Friday, January 31, 2020

Cumberland County Kingdom

From the Kezar Pond to Saco Bay. Old Orchard Beach to Bailey's Island. The land of my youth The summer camp on Watchic Pond Built by my grandfather. An orphan became a frontline surgeon in WWI France. A retreat from the horrors to Maine With a nurse, my grandmother. A noble woman from a 9th generation Maine family.

Gorham was their refuge They had a family And moved to a huge farmhouse In Westbrook under the shadow of the SD Warren papermill.

Cumberland County was a land of tall pines. My best friend was Chaney. He found a basket of dead puppies. We threw them into Portland Harbor. The tide took them to sea. My innocence was destroyed by death In 1960 Chaney drowned in Sebago. He was only eight. I never saw his gravestone.

Four years later a big-breasted girl working at a drugstore counter asked, "Will you walk me home?" At 12 a walk was a walk. I stuffed my comic in my jean's back pocket. And drained my glass of vanilla soda. I accompanied the girl along the Presumpscot River past the paper mill. No houses. No voices. Only the grinding of the wood saws across the river And the murmur of cars along Route 25. We stood in the woods. She lifted her dress over her head. Her breasts rose as puff pillows. I ran. Ran fast chased by her laughter. Running to my grandmother's house. Upstairs to a bedroom with sea murals I lay in bed. My innocence gone.

In 1975 my grandmother passed away. The camp was sold. The house on Main Street too. Chaney's family moved north. I went south. To New York. A city of too few pines to soothe old ghosts Of an exile from Cumberland County.

Chaney - Sebago Lake - June 1960

My best friends as a child were my older brother and Chaney

We lived in Falmouth Foresides, Maine.

We did everything together.

School, hockey, eating stolen strawberries from the nearby farm, hang at the docks at the end of our street, and swim at Sebago Lake.

My family moved to the South Shore of Boston in June of 1960.

This excerpt from GAYBOY relates the last time we saw each other. --------------------------------------------------------------------------

Chaney stood on edge of the lawn. My father had mowed it this morning.

“I guess I’m going.”

“Have a good summer.” Chaney kicked a clump of cut grass with his sneaker. His jeans were torn at the knee. This summer was supposed to have belonged to us. A snorkel and diving mask hung in his hand. They were a gift from his Czech grandmother.

“My father says we’ll return in July for vacation.” The week on Watchic Pond couldn’t come soon enough.

“Don’t go swimming without me.” Chaney lowered his head. Boys weren't supposed to cry in public.

“I won’t.”

I eyed his mask, wishing I had one.

I reached into my shirt pocket and pulled out my Pete Runnel’s baseball card. The infielder was our favorite Red Sox player. I offered it to him.

“Here.”

“No, you keep it, but if you go to a game at Fenway Park, have him autograph it for me.” Chaney smiled with the prospective of having the .300 hitter’s signature as well as not having to hand over his mask in trade.

“Everyone in the car,” shouted my father.

“See you.” I slipped the playing card back into my shirt pocket.

“Not if I see you first.”

___________________________________________________________________________________

I recently recorded a piece about what happens to Chaney.

Please go to this url

Chaney

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=awPPmr1NJHg

Thursday, January 30, 2020

The Bark MAGGIE MOORE

I found this photo of the bark MAGGIE MOORE dating back to approximately 1877.

My great-grandfather Charles S. Smith was the captain and owner.

I recall the photo from my grandmother Edith's house in Westbrook, Maine, but not the written page attached to the back of the frame, which had been penned by my grandfather Frank A. Smith.

It is a sad tale of the sea.

BARK MAGGIE MOORE, CAPT. CHARLES S. SMITH

Fastest ship ever commanded by Capt. Smith.

Made world record between Liverpool and Rio de Janeiro.

Last burning at sea 600 miles off the coast of South America, while homeward bound with oil. Capt. and crew only saved their clothes they had on and on white poodle dog owned by Captain. Wreckage of the Maggie Moore was first picked up and I will remember the terrible anxiety of my mother before news arrived in the middle of the night that Captain and crew had been picked up by another shop. The minister of the Baptist Church in St. Stephen N.B. brought us the good news and Mother in her joy roused her two children (Sister about 3 years old and myself 5 years old. while we kneeled by the bed and offered prayers of thanks for the safety of father and husband. A wonderful day when Father arrived home from this voyage, although (financially it had been a severe blow.

Charles S. Smith died at sea of 36 years from Malaria and dysentery, originally contracted on a voyage to South America, The little poodle barked all day and into the night when the Capt's remains were brought to Mascarene, St. George N.B. and afterwards the poodle's bark was only a little croak.

Frank A. Smith M.D.

There is no record of the Maggie Moore, except for this foto from one hundred and thirty years ago.

RED HOT RED / Bet On Crazy by Peter Nolan Smith


Several years ago I was sitting with a mystical friend at Frank's Lounge, watching the end of the Jets-Colts playoff game. Rooting for the New York team surprised Wilson. He knew my life-long ties to Boston and I told him. "If the Jets win, we get to beat them again and other than winning the SuperBowl nothing is better than beating the Jets."

I hate Jets fans, except for Bob Wolfkowitz. This family friend is a season ticket-holder in the Meadowlands. Their last championship was in SuperBowl III. I hope that another hundred years go by before the Jets win the championship.

"Never the gold for the Jets." I said this loud enough for the benefit of Tyrone. He too is a die-hard fan. I wish that I could wish him good-luck, but when the Jets upset my team, the Patriots, in the first match-up between the AFC East rivals, Tyrone was crowing about how the Jets were going all the way.

My phone was ringing. I looked at the number and put it back in my jacket. It was Richie Boy, my boss.

It was Richie Boy, my boss. We were old friends, but this was a business call and he wasn’t paying me enough to answer the phone this time of night.

"We'll see next week." Wilson was a Giants fanatic. He was praying for both our teams to crash head-on in their buses, so the Jints could sneak into the playoffs. Football fans are devoted fools. "Two strong teams. Evenly matched."

"Dirty Sanchez is no Tom Brady." I imagined the Jets' QB to be a modern-day Paris of Troy looking to steal Helen from New England. There was only one Giselle and she had a big nose. My phone started ringing again. Richie Boy must have finished skiing in Vermont.

"Who's calling you?" Wilson was curious since the only person that ever called me this time of night was Fenway's mom from Thailand and I always answered her. Mam was 26 and as beautiful as the first day I met her four years ago.

"My boss from the diamond exchange."

"Doesn't he know that it's a Saturday?" Wilson worked as a building inspector for the city. 38 years on the job. "Ain't no one working at my job on Saturday unless it's double overtime."

"My bosses don't understand the concept of overtime." I was 58. Finding a new job was impossible for men my age. I was the only one on the subway in the morning. The phone started ringing again.

"Your boss?"

"No, a friend."

Isaac had a store in the Plaza Hotel. We had met two years earlier when Richie Boy opened a shop in the new Retail Collection. The experiment in the basement had been a disaster. One partner was a thief and Richie Boy's Persian backer was broke. I saved the sinking ship by selling a million-dollar ruby. Isaac admired my effort and my cool demeanor after our Persian backer stiffed half my commission.

I answered the phone.

"Man, you've got to tell Richie Boy to chill." Isaac and I were trying to sell a 2-carat red diamond to a sheik. So was everyone else in town, but Isaac had sold the client before, giving him the inside track. "He's calling me every 30 minutes."

"Me too."

Richie Boy had a bad habit of thinking that every sale was a done deal as long as you showed the stone.

I walked out of the bar onto the sidewalk. The night air was cold. Across the street General Fowler's statue was covered in blinking lights. Some sport had draped him in a cape. The wind gave the Civil War hero life.

"Isaac, did you speak with the Arab today?"

"No, I told you and told Richie Boy that I wouldn't be speaking to him until Wednesday. He has to relax."

"Did you call anyone else for a stone?" I hoped that he hadn't.

"Someone showed me a pinkish red." I knew that Isaac couldn't stay off the phone. Richie Boy wasn't the only crazy person.

"Pinkish red is a garbage stone. You show that to someone looking for a red diamond and they'll think you're an idiot. How much they asking for the pinkish red?"

"A bargain. $1 million a carat."

"A piece of shit more like it."

The colored diamond and gem trade are controlled by Afghani Jews. I know most of them. They are good people, but no one has an idea how much they pay for their stones. I figured that they doubled up on the purchase price. It could have been three times that.

"If someone says 'red', show them red." My phone buzzed with another call. I knew who it was. "Do yourself a favor. Stop calling around. Every time you call for a stone, the price will jump. Tell the Arab that too. It's the truth."

"How much can we make on this stone?"

"Enough for me to stop working for two years." I could live on 50K a year. "Let me answer this call."

"Okay, but tell Richie Boy to leave me alone."

"I wish I could tell him the same for me." I switched calls.

"Why didn't you answer my call?" Richie Boy was rightfully agitated by my ignoring him.

"I was on the line with Isaac." I explained how Isaac needed space.

"Space? This isn't a marriage. This is a diamond deal. I have people holding a red diamond for him."

Richie Boy ranted for several more seconds about how he didn't need people to be a prima donna. I didn't need to hear this on the weekend, since nothing and nothing was supposed to happen on the weekend.

"It's shabbath. The broker is at temple. Where are you?"

"Just getting home." Richie Boy and his wife had driven north to spend the weekend at their trailer on a river in Vermont. I had seen the photos. If he threw in a fire and glass of wine with a view of a snowy river, some called it paradise.

"Then have a good night. I'm watching the end of the football game." I hung up and shut off my phone. I returned inside the bar and sat next to Wilson. The Jets had scored a TD.

"What your boss want?"

Wilson was unimpressed about the red diamond sale. He was looking at a good pension in two years.

"What makes a red diamond red?" It was a good question.

I had a good answer. The truth.

"No one knows." It could have been elemental. Maybe a weird radiation from the earth's core or the the vastness of the cosmos. All I knew was that I wasn't selling it this weekend and I bought Wilson a beer, happy to be where I was, for Frank's was good for drinking beer and not worrying about work. It was paradise for some and almost home for me.

And General Fowler too.

This statue wasn't going anywhere soon.

Sunday, January 26, 2020

1970s Versus Now

Where be my Time machine, Mister Wizard.

Fuck now.

1970s always.

Saturday, January 25, 2020

VOYEURS, EXHIBITIONISTS, CRIMINALS, AND MISANTHROPES - Jan 25 Reading at Howl Gallery

January 25 @ 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm

Howl Gallery

6 East 1st Street

Writers Remember Times Square

Noah Prince, Peter Nolan Smith, and Claudia Summers

Confetti lingers in lonely gutters and the crevasses of the sidewalks. It spins upward through spiraling gusts of wind eventually landing again. Aside from your best intentions, nothing escapes the gravity of the neighborhood. —Noah Prince

Times Square as a center of gritty life is long gone, but among this group of writers, it’s not forgotten. Join us for an evening of provocative readings by Noah Prince, Peter Nolan Smith, and Claudia Summers. The Disneyfication of the area is complete, and for many what remains is a memory of a time in the life of New York City prior to commercialization, gentrification, and the gutting of neighborhoods and the colorful characters who inhabited them. Just as Jane Dickson’s paintings describe her experiences of living in Times Square—once a mecca for voyeurs, exhibitionists, criminals, and misanthropes—these writers describe a bygone era of this infamous locale.

Jane Dickson’s exhibition, HOT, HOT, HOT: Paintings of Times Square Peep Shows, continues through February 23.

PARTICIPATING READERS

Claudia Summers is a writer living in New York, a recent MFA graduate of City College. She was the vocalist on the dance club hit “The Dominatrix Sleeps Tonight”. She is currently working on a collection of linked short stories set in the 80s downtown art and music scene of New York. She can be followed on Facebook, and her Instagram username is @_claudia_summers_.

Noah Prince moved to Hell’s Kitchen in early ’86 and lived so many events he could never un…live… Times Square was his coming of age. He accidentally began a career in the New York film industry. The idea of writing was nowhere in his path. In 2011 he worked on a television show set in the theatre district. It brought back his memories of the 80s. The thoughts quickly formed a book, Failures at Summer Camp, as well as several short stories from the time. He lives in Brooklyn.

Peter Nolan Smith moved from his native New England to New York in 1976. The city was ablaze like the Goths had just burned Rome, but the East Village was a refuge for young malcontents. A doorman at illegal nightclubs in the late 70s, Smith moved to Paris to pursue writing detective poetry. Nothing came of it other than a few short stories and a failed screenplay. Back in New York he compiled more stories and published in various literary magazines before heading out to Asia for a decade-long excursion throughout the Far East. In recent years he resumed writing novels and collections of short stories without bothering to have them published other than on his website mangozeen.com, living by his old motto: “No commercial value. No sellout.” The author now lives between Fort Greene and Thailand and is currently writing a novel about teenage devil worship in the 1960s.

Details Date: January 25 Time: 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm

Tuesday, January 21, 2020

22 Rich Men In Africa

Twenty-two people have more wealth than 325 million women in Africa.

Their names are:

Phil Knight of Nike

Sheldon Adelson's fortune comes from gambling.

Charles Koch, right wing racist

Ma Huateng of Ten Cent

Jack Ma of Alibaba

S. Robson Walton of Walmart

Alice Walton of same shitty company

Jim Walton related to the above two billionaires

Michael Bloomberg, who during his three terms as Mayor of New York had almost a million young men of color searched for marijuana.

Francoise Bettencourt Meyers, the witch heiress of L'Oreal

Steve Ballmer, former CEO of Microsoft.

Mukesh Ambani, thief of the poor of India

Sergey Brin, Google czar

Larry Page, the co-founder of Google with a horrible haircut

Carlos Slim Helu, Mexican drug launderer

Larry Ellison, Oracle

Mark Zuckerberg, total scumbag of FaceBook, another bad haircut everyday of the week

Amancio Ortega, Zara Designs

Warren Buffett

Bill Gates, superstar scumbag dedicated to the depopulation of the world

Bernard Arnault, luxury brands

Jeff Bezos, the worst person on Earth besides Ole Orange Man

None of them are worth a poor woman's sandals in Africa.

A Well-Maintained Militia In Richmond.

Yesterday thousands of gun-right supporters gather in Richmond to protest the Governor's plans require background checks on weapon buyers and only allowing the purchase of one handgun per month. Donald Trump tweeted the protestors, writing at 10:42 AM, "The Democrat Party in the Great Commonwealth of Virginia are working hard to take away your 2nd Amendment rights. This is just the beginning. Don’t let it happen, VOTE REPUBLICAN in 2020!"

The marchers carrying hard-core ARs shouted, “Northam out."

No counter-demonstrators were seen within blocks and the police allowed thousands of gun-toting people to march around the city thankfully without any acts of violence marring Martin Luther King Day.

I liked shooting, but have seen the need to walk around New York City armed to the teeth.

Unlike these men who fear the government might take away their guns.

I don't trust the government either.

The police only protects the rich and regard the poor as a source of income, but do I need an AR-15?

No.

Last year a gunman killed twelve people in Virginia Beach. A special lawmaking session on gun control ended in ninety minutes without any action to protect innocent people against a senseless attack of a madman, but the fear of crime fuels the need for guns.

In 2018 .2% of American household suffered an armed intrusion either by gun, knife, or physical threat and in the same year 815 bank robberies occurred in California, but the real reason for millions of Americans owning guns is not crime or the government.

They fear blacks.

A Nat Turner uprising.

Getting killed in their beds for the sin of slavery.

The crime of oppression.

The evil of hatred.

And they know they are guilty, which is why they have the guns.

No other reason other than to maintain racism.

This is their fear.

Freedom.

Monday, January 13, 2020

Taking A Friend Home From the Titanic

Previously published on Jan 13, 2020

On the night of April 15, 1912 the RMS Titanic struck an iceberg on her maiden voyage across the North Atlantic.

< Three hours later the unsinkable White Star ocean liner disappeared from sight beneath the sea.

Only 20% of the passenger and crew survived the disaster.

According to the Bowdoin online magazine one of casualty was Richard White and his classmate and fraternity brother, Frank Arthur Smith, spent his thirtieth birthday in Halifax, Nova Scotia. My grandfather’s trip was not for pleasure. The families of the Titanic passengers had been informed that the bodies of hundreds of the victims had been recovered and transported by a steamer to Halifax for identification and the Bowdoin senior traveled to Nova Scotia on behalf of the White family, who hoped to recover the bodies of both Richard and his father, Percival. Frank waited anxiously at the Halifax Hotel for several days before receiving a telegram from his friend’s wife.

“Richard’s body reportedly found. better return with it at once… look sharp for my brothers body. wire me fully as soon as you can.”

What was thought to be Richard’s body was found clad in a brown suit, wearing white shoes. The man had fair hair and seemed to be carrying Richard’s effects, but the estimated age was listed as thirty-seven. Richard was only twenty-one. Bowdoin sent measurements taken during Richard’s last physical to assist officials in identifying the body.

Finally, after several delays, the steamer arrived in Halifax where the bodies of the first-class passengers were taken to a make- shift morgue in the city’s curling rink. The corpses of second-and third-class passengers and crew had been sewn into canvas bags to dumped into ocean before the survivors, who “cannot forget the cry of tortured humanity, facing its death in cold and darkness, despairing, a shrill chorus that carried despair across the quiet starlit waters.”

Frank A. Smith was taken to view body number 169. The remains were so battered, so ravaged that it was understandable that the body had been thought to be sixteen years older. Richard's personal possessions fared better. He had a gold watch, keys, a bloodstone ring, and his Delta Kappa epsilon fraternity pin.

After positively identifying the body of his fraternity brother, Frank A. Smith inquired about Percival White with officials and checked among the other passengers yet to be identified. There were no bodies matching his description and it was assumed that Richard's father was lost at sea.

Frank saw that the coffin was sealed and prepared for travel.

In Portland he was met by members of the White family.

Richard's remains were then transported to Winchendon, Massachusetts, and were interred in a private ceremony on May 2.

Frank A. Smith was my grandfather.

He had latervserved in World War I as a doctor with the Royal Canadian Medical Expedition Force and had met my grandmother Edith coming down the gangplank and lent her a hand to leap onto the dock at Le Havre.

He had married Edith shortly after their return from France.

Sadly he died several months before my birth.

div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">

I love Edith to this day.

This story was told me by my father.

My best friend.

Frank Arthur Smith II

ps My grandfather reputedly had qualified for the 1912 US Olympics Team as a pole vaulter, but had supposedly broken his leg and practice and was replaced by another vaulter.

Sunday, January 12, 2020

COLD AS IT GETS by Peter Nolan Smith

Mount Washington is far from the tallest mountain on the face of the Earth, however in 1934 the summit observatory recorded the strongest wind on the planet at 231 mph or 372 km/hr. Winter temperatures on Agiocochook, or “Home of the Great Spirit” regularly dropped as low as -50F. Death from hypothermia can occur within an hour at that sub-zero temperature, but a human can freeze in less time, because one early morning in February of 1971 my friends and I headed north from Boston to ski the various slopes of the White Mountains; Attitash, Intervale, and Black Mountain.

As we neared North Conway, Mark fiddled with the radio dial and found Bill Withers AIN'T NO SUNSHINE.

"He's right. It's not even dawn," I said behind the wheel of my VW Beetle. It had good heat.

"Not yet," Mark responded before lighting up a joint. "But soon."

We reached Cannon in Franconia Notch around 8. The sun shone behind the mountain. We bought tickets and quickly booked a room and consumed a stack of pancakes for fuel.

The aerial tram carried skiers to the 4000-foot summit. Several complained about the cold. The four of us were comfortable with 10F and the fluffy snow presented well-groomed conditions. We hit the steep speed trails of Rocket, Zoomer, and Polly’s Folly, broke for a chili lunch, and then finished with long runs on Taft Slalom, Ravine, Cannon, and Cannonball.

We called the day early and drove back to North Conway before sunset, because driving through the mountains was treacherous at night.

"Good day." Tommy nodded, as we loaded the skis and clunky boots in the front trunk.

John blew in his hands.

"Damn, I think it's gotten colder.

"We'll be snug in the Bug soon enough."

VWs had air-cooled engine and I started the car on the first attempt.

WBZ played Janis Joplin's ME AND BOBBIE MCGEE, as we drove up the notch to catch 302 to Crawford Notch. The four of us sang every word. Snow fell in clumps. The VW skidded on the drifts, as plows fought to keep the road open. Some days it was a losing effort.

"I'd hate to drive off the road." John sat in the front holding his hands over the heaters.

"I'm not crashing."

"You never know."

"I see it this way. We slide down the slope to the Saco River and land upside down. We can't get out and the car is buried by an avalanche. We end up eating each other to survive."

Stop already, buzzkill." I wasn't driving fast. "I'll get us to Conway alive."

We unloaded our equipment into the cheap motel and ate hearty meal at a local restaurant.

Stepping into the night I was surprised by a severe temperature drop and said, "-5 and that's with no wind."

"It's just the night," Tommy assured us.

"But sunny tomorrow." Tommy was an eternal optimist, but checked his watch. "Time to sleep."

The winger wanted to watch his show.

Back at the motel we broke out the bong and turned on the TV.

THE MOD SQUAD.

Peggy Lipton.

We crashed during HEE-HAW.

The next morning John, Tommy, Mark and I woke early and they ate oatmeal drowning in maple syrup.

I had toast and coffee."

"What's with the diet?" asked Tommy with a spool of gruel in his hand.

"I hate oatmeal. Always have since reading OLIVER TWIST."

"Can't I 'ave some mo'e?" John held out his empty bowl.

"Yea, you can have my share of drool."

"All the more for me." John refilled his bowl.

"I understand, but it's never good to ski on an empty stomach. You want to smoke some weed? Nothing like it for eating something you don't want to eat."

I shook my head.

"I'm good."

Hitting the parking lot the cold bit at my face and I hurried to the Beetle.

Tommy and Mark scrapped the ice off the windows.

"It's even colder today." John shivered like a malaria victim.

He was right.

It was colder.

A lot colder.

The 1300cc engine started on the first twist of the key. I beeped the horn. Matt and Tommy jumped in the car. Johnny regarded the other skiers struggling to start their Detroit V8s and said, "Suckers."

"Good girl." I tapped the steering wheel and drove up 302 to Attitash. Mt. Washington's summit was draped by a cloud. At 6000 feet the observatory was almost in space. Snow swept across the road. Other cars struggled up the Notch. With the four of us serving as ballast the VW was the fastest car in Northern New Hampshire.

We arrived at the base of the mountain just as the sun peaked over the steep horizon. An overnight snow had dusted the trails and coated the pine trees with white. Getting out of the car we swiftly zippered up our parkas.

The untouched snow on the glades was ours. Our skis deflowered Tightrope and Saco.

"It's well below freezing. The thermometer at the lodge read -20."

"At the summit it was -30." John was suffering in his Filene's Basement ski gear.

"I felt okay." I had traded an ounce of grass for Hart Outer Clothing.

"Me too." Tommy fussed with his new Roffe parka and gloves. He played hockey for a prep school in Maine. A booster paid him under the table for winning goals.

"Fuck you both."

The cold sucked the life from our bodies and we finished the day early.

We drank Whiskey toddys with dinner at the restaurant across from the motel

Everyone in the restaurant discussed the cold.

They were locals.

One older man argued for 1968 winning the record for cold.

"It hit -32."

"I remember that winter." The waitress pulled shut her sweater. "My husband and I stayed in bed most of the winter. We had twins in the fall."

Upon leaving the restaurant we hurried to our room.

"You know we don't have to ski tomorrow." John's skin was as white as the corpse of a drowned Titanic passenger rescued the the icy Atlantic.

"It'll be fine." Tommy played prep school hockey in Northern Maine.

Aroostock County was another kind of cold.

The next morning we woke to a brittle white light rising over the valley. I went to the window and felt the glass. It was colder than ice.

Several skiers stood before their cars.

The engines were frozen solid.

I turned on the TV.

The Three Stooges were yucking it up. I kicked the beds. Mark and Tommy swung their feet to the floor. John was stuck under the covers.

"It's my off day." His hand reached up to the window. A brief touch and he dropped his hand. "Oh, yeah, I'm sleeping in."

"Is it that cold out there?" Tommy was tough, but even hockey toughness had its limit.

"It's Siberia out there." I thought of the gulag prisoners and Alexander Solzhenitsyn's ONE DAY IN THE LIFE OF IVAN DENISOSVICH. The USSR would have loved the White Mountains.

"John, you're coming with us whether you like it or not."

"No, I'm not."

"Yes, you are," Tommy wasn't taking no. "Get dressed. We have a mountain waiting."

The four of us stuffed our bellies with a hearty breakfast of pancakes and sausage.

Exiting from the motel restaurant we got in the VW, then ascended Pinkham Notch to Wildcat opposite Mt. Washington. The snow along the road rose above the guard railing and I opened up the heating vents to full. Mark acted as co-pilot and scrapped the frozen condensation from windshield.

"Leaving Earth."

"To the Planet Pluto," groused John.

"I think Pluto is warmer."

"Today for sure."

We reached Wildcat at dawn. Mount Washington rose across the valley. Agiocochook was breeding weather with the sky.

Getting out of the car we zippered up our parkas and hurried to the ski lift after buying our tickets.

“Damn, this is cold,” said Tommy.

“You think this is cold. Wait till you get to the top.” The red-faced gondola operator pointed to the thermometer on the wall reading -20.

“On top it’s -30 and then there’s the wind. Have a good day, boys.”

On the trip to the summit the gondolas shivered in the wind. Mark and I stared at the empty slopes.

"Doesn't look like anyone's fool enough to come up here."

“Guess we’re the first.” He tightened his scarf and tucked his arms over his chest.

“Or the only ones.” I blew on my gloved hands and lifted my scarf over my face as a mask. The cold seeped into the oblong transporter and chilled my bones to the marrow. My Hart parka was not made for this temperature. “I wonder if this was as cold as when Robert Scott crossed Antarctica.”

“Not even close.” Mark lit a cigarette and exhaled the smoke, which dropped to his lap like a submarine submerging below the sea. “The South Pole gets down to -100 below zero.”

“But it’s a dry cold.” My words misted in the air.

Oxygen was scarce atop Wildcat.

“Dry or wet. This is cold.” Mark clapped his gloved hands together. We were approaching the summit station and he tugged down his cap.

“I’m ready for it.

“Me too.” We were New Englanders and New England only had two seasons.

Summer and winter.

We knew which one was longer."

We exited from the gondolas and snapped our boots into the bindings.

The thermometer read -40.

The frigid wind ripped through our parkas like sandpaper scrapping the flesh. Mark shouted over the biting gale, “The shortest way down is the fastest. Follow me. Ready?”

"Never readier."

Having skied Wildcat before Mark charged down Upper Wildcat to the black diamond Lynx Lair connecting to the other Lynx trails. None of us dared a fall and we reached the base lodge in less than fifteen minutes.

The three of us ripped off our skis and clumped into the cafeteria.

Each of us ordered two hot chocolates.

The scalding brew soothed our inner core.

“Damn, that was cold.” John's skin was a boreal white, as if his blood had sucked dry by a vampire.

“Anyone ready for another run?” Tommy practiced ice hockey outside every day. Cold was second nature to the right winger's daily routine.

Mark, and I regarded the blaze in the fireplace with an affection reserved for our girlfriends.

All three of us shook our heads.

“Chickenshits. We didn’t come up here to toast marshmallows.”

Tommy shamed us and we drained our hot chocolates, then exited into the boreal bitterness for another assault on the slopes.

A grim overcast settled over Wildcat and the morning was worsened by the damp mist whistling through the pines. Each of our runs was more punishing than the previous. None of this was fun.

At lunch even Tommy admitted that he lost his enthusiasm for the day’s outing.

"This sucks."

"Big time."

We ate our chili in silence.

Finally Mark said, "Let's we give it one more try.”

“What for?” Tommy shook his head. “I feel like I’m being tortured by Old Man Winter.”

“What for?” Mark held his hands to the fire. “Because after this weekend I go back to work at the shipyard and John will be doing double-shifts at the gas station. Tommy will be playing hockey seven days a week and you’ll be going to college in the day and driving taxi at night to pay for it.”

“Thanks for painting such a pretty picture.” I stepped closer next to the fireplace. Mark was right and I said, “I’m game if everyone else is.”

“We do Irish coffees at the motel on me.” Tommy nodded his commitment to our endeavor. He got a little money under the table for each goal scored, which he split with the opposing goalie.

“Last one down pays for the first beer.” Mark ran out of the lodge and grabbed his skis from the rack.

“You guys, this will be the last run for the day.” The operator was posting the ‘CLOSED’ Sign. “The wind’s picked up on top. Management figures the temperature with the wind is down to -50.”

“I’ve never been in that kind of cold.”

“Most people haven’t, because they can’t live in it.” The operator sealed us in the gondola. “Hope you don’t end up as popsicles.”

"We'll be fine."

Mark and I sat as close as Eskimos waiting out the season of good sledding.

“You know that we might never be this cold again.”

“My favorite book as a kid was SOUTH by Ernest Shackleton.

The British explorer had been struck on the ice for a year. Temperatures in Antarctica had been lower than this, but this must be how it felt like being lost on the Ross Sea.”

“Let’s not talk about the cold.” Mark detoured from our misery to discuss last April's trip to Florida.

"Remember Florida last year. Sun burnt sin. Swimming in the sea off Fort Lauderdale with girls in bikinis.

“No bikinis here.”

“Never.”

Snow bunnies were for Colorado ski resorts not North Conway and the top of Wildcat wouldn’t see 26F until April.

Mark and I jumped out of the gondola and skied to the right. I pulled down my googles to prevent my eyelids from freezing shut. Tommy stopped beside us.

"A race to the bottom."

As a hockey player he loved any kind of competition.

"We might as well make this run a long one."

Mark plotted out the trails and we nodded in shivered agreement before lining up to the start.

"Let's do it." Tommy leaned forward to push off like Spider Sabich at a World Cup race.

"On the count of three." Mark counted off the numbers and we burst forward with shouted 'GO'.

Our style down green dot Upper Catapult was a pure downhill to offer the best aerodynamics as well as shield our bodies from the chill. Tommy grabbed the early lead by the start of the black diamond Upper Wildcat.I fought to catch up, but my fingers, toes, and ears were losing feeling and my tears formed ice spiders inside my goggles.

Mark overtook the two of us right before schussing onto Middle Wildcat. The steepening of the icy slope challenged our skills and I almost fell on a turn.

My fist punched into the packed powder to right myself.

My two friends were almost out of sight, as I reached Middle Wildcat, but I ducked through the trees to make up the distance and emerged from the forest to barrel down Copycat to the bottom.

The three of them beat me by a few seconds. They flicked off their skis and dashed into the lodge. I followed them inside.

I didn't know who had won, but I had lost.

“Irish Coffees on you.” Mark stood at the bar.

“I thought it was first to the car.” Drinks were cheaper in North Conway.

I ran outside to grab my skis and shambled down to the parking lot, trailed by my friends running like drunken Frankensteins in their heavy boots.

I touched the back bumper and turned to the panting trio.

"I win."

"Fucking cheater."

“Just kidding. Drinks are on me. Now pray that the car starts.”

Every driver in the parking lot was struggling to start their car.

I sat in the VW and twisted the key in the ignition.

The engine coughed to life and we packed our skis into the car, then exchanged our ski boots for Frye boots. The heat took its time coming to life, but by the time we passed the Lost Pond Trail on Route 16, we shucked off our hats and gloves.

"Goddamn VWs." I loved this car and pointed my car south.

"Goddamn VWs is right." My friends loved this car.

"Nice and warm."

"Sort of warm," Mark shivered beside me, because warm was a long way away from North Conway, but with the right amount of heat we would call it Florida.

And not one of us questioned its location.

Especially not after skiing -50 on top of Wildcat.

After all we were New Englanders and we liked to dream of beach girls in bikinis.

Fort Lauderdale and the sun.

Not the cold of Agiocochook.

No one dreams of that.

At least not in their sleep.

Saturday, January 11, 2020

Long Love The West End of Boston

The West End of Boston had been developed for the rich. The neighborhood also sheltered freed blacks, who bravely served in the Civil War. The waves of Armenians, Greeks, Irish, Lebanese, Italians, Jews, Lithuanians, Poles, Russians, Syrians, and Ukrainians emigrants pushed out the wealthy, creating a ethnic haven for one and all.

The Ward 8 boss, Martin Lomasney, aka 'the Mathama' protected the people, especially the Irish families, but helped all newcomers find jobs to insure their future votes. The lifelong bachelor's even-handed reign over the West End endured over forty years under his motto, "Don't write when you can talk; don't talk when you can nod your head."

The strong Jewish community centered on the Vilna Shul, whose revered double hand symbol for the Kohanim, known to Trekkies as the Vulcan salute.

At its height over 23,000 people lived in the flourishing West End, however the Brahmin landlords decided to 'deslum' the neighborhood with a grandiose development project. Resistance to this change was strong, but by the 1950s the population had shrunken to 7500 diehards without a political champion.

Tawdry Scollay Square was leveled for a new city hall designed by IM Pei.

In 19523 Mayor Hynes declared the West End's narrow streets a fire hazard without mentioning anything about the cobble-stoned lanes of Beacon Hill, bastion to the Cabots, Lodges, and Lowells.

The West End was doomed by wrecking balls fueled by greed.

The Boston Housing Authority demolished the West End with the high-explosive viciousness of Curtis Le May's Eight Army Air Force.

When nothing was left the BHA built luxury apartments for a little over 400 families.

At the end of Storrow Drive a billboard promoted the project with the sales pitch, "If you lived here, you would be home now."

Only one tenement building remains from the rage of progress.

42 Lomasney Way.

The Winter Hill Gang's HQ.

Fuck the rich.

This Is Our City

The 1960s were the highwater mark for American suburbs, as white people abandoned the cities in favor of the towns rimming the cities. Ring roads allowed fathers to commute by car into work. Wives bought food and clothing at spacious shopping malls strategically distant from distressed urban communities.

It was the New Eden for the Adams and Eves of America and their spawn.

I attended a 100% white Catholic school, wore a uniform, and was instructed by the Sisters of St. Joseph to memorized our purpose on Earth according the the Baltimore Catechism.

"To love, obey, and serve God."

I parroted every word to perfection, because the nuns regarded atheists as Servants of Satan.

The newspapers and TV portrayed the cities as hellholes of sin rebelling against God's order.

I didn't believe a single word.

I hated the suburbs.

Town with no life after dark.

By 1965 we were in rebellion.

White kids knew the words to James Brown's I'M BLACK AND I'M PROUD.

Not all, but enough to make a little difference.

We protested against racism, the Viet-Nam War, and marijuana laws.

Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, and RFK were assassinated in 1968 and Richard Nixon's election to the White House showed the truth.

America hated disbelievers in the Great White Way.

We abandoned our hometowns to repopulate the cities with no ambition to change a thing.

We had no contact with the Silent Majority hiding in the suburbs.

Chaos was our God.

Decay was the next stage of evolution.

Oblivion was easier to achieve than enlightenment and who cared if the best minds of our generation destroyed by madness, starving hysterical naked, dragging themselves through the negro streets at dawn looking for an angry fix angelheaded hipsters burning for the ancient heavenly connection to the starry dynamo in the machinery of the night.”

We were less than all that and nothingness gave our souls succor.

Then it was all gone like the exquisite wickedness of the Witch of the East after a little water.

Crime was a black thing. White investors saw the value of the cities.

But only if us were replaced by them.

Luxury Condos.

This is the new vision of New York for the M'zoongoo.

Not a brother or sister left in sight.

Ethnic cleansing.

So this belong their city again, but it never was really ours.

At least that's why 'they' think and say, "4Q."

This will be our city again.