Friday, March 6, 2026

Kalle Swensen Opinion

A little tip for today, in my capacity as a financial advisor:

You pay for a bank loan for 30 years!

You only serve 5 years for a bank robbery!

The stone cold truth from the legend Kalle the King of the reeperbahn as well as this adage

“Kill one man, and you are a murderer. Kill millions of men, and you are a conqueror. Kill them all, and you are a god.” – This paraphrase comes from a famous cynical remark by Jean Rostand in his 1938 book “Thoughts of a Biologist”: “Kill one man, and you are a murderer. Kill millions of men, and you are a conqueror. Kill them all, and you are a god.”

Thursday, March 5, 2026

POLE DANCING TO THE END - 2010

Back in the day Pattaya was a paradise for middle-aged western men with money. Food, accommodation, cheap beer and beautiful girls calling old men sexy. None of these seductive women were blind, yet the men forget about the truth of their mirrored reflection, for as Frederick Engels the co-writer of THE COMMUNIST MANIFESTO said, "Money is the one thing that can grow hair on a bald man's head for a woman."

Pattaya most certainly was the closest thing to Eden, however men needed money to operate as a sexy men and this year my friend Jamie Parker found his fun funds close to 'empty'. He wasn't a gambling man, but bought several Thai lottery tickets with a portion of his last 1000-baht bill. The numbers came out in the Thai newspapers. None of which Jamie ever read, however his geek, Ort, discovered that Jamie had purchased a winning ticket.

25000 plus.

Jamie was back in the money and after redeeming the ticket his luck ballooned with the discovery of 5500 baht in an envelope at the 7/11. He waited for an hour outside the convenience store for someone to show up to claim the money. No one came in a panic. Up 30000 baht he returned to his unfurnished apartment on Soi Bongkot, thinking to take Ort out for a nice meal and found the go-go girl packing her bags.

An Englishman had decided she was the prettiest girl in the world and retired her from INSOMNIA GENTLEMAN's CLUB. This was good news, since Jamie had been shedding 1000s of baht on the little go-go dancer's ice habit. She loved the gear. Jamie was semi-sad to see her go, although pleased that she wanted none of his cash.

"You good man. You find new girl. No one more pretty than me. Find ugly girl. She cheap."

"If you say so." Jamie watched her get into the farang's CRV 4X4. The guy was older than Jamie. Bald too. He wished them both luck. It wasn't the first time Ort left him for another man, but it was the first time she left with money in his pocket. Jamie decided to celebrate this Trifecta of good luck with a binge at What-Up's a Go-Go. I was in town for a single night. Mem had cut me loose from Sriracha. I didn't plan on a late one.

"Go with friend. Have good time. No look at other lady." Mem knew that her love potion denied me any opportunity to cheat on her.

"No look. No touch." I kissed her and my son good night. The sun fell fast this time of year. It was barely 6 O'clock. I got to the bar at 7. Jamie bought a round of shooters for two go-go dancers and then went over to the DJ with the Doors' first LP CD. Tik Tok" by Kesha on the sound system. # 1 of 2010. He ordered drinks for the DJ and himself, realizing more drinks was only way to bridge the gap between the generations. The DJ seemed rightly skeptical about a request for THE END. Farangs always asked to play hippie songs. All Thai DJs and dacners hated the Eagles HOTEL CALIFORNIA. Jamie flicked him another 1000 baht. Basically two nights wages. The DJ nodded agreement and the fifty-five year-old returned to the couch with a laconic smile and I asked, "What you ask him to play?"

"I gave the DJ 200 baht to play the Doors' THE END." The song was ranked #328 in all-time great rock songs, despite its lasting over 11 minutes.

"Are you joking?" THE END had opened the movie APOCALYPSE NOW. I remembered watching Coppola's homage to THE HEART OF DARKNESS at New York's Ziegfield Theater and hearing the helicopters waft from left to right to rear to front. There were no helicopters on the LP and once here. The song from 1967 transported the go-go girls by surprise and the old guys in the bar too, but their eyes widened with surprise and their lips moved wordlessly to the lyrics. Some of them had been hippies too.

"In a desperate land."

Jamie bought more tequila for the girls on stage. They downed them with a hearty Chai-yo.

"Lost in a romance."

"Ride the highway west baby."

Other old dudes flipped red 100-baht bills on the stage too. They had been young in 1967 and became young again in THE END's trance. "The snake is long." The girls understood THE END was a cash cow and danced accordingly like naked hippie girls at Woodstock. They were so pro.

"The snake is old."

The tequila and Jim worked its effect. The old guys ordered more shots. The young guys in What's Up were out of their element by forty years. The Doors and go-go girls. Jamie was right. Our generation.

"The killer woke before dawn." The girls crawled against the steel poles like serpents with poison ivy.

The DJ still was uncertain about the choice, but the old age brigade sang along with THE END.

Another 1000 baht tip kept the DJ from segueing to Britney Spears. Ah Pattaya.

I was a Doors fan.Few wgite boys my age hadn't been then and now. They had no bass player in the band, but the bassist from Clear Light i.e. MR BLUE supported them in the studio and on the road. I still play the Door's CRYSTAL SHIP, but having the DJ play that would have been pushing our luck.

"Yeah, yeah, yeah."

Jamie disappeared into the bathroom with the go-go dancer.

I left the bar. Faithful as ever. To quote Jim Morrison, "I only have one friend."

And THE END and Mem, my love, knows that too well.

THE END the 6 minute 45rpm version

APOCALYPSE NOW AND THEN

In 1968 I lied about my age and tried to enlist in the Marines soon after my 16th birthday. My mother refused to sign the papers. The Tet offensive fed her doubts about the final outcome of the Vietnam Conflict. Boys were returning in coffins, wheelchairs, or hooked on heroin. Returning soldiers were portrayed as drug addicted monsters. Dennis Halley came back with nothing more than a thirst for beer.

The twenty-year old had seen action near the DMZ. The Boston Globe had mentioned his heroics during the Tet offensive. My hometown's John Wayne was dating my next door neighbor. Addy Manzi was the prettiest girl on the South Shore. We had vandalized an abandoned missile base of top of Chickatawbut Hill. The police had arrested me and I never gave up his or Addy's name. I considered him a god and said that I was thinking about joining the Marines, while we were sitting by the Manzi's swimming pool.

"Maybe you can convince my mother."

"Why you want to go?" He stared at the stars.

"I want to get out of here." My hometown had three red lights, fifteen churches, and no bars. It was a suburban purgatory.

"I wouldn't do that." Dennis had a puckered hole in his arm from shrapnel and shook his head.

"Marines are taking a lot of casualties. Officers are gungho for promotion. One West Point fuck ordered my friend to get some beer. A mine blew up his truck. My man died for warm beer. Viet-Nam is fucked and if you don't have to go, then don't go. The only people there are dumb fucks like me and poor white trash and blacks who can't afford to go to college."

"What about serving my country?" I believed in the American Way; life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

"I spent two tours humping around rice fields, burning villages, and shooting at an enemy I couldn't see. But one of them saw me good enough to shoot me. If I hear you signing up for the jarheads, I'll kick your ass." Dennis Halley had killed VC. His eyes squinted like he was a stand-in for Clint Eastwood in THE GOOD THE BAD AND THE UGLY.

"You want to leave this town, then join a carnival or circus."

"Okay." I wasn't arguing with my hero.

"Good, now give me some room." He nodded to Addy. They wanted to be alone. I didn't have to be told why and wandered across the lawn to my split-level house.

It was painted pink.

The strength of his advice changed my life. I became a hippie instead of a Marine. I protested the war with conviction. My father considered me a 'commie', but he didn't want me to go to Viet-Nam. Like Dennis said the war was someone else's fight and I avoided the last years of the war by attending college.

By the time I graduated in 1974 our troop levels were down to 1950 numbers, but more than 50,000 Americans had died in SE Asia. Hundreds of thousands more were fucked up by grievous wounds to body and soul. Few of them talked about their experiences and those that had not gone wondered whether they missed the glory of war.

No one spoke about the dead or maimed on the other side.

They were gooks.

Dennis broke up with Addy and moved to California.

In 1976 she and I kissed after my older brother's wedding.

I was too drunk to attempt anything more in my family's Oldsmobile.

Later that year I quit my teaching job at South Boston High School in 1976 and relocated to New York. The punk movement was my universe. Manhattan was heaven for a young man in his 20s. I had friends. My girlfriend from West Virginia loved me and I worked at a rock disco on West 62nd Street. My days were free and I spent them going to the movies.

Double bills at the St. Mark's movie house.

3-4 films a week.

STAR WARS at the Whitestone Drive-in.

ALIEN on May 25, 1979 at a Times Square theater.

None was more important than the release of APOCALYPSE NOW on 15 August 1979 at the Ziegfield.

Anthony Scibelli and a few others from Hurrah showed up an hour before noon. The line already ran around the block. The film had won the Palme D'Or at the Cannes Film Festival in May. This was the first day, first screening. More than a thousand of us had nowhere to be in the world, but here. Whenever someone asked why we were waiting, we told them, "To see APOCALYPSE NOW.

"Damn." They disconnected with their day and also bought a ticket for unassigned orchestra seats.

The first showing was a sell-out and disappointed film buffs begged for tickets at any price. No one was selling and the thousand-strong audience filed into the West 54th Street theater with pride.

We bullied our way to the center of the seating.

At noon the lights dimmed to a semi-darkness. None of us were ready for what came next.

A jungle filled the twenty feet tall and fifty-two feet wide screen and the repeating whoop of helicopters passing overhead strobed over the sound system. Dust and fire.

The young boy next to me ducked, as if the rotor blade might slice off his head and then a byzantine strum of a guitar was followed by chimes.

The predominantly male audience gasped with recognition.

THE END by the Doors.

A man's face upside down was overlapped with carnage.

A hundred matches ignited throughout the theater. Marijuana smoke clouded the air.

153 minutes later I walked into the steamy afternoon with a better understanding about why Dennis Halley was so vehement about my not enlisting.

APOCALYPSE NOW was and is and will be a time machine back ten years.

"Do you think it was really like that?" My friend asked after fending off the next sitting's questions about the film.

"Yeah." I really didn't know, but none of my friends who had been in Vietnam had spoken about the war. Some people told stories, but I figured those that knew didn't say and those that say don't really know. Now I had an idea and once more wished that I could have served in Viet-Nam.

Not to serve my country or kill VC, but to witness the spectacle of power and glory humbled by determination. It must have been something and I would gladly have risked my life to have the distinction of being a Viet-Nam veteran. Many men of my age felt the same way.

We had missed out on the Big Show.

Like Civil War re-enacters more than a few of baby-boomers claim to have been overseas with various units and more than a few congressional candidates were caught in these lies by the Press. They had been telling war stories to their small town constituencies for years.

Everyone believed them.

They were no John Kerry, a Navy Lt. There weren't even GW Bush, a Texas Air Force Reservist.

They were Dick Cheney, who had been out of the country and that goes for me too.

I fired no M-16. I never danced with hookers at the Fall of Saigon. My hailr had been shoulder-length on that date. I had danced in the streets of Boston with hippie girls. Our side had forced the peace on LBJ, Nixon, the silent majority, and the military. I never expected a reward for taking a beating from riot police,but I'm getting old. The Department of Defense has yet to answer my requests for a pacifist pension.

Several years ago I flew over Viet-Nam on a flight to Bangkok.

The country looked at peace from eight miles high and I stared down at the mountains thinking about grunts humping 100 pounds backpacks up and down the slopes.

It was a long way from America.

Later that year B=back at the diamond exchange I told the security guards about my trip. Andy had served one tour in 1968.

Army, but working at the motor pool.

He was no peace-nik, but had had no wish to end up a dead hero.

"I've been writing the Pentagon for a pension."

"For what?" Andy knew my stance of the war. He felt it was a waste too, but also that we had to stop the Reds from taking over the world.

"For all the years I protested against the war. Ho Ho Ho Chi Minh, NVA is gonna win." The chant had served as a slogan at demonstrations throughout the USA.

"Fuck that. You traitors will get nothing." Andy spat out these words. The Brooklyn native was right-wing. His 2012 choice for president was the feisty Alaskan Sarah Palin.

Like my father he considered me a commie.

"And you deserve nothing. I landed in Danang at the beginning of the Tet Offensive. Bullets smacked into the charter jet and the sergeants yelled at us to take shelter. I spent the first three days in a trench praying for a truce. Mortar rounds landed ten feet from our shelter. I stayed one tour and got the fuck out. I don?t get a pension for it, so why should some long hair peace-nik."

"Hey, the Feds give money to everyone. Why not me?"

"But you were never in Vietnam?"

"No, but I was in Cambodia."

"You served in Cambodia?" Andy didn't figure me for Army and he was right.

"No, I visited Phnom Penh and Laos too." Both countries were next to Thailand. Thousands of farangs traveled to the borders for a visa renewal. I thought about Dennis Halley's dead friend. He was one of thousands who never returned to the States.

"Hippie scumbag." He gave the finger.

"Baby-killer." I didn't mean nothing by it and neither did Andy.

My fingers split into a vee.

The gesture had many meanings.

Fuck the French to the English archers at Agincourt, since the frogs lopped off prisoners' fingers to prevent their rejoining the killing ranks.

Churchill had transformed the vee into a sign for victory.

I remained true to the 60s.

"Peace."

"And love." Andy returned the gesture, because war was a young man's game made dead serious by the decisions of distant old men and like everyone else who lived through those times we were glad to be sucking air into our lungs.

Here there and everywhere.

ps

The old Ziegfield Theater was closed by the greedy realtors.

No one fought in Vietnam for luxury condos.

But we all believe in peace no matter what the cost.

A Little Brando Maybe

From 201O

Last week I was playing pool at the Abbey. Maz was in town from Alaska. The jewelry salesman was leaving for the Caribbean on Wednesday to work the cruise ships as he had up north. His time in the Far North had not effected his hand and eye coordination and the bald-headed genji ruled the table for several games. I lost to him on a double-scratch on a corner shot on the 8-ball.

While awaiting my next up with the champ, I watched the popular bar on Driggs Avenue filled with young people. I was already in the youth of old age at 58. I spoke to several sci-fi fans about RESIDENT EVIL and a BBC correspondent about the current BBC sex scandal. We agreed that Jimmy Seville the TV announcer was an unrepentent child molester, but he argued that Jimmy Savile was the only person involved during the decades of under-age sex at the media center in London.

"Not bloody likely." Birs of a feather flocked together.

He dropped his quarters in the slot and Maz offered him the break.

His pool cue was missing the tip from the ferule.

"Your stick's accent is 100% Cambridge." It was a good guess and he admitted to having graduated from that prestigious university. "Playing pool well is the sign of a misspent youth."

His blonde girlfriend thought that was funny. She was a literary agent.

"I handle mostly non-fiction." She was young and smart with long legs. She would have been beautiful in any bar in New York. Her unnaturally curly hair discounted her tale about working only with the truth. Her friend lost to Maz and after they left he asked me, "Would you sleep with her?"

"No." I am faithful to Fenway's mom.

"No." Maz is astounded by my self-imposed celibacy.

"She's not my type."

No one believed my restraint, since I had been living down my reputation as a worldwide libertine. I looked around the bar. The women in the Abbey laughed with the freedom of youth. None of them had eyes for a man my age. I had once looked like an Irish Brando. Probably still do look like an older, less heavy than his appearance in APOCALYPSE NOW plus thitty years. I'm overweight, but he was the Second Coming of Orson Welles in that film. I dropped four coins into the pool table slot.

"Not a single woman in here is my type".

"I don't worry about types." Maz was a free agent as I had been at his age.

I was forty years old twenty years ago.

I accepted the truth of my ruin and racked the fifteen balls tight. After Maz's break I ran the table with a series of combos and bank shots. The next player was a black girl in her 20s. She was wearing a short black skirt.

"Nice shooting."

"Thanks."

I lost on the last shot just like before, which was always better than the first adn why they call the game 'Eight Ball'.

ps Me and Amanda

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Sony World Band Radio

Before the Internet the Sony World 12-Band Radio was my only connection to the West from Biak, Irian Jaya to Tibet.
Primarily the BBC. Big Ben's bongs sounding the hour and then the soothing voice announcing, "This is the BBC. The time is 12pm Greenwich Mean Time."

Plus listening to the music of the world beyond the unlit horizons.

Now all the radio's dials are digital. No more fine tuning as if your fingers were cracking a safe's combination. No freedom to fiddle in Rome, Timbuktoo, or distant stations across the globe. Just what digital gives you.

No surprises.

I left my radio with my Bali house keeper, Nyomon.

He loved me for it.

Long ago in Ubud, I once lived and listened through the night to the news of the world.

So far away.

Same as today from Ubud.

That young man is now in his 50s.

Selamanya muda or Forever young.

Monday, March 2, 2026

GHOST OF THE STUMP

In 1990 gem diamonds were priced to the advantage of the dealers on 47th Street. 50% profit was normal for most quality stones and my boss Manny rewarded his sales staff commissions based on 5% of the gross. Not the profit. On the gross. In late February I luckily hooked of the street a middle-aged woman seeking to buy a 5-carat F-color diamond for her aged mother in Florida off the street. The transaction was smoothly concluded within a week and the customer dropped $50,000 on a 5.12 FSI1 diamond. Everyone was happy with the sales, except for Manny. He thought we hadn't charged enough. Seeking company for his misery, my boss made the woman cry by charging $100 for shipping.

"Her tears were fake." Manny was a firm believer in Cato's old adage that the strongest acid in the world is a woman's tears.

"That may be true." I had fallen in love with enough women to agree with his assessment of her weeping. I always believed the tears. Mine too. "But for a $100."

"Doesn't matter." Manny smiled with the joy of this little victory. "It's all about money."

"She's a potentially good customer." His son and my good friend was trying to educate his father to the modern world.

"No customer owes you any allegiance." Manny was Bowery to the bone. Everything depended on numbers and sleight of hand. "Like everyone else they only think about themselves."

"Thanks. It's a good thing that we don't need repeat customers." Richie Boy shook his head and returned to working the phone.

We never saw the woman again, although the next day she called to thank me for my help. My commission came to $2500. My savings account held over $6000. An ad in the NY Times Travel Section offered around-the-world ticket for $1500. I planned on spending most of my trip in Indonesia.

"I'm going on vacation after you come back from Miami," I informed Manny the next day.

"For how long?" Manny looked out the window. Snow flurries were swirling in the air.

"Six months." I planned on writing a novel about pornography. My finances allowed a budget of $1000/month. The Lonely Planet Guide suggested $10/day for Bali. At $30 a day I was going to live like a pascha, a friend of an Ottoman sultan.

"Your job won't be here when you come up." Manny had worked 6 days a week since the time he was 15. He hated layabouts.

"If it is, it is." I was hoping to get lost on the other side of the world. Few of my family and friends had been to the Orient.

At a farewell dinner at my parents house outside of Boston my family members were curious about my trajectory around the world.

"First stop is LA."

"The home of Mickey Mouse." My youngest brother, Michael, loved Disneyland.

"The second will be Honolulu.

"We've been there." My father tenderly held my mother's hand. Last year they had thoroughly enjoyed their stay at the Royal Hawaiian Hotel. All their trips were second honeymoons.

"Next stop is Biak." It was an island off Irian Jaya. The stopover was optional. My travel agent, John from Pan Express, had said none of his round-the-world clients had stopped there.

"Biak?" My mother possessed a dictionary in her head, but she had never seen this destination in the Boston Globe's crossword puzzle.

"Biak. I know Biak." My Uncle Dave tapped the kitchen table for attention. A cigarrette in hand. He had served in the US Navy during the Pacific War against the Japanese Empire. "I fought there in the Battle of the Sump. We bombed the hell out of the jungle. The Japs didn't surrender easy. I lived on a destroyer for six months off Biak. I bet it hasn't changed since 1944. Coconut trees and cannibals. Let me know if the Dutch hotel is still open. Buy yourself a beer on me, if it is and Stay at the old hotel near the airstrip. It was still standing after the battle. I have no idea how."

Uncle Dave cuffed me $20 and back in New York I read about the Battle of the Sump at the Main New York City Library on 5th Avenue. From May 27 to August 17, 1944 the US Marines and Imperial Army fought the first tank vs. tank battle in the Pacific Theater. The defeated Japanese forces hid in a gigantic cave. The marines poured gasoline on them. Only few hundred survived the conflagration spreading through the cavern. I would drink a beer for them and the Marines too. I told my travel agent at Pan Express to book a stop on the island.

Two weeks later a Garuda 747 landed on the lengthy tarmac of Mokmer Airfield. The Indonesian Tourist Board hoped to develop Biak as a tourist destination. The disembarking passengers were greeted by a trio of black guitarists playing BY THE RIVERS OF BABYLON. The musicians were near-naked, except for a long gourd capping their penis. A string attached to a necklace of amulets directed the shell skyward. After a quick tour of the souvenir shop the hundreds of weary passengers reboarded the trans-Pacific flight bound for Bali. Naked Canninals were a hard sell for westerners.

I watched the 747 lift from the runway. Silence descended on the airfield like a long-borrowed cloak. The customs officials processed the two missionaries and me. Dusk sped from the east contradicting the  tropical laziness of the languid evening.

Across the street from the terminal was a low wooden building with the name HOTEL IRIAN JAYA. It was Uncle Dave's hotel. The establishment wore neglect with understated pride, but it looked comfortable and solid. The tropics were hard on buildings and even harder on people. Booking a room was facilitated by the absence of other travelers. This was the end of everywhere. The bellhop wore a vest along with a penis gourd. His skin was the color of the old mahogany piano in my grandmother's living room in Maine. Anthropologists called the inhabitants of Biak Melanesians.

"Have you ever heard of Africa?" I asked slowly in English, as I entered my room. "Africa." His eyes revealed a maze of miscomprehension.

"The continent of Africa." I pointed to his skin. Somewhere during the last Ice Age his ancestors must have across the landbridges from the Mother Continent to Asia and this archipelego.

"Tidak tahul, mistah." The bellhop shook his head. He hadn't understood a single word that I had said.

"No problem." I tipped him a dollar, which was big money this far from anywhere and he said, "Terami kasih banyak."

I figured that had to mean 'Thank you alot' and replied, "You're welcome." I put away my bags and opened the door to the veranda. Indonesian pop music was playing in the hotel bar. The sun was setting to the west on a mirror of slate gray sea. I checked my watch. 6:13. Biak was south of the equator. Day and nights were equal. Joseph Conrad might have sat in this room. So might have my Uncle Dave. I sniffed at the air. Clove. Someone was smoking a clove cigarette. I went to the front desk to make a phone call.

"To my mother." "

Sorry," the Indonesian manager explained that the phone only worked for the island.

"No problem."

I decided to celebrate my isolation from the rest of the world with a beer. The bar was at the end of a bamboo hallway. Two 40-watt bulbs provided illumination for the swirl of insects. The clove cigarette smoker wasn't an Indonesian or Biakian either. A white man with a beer-barrel chest sat on a stool with a diminutive oriental female aside him. He looked like an overweight Popeye and noticed my staring. There was no one else in the bar.

"You get off the plane?" His accent originated from Panhandle Texas. I had hitchhiked through Amarillo in 1974. I hadn't stopped there.

"Yeah, my uncle fought on Biak. He gave me $20 to drink beer at this hotel." I pulled out Dave's 'double sawbuck' and walked over to them. "Can I offer you drinks?"

"Then you've come to the right place. One for me. The missus is a Muslim. She'll have a soda." He introduced himself as Larry Smith. We shared the last name. The woman was Annisa. Larry explained it meant woman. He was a diver hired by a Singapore concern to open a scuba school on Biak. "The sea here is virgin. The reef drops into chasms. Fish and sea turtles everywhere and even better old Jap ships sunk during the war are scattered underwater. Rare fish, wrecks, reefs, and cheap beer. You can't get better than that. I have a good boat, but it has a shit engine. I'm waiting for someone to fly in a new one from Surabaya."

Every word cast a magical spell. The Texan was living many men's dream. Larry had escaped East Texas by going to sea. He had learned his diving skills on the oil rigs of the Gulf. His right hand was missing two fingers from an accident off Borneo. None of his stories were lies, because he had nothing to lose by telling the truth. His girlfriend came from Jakarta. They were staying at a less expensive hotel in town. My room was less than $10. His was $3. At midnight we finished the last beers in the hotel on my Uncle Dave's $20. The big bottles were $1 each. 

"I'm going diving tomorrow." He stood and tottered like he had spent too many years off dry land. His girlfriend helped balance him with her 40 kilos acting as a crutch.

"Where?"

"Out there?" He pointed to the black sea. "You want to come along. I'll show you the island too."

"Sure." The hotel wasn't pushing tourist tours. "See you in the morning."

"We don't get up early."

"Me neither."

They wobbled from the bar and I returned to my room. My one luxury was a world-band radio. I tuned to the BBC and fell asleep to a report about the first McDonald's opening in Moscow. I hadn't eaten a Big Mac in 10 years.

In the morning hunger growled through my stomach like a rabid tiger in the jungle. The nearest man-killer was at the western end of Indonesia on Sumatra. I had plans to go after Bali and Java. I washed my face in the sink and went down the hallway to the dining area with a Nelles Map of Indonesia in hand. I was the only guest for the breakfast buffet of eggs, bacon, toast, coffee, rice, and fruit served by the gourd-adorned waiter. I didn't have the courage to ask why they didn't bother to cover their balls. Michael Rockefeller had been eaten by my server's brethren on the Asmat coast.

Food was not the answer to my hang-over, so I drank bottled soda water and ate another order of toast. My waiter was grateful for his tip of $1. His smile revealed sharp teeth. The guide books assured travelers that no Biakians had eaten human flesh for over fifty years. The waiter's fangs looked flossed from use and I exited from the hotel with a shiver.

The gunmetal sea was flat as a young girl's chest. The palm-fringed beach was littered with broken boats and the bones of dead pigs. Large fish quivered at the banquet of dead flesh along the shore. I put my foot in the water. I hadn't come halfway across the world to be squeamish and stripped off my shirt. I swam out beyond the filth. Within seconds my hangover was history, thanks to a surge of exhilaration.

Americans aspired to visit the cathedrals of Europe, the Riviera, and Rome. In the 180s I had lived in Paris for six years. A single night in Biak exorcised those years and I asked myself why I ever bothered living in the West. This was the world of Jack London's Tales of the South Pacific. I swam back to gritty beach and toweled off the wet. I tugged on a shirt and walked over to Larry's Hotel. Biak's market was flush with exotic fruits and multi-colored birds. This was also Conrad's Orient. LORD JIM and MCHALE'S NAVY.

"Mistah tingal di sana." A banana salesmen pointed to an unpainted barrack. Larry's hotel would have been condemned by a bribed housing official in Appalachia. His girlfriend was outside on the patio, washing a tattered shirt the size of a tent.

"Rarry." Annisa called without lifting her head.

"Hey, man." Larry exited from the room naked. His girlfriend threw him a sarong with horror. He wrapped the shredded fabric around his waist. "Go figure. All the men around here wear nothing but a gourd. That's all right. But I go buck-naked and she has a cow."

"You mistah. Not Orang Papua." She didn't look his way. His penis was erect without any help from a gourd.

"Yeah, I mistah Rarry. The Indonesians still show a little respect for the white race. Guess the Dutch knew how to whip 'em good. Me, I believe in the carrot and not the stick, but the Dutch are a tough people. Have to be to grow a tulip. Give me a few minutes and we'll start our tour." I tried to start up a conversation with his girlfriend. She spoke no English. Larry seemed stuck on American as his language. He didn't say good-bye to her, but confided to me, "A good woman, although it's not so hard to find a good human this far from anywhere." An Indonesian waited by a Toyota Landcruiser. The rental cost was $20/day with fuel. The owner didn't ask for any ID. There weren't too many roads on Biak and we weren't going far. "First stop is the caves."

"Where the Japs died." Larry got in the front and I squeezed into the back. He took up a lot of room.

"Good, you know your history." We headed toward the airport.

"My uncle fought here on a destroyer off shore."

"Ugly fight." He didn't say much on the rest of the short ride. We got out of the car and walked to the edge of a cave.

"This is where the Japs were trapped by the Marines. Maybe 4000 of them. Maybe more. The Marines asked them to surrender. The Japs said no. The Marines poured gas into the pit and burnt them alive. Every week a few survivors fly in from Japan to honor their dead." Larry threw a rock into the pit. The smell was of deep earth. "I've never gone down there. You want to go down?"

I shook my head. The smell of burnt flesh lived on the rocky walls. 4000 dead for an Emperor who spoke like a crane. The ghosts deserved their rest. Larry and I drove back to town. We stopped in town at the fish tanks swarming with rare species for export to the West. He showed off his boat. It had no engines.

"Fucking Bugis in Surabaya me promised engines last month, but out this end of the world time is the only luxury not for sale." He shouted to a Biakian puttering with a Zodiac inflatable. "You ever free dive?"

"I have good lungs." I could hold my breath underwater a good two minutes. At least last year off Isla Mujeres I could.

"Where you free dive last?" v"Isla Mujeres, Mexico. 1989." Last summer I had swum through a cave 100 meters long. It was 20 meters deep. I hadn't tried the hole until I was ready and said to Larry, "I'm good for 10 meters."

"What I have to show you won't take us that deep." He ordered the mechanic to fill the gas tanks and a minute later the Zodiac skimmed atop a reflection of the sky. Islands floated on the horizon like ships dedicated to never sinking. Their distance promised that their beaches were preserved in a time warp dating back to Uncle Dave's time and beyond that into the dust of time. Larry slowed the engine and handed me a diving mask.

"This is the place."

"Aren't you coming?" We were a good three miles from Biak.

"Only got one mask. Don't worry, I'm not going anywhere."

"Sure." I strapped the mask over my head and he handed me a large rock.

"What's this?" I was a good diver. Not very good. Only good.

"The rock will take you down fast. Stay as long as you can. You'll never see something like this ever again. Few people will, unless I get that engine from Surabaya."

I held the twenty-pound stone in my arms. Larry nodded with a heavy head. I looked at the sky. The clouds reflected in the flat sea. I dropped into the water on my back and plummeted into its depth for several long seconds until I spotted the long destroyer on its side. The markings were Japanese. Sea snakes withered on the current and turtles chased octopii. Fish flowed through the battle wounds like smoke through a chimney. They numbered in the millions. I saw no skeleton. A reef made not by any gods, but by war.

Other ships lay in reflecting shadows. This was defeat. Uncle Dave must have seen the shattered ships aflame. Sailors like soldiers never tell the truth of horror. No one would believe them. My lungs burned like those of a drowning sailor and I rose to the surface half-expecting to not find the Zodiac.

"Pretty damn impressive." I reached out my hand. Larry pulled me from the sea. His eyes scanned the horizon for something dangerous. He had not mentioned sharks. I huffed air into my depleted lungs.

"And there's more down there. I once found a sea cave stacked with artillery shells. 20 meters down. Stacked. Who the fuck would do something like that?"

"Soliders with orders." I had been brought up to think of them as fanatical. So was Larry and Uncle Dave. We all followed orders.

"Yeah, and now all the youong Japanese tourists want is build a golf course here."

"And dive a little?"

"I can only hope for the best. What you think about beer?" "Like it's a good idea."

Larry drove the Zodiac back to Biak without any detours. We drank the first beers to Uncle Dave and killed the rest of his money toasting the fallen. Theirs and ours. That war was long ago. There were more to come. Today the noon sun was wicked, but the beers were cold under the palms of the Dutch Hotel. Almost as cold as the dead.

The Timeliness of Horseshoe Crabs

Fotos from beneath the Broad Channel Bridge June 2025

Now awaiting on Clinton Hill for the Summer homecoming of the Horeseshoe Crabs.

Rene Descartes author of The Age of Reason had argued that animals had no intelligence, because they had no sense of time. The rationalist lablled them 'automata'. or mndless creatures. To argue that accusation horseshoes crabs return to the same beach to lay eggs year after year according to the cosmic time of the moon and have for over 400 million years well before Man needed a clock to know the time.