must remain between the two of us.

…It went something like this:

Schlomo Rabinowitz II started his military career as a private, sign painter in the Israeli infantry for his compulsory 2 years service to his country after high school. Even though his lines were straight and his calligraphy was perfect he was quickly moved through the ranks for two very important reasons 1) he was an extraordinary shot with a rifle and 2) his father Schlomo Rabinowitz Sr. was one of the helicopter pilots at the famed “Raid on Antebbi”, where the Israeli army freed 22 Jewish hostages and killed 19 Lebanese Freedom Fighters without one fatality on their side. That was the military maneuver that put the Israeli armed forces on the “world power” map. Two years after the Raid on Antebbi Schlomo the first was killed in a fire fight on the Gaza Strip when an RPG struck his aircraft killing him and the 25 innocent bystanders standing directly under his helicopter instantly. He was the first of the Antebbi Raiders to die in action so the Israeli government made a big stink out of his death proclaiming him a national hero with his own day named after him and all that crap. The 25 innocent bystanders got jack-shit.

Schlomo Jr. was 6 years old when Schlomo 1 died and had long since forgotten every single detail of the man so by the time he was 19 when he himself entered the Israeli Black Force an elite unit of hand-to-hand assassins that was a “governmentally deniable” off-shoot of the Israeli special forces known as Hamas. The Black Force worked predominantly under cover of night, hence the name and had some of the most extensive hand-to-hand combat training known to man. By the time he was 21 Schlomo II had killed 16 men with his bare hands and 10 more from incredible distances with a rifle. Much to the delight of his superiors Schlomo Jr. was proving to be a natural born killer just like dear ‘ol dad but on a much more intimate level. Just after his 22 birthday and his 26th murder Schlomo the II signed up for two more years in the Black Force and took a well deserved month long liberty leave to the Island of Isola Asinara. Soon thereafter Schlomotion would discover two very important things about himself; two things that would in fact define the rest of his natural life. 1) He truly loved LSD and 2) he was an incredible artist with a paint brush. For four long weeks Schlomo tripped acid, swam naked in the warm Mediterranean Sea, painted on canvas and fell deeply, madly in love with a beautiful young woman from a little town on the west coast of the Americas called Belltown, her name was Deloris.

Deloris was undeniably the most beautiful thing that Schlomo had ever put his eyes on. After so many years of hatred and death Deloris’ powerfully hypnotizing eyes, gracious easy-going smile, long flowing golden hair and perfectly proportioned, drop-dead 17 year old body was in direct contrast to the grisly ghosts stacking up around his conscience. Deloris was not only breathtakingly beautiful she was also highly intelligent with a keen sense of abstract mathematics and longed to travel the world so by the time she’d laid eyes on Schlomo’s militarily sculpted body and hard good looks she was well past ready to leave Isola Asinara.

Although Deloris was born in Belltown she was raised on a very strange international proto-hippy commune on that tiny Island just North of Sardinia in the Mediterranean Sea. The commune was called Creation and Deloris’ grandparents and their siblings were the original founders of Creation. They had claimed the land for the commune on Isola Asinara (Italian for Donkey Inhabited Island) just after WWII in 1946’s zoning of Italy and never paid for it, not one single lira, ever. To this day the residents of Creation hold true to their original philosophy that procreation was their god’s gift to all of them and it was the responsibility of the entire community to raise and teach the offspring of the community. They made all of their own electricity using as many alternative means as possible, composted all of their waste, grew and raised all of their own food which was all very cool but according to Deloris, they were also hyper-conservative patriarchal religious fuck-heads and that ultimately drove Deloris into running away to London with an angry young man by the name of Schlomo Rabinowitz II and opening up a highly successful Falafel stand in Piccadilly Circus.

Schlomo viewed the acid that he took every three days or so on his holiday on Isola Asinara as a beautiful doorway leading directly into Deloris’ arms and a powerful connection to the canvases now piling up around his physical self. When Schlomotion told me that the first time he’d dropped he actually felt as though they had made that drug just for him I couldn’t help but smile. So after so many years of causing so much pain to so many people Schlomo had truly discovered himself as a prolific artist and an illicit drug user of the highest order. His work in oil on canvas was beautiful on so many painful levels that it was almost impossible to look at any one of his Isola Asinara paintings for more a few seconds. His use of deep swirling blood reds and its ultimate contrast, black, was as startling as the tragic subject matter that was dimly alluded to with his choice of colors. Schlomotion was the quintessential artist; born of the pain and suffering of the lives that he had taken with his own bloodied hands and the acid was the secondary medium for his confessions. Before he left Isola Asinara Schlomotion had completed 26 works of art, one for each mother he had saddened.

The one thing in Schlomo’s new art driven life that had carried over from his past was the music that deeply moved and inspired him. When Schlomo Sr. died the only thing that Schlomo II received from Schlomo 1’s sprawling estate was a vinyl collection that would shock even the most hard core of FUCC’s DJ’s. 8,000 12 inch, 10 inch and 7 inch vinyl discs spanning the years and genres of the medium from an original thick wax pressing of Orson Wells’ War of the Worlds to every single note that Charley Parker ever blew for Blue Note, from Harpo Marxs’ Rac-6 to Spike Jones’ Dance with der Furor, from Charlton Heston’s 1962 (abridged) reading of Genesis and Exodus to Abby Hoffman’s (un-abridged) diatribe against the Vietnam war at the Lincoln Memorial in 1969. Schlomo loved each and every one of the records in his fathers collection but the music that truly stirred him were the works of the ambiguous psychedelic masters of the early ‘60’s to the late ‘70’s. Bands spanning that influential genre from its primordial beginnings with The Deep, Hawkwind, Moby Grape and Radio Luxembourg through the more abstract and musically profound projects such as Art Lab, Country Joe and the Fish and yes, even Syd Barrett’s Pink Floyd. He wasn’t only into the Americans and Europeans though, he also loved the early Australians and Kiwi’s such as the Easy Beats, the Nuggets and Lenny Key. The bands that stimulated and truly inspired Schlomotion’s artwork though were all the incredible musicians that came out of the Canterbury Tour Scene of England’s early to late ‘70’s. Prominent musicians such as Arthur Brown, Robert Wyatt and Schlomo’s good friend Kevin Ayers as well as all the different bands that also came out of that little known (in the U.S. but huge in England) scene such as Arzachel, Egg, Hatfield and the North, Kahn, National Health, Matching Mole, Soft Machine and of course Schlomotion’s all time favorites Gong and Can. Schlomotion was another man that knew the most essential thing in the world; you keep your vinyl in alphabetical order, by genre and protected from the elements, always! By the time I met him Schlomotion had paintings of themes taken from almost every single song by Gong and Can and the over 400 vivid canvases were all over his giant Belltown flat ranging in size from 2 inches by 2 inches to 6 feet by 8 feet.

By the end of his month in paradise Schlomo had devised a brilliant plan for escaping the new two year contract that he had signed with the Black Force just before his life changing liberty leave to Isola Asinara, a plan that would in fact seal his fate and ultimately alienate him from his family as well as his country.

As the sun came up on that rainy Belltown morning Schlomotion continued his story by telling me about his first contract upon his return to Israel and I couldn’t help but listen in rapt silence.

The contract was a highly elusive Jordanian bomb maker/Palestinian sympathizer that was making allot of sad mothers himself near the border of the Gaza Strip. Schlomo was contracted to make this man disappear, which was the only contract he ever received. He was to find him, kill him, dismember his body and dispose of the pieces where no one would ever find them with the exception of the left pinky, that was usually sent to either the Mother of, or the Commanding officer (if he or she was military) of the victim to confirm the kill.

Schlomo told me that his all time favorite method of taking a life was a single long-knife insertion at a downward angle at the top of the left pectoral muscle severing the aorta from the heart of his victim, that way most of the bleeding was internal within the chest cavity and the job was completed in about 6 seconds. He showed me where the insertion was made with his thumb on my chest and a cold chill went up my spine.

Schlomo had a few favorite places of disposal but his usual was a high volume plastics incinerator located by a kibbutz just outside of the town of Tiberius, the city of his birth.

The contract, popularly known as The Cap was in every sense a despicable man. He was the son of a rich oil magnate and studied chemistry at Cornell University in the U.S. before his career as an anonymous killer. The Cap seemed to make his designer-bombs for fun rather than for money or politics and to the few people that knew him he seemed to take a lot of pride in the stylish way he built his explosives. Also, with his decadent life style of fancy chauffeured cars and expensive meals Schlomo knew that this was not going to be hard man to find. The limited dossier that Schlomo had received on The Cap prior to his return to Israel had only one bit of information of interest to the Black Force assassin and that was; The Cap was the exact same height and weight as Schlomo, down to the gram.

In fact, The Cap turned out to be an extremely easy man to find. Like the arrogant dumb-shit that he was he ate dinner every night at the same place, an elite little restaurant by the name of Café Zatar right on the beach in the Gaza Strip and he was always surrounded by a group of 6 very large well trained body guards.

Using the name of a local caterer known as Mohamed Salim Schlomo crossed the border into Gaza in a small delivery van and broke in to Café Zatar at 5am on the second day after his arrival in Israel and just 26 hours after his briefing on The Cap. He hid himself over the tiles in the ceiling of the men’s restroom just over the main entrance and waited there until The Cap came in to take his nightly dump at about 8:00pm, 13 painfully still hours after Schlomo’s arrival at the café. When he needed to shit The Cap would come in to the restroom after the room was secured by one body guard and was followed in by a second, the two body guards would stoically wait shoulder-to-shoulder about 3 feet in from of the door on the inside of the restroom while the The Cap was stinking up the place.

As The Cap shuffled into his stall Schlomo slipped from the ceiling behind the two body guards, broke the neck of one and severed the aorta of the other with his trusty long-knife in one smooth, completely silent movement. After silently arranging the bodies of his two new victims Schlomo set up a plastique charge under the body of the body guard with the severed aorta to go off when the restroom door was opened next. When The Cap exited the toilet stall 2 minutes and 45 seconds later his own aorta was severed and the wound covered and sealed before he could call out or even drip one drop of blood on the restroom tiles, dead in about 6 seconds flat. His body was hauled up into the ceiling, out the back of the café, into the delivery van and driving away 4 minutes before the next body guard entered the restroom blowing up the back half of Café Zatar killing that body guard and 4 innocent coffee drinkers that were passionately engaged in a very disturbing conversation about the current state of affairs between Israel and Palestine. By that time Schlomo was well on his way back to Black Force headquarters.

Before reaching headquarters Schlomo stopped his little van, pulled out his victims’ body, undressed the cadaver and proceeded to beat the shit out of it. He beat the corpse’s head so badly that 3 of the teeth came out, the jaw was broken in 2 places, the cheek bones crushed and the skull was shattered. He whacked off the left pinky finger just below the first knuckle of the beaten corpse. In the pockets of The dead Cap he put a razor sharp switch blade, a small sewing kit, a tiny flash light, an English Passport belonging to one Hiram Levi, a box of matches, a roll of duct tape and a remote control for the 4 pounds of C-4 explosives lining the interior of his delivery van. To the chest of his victim he taped 12,000 British Pounds-Sterling and a Glock 40mm semi-automatic pistol, the weapon of choice for the PLO. And finally up the freshly evacuated ass of the dead man Schlomotion shoved a two liter plastic bottle full of petrol. Schlomo put the teeth and the chunk of pinky from The Cap in a small plastic zip-lock baggie, put the baggie in the right breast pocket of The Cap’s shirt, redressed the freshly beaten dead man and continued his journey back to headquarters.

“Whoa, slow down there brush fire!” I said standing in the cold rain shivering my ass off that morning on the roof of Schlomotions building, “Dude, how in the hell do you get a full two liter bottle of anything up a man’s ass?!”

“My friend, this is not a problem when the man is dead and he just took a shit, remember his sphincters are no longer working, no.” Schlomo replied and busted up laughing. He suddenly stopped his hysterical laughter, reached over to my face and closed my gaping jaw and stoically continued his tale.

Once he was back at Black Force headquarters Schlomo parked the van directly against the back of the building on the van’s right side and entered the headquarters offices from the roof access fire escape with the dead body of The Cap draped over his shoulders like a cape with the dead mans wrists and elbows duct taped together in the front, he stashed the body in a rubbish container located on the top floor of the headquarters building just above the brig in the stairwell. He put a lock-pick set between his cheek and gum and went in to his commanding officer’s office.

The conversation between Schlomo and his commanding officer went something like this:

“What happened? Why are you here?”

“They made me and the contract escaped, I had to blow the building just to get away!”

“What!? You fucking asshole, why did come back here? This is a secure facility and you most likely just blew that as well!”

“I didn’t know what else to do; you have to get me out of the country, I am certain they will be coming for me!”

“What, I don’t have to do anything, this is your fuck up, and now you have to deal with it!”

“You will arrange for my safe passage out of this country or you will not leave this office alive.”

“Fuck you, you sniveling little insubordinate shit, you dug this hole now you have to lie in it!”

“I’m afraid that is not an option.” Schlomotion very calmly replied and proceeded to beat the living shit out of his commanding officer right there in the mans own office but not before letting him trip his personal alarm system.

Schlomo allowed 6 MP’s (not enough really) to subdue him, beat him up a little bit, strip him down to his underwear and throw him into the on site brig.

Once in his cell Schlomo, the assassin, the son of Schlomo the hero pilot went to work. He silently picked the lock of the cell, snapped the neck of the guard in front of the door dragging him inside of the cell. He went to the end of the hall picked another lock and killed another guard stashing that body under a desk at the end of the hall. Schlomo made his way up the stairwell to the dustbin at the top of the stairs. He pulled the dead body of The Cap out of the rubbish bin draped it over his shoulders again and made his way back to his cell. Once inside the cell Schlomo pulled all of the dead mans clothes off and put them on the cot along with the 12,000 British Pounds-Sterling and the Glock 40. He pulled out the switch blade, dug out 3 of his own teeth, the same three that had been broken out of The Caps dead face and lopped off the tip of his left pinky just below the first knuckle and placed his pinky tip in its own zip-lock baggie.

On the roof of his Belltown flat Schlomotion opened his mouth showing me his three missing teeth and held up his left hand exhibiting his distinct lack of pinky tip, smiled and continued.

Schlomo spread a generous amount of his own blood around the cell, put his boxer shorts on the dead body of The Cap, threw his three teeth on the floor, pulled the bottle of petrol out of the dead man’s ass and doused the body with it. Schlomo washed his face in the tiny sink and carefully duct-tapped his severed pinky. He dressed in The dead Caps clothing putting the baggie with his pinky tip in the left breast pocket of the shirt. He then took the switch blade and cut the seam at the top of the feather pillow, emptied the contents of the pillow on to the dead man’s body and stuffed the empty pillow full of the cash. After he was cleaned and dressed in The Caps very nice shirt, pants and shoes he took the remote control out of his pocket and blew up the entire first floor of the Black Force headquarters. After the building stopped shaking Schlomo II lit the body of The Cap on fire, slung the pillowcase full of money over his shoulder and escaped a second time from the building leaving all the doors open and dropping the Glock-40 on his way out.

Because of the fact that Schlomo’s commanding officer was taken away in an ambulance Schlomo felt compelled to hot wire the man’s beautiful new BMW 323-I Bavaria. He drove to a little place he knew just outside of a Kibbutz by the little town of Tiberius, the city of his birth.

Illuminated by the hellish light of a high powered plastics incinerator Schlomo’s goateed ashen face took on the distant appearance of a long forgotten Pan. The bloody sewing kit was in pieces strewn around him. He reached into the right breast pocket of his new shirt, took out the zip-lock baggie that had three teeth and the tip of a pinky finger in it and threw it into the pyre. He reached into his left breast pocket took out the zip-lock baggie that had his own finger tip in it, put the baggie in an envelope that was addressed to his mother and sealed the envelope. He took four capsules of high powered, militarized meth-amphetamine and drove off into the night stopping only at a mailbox along the way.

Two years after his escape from Israel Schlomotion and Deloris took the proceeds from the sale of their highly successful restaurant in London to move back to her home town of Belltown on the North West coast of North America, soon there after Schlomotion had his first art show at the Weathered Wall where he managed to sell all 26 of his original Isola Asinara collection but for some reason the only piece that he didn’t sell at that show was a tiny 2 in by 2 inch painting of the severed bloody tip of a finger, the name of that piece was simply, The Cap.

“… I will eat his tongue in front of him but I will not kill him, I want him to live as long as possible.”

“Schlomotion you fucking asshole, what makes you think that anyone listing to the radio right now gives a shit about your completely insubstantial suspicions about your wife?”

Without turning off the mic Schlomotion turned to look at me standing in the door of studio 1 and said, “Get out of here Phelch Dunderhead, you have no right to censor my radio program.”

“Censor you? I’m not trying to censor you my friend, I’m simply trying to save you from the inevitable embarrassment that you will suffer when you find out that not only is your wife not cheating on you but for reasons I will never understand she desperately wants you to come home to her loving arms when you’re finished making a fool out of yourself on the radio! Censor you, what the fuck is wrong with you? On the contrary, turn that fucking mic up I want everyone to hear this, there is no one at your flat right now with the exception of Deloris who loves you more than I thought was humanly possible and Snatch, who doesn’t like you very much at all right now! Fuck you, fuck you, fuck you!” I said, full-on screaming into his deathly calm face. “I can’t believe you would have the audacity to turn this incredible outlet for free speech, this radio station, the one that you even helped build, into an outlet for your unsubstantiated hatred! After all that we’ve been through, how can you trivialize all of that work with your hateful language, fuck you, you inconsiderate asshole!”

“I saw his car parked in front of my house.” Schlomotion replied in a tired, subdued voice with his head hung looking at the floor.

“No, you’re wrong, it must’ve been somebody else’s car! Listen to me, she loves you my friend and she’s going to have your son so you need to stop trying to kill yourself for the sins of your past and move on to a beautiful future with your family. Please, just go home to Deloris, she’s waiting for you.”

Schlomotion stood up and dropped the live microphone in the DJ chair and leaned into me whispering with an icy smile, “My friend, you are a very brave man.” And he left the studio picking up his records on his way out, never to return.

“…You’re listening to 89.1fm FUCC.”

Edwin…

Jul 26, 2008 in James' Fiction

Through a 13th floor window a cold January wind whispers a story. A story of a top hat made of silk, a pen that scratches on paper and of a man for whom life has taken its turn. But the wind also whispers of other stories as well, it tells the tales of freeloaders that ride on the wind, the unseeables, the histories of all that have whispered before. The whispers have desires unto themselves apart from the top hat made of silk and the man but very much in collusion with the scratch, scratch, scratching of the pen. The unseeables much like the man and the top hat made of silk are in search of the one thing that can translate them from the abstract to the idea, from the idea to the man, from the man to the pen, from the pen to the scratching. Just as the pen desires the paper, the top hat made of silk desires the head of the man for whom life’s turn has been taken, the whispers unseen desire the same thing that they all so desperately need; a receiver.“Howard…”

If, a receiver is merely a vessel intended for the specific purpose of receiving a transmitted message then the medium of transmission isn’t only a vector for the message but is in fact a message within the message and the man for whom life has taken its turn at this particular juncture is nothing more then a transmitter.

Transmitters and receivers.

The man for whom life has taken its turn looks up from the scratchity-scratch of his pen on the paper to the opened 13th floor window and receives the cold January wind upon his face, he pauses, takes a long look at the top hat made of silk then resumes his labors.

The paper receives a message from the man, his vector is the pen and thus his story unfolds.

“Howard!”

The Message: defining this message, hell any message is a matter of understanding the very nature of the transmitter, who produced it, where it came from, how it was built and of course, why. Who, what, when, where, how and why…

“Edwin!”

“No one calls me that.”

“Well at least you answered, if you think I’m going to address my new husband as ‘Major’ like some under paid subordinate, you’ve got another thing coming mister!” Marion said dusting a small grain of dust off his shoulder. “There, you’re perfect. Now let’s go out there and knock ’em dead!”

He bent down to kiss her ruby-red lips and she slightly turned her head at the very last moment saying, “Lip-stick!” and smiling, an incredible radiance that engulfed her entire face.

“You are so beautiful!” He said searching deep into her eyes, tightening his lips and slowly shaking his head from side to side.

“Oh, fancy!” She blushed and hid her face behind her pearly white gloved hands.

The giant door creaked and they both looked up to once. A small head peaked around the massive bulk and said, “Will you two stop playing kissy-face and come out here, we’re about to lose the General!”

“Ok Harry, we’re on our way.” He said looking down at his beautiful (literally) blushing young bride, saying, “Mrs. Armstrong, please, after you.” He then stretched his long arm out towards the door and bowed his slick bald head.

Harry disappeared tisking his tongue and the massive door closed behind him.

“Oh my god, I almost forgot, wait! She said and ran to a small closet next to a giant desk at the other end of the room and pulled out a rather large silky grey box. She turned her back to him, pulled something out of the box and let the box drop to the floor. Turning back around she quickly put the contents of the box behind her back with one hand and with the other she reached out to him as she crossed the room, her footsteps lost in the thick red and black carpet. “One last thing,” She said and from behind her back she pulled out a shiny new top-hat still smelling of mercurous nitrate.

He smiled so wide that the twitch was barley noticeable on his left side. He then bowed enough for her to place the hat on his shiny bold pate, stood up to his full height and placed his left hand into his jacket saying, “My lady.” He then triangled his right arm allowing her to put her arm through his and said, “Shall we Mrs. Armstrong?”

She replied, “Why yes, Mr. Armstrong, we shall.”

Before reaching the door she whispered, “Don’t forget to duck.”

***

“Well hello there Mr. Armstrong. I guess you should know that you’re a very lucky young man.” Said a voice at the boy’s feet.

The boy’s vision was blurred but he could make out the figure of a large man dressed in a white coat at the end of his bed reading what appeared to be something on a clipboard. All around him smelled like what he always thought a hospital would smell like. There was a glass jar turned upside down with a rubber tube coming out of it hanging on a pole next to his bed. The tube led to a needle that was stuck in his left arm. His arm was tied to a very uncomfortable piece of wood with thick leather straps. He was not in his own bed.

“My name is Dr. Jones and I suppose you’d like to know why it is you’re feeling so bad.”

“Yuh I woo…” He said and was then wracked by a cramp that started in his left side, under his ribs and went all the way up to his left temple. It lasted only a second but blurred his vision almost to the point of blindness. The leather straps creaked with the strength of him.

“Don’t try to talk, just listen for a minute. You’ve had a little bout with the St. Vitus Dance or Neuro-Rheumatic Fever to be more precise. The disease is now in the latter stages and is having its way with you in the form of some pretty painful seizures’ on your left side. The reason why I said you were lucky; I believe you slept through the worst part of it.

“’Mmm dhirsty…” The boy said, his tongue dry sticky and brick-ish inside his mouth.

“I bet you are,” Said the doctor putting the clipboard back on a hook at the end of the bed. “I’ll send the nurse in to give you some water as soon as I’m finished here.” The doctor then walked around the bed thumping, poking and prodding at young man’s legs, his right arm and his torso for several minutes humming a non-song while he did his thing. Finally he said, “Mr. Armstrong, we don’t know a whole lot about this disease outside of the fact that it’s very uncomfortable for the people that it attacks. I’ve done quite a bit of reading on it in the three weeks that you’ve been here and the bottom line is still; I just don’t know what to do with you. I do know that this disease has a history of dramatically affecting the heart of the people that it attacks, so it is very important that you stay as calm and still for as long as you can.” The doctor then came around the bed, put a cool hand around his right wrist, looking at his watch he said, “Look, I know this is hard for a nine year old boy to understand but you’ve been though allot and as far as I can see you still have a long way to go to fully recover from this sickness, you have to get used to that fact. I suggest you read a book, heck, read allot of books.” Doctor Jones then gave a quick tight smile turned on one heel and left the room.

“Hello Edwin” The boy’s mother said as she came into the room. Her hair was done up fancy and she was wearing a brightly flowered dress that just covered her knees, bright red lipstick and she was carrying what looked to be a heavy brown paper bag.

“Ghuy moung” the boy replied with a smile that slanted to the left, he was drooling a bit to that side, he then twitched with a pained expression on his slackened face.

“Don’t talk honey, doctor Jones tells me that you shouldn’t even try to talk for another week or so, so just listen. You’re a very sick young man and we’re going to do everything in our power to get you better.” She said taking a flower crocheted hanky out of her little red leather purse and wiped the boys chin.

A nurse wearing a bleached white, stiffly ironed uniform and a large slickly red painted smile came into the room holding a metal jug and a small cup. She had a dab of lipstick stuck on her front tooth that smeared slightly when she smiled. She poured some water into the cup and handed it to the young man in the bed.

“Ang gu.” He said taking the cup in his shaky hands and putting it to his lips drinking deeply.

“Shush!” The nurse said setting the jug down on a shiny metal trey next to his bed. She then smiled at him again , her bright red lipstick piling up at the corners of her mouth; she turned and left the room in a flurry of shifting, hissing starch.

“Listen to me Edwin,” The boys mother said, “You have to be very quiet now, don’t try to talk, don’t try to move, don’t do anything! We want you to get better as soon as possible and the only way for you to do that is to be as quiet and still as you can. Do you understand?”

He shook his head and smiled the best he could around his swollen tongue trying to hide his disappointment. He still had only a vague idea of how long he’d been in that place and despite the doctors explanation he couldn’t understand what was wrong with him. All he really knew was that he was weak, thirsty and incredibly shaky all over his skinny little body.

His mother then reached into the bag and pulled out a nicely wrapped package the shape and size of a hefty book, she handed it to him, tipped her head to the side and tightly smiled saying, “Your father and I got you a couple of things that we thought you might like.” Continuing, she said, “Go ahead son, open it.”

Edwin took the gift from her hands and held it for a few seconds looking at the loving way his mother had wrapped it. There was a small note written on a tiny folded up piece of the wrapping paper that said, ‘To our lucky young man, maybe now you can re-invent yourself!’

Edwin then tore into the wrapping with his one good hand leaving the paper in shreds at the base of the hospital bed. Inside the package was a fantastically colored leather backed book called, “The Boy’s Book of Inventions-Stories of the Wonders of Modern Science” by a guy named Ray Stannard Baker. Edwin looked up at his mother with eyes that welled and mouthed the words, “Thank you.”

“You are very welcome honey; now, I’m going to leave so you can get some rest, so’s you can come home to us.” She got up, smoothed her dress over her legs, picked up the bag and said, “Oh, I almost forgot!” She reached back into the bag and pulled out a small wooden box, handed it to him and said, “You’ll need this if you’re going to be the next, Marconi ‘eh.” She leaned over his bed, kissed his swollen cheek and whispered, “Now get some rest honey.”

After his mother left the room Edwin looked down at the little box in his hand. It was beautifully made out of the most exquisite wood he’d ever seen and carved in to the top of the box was a single word, ‘Parker’. He opened the box by jamming the bottom half between his knees and pulling the top off. Once opened he beheld sitting in a silken field of blue a single pen, a Parker “Lucky Curve” ink pen that he would carry with him for the rest of his life.

***

Harry

“Hey,” The young man with the cast said as he entered the room. “My mom told me that I’m supposed to tell you not to talk, so, don’t talk ok.” He then tried to smile, failed, continued, “My names Harold but my friends call me Harry. Edwin lazily lolled his head in Harry’s direction but didn’t seem to respond. “You and me are the only two kids in this place so my mom made come in here, I’m sorry, I’ll go.” Harry got up to leave but Edwin just said; “Please don’t leave, I’m sorry if I’m not very quick today, I’ve been having a rough time lately, what happened to your arm?

Harry held his brand new cast up and said, “I was trying to put up a wire on the side of our house and fell, that stupid doctor told me I was lucky, can you beat that!

Edwin started to laugh and ended up coughing and Harry got up to leave again saying “Look, I’m sorry I’ll get outta your hair.”

No, no please! This just happens to me is all, I start to cough when ever I get cracked up and you crack me up, that stupid doctor told me the same thing, that I was lucky! I mean no body seems to know what or why I all of the sudden started to shake and puke all over the place but for some reason this joker thinks I’m lucky.” Edwin said and started to laugh and cough again.

Harry joined in the laughing part, reached over and picked up Edwin’s new book saying, “Hey, this is my favorite book!”

“Oh yeah, what’s your favorite invention?”

“Marconi’s Wireless of course, why do you think I was climbing the side of my house? I’ve got a crystal set at home and I heard that some guy in Canada was going to try to beat out Marconi for the distance record and I figured if I could get my wire up high enough maybe I could catch a hint of the signal somehow!”

“Wow!” Edwin replied broke off into another short coughing fit but recouped quickly asking, “What’s the guys name?”

“I don’t know, Lee something. Some guy at my dad’s hardware store said that this Lee guy has the tallest, what’s it called?”

“Antenna!”

“Yeah, antenna in the world and a huge, What’s it called?”

“Transmitter!”

“Yeah, and he’s going after Marconi like it was something personal!” Harry said by then full on sitting all the way on Edwin’s hospital bed bouncing up and down with every word.

“Hey,” Edwin said still reeling with excitement, “Tell me about your crystal set,” and continued to cough in to his hand.

“Well, it’s the exact same one, part-for-part that’s in ‘The Boy’s Book of Inventions’. I just went to my dads store, worked the whole weekend for free and he let me have everything on the list except the crystal detector part, you have to order that special, and I put it together just like the one in the pictures. About a month ago I ordered the galena crystal detector from Pickard’s in Boston and it came in a little over a week, you believe that, anyway, here’s the cool part, My uncle Alf who works for Bell Telephone made me a carbon amplifier head phone out of a telephone receiver and a flashlight battery!”

“Wow!” Edwin said and projectile vomited all over his new friend.

***

“Ladies and gentlemen, may I present to you Mr. and Mrs. Major Edwin Howard Armstrong!” Harry announced, his voice slightly cracking at the end of his call.

As the young couple entered the large room the crowd of people all turned and raised their glasses in unison towards them. A rather short man in a perfect tuxedo came forward and announced above the din, “My friends, I’d like to make a special toast to these two young people. It has been my pleasure to have had intense, to say the least and intimate dealings with both of them over the past few years and it makes me proud and happy to finally introduce them together. First of all, I’ve had the honor to personally know and know of the Major for quite a few years now and there is no one in my life that I would consider to be more a brilliant scientist and radio technician then this man, a genius in every sense of the word, Major, Edwin Howard Armstrong!” The group in unison voiced, “Here, here!” and raise their glasses a little higher. Then the small man with the booming voice continued, saying, “And secondly, to Marion, my beloved assistant. A woman that is not only frighteningly beautiful but has seen fit to make my life actually manageable, a task, I might add, that seemed impossible just two short years ago. “Here, here!” Replied the synchronous crowd. “So now, these two beautiful young people have been joined in holy matrimony after one of the most painfully long courtships I’ve ever been witness to, I might add.” A rumbling chuckle emotes from the mass. “And so I say to you my friends, To never ending love!” “To never ending love!”, Answered the volgus, a moment of gulping silence fallowed and with the release of 40 pounds of tightly cut confetti in the ceiling a roar rose above the room to find the hidden standing wave in the rafters supporting the structure of the building.

Marion immediately fell into a screaming group of similarly dressed young ladies and proceeded to address the rituals of the modern Judaeo-Christian post-marriage festivities.

“Thank you sir, that was eloquent and inspiring to say the least” Edwin said to the tuxedoed orator.

“Nonsense, after that bit of engineering genius you pulled with the Superhet it’s the least I could say and besides when you return from your highly paid, extended vacation I will be expecting that mythical “Black box” you promised me, but least of all you two truly deserve each other!”

“Here, here!” said the voice of Harry walking up to the two men wearing a champaign swagger and the grin to match. “Are you going to give it to her here, tonight?” Clearing his throat and turning a bright red, saying, “I mean, the Superhet that is.” He turned to the other man addressing him with a simple, “General.”

“No, I thought I’d wait till we got to Montauk.” Edwin replied with a laugh shaking Harry’s hand.

“That’s too bad; I would love to see the reaction the smallest radio receiver in the world would have on this crowd, I mean really this room is filled with the only people in the civilized world that could give a crap, parden my French, about the “Worlds Smallest Radio Receiver.”

“I think that’s about to change Harry”, Edwin said with the grin of inside knowledge and took a long slow sip of Champaign.

“What’s all this then?” The General asked.

“I’m giving Marion the prototype as a wedding present.” Edwin stiffly replied.

“Well isn’t she the luckiest girl in the world, I’m sure Mrs. Sarnoff would love to be the owner of not only the smallest but the most expensive Superheterodyne radio receiver on the planet as well!”

With a twitch in his left eye Edwin nervously replied, “Come now General, the whole purpose behind all that research and expense was to create a radio receiver that every home could afford.”

“Yes, but that one in particular cost me a little over $150 thousand dollars!”

Harry made an exaggerated gulping sound and swayed on his feet. The three men laughed.

“I’m just kidding,” The General continued saying, “Harry told me about your idea to give her the thing last week, but you really should have told me about it yourself.”

“My apologies General, with all of the other things happing this past month it must have slipped my mind.” Edwin said taking the top hat made of silk off his head and bowing gracefully to the man.

“Slipped your mind?” The General replied with fained anger, “let us hope that this kind mind slip isn’t a regular part of your brilliant routine.” Then the man leaned in close to Edwin’s ear saying, “I want my black box Major…” He smiled tightly, turned and beautifully blended with the crowd.

Harry said upon the tiny man’s disappearance, “Boy, what a prick.”

“Hear, hear.” Edwin quietly replied with a slight toast of the glass.

***

“Harry, what’s the definition of stupid?” Edwin asked storming into the radio lab at Columbia University. The snow was melting on his thick brown, fur callard, leather riding coat and he was still wearing his motorcycle goggles. Harry looked up from his labors, he was irritated. He was dressed in a stained and heat scorched white lab coat over a white second day button up short sleeve shirt, a thin black tie, stained grey pleated slacks and a pair of beat up, squeaky brown leather shoes. Harry had a set of brazing goggles on his forehead. “You’re late!” He said putting the goggles over his eyes, he then lit a brazing torch and turned back to his work.

“No, Harry, wait a minute, traffic was murder coming over the bridge, I know I’m late but you gotta listen, I have a point!”

Harry sighed, shut the torch off with a fwip and turned back around on his squeaky stool. “Okay Howard, what’s your point?” He said putting his goggles back on his forehead.

“My point is,” Edwin said with a big twitchy grin shucking off his thick, wet, riding gear. “If you spend months in a lab with one particular invention in mind and your end result is that invention then you’re a genius right?

“Ok Howard I’ll play,” Harry answered with a sneer. “Yes, you’re a genius.”

“Right,” Edwin said pulling up a stool next to Harry. “That is, if you actually know what it is that your invention does?”

“Howard, I’ve been in this lab for the last 18 hours working on a diagram that you drew out and I have absolutely no idea what it is that I’m doing, are you calling me stupid?”

“You? Harry, heavens no! What I’m saying is, not only do I think that Lee de Forest didn’t know what he was doing when he invented the triode, I’m saying, I think he flat out lied about everything and stole the idea from some poor bastard that did! You can’t spend a large chunk of your life inventing something and not know what the hell it does.”

Edwin jumped up, put on his lab coat and pulled out the keys to his locker saying, “Harry, I don’t know who de Forest stole those plans from but whom ever it was must have known this,” Edwin spun around and opened his locker saying, “If you don’t feed the primary signal back through the wire grid in the audion, the triode is practically useless! But, if you do!” Edwin then wheeled a large table out of the locker; on the table was some kind of large mechanism covered with a stainless white sheet. He spun around and walked over to his wide eyed friend. Pointing his left finger in the air he said, “If you do, you increase the regenerated signal by several orders of magnitude!” With that Edwin spun back around and tore the sheet off of the table. On the table were three large wooden boxes. The one in the middle was a square with the light bulb looking audion triode tube sticking out of the top and a large black circular dial with tiny numbers around the circle in the middle of the box, the two other boxes to the right and left of it were vertical rectangles with curly wires attaching them to the center box.

“Harry, the triode was either invented by that stupid mother fucker or it was flat out stolen! That thing that you’ve been so diligently working on over the past few days is the circuit that resends the modulated signal back to the triode to boost the signal. Not only that but it boost the signal enough to send it directly to a transducer; no more painful crappy headphones Harry, I’ve done it! I’ve invented a radio that everyone can hear. It’s just like what Marconi said when he sent that weak little signal over the English Channel; ‘Are you ready?’”

Harry jumped up off of his little stool and grabbed his friend by the shoulders and said, “You son of a bitch, Howard you really are a genius!” And they both howled with laughter.

Two weeks later Harry awoke in the middle of the night to the sound of his old spark-gap receiver tapping out this message;

…. .- .-. .-. ..–.. .-. . –. . -. . .-. .- - .. — -. .– — .-. -.- … -… — - … .– .- -.– …

(HARRY, REGENERATION WORKS BOTH WAYS!)

Answer;

..–..

(WHAT?)

Message;

.. ..-. -.– — ..- ..-. . . -.. - …. . - … .- -. … — .. - .. — -. … .. –. -. .- .-.. -… .- -.-. -.- - …. .-. — ..- –. …. - …. . - ..- -… . .. - -… — — … - … - …. . - .-. .- -. … — .. - .. — -. -… -.– .—- —– —– —– .-. .. -. … -

(IF YOU FEED THE TRANSMISSION SIGNAL BACK THROUGH THE AUDION IT BOOSTS THE TRANSMISSION BY 1000 TIMES RIGHT)

Answer;

.-. .. -. … -

(RIGHT)

Message;

- … . .- ..- -.. .. — -. -.-. .-. . .- - . … .- … .. –. -. .- .-.. — ..-. .. - .-. — .– -. - …. .- - -.-. .- -. -… . .-. . -… .-. . -… .-. — .- -.. -.-. .- … - .- -. -.. — - .. … .— ..- … - .- … … - .-. — -. –. .- … - …. . .-. . -.-. . .. …- . -.. … .. –. -. .- .-..

(THE AUDION CREATES A SIGNAL OF ITS OWN THAT CAN BE REBROADCASTS AND IT IS JUST AS STRONG AS THE RECEIVED SIGNAL!)

Answer;

.– — .– –. — - — … .-.. . . .–. .-.-.-

(WOW! GO TO SLEEP! END.)

The Ocean Blues Again…

Jun 01, 2007 in James' Fiction

The Sun Set as we head North once again

The Sailing Vessel Sapien and her crew of two set out once again on the Ocean Blue.
At 1600 hours on Friday the 13th day of April in the year 2007 we tossed off the mooring at the Honokohau Harbor (position: 19°40′08.30 N, 156°01′61.44 W) with our bow pointed at 300° NNW.

We motored on that heading across glass water for 10 hours with not a breath of breeze. The change came quickly. At 0200 on Saturday morning we hauled all yards in a perfect 15 knots of steady ocean wisp. At 0230 we put the first reef in the main and by 0245 the second reef came down and we hauled in the jib to a five foot storm reefing. Within 45 minutes the winds went from 15 knots to 40 knots with the seas pounding us with a 10 to 20 foot chop! We had entered the ‘Alenuihāhā Channel.

Between the island of Maui and the Big Island of Hawai’i to the South lies a channel that is only 12 miles wide, 40 miles long and 12,000 feet deep called the ‘Alenuihāhā! The winds, waves and currents in this channel are notorious to sailors the world over, in other words, she kicks up a bitch on a daily basis.

Now, the crew of the S.V. Sapien was well aware of this viscous strait of ocean before we took off on this leg of our global circumnavigation but being “aware of” and being “prepared for” are two totally different ways of thinking, to be sure!

Let me be more specific: We got our asses kicked and licked for 10 hours and there is nothing that can prepare you for that kind of a beating.

Speaking of beating, that’s exactly what we did for the first four hours of the sail through the channel. We beat into the wind and waves and never in my life have I experienced a word that so perfectly expressed what it was that we did! We got beat up, we got beat down, we got beat in, out and of course ALL AROUND! And at the end of those four hours of beating we were, yes, BEAT!!! My wife Dena, drenched to the skin and geared up to the max in her Seattle-bought foulies came below decks to tell me that she had had enough and was turning tail to run with the weather, so that we did. At 0600 on Saturday morning from my cozy bunk before the mast on the S.V. Sapien, I felt the sudden change from “all’s hell” to “all’s well” as Dena changed our course from 300° NNW to 240° WSW. She struck the jib and let the double reefed main far out and just like that it was “Tea Time in the Cockpit.” We went from 3.9 knots beating to 6.5 knots running. The way we saw it, as long as we made a westerly heading at some point we would come in lee of Maui and the winds had to change, right? RIGHT!?

Right…

I can’t believe I almost forgot to tell you about Dena’s totally kick-ass, leaning over the transom repair job on our Monitor! The stopper knot at the lowest (of course) part of the unit just blew out at about 1000 hours. The end looked shredded, even though we had wicked and burned it like we have so many other lines in our sailing lives. The Monitor was working hard in the following seas, though, and it busted loose that knot with a crack. I was on shift, so I took the helm in the Pilothouse while Dena peered mournfully - and more than a little sleepily - at the aluminum tube through which she was going to need to thread the line. Luckily we have a thin orange line with some stiffness to it, and she was able to make two bends within that tube and still fish it out at the end! The knot tying and monitor adjusting was homey in comparison to the line running. She had the whole project completed in less then 10 minutes so she sleepily gave me kiss and went back to bed… She’s such a super-hero!

At 1100 Saturday morning during my 0800 to 1200 pull at the helm we made the lee of the island of Maui and the winds subsided to 15 perfect knots once again and the seas seemed to smile! We couldn’t see Maui through the clouds but we knew she was there protecting us from the evil ‘Alenuihāhā. All day long we sailed in the quintessential Pacific Ocean, happy as clams and naked as jay-birds. We ate P-B&J’s with a can of “Husband Please’n” beans and laughed like a couple of life drunk sailors.

The weather stayed delicious until about an hour after sundown when we entered the Kaiwi Channel between the islands of Moloka’i and O’ahu. We put two reefs in and pulled the jib a few feet and skimmed along at a powerful 6.5 to 7.2 knots in a 20 to 28 knot breeze. The seas were choppy, no doubt, but workable and we maintained a course of 330° NNW with just our Monitor Windvane at the helm. As we raised the city of Honolulu on our bow in the dark, the choppy waves took on the appearance of crazy little goblins running across our bow. Every once in a while we’d get hit by a “big’n” that would slap our broadsides with a loud sloppy “CRACK” and drench me through to the pink-stuff.

At 2400 Sunday morning Dena took the helm and all of Honolulu was in view and took up the entire horizon. I went below decks to grab 40 winks and ended up sleeping like the dead until Dena called me from the cockpit to tell me that we were getting close.
The approach and land fall in the middle of the night from offshore in a 20 knot sea breeze to a marina that we had never seen before with a huge city behind it was completely uneventful. Dena brought us in with a “Red Right Return” to Ko’ Olina Marina at 0200 and we made our moorings on the N-dock with a starboard tie. We coiled our moorings and washed the salt off Sapien for the next two hours and at 0400 Dena and I fell into each others arms in the forepeak of our ship at our new home port located at Latitude 21°19’46.14 N and Longitude 158° 07’12.3 W.

An entire lifetime’s adventure in only 32 hours and once again, we lived!

KoOlina0407.jpg

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.

20 days of Pacific or rather, Just Go!

Nov 30, 2006 in James' Fiction

Just… Go!

I can see no reason not to just go…

Sapien Away

So on the 17th of October in the year of 2006 we just went. The boat, the sailing vessel Sapien (a 1989 Gulf 32-pilothouse sloop), and her crew of dedicated ocean explorers, James Lane and Dena Hankins, left the left coast of the continental United States for the second leg of their global circumnavigation: San Francisco, California to Hilo, Hawaii.

It’s not that this thing, this just going thing hasn’t been done thousands of times before (maybe even tens of thousands) but for this crew of two it had never been done. Yet I mean.

Even after the first leg of our on-going journey was completed in 2002 (Seattle to San Francisco) our best friends and acquaintances still gave us that blank but concerned “Land-Lubber” stare saying:

“You’re doing what?”

“Sailing around the world. Hawaii next then we’ll see how that goes…”

“Why?”

“…” Silence, then, “Because we have to, it’s the thing that we do.”

“How?”

“Now that, that’s a good question!”

The body…

My Bike

In my oh so humble opinion, the first step to a successful oceanic passage is being prepared within your own body. By that I mean physically, psychologically, and intellectually ready to take on the immense stresses that a trans-Pacific crossing entails. I’m telling you, this is a complete lifestyle that is not easy but for people that truly want it, it is do-able.

When my life partner, Dena, and I set sail on the first leg of our Global Circumnavigation, we had to let go of some very hard to shake addictions. The first one being the “all important” automobile. That’s right, you gotta shake that car if you’re going to travel by sail and in doing so you’re taking that first step to getting your body ready to take on an ocean passage. Bicycle riding is by far the very best and easiest way of getting strong while at the same time staying limber and agile, two of the three most important things for being a small vessel sailor on a very large ocean. The third one, of course, is being smart.

You wouldn’t believe some of the bullshit rationalizations I’ve heard for not getting rid of that stupid car:

“Dude, you just gotta have a car if you have dog!”

Or,

“Man, How’m I going to work off that DUI if I don’t have a car?”

While I was in the Bay Area I managed to put 9,767 miles on my custom Linear recumbent bicycle, a distance equal to a trip from Seattle, WA, to Lake Titicaca in the Andes Mountains. That was just in the East San Francisco Bay in just a little over four years.

On top of riding our bikes everywhere Dena and I had a memberships to the Oakland YMCA. There I worked my upper body no less than three times a week with machines and free weights as well as my lungs and cardiopulmonary system with an intense regiment of steam and dry sauna. Also, for 8 months (before they unfortunately changed the time of the class) we got to study Tai-Chi with a true master of the art and those classes improved my center and balance thus saving me from getting hundreds more bruises than I already received on the adventure.

Besides the positive physical aspects of working out at “The Y” there were a great many fantastic people I got to know while I was there. They taught me more than I ever thought I could learn about the psychological value of staying physically healthy.

The mind…

That brings me to preparing your head for an adventure into the unknown such as a Trans-Pacific passage. Like I said at the beginning of this rant, thousands of sailors have successfully completed the 2040 NM crossing from San Francisco to Hilo, so doing as much reading on the subject as I could was an important part of the preparation process. I must have read hundreds of articles on the internet as well as everything I could get my hands on in back issues of SAIL, Latitudes and Attitudes, Ocean Navigator, Latitude 38 and 48 North, and I mean really, just to name a few. For the last few months before setting sail I was nuts on the subject. If I even heard someone say the words Hilo, Pacific, Ocean Crossing, et-cet, I would dive into them with as many questions as I could muster and the bottom line from all of my research was, “Do-able, not easy but definitely do-able…”

The vessel…

Haul out 2006

Since there is no way that you can put an order of importance on any of the preparations that one must take for sailing off into the sunset, the next thing I’d like to talk about is the boat - oh yeah, the boat.

The sailing vessel Sapien was designed by one of the greatest yacht designers of our time, William Garden.

Dena and I started out our global circumnavigation in Seattle, Washington on a Garden-designed 1969, 25 ton, mahogany-on-oak, 50ft Sea-Wolf ketch appropriately named Sovereign Nation. Once again, in my (maybe not so) humble opinion, the S.V. Sovereign Nation defined beauty on the high seas. He had a clipper bow and a heart-shaped transom and once under sail he would cut through the water with the grace and power of his many noble predecessors. The key words above being “once under sail”. Just to get that beautiful vessel out of the dock was such a major undertaking that we were short handed when it was just the two of us - which was all the freaking time. As a matter of fact, Dena learned how to sail on Sovereign Nation, poor girl. For the first five years of her sailing life, she actually thought that sailing was that hard to do all the time. Then we got Sapien.

Sapien is so easily sailed by either one of us single-handed that, after three years of sailing this boat, we’ve come to the conclusion that the five years spent on Sovereign Nation was just proving ground. It was like going from a tugboat to a Zodiac and we loved it.

Now don’t get me wrong, I love working with hardwoods and applying that art to boats is one of my favorite things in the whole world. It’s just that Sovereign Nation had so many unresolved issues that, as Tristan Jones would say, “…that is another story.”

When we purchased Sapien in 2002, she had just had all of her standing rigging redone by her previous owner, who was an engineer and diesel mechanic. With a brand new set of North Sails cruising sails along with a new Le Fiel boom with internal reefing lines and all lines running aft, she was the perfect vessel to replace the one we had loved.

Sapien was set up for single-handed offshore sailing. Although going it alone is not exactly what we had planned, if one of us was to go into the drink it’s good to know that the other one could handle the boat with no problems in pretty much any weather and come back and get the other one.

We then added a JRC 1500 radar and a good strong GPS antenna along with two backup handheld GPS’s. Before casting off for Hawaii we got a full new set of running rigging and did one last haul out for blister repair and bottom painting and Sapien was ready for provisioning.

…Food!

Our food

Provisioning for an offshore cruise is definitely one of the fun parts. I mean really, you take what little money you have left and you fill every available hold with all the food you love. We bought ten zippered bags with the words “San Francisco” silk-screened on the sides (for future trading/gift giving). We then filled each bag with (what we thought at the time was) three days worth of food. We made a master list of all the food we had on the boat and hung the list over the folding galley table and checked things off the list as we ate. Each bag in actuality held an average of 5 days worth of food on this journey, so we ended up having plenty of food left over when we got to Hawaii. That was a good thing because finding jobs in Hilo turned out to be a much bigger deal than we originally anticipated, once again, another story…

The adventure…

The Golden Gate '06

So we took off after four years of preparing our minds, bodies and boat for a journey that averages 27 to 30 days for a 32 foot vessel. When you’re 2000 miles from the closest anything, you can’t be too prepared. You have to be your own city, state, country or your own sovereign nation.

Meclizine, oh yeah baby, that’s my drug of choice!

When we took off from Seattle in 1999 we sailed North in the Puget Sound through the San Juan Islands and continued on to the Gulf Islands in British Columbia, Canada. Although we had lots of amazing weather all throughout the Sound, it was still “protected waters”. Even when we were heading out of the Strait of Juan de Fuca and taking 10 to 14 foot seas directly on the bow, neither Dena nor I got even a little bit seasick. Once we rounded the point at Cape Flattery and hit that northern Pacific Ocean roll, I got as sick as a Kansas tourist on a square rigger. Puke! Oh my god, I puked my guts out for days. When we went to Monterey, California, from San Francisco in 2005, once again I got sick - oh my god, did I get sick. Dena got sick as well but she didn’t actually puke. Me, the cookies were in the drink! So when we made landfall in Monterey that year, we went straight to the drug store and bought a 100 count of the generic version of Dramamine, Meclizine, and life instantly got so much better.

For people who are planning a future big offshore adventure, I’d say Meclizine was just as important as say, first aid bandages.

Twenty-four hours before we went west through the Golden Gate Dena and I both took one pill each and took one every 24 hours for the next 10 days. After that, the constant motion of the seas just became the way that life was. After that we just forgot to do our daily “meds” and that was ok.

The first three days of any ocean passage should be dedicated to the re-adjustment of life. Nothing is the same as it is on shore, not even if you live on your boat at a marina or on the hook. Underway at sea is just flat out intense and it takes time to get used to. The first three days of our San Francisco to Hilo passage are a great big blur that ended with a pod of dolphins, hundreds strong, swarming Sapien right at sunset. We were just preparing for dinner 165 miles offshore from Monterey, California, on a heading of 240 degrees south by southwest, when all of the sudden I looked off the aft quarter and there they were. That ocean was just thick with them. There were so many of those lovely animals on the bow that they were hitting the boat jockeying for the inside position. They stayed with us for about 45 minutes and disappeared just as fast as they appeared, leaving us with an awe-inspiring sunset that was our last for what seemed an eternity.

Our weather…

With no Land in Sight...

For 7 of the first 10 days of this part of our adventure, we were in an abject gray shield. No sun, no moon, no stars to guide us by, just grayness all around us for what seemed like thousands of miles in every direction. On the fourth day the seas started to build along with the winds and the reefs started to stack up in the yards. By 1600 ship’s time on the fifth day, we were running before the wind at 8 knots under double-reefed main, in 15 to 18 foot seas, and it was tea time in the pilothouse! Really, down below decks on Sapien, it was like we were day sailing in the Bay. That boat is so stable and solid that we just couldn’t tell that we were in Force-7 near gale conditions, unless of course we were out on deck, where we went at least hourly to check the condition of the rig.

When you’re cruising, the stresses on all the equipment are immense and constant, so not only keeping an eye on but constantly tightening and adjusting every single shackle, line, car, track, winch and fastener becomes a part of the regular routine of the watch. If you drop the ball, the first thing you know you have an exploding mainsheet car that under 30 knots of wind can tear the entire rig apart and, just like that, you’re in a world of shit.

At 1400 on day 6 Dena came down below with some truly alarming news. It seemed that the Monitor Windvane, our self steering gear was chewing through it’s own guidance lines at the routing sheaves. The hardware that holds the sheaves in place was sawing the lines right through as the windvane would make it’s tiny course corrections. The windvane would only have to correct a little bit at a time so the point that was being sawed through was only about two inches on either side. We tried pulling the sheaves off and realigning them so that they would pull in the opposite direction but the only other adjustment point pulled the line all the way over to the other side of the sheave making it saw on the good side of the line. We both put our heads together, watched the thing working and thought about it for another hour or so when it suddenly occurred to me that we were thinking about solving this problem from the tool-makers point of view rather then the tool users point of view. All we really had to do was bend the metal back away from the sheaves with a pare of pliers just enough to stop it from cutting into the lines, so that’s what we did. Unfortunately we discovered the resolve a little to late to save the starboard guidance line from being almost completely cut in half. I pulled a leader line all the way through the Monitor, turned the damaged line over so the I could make a splice in the damaged section of the line, made the splice and put the rig back in the water. Voila, it worked like new, issue solved. Once again I thanked the two-legged gods of modern pharmaceuticals for Meclizine!

Later on that night at about 1900 we saw our first ship since leaving the Bay Area. She was a Norwegian cargo carrier 10 days out of Japan on her way to the Panama Canal by the name of “Star Dover”. Her watch commander gave us our first weather report in almost a week and boy did that freak us out. They had just survived a big storm 2 days out of Tokyo and they reported on the hurricane that was heading inland off the coast of Baja, California. He did tell us that we should have smooth sailing south of the Tropic of Cancer all the way into Hilo but we’d just have to be patient and diligent until then. Although he was a very nice and professional sailor we would’ve been much better off without that bummer of a weather report. Hey, we asked for it and boy was it nice to actually make contact with the outside world for a change.

…My head!

Ow!! My Head...

Just after my second AM watch on day 7, I peeked my head out of the companionway hatch to do a last minute inspection on the self-steering gear. The hatch got caught in a big rainy gust that flipped it into my face, splitting my forehead wide open and knocking me flat on my back in the galley, out cold. I woke up and I could hear Dena pumping the head. She had just gone into the head before I went out on deck so I knew I hadn’t been out for long. I could see so I knew I wasn’t that hurt but then I looked down at the cabin sole and there was blood everywhere. I put my hand over my forehead, smearing blood all over my face, so by the time Dena came out of the head I was a bloody mess.

Now, Dena really is one of the most level-headed people I have ever met. She took one look at the mess that was me and without so much as an “Oh shit!” she ducked back into the head to retrieve the first aid kit. Moments later she had my little boo-boo patched up and was chiding me on calling out when I’m truly hurt.

Now, most of the time when I bump, bruise, scratch or even paper-cut myself I holler like a banshee and cuss like a preacher’s kid, but for some reason this time I couldn’t even manage a decent “ouch”. All I could do was stare at the blood puddling up on the engine hatch in the galley and grunt like a caveman. Four hours later I was back on deck doing my watch. I might’ve had a slight concussion - I know I had a raging headache for the next three days - but I never missed a watch. As a matter of fact, in all the years I’ve been sailing I’ve never missed a watch, not one. I don’t care how bad, mad or banged-up I’m feeling, I stand my watches every time! Dena’s the same way, it’s just an order of pride between us and always has been.

Intimacy…

When two people are packed into a 32 foot vessel with all of their worldly belongings, all of their favorite food, enough literature to keep them entertained for at least a month as well as enough electronics, water and fuel to keep them safe and alive, those two people better really like each other and I mean really! Dena and I have been through so much together in the seven years that we’ve been at sea that not only do we share the same food, cloths, toothbrush, and space, we need that intense intimacy for our very sanity. While we were in the Bay Area, every now and then some of our friends would ask us to house/cat sit while they would go out of town, and it always just blew us away how much room most people think they need. Even an average one bedroom apartment in Oakland, Dena and I would walk through the place with our arms all the way out to both sides saying; “Wow, can you believe how big this place is for just one person?!”

When you’re at sea and the weather’s nice, you can go out on deck and you have the entire world as your digs and on a clear night a thousand miles offshore the universe is yours and you are a traveler through space. That sheer vastness is one of the most beautiful feelings I have ever experienced. Standing on the after-deck, holding on to the backstay, traveling through space on my ship, just the woman that I love and me.

On the 25th of October, 2006, 1,767 miles from the coast of Mexico, the sun came out and Dena and I celebrated our 10th anniversary together. We were the only two people in the Universe and we were truly happy doing what we had always dreamed we could do together, sailing off into the sunset, just the two of us on our ship, in our ocean.

Our Sway-Back Cake...

…The days roll by.

On the morning of the 14th day at sea I was busying myself with my latest and greatest Idea for a preventer line that runs aft when I hit my head on the aft pilothouse winch in the exact same place where I’d split my face open before. That was it, I’d had my fill, I was done with this so called adventure and there wasn’t damn thing I could do about the 685 miles we had left to travel and I could care less about the 1800 nautical miles behind us. I was just finished and the only thing I could do about it was “endeavor to persevere”. So I put my hand of my wound and said the word fuck as loud as I could. Ultimately though my preventer worked like a charm as a matter of fact it worked so well that we can now single handedly set up all points of down wind sailing, from a beams-reach to a down wind run from the cockpit!

After the sun came out, the winds became variable to the point that we both had to constantly watch and adjust the sail trim but really that’s no chore, that’s just keeping our heads busy. The rollers weren’t any smaller, they were just different. They were football fields being shaken out like a towel in slow motion. Sometimes the rollers would be 18 feet high from the bottom of the trough, then suddenly Sapien would be on top of the wave and I could see for what seemed like a 1000 miles in every direction. At the bottom of the trough of the giant rollers there was no wind and at the top there was just enough of a puff to move us on the next rolling football field every 30 seconds or so. Sometimes rising slower sometimes falling faster and the mind travels to all points of the universe and beyond, up and down, up and down.

On day 16 another storm loomed off the starboard fore-quarter to the West with an intensity that we hadn’t yet seen on this adventure. A central cumulonimbus rising up towards the stratosphere with a solid patch of rain directly below the massive cloud with descending nimbus clouds off to the North and South as far as I could see. I watched the system approach for the greater part of my second AM watch then tacked away from it just before Dena came above decks to take over the helm. She said that she’d noticed the tack while down below and wondered what was going on. She then looked at the storm now off our starboard stern and muttered a simple,

“Wow!” That said it all.

South of the Tropic of Cancer

We were broad reaching on the third day of a port tack so there wasn’t much of a change in the heel of the boat. Then the wind completely died and we rolled on up and down on the smooth seas. The mainsail would pump and rack, shaking the entire vessel with a loud crash every time we would crest a wave. After about an hour of that I noticed from down below that Dena had tacked us again so the boom had stopped pumping and we were once again making about 3 knots but heading directly at the storm. I went up on deck and we talked about our options. My thoughts were either: A) We head into a storm and make some headway while at the same time washing the boat down and trying to take on some more fresh water or B) We head back away from the storm and sit in the doldrums patiently until the winds kick back up or C) We start the engine and motor away from the storm until we can catch a breeze.

“Yuk!”

There is no doubt that Sapien’s engine is a great one. She came equipped with a Westerbeke Universal 40, which is really over powered for a 15,000 pound, 32 foot sailboat, making our little vessel by definition a “motor-sailor”. Even after 16 years and 3 owners there are still only 1200-odd hours on that engine. Simply put, we sail our boat whenever we can and it’s like pulling teeth every time we have to start that noisy internal combustion monster.

So we tacked again and sure enough the winds kicked up just enough to move us out of the way of the storm. We rode the edge of that storm for the next two days with a perfect 10 to 12 knots of ocean breeze.

Sun Rise Day 17

In 2003 we purchased the Noble-Tech 3-D global navigator. That program really does make navigating by computer easy, I mean when it’s not screwing up! When we went up the California Delta in 2004 we navigated the entire way with that program running on our new (at the time) Dell Inspiron 5100 and it blew our minds how incredibly accurate computer navigation can be. That program hooked into our onboard GPS gave us up to the minute, real time positioning that made our Delta cruise a truly fantastic experience.
Of course when it came time to head out for Hawaii we were stoked about the prospect of watching that little green boat icon make it’s way across the little version of the Pacific Ocean on our little laptop computer screen. I mean really, We’ve got two hand held GPS’s, the main GPS that has a great big, buff antenna on it, paper charts, a sextant, work sheets and even a sundial but boy do we love that modern technology! Once again when it’s working. At least once a day the Nobel-Tech program would get scrambled some how and we’d have to either re-start the computer or at the very least shut the program down and re-start it. On two different occasions the program lost our previous track and projected course so we had to start all over again from scratch with a new course projection in what looked like starting in the middle of the ocean. Now neither one of us are mathematician-class computer programmers but we are both proficient enough with any windows based program to trouble shoot in even the worst conditions witch by the way, we were never in. Every day we’d do our noon reading, start the computer up and have to go through the Nobel-Tech “disaster menu” to hopefully restore our settings to their previous level. At some point we stopped caring, made our reading, looked at our progress and shut the computer down. We’re both convinced that when we do finally contact Nobel-Tech they will guide us through a 30 second troubleshooting routine that will make us feel tiny and fix all of our Nobel-Technical issues, where did I put that sundial?

Our last sunset at sea in 2006

On the fifth day of November in the year 2006 we looked at our little computer screen at 1200 and could make out all the detail on the Big Island of Hawaii. We were 113 miles out the wind was blowing a steady 15 knots from directly astern, we were wing on wing clipping away at 6.2 knot over the ground. We were 19 days out from the Golden Gate Bridge and we just knew that if the wind stayed with us we’d make landfall by noon on the 6th!

20 days!
20 DAYS!?
20 freakin’ days In a 32 foot boat? WOW!!!

So we made lunch, then diner, we pulled our watches that night and by noon the next day we were safe and sound on the hook in Radio Bay in Hilo, Hawaii.

Just like that.

This really is what it is that we’re doing with our lives, We’re going and we’re not stopping until we’re done. It’s like I said earlier, it’s not easy but it is damn sure do-able and there is absolutely nothing like the feeling of achievement that a human can feel from going to sea and surviving, in style!

Aloha

Radio Bay '06