Sunday, October 24, 2021

FINALLY by Peter Nolan Smith

All through the summer of 2014 I had been jokingly asking couples about the chances of us having a menage-a-trois with me. The response varied from disgust to a laughing rejection. I spared no one my query and no one accepted the challenge.

The ludicrous proposition was strictly a joke, but last weekend I attended the screening of the first 35 mm adult entertainment film JOY.

My good friend Sharon Mitchell had starred in the DEATH WISH take-off.

The producers Distribpix.com had flown out the founder of AIM Health Center to speak to a full theater of 1970s XXX film buffs.

Most of the fans at the Anthology Cinema were in their 50s and 60s. The veterans of the wicked White Way of 42nd Street were starstruck by Sharon's presence. My two guests were my godson Fast Eddie and his university friend, Jean Namur. Neither young man had been to an X-rated movie and I introduced Sharon to the twenty-year olds.

Fast Eddie said the retired actress looked young.

"Hell, Mitch, you look good for any age," gushed a frail bald septuagenarian. "I can't wait to see this film. 35 mm and full-screen. I hate TV porno."

"Thanks for coming." Sharon posed for a photo with my guests.

Other young men and women were in the audience. They were devotees to the genre of 1970s blue films. From the short Q & A session before the filming these neophytes revealed their devotion to the history of XXX films such as THE OPENING OF MISTY BEETHOVEN and BEHIND THE GREEN DOOR.

The event's organizer asked everyone to take a seat and the cinema lights went dark for Harley Mansfield’s, 1977 classic with Sharon cast as a reverse rapist in a New York of dark alleys and empty trains. Her crimes lead to a spate of copycat sexual assault on men by her devotees. The viewers in the theater laughed throughout the film. It was funny.

After the lights came up, Fast Eddie and Jean Namur biked off to Pratt Institute. They had graduate engineering classes in the morning.

"Thank Miss Mitchell for us."

Fast Eddie knew how to be polite.

The second Q & A was longer and I waited for Sharon. We were getting drinks together.

Old friends and stars had popped out of the woodwork.

I knew none of them.

"I need a drink," Sharon whispered to me.

"Me too."

We ended up at Planet Rose, a karaoke bar on Avenue A.

The owner was Sharon's friend. He bought us drinks. Steven Morowitz of Distribpix got the next rounds. Sharon basked in the glory of another night of fame.

"It was great being a movie star again, but watching me in JOY was like watching my granddaughter on screen."

She introduced me to the king of the peepshow loops.

He had stories of Times Square.

Strippers, porno actresses, fat boys, dirty cops, bag men, and connected producers.

"Just don't tell anyone these stories," he cautioned me and looked around the room. "Some of those guys are still alive."

"You got it." I can hold my sand as can any one of 'Us'.

A small blonde man rocked on the mike singing Judas Priest. Sean came from Tulsa. I told him about passing through town in the 1970s.

"I drank with the Speare Sisters." They were good girls and true to their church, but liked a good time in the speakeasies of that Bible Belt city.

Sean loved Sharon.

He danced cheek to groin with her.

Out west she lived near Big Sur.

Crystal Creek was a small town.

She liked the big city.

Same as Sean.

I saw my opening and joined the two, as a fat girl sang Taylor Swift's YOU BELONG TO ME.

Her voice was brutally flat.

I liked it.

Sharon loved it.

Sean loved it too.

Technically nothing happened, but this fully-clothed encounter was as close as I was getting to a menage-a-trois this summer or any season to come and that was probably a good thing.

For everyone who said no.

There was only one yes thanks to the magic of JOY.

Fotos by Daniel Karpus and Peter Nolan Smith

To order JOY, please go to the following URL

http://www.distribpix.com/film/joy/overview

Tuesday, October 19, 2021

Deja Trop Vu From Holyoke

Several years ago I visited Boston's Museum of Fine Arts for the first time in decades. My sister, her husband, and daughter slowly inspected each and every painting, while I sought out Northeast classics such as Fitz Hugh Lane's OWL'S HEAD, Winslow Homer's THE FOG, and Childe Hassam's BOSTON COMMONS AT SUNSET. I have admired these iconic images for ages and it was good to be close to them, as was seeing my family members out of the corner of my eye, since familiarity breeds more familiarity and I am a native New Englander.

A few years later my producer and I traveled north from New York to work on his lakeside house outside of Springfield. After New Haven we detoured off the route to visit East Rock, a basalt traprock promontory north of New Haven. A tall stele tops the park. Eric and I had driven by this monument hundreds, if not thousands of times after our mutual moves to New York City in the 70s. Atop the butte many Mexican families celebrated the sunny weather, even though one side of the base hailed the American victories against Mexico in 1848. The other side was dedicated to the soldiers and sailors of the American Revolution, and the Civil War.

"See that bump on the far horizon?" Eric pointed to a blue hill beyond the farthest ridge.

"Yes."

"That's Mount Holyoke."

"I haven't been there since my father had taken our family there on a Sunday drive back in the 1960s.

"We'll go there this afternoon." Eric motioned for me to get back in his car. His house was another hour away and we had plans on eating at Crazy Jake's. The family restaurant in his hometown had great fried clams and that compliment comes from a man raised on fried bi-valvals from Wollaston Beach.

Lunch was delicious. The clam bellies were fat and succulent. Eric's house was a minute away from Jake's. We unloaded the van and I pulled knee-high dandelions from the backyard, while Eric mowed the overgrown front lawn. After an hour of landscaping we had temporarily tamed nature and I threw a final armful of weeds into the encroaching woods, then asked "How about that trip to Mount Holyoke?"

"I have a few things to do on the internet." His video production company was a non-stop enterprise. "We'll go around 4."

"Fine with me." I went outside to trim a tree shattered by a winter storm. The ax was dull, but my heavy swing hewed a gut in the log and within a half-hour I shouted 'timber' to the bugs. The limb fell several feet from me with a threatening thud. Sweat stained my shirt and I dragged the branch to the wood pile, ready for a beer.

"What was that noise?" Eric didn't lift his head from the computer.

"Chopped down that hanging branch." A real woodsman could have accomplish the task within five minutes, still I was proud of my effort. I had all my fingers and toes and hadn't thrown out my back.

"Give me another ten minutes and we'll head over to Mount Holyoke."

Fifteen minutes he drove us through the verdant green woods of Western Massachusetts and I listened to his recounting tales of his youth. The park was open to visitors and we wound up the narrow road to the summit teased by ever-scenic vistas of the Connecticut River Valley. Eric parked the van beneath the mountain house, which was surrounded by a chain-link fence for renovation. A path led to the northern side of the summit and we climbed to granite slab.

"That's the oxbow." Eric pointed to a gentle loop in the river.

"I know this view. Thomas Cole painted it in the 1840s."

"The View from Mount Tom." I had stood before his arcadian tableau at the MFA. His viewpoint was more to the east, but recognizable from my vantage. "For a second I thought it was a deja-vu. I once had a similar one in the South of France."

"Where?" Eric had family in the Luberon. His father had met his mother in Normandy a week after D-Day.

"Perpignan." I had spent the summer of 1989 with my family on the Cote Vermillon. "I was writing a collection of short stories there. My cousin and I drank in various towns up and down the coast. We gambled in Spain and ate great meals in Sete. One afternoon Jacques said that he had a favor to ask me. I said, "What?" and he replied that his wife wanted us to attend a classical quartet concert in a mountain monastery. I hated that type of music. Jacques felt the same way, but demanded on our blood that I accompany him. I agreed and that evening we drove up into the Pyrenees under a glorious sky. Turning a corner I spotted the monastery atop a hill and was staggered by a tidal wave of a deja vu. I had been here before. Physically. Jacques asked what was wrong and I told him about my reincarnation. He laughed and explained to everyone in the car about my deja vu before explaining that half this monastery had been sold to an American, who planted the twin at the end of Manhattan."

"The Cloisters." The renaissance edifice was a highlight to everyone driving up the Hudson.

"One in the same."

"So no deja vu."

"No and I guess none today." I couldn't recall the last time that I had experienced that mystical sensation. Maybe I've seen too much over these last six decades to be surprised by deja trop vu, but I doubt it and my eyes stripped away the trees and the laces on roads to time-travel back to the view of Mount Holyoke seen by Thomas Cole. It was easy once I took off my glasses. Without them everything was ablur and painters back then always painted a blur.

Just the way I like it.

BETTER LUCKY THAN GOOD by Peter Nolan Smith

Back in 1990 a greasy nor-easter ruined Columbus Day weekend for New York. I shut my windows for the first time in months and dressed to leave my apartment for breakfast at the Veselka Diner on 2nd Avenue. The shoes and jacket seemed unnaturally heavy after a season of shorts and sandals. Luckily Global Warming guaranteed that New York would heat up once more before the leaves fell from the trees.

After exiting from my building I dashed along East 10th Street, dodging the raindrops.

Halfway down the block a young man and an attractive older woman walked underneath an umbrella. A pale scarf covered the woman's head and the long black raincoat acted as a chador for her body.

Her handsome escort made her laugh.

I stopped running.

That laugh belonged to Gus.

As she neared, I almost said hello, but the elegant Quebecoise appeared happy and I sidestepped out of their path.

Marie must have recognized my walk, for she called my name with a touch of disbelief.

"Is that you?"

"I'm surprised to see you in New York."

I'm shooting a film here." Gus tugged off the scarf and unleashed her casually coifed blonde hair. Her beauty remained as intoxicating as our final kiss good-bye in Paris.

"You haven't aged a day."

"Most men say that." The timeworn compliment rang leaden on her ears.

"And it's the truth."

Several night ago I had seen her in a film by Claude Lelouch. It had been rented from Kim's Video.

In one scene Gus had been naked.

Her breasts lay flat against her chest.

Blonde hair hung down her back.

The memory of her body was too familiar to endure the entire sex scene.

"Thanks." She introduced the handsome young man as the lead actor in the movie. "I'll hit it big."

"Only if the camera lets me." His eyes were Paul Newman blue and his smile shone with a desire for the silver screen.

"The camera never lies," I opined without conviction. I was a failure as a writer.

"It's the lighting that helps hide the truth." The actor started a discourse on acting, but I cut him short with a question to Gus. "How long are you in town?"

"Just another week. Maybe we can meet for lunch." She stepped closer to the young man for shelter under the umbrella.

I stuck my hands in my pockets.

"I'm at the same number and the same apartment?"

When we had been contemplating of a life together, she had visited the three narrow rooms of 3E. A loft or a hotel room on the park was suitable for her beauty. I had hoped that she would leave Paris for me. I lost to the City of Light "I've been living there since 1977."

"Except for when you stayed with me in Paris" The blonde actress lilted her head to the side and a golden curtain slipped across her face.

"And a couple of other places."

Marie and I might have spent part of a lifetime with each other instead of less than a half-year. It took me a long time to discover that she gave me many more months than other lovers. Wanting it all had been asking too much.

"Your friend, Jeffery, he introduced us." She touched my hand as a silent apology for our failed romance.

"Jeffery's dead almost two years and his girls are almost grown."

"And he's not the only one." Paris and Manhattan were populated by ghosts of both the living and dead. I heard you died in a motorcycle accident."

"A truck hit me head-on in Burma and killed me instantly." I lifted my bent left wrist and she shook her head. "You're joking?"

"I'm too old to lie." It was easier to remember the truth. "I hit the windshield and flipped over the truck to land on a pile of rice and an old woman. The old lady looked in the air for the airplane from which I had fallen."

"You were always lucky."

Her words aged me a hundred years, because I had never been lucky in love and asked, "How's your pig?"

"Doe-Doe passed away a couple of years ago." Doe-Doe was a French expression for sleep. Her pig loved a good snooze and it was funny that her pig never snored in its sleep.

"Sorry, you really loved that pig." Doe-Doe had a sense of humor and danced to Jacques Dutronc like a drunken legionnaire.

"You had a pig?" The young actor understood his role in this scene was as straight man to two old lovers.

"She considered cats and dogs dirty."

"And pigs are clean?"he chuckled and Gus narrowed her Atlantic green eyes.

I answered for her.

"Pigs only wallow in the mud to stay cool. Her pig was toilet-trained."

"So you're a pig-lover." The actor winged the improvised scene.

"Why not? They saved my life."

"How?" The actor feigned interest.

"Knowing you it's a probably a long story and we have to rehearse our lines." Marie leaned forward to kiss me.

"More than a hundred words."

I turned my head. The twin pecks on the cheeks were a far cry from making love in the shadows on the Tuileries.

"Another time then." She pulled away without asking for my phone number.

"Still wearing Chanel." Gus had been their spokesperson.

"Some things stay the same."

The tolling from the St. Mark's steeple broke the spell of the past and she tucked her arm under her escort's arm.

"Good seeing you. You take care."

"Don't worry about me, I'm indestructible." I walked away to be soaked by the rain.

Once Gus and I had lain naked in bed for days. I had bought her flowers and she had cooked me meals fit for a deposed king. She sang her songs of love with a reedy voice and I played Gene Ammons records on her stereo. I hadn't been a younger man in 1988, but I had confused lust for love. It was more a talent than a fault.

I turned around and watched the two of them cross the street. They belonged here more than me, for Gus was right about my immortality.

None of my friends, enemies, or family had expected to live long enough to have gray hair.

I had been drowned by a double-overhead wave in Bali, beaten to a pulp with baseball bats on the Lower East Side, drunkenly blown the red-lights on Comm. Ave in Boston, and survived an Olds 88 t-boning my VW in front of the Surf Nantasket.

I missed death on countless other occasions.

A second sooner or later crossing a street and a car might have crushed me on its fender.

A slip in the bath and I drown.

Fitness had no influence on my survival and I believed in luck, which is little protection against the deadliest assassin of all.

Yourself.

In THE COMEDIANS Graham Greene writes, "However great a man's fear of life, suicide remains a courageous act, for he has judged by the laws of averages that to live will be more miserable than death. His sense of mathematics has to be greater than his sense of survival."

In 1974 I had gambled in Reno on my twenty-second birthday. I lost everything and woke on the banks of the Truckee River wishing I was dead. It wasn't the first or last time I challenged my mortality, yet nothing prepared me for a sudden lurch toward the brink of self-destruction in 1988.

The summer had started with my faux-cousin, Olivier Brial, throwing me the keys to his family's beach home. Carnet-sur-Mer wasn't the Riviera. Only the Riviera was the Riviera, but I wrote during the day, swam in the Med in the afternoons, and ate with his family in the evening.

The town had no nightlife outside the cafes and by the end of August I had completed my collection of short stories. I thanked the Brials for their hospitality and bid Perpignan farewell, fully confident of my book's success in Manhattan's literary world. I hitchhiked along the Autoroute to Avignon and headed into the Luberon, where my friend, Jeffery Kime, was renovating an ancient villa on the outskirts of Menerbes.

Summer ended slowly in Provence and I took a taxi from the national route up an old Roman road. Jeffery's dog barked out my arrival. His wife and kids shouted warm greetings from the terrace. Lunch was set for ten guests. Jeffery introduced me as an 'author'.

After a long repast of fresh vegetables, succulent fish, and melons accompanied by countless bottles of red wine, I read them a story of swimming in the Quincy Quarries.

Jeffery's wife claimed I was the next big writer. Their friends toasted my upcoming success. We ate fresh foods and drank cheap good wine from bottles emblazoned with stars. The day lingered with the regret of a season's end and I sat at the table, admiring the scenery of ruined towns stretching through the Luberon Valley.

That evening I went to sleep in the attic. I was happy and expected to be happier in the morning, instead I woke in an unexpected state of deep despair.

This depression was not the result of a mere hangover. I was inflicted with a disease and swiftly diagnosed its source by peeking out the attic's tiny window. Jeffrey's youngest daughter was holding onto the tail of their Golden Retriever and relieved herself au natural. Her mother joyously declared, "Matilda's getting toilet-trained by a dog."

The couples at the breakfast table laughed without restrain. The women were beautiful. The men had successful artistic jobs. Their lives were moving towards a reachable goal and I was going nowhere fast.

I bid them good-night with a faked smile and secluded myself in the attic completely devastated by this flipflop of moods, asking myself, "What next?"

I stood at the window and my eyes crossed the night sky.

Jeffery's house nestled under an escarpment separating the Luberon from the coast. A dirt trail climbed through the vineyards past a quarry. The centuries of backbreaking work had created a three-hundred foot cliff and the sheer white face murmured a single syllable.

"Jump."

Not like David Lee Roth sang in Van Halen's second album.

Simply, "Jump."

The next morning Jeffrey sensed my dismay and didn't leave me on my own for several days.

He was a good friend.

His surveillance wavered with the preparations for a Sunday dinner. His wife demanded that he accompany her for shopping in Avignon. His two kids begged me to come along. I smiled and said, "I'm going for a long walk."

"Will you be here, when we return?" Jeffery opened the door to his Volvo. His wife corralled their two daughters into the rear and said, "Where else can he go?"

"I'll take a walk in the beautiful French countryside," I answered with a smile.

As soon as the car disappeared around the curve, I set out for the path skirting the white cliff face. I rested atop the hill.

To the West the River Rhone shimmered as a silvery snake under the late August sun and the northern horizon wore the broken toothed snowy Alps. Not a single cloud spoiled the blazing blue sky and fragrant wildflowers scented the wind. It was too beautiful for any more words and I walked toward the edge, determined to exorcise the word 'jump' from my vocabulary.

Only twenty feet from eternity primal snorts shivered the underbrush. The bushes rustled apart for two little pigs. They were unusually hairy and cute.

I took a single step toward them.

The babies squealed in alarm and a louder snort trumpeted from behind a rock.

I turned my head in horror.

A massive boar with two yellow tusks curling from her snout and coarse black hair coating her sinewy spine trotted before the piglets. The black pearl eyes glared a maternal hatred, as the beast scrapped the earth with a cloven hoof before lowering its horrible head to charge me in a slather.

Screaming I fled across the plateau to climb a wizened tree. The boar rammed the trunk several times. Each impact shuddered the trunk.

After its babies scooted into the bushes, the ugly brute vanished from the plateau.

Not sure it wasn't playing a trick, I swayed in the tree for another minute, realizing my will to survive this boar attack had triumphed over my desire to die.

A priest might have deemed the incident a miracle and I might have offered a prayer in thanks, only I wasn't sure which saint was the patron of pigs, so I dropped out of the tree and returned down the hill to Jeffrey's house.

The kids were chasing each other in a squall of shouts, the guests were drinking rose and conversing about a nearby neighbor's book about life in Province. Jeffrey's wife was slicing a slab of meat for the barbecue and my friend was peeling potatoes. Relieved by my reappearance, he asked, "Where have you been?"

"Out for a walk." Explaining my mad dash from suicide was a topic for another day and I helped chop the potatoes with a knife. It was sharp and I was careful not to cut my fingers. "What are we having for dinner?"

"A nice roasted pork." Jeffery beamed with a lean hunger.

"Pork?" I protested and Jeffery scowled, "You convert to Islam?"

"Not a chance, just a change of heart." Grateful to the boar's intercession, if only momentarily, I said, "I"ll stick to the potatoes for today."

"Suit yourself," Jeffery shrugged and I drank a glass of wine.

It was good to want to live again.

Later that fall in Paris Jeffery introduced me to Marie.

I was happy for a while and smiled approaching Veselka. Bacon was sizzling on the grill. A greasy breakfast was a good start to the rainy day for a man in his 50s and asking for anything more from life than breakfast became risky, but I can deal with surprises.

I've had many, for while pigs can't fly, they sometimes can save your life.

Monday, October 18, 2021

SOUR GRAPES by Peter Nolan Smith

Thailand is about twenty-one hours away from the United States. Most Americans only have two weeks annual holiday and few of my friends or family traveled to the Orient, but in the summer of 2001 my dear cousin Bish was eager to visit the Last Babylon and I took the bus up to meet Bish. The Boston lawyer was wearing a suit and he was surprised to see me at Don Muang Airport. "You didn't have to come and meet me."

"You're right." I lived two hours south on the Bight of Siam with a skinny ex-go-go girl, who had worst girlfriend of 1999. "My mother told me to look after you."

"Your mother said that?" His voice choked with emotion. My mother had been gone over four years. It was typically hot for Thailand and Bish loosened his tie. Not another westerner was wearing one. I almost suggested his taking it off completely, except my cousin valued tidiness above comfort.

"It wasn't her dying wish, but she did tell me before she went into the hospital that last time." My youngest sister constantly accused me of fabricating family myths to amuse the dinner table. This one was true. A lot of the others weren't, but people laughed at the right parts. "Now give me that bag and let's hail a cab."

"No cabs for us. We're taking a limo." Bish hired a Mercedes. He was a big earner in Boston

As we sped on the tollway, he handed me The Boston Globe's sports section, "Sorry it's a day old."

"Don't matter, Bish." My late Uncle Dave had give him this nickname and I couldn't let the tradition die and read the headline of the Bosox win by the light of a purple dawn.

"I'm surprised after so many years away from Boston you're still a hometown fan."

"Always will be."

I scanned the American League standings. The Red Sox were classically trailing the Yankees by double-digits.

"Damn, they're going nowhere this year."

"So you care about them? The Babe Ruth Curse, Jim Lonborg's blister, Tony C's career-ending beanball, trading away Carlton Fisk, the ball between Bill Buckner's legs in Shea or Bucky Dent's unfathomable home run in 1978 should have broken your faith."

"I watched the 6th game of the 1975 Series with my brother and younger sister. She insisted that one of us stole her lucky seat. She gave up when the Sox were down late. After Bernie Carbo hit his home run, my brother ran upstairs and pulled her downstairs. She stayed in that green vinyl chair, until Fisk hit the game-winner. All they had to do was win one more game." Don Zimmer had insisted on playing Cecil Cooper even though he had batted 1 for 23 in the Series, instead of substituting Bernie Carbo. Just on principle.

"Like in 86 against the Mets." My cousin stated and I nodded in agreement.

Buckner should have been pulled for a defensive player." Another cousin lived near the retired first baseman. We thought about egging his house, but Buckner should have been pulled for a more defensive player and Bucky Dent had only hit two homers during the season."

"A wiser man would have walked away from the team."

This taunted optimism was a mortal curse for New England and I explained, "When my sister's father-in-law was buried, the rabbi surprised the mourners by saying, "Herb was a good man for his family, community, and country. The one hole in his life was the Red Sox. Let's pray before the end of the century, they can win a World Series and let Herb rest easy in peaces, so like Herb I guess I'm a sucker for the Sox."

"And that's why I brought you this.' My cousin reached into his travel bag and pulled out a Red Sox hat and t-shirt. He dropped both on my lap." "Pedro Martinez's on the mound and Manny Ramirez is slugging home runs. This might be the year."

"Possibly." I thanked Bish for his gifts and he leaned against the window to fall asleep with a smile on his face, dreaming either of a successful victorious October Series or his vacation in Pattaya, the Last Babylon.

Throughout the week we followed the exploits of the hometown team in the Bangkok Post, Herald Tribune, and USA Today. The Red Sox stubbornly struggled against mediocre team withNomar watching from the DL and Pedro Martinez's aching arm.

Sitting in a bar on Walking Street I expressed my concerns to my cousin, who said, "Believe me, this team isn't playing in October. Babe Ruth can go to Hell."

"Pedro said the other day, if Babe Ruth was playing, he'd stick a fastball in his ear."

"You're not talking about the Red Sox, are you?" A red-faced man in his fifties shouted with a North Shore accent. His crooked hand hands tremors around a glass of whiskey. "I was born in Lynn. I saw Pete Runnel, Tiant, Yaz, Dewey, Lynn, Rice, Clemens and no one believed more in the Red Sox than me. They'll never win the Big One. Never."

"What makes you say that?" As a teetotaler Bish had little patience with drunks. "I heard a story one day that broke my heart for good."

My cousin's nod indicated he had heard enough, however I was still had a half a Chang Beer and the whiskey drinker said, "I usta tend bar in Boston. A strip club called the Two O'Clock Lounge."

"On Washington Street. I drove cab during college and finished my night hanging out in front of that go-go bar. Always hoping to drive a stripper home. They tipped nice."

"Here is Heaven, but the Combat Zone was paradise, but closed after some stupid state trooper got himself killed on LaGrange Street." His eyes drifted off us to a passing trio of bargirls.

I vaguely recalled the story and said, "I don't think any Red Sox involved."

"No, after that I worked at this bar on Newbury Street. Good money. Good crowd. Famous people. TV people and sports figures. One day Mickey Rivers walks in. Along with Willie Randolph, a total class player. To show no hard feelings about 1978 I sent him over a few drinks. He toasts me and we talk. Mostly bullshit, finally I say, "I can't understand how Bucky Dent hit a home run in that play-off game."

"Hey, Mike Torrez played for the Yankees and Bucky anticipated his pitch," Mickey said low enough for only me to hear. This was a Boston bar and I guess he wasn't interested in instigating a riot, I leaned forward and said, "Bucky had two home runs that year."

"You've been a nice guy, so I'll tell you a little secret." Mickey checked the nearest table to insure no one else was listening. "The TV shows the home run and Yaz's popping up in the replays. Nothing else, but if you see the full game, Bucky breaks his bat. You're asking yourself, "So he breaks his bat?" When he goes to the dugout for another bat, I hand him mine."

"And?" I asked him and Mickey answered with a sly smile, "Well, my bat was corked."

"Needless to say I was shocked and Mickey Rivers walked out of the bar before I could ask him another question." The whiskey drinker drained his glass and feebly waved for another round.

I had watched that game in the Edison Hotel on Broadway and easily recollected that awful sinking feeling, as Bucky's homer soared into the left field screen.

"Perhaps Mickey was kidding."

"Nope, I'm from Lynn. We know truth when we hear it, especially bad news.."

Bish, a lawyer by profession, cross-examined the drunken North Shorite, "You see a tape of the game?"

"Nope, what"s the point? Mickey wouldn't have lied and I don't care about the Sox."

"One year we will beat the Curse.

"Dream on."

"Fuck Arrowsmith."

"Fuck Johnathan Richman." He threw a pile of 100-baht bills on the bar and stumbled into a go-go bar. My cousin asked, "You believe him?"

A member of the Baltimore Colts had told me that a gambler had compromised a very important offensive player during Super Bowl III, except Bish looked in need of illusion, so I said, "This town is full of bullshitters."

"Would we be better people if they had won?"

A sweetness the taste of molasses seeped through my veins.

"It wouldn't have changed anything."

"Okay, enough with the what ifs." Bish raised his hands in surrender. "Being losers has made us the men we are today. You ready to give up on Red Sox?"

Nevah."

"Then I guess we're doomed and I couldn't think of being doomed in a better place than Pattaya."

The Bishop paid for our drinks and led me to young people had a good time.

I felt better for telling him the lie, for the truth won't stop Bucky Dent's homer or the baseball bouncing through Bill Buckner's legs. We should have won those games and in the mind of a Red Sox fan this knowledge had no small value, at least until the curse is over in the hopefully near future and the Red Sox Nation was too stubborn to die before that date.

Fuck Bucky Dent

Several years ago my friends warned me not to wear this shirt to Yankee Stadium. I ignored their pleas and wore everything I had. I rode to 161st on the D. A Yankee fan from VA told me that I was brave. His wife said I was stupid. We spoke about Bucky Dent. Exiting from the subway a group of yankee fans yelled that they should burn my shirt. They were young and drunk. There was only two ways out and my fighting days were over, so I shouted, "Bucky Dent had a corked bat."

"Really?" They respected my age and I related a story about Mickie Rivers having given Bucky Dent a corked bat to hit that fateful home run.

"You're all right, man." We said goodbye with pumped fists.

Several minutes later a young man shouted, "Burn that shirt."

It was the young man from before. He recognized me with a laugh and apologized before hugging me.

"Bucky Dent, Bucky Dent, Bucky Dent."

I laughed but truthfully that homer still hurts.

Bucky Fuckin' Dent.

Sunday, October 17, 2021

BREAKING THE LAW - Hayseed Dixie

My online search for Judas Priest led to this cover of BREAKING THE LAW by Hayseed Dixie. I can only blame my ignorance of this bluegrass heavy-metal band on my seven-year self-exile in Thailand.

To see their version, please visit this URL:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zcj2ltTs58M

Judas Priest - Better By You, Better Than Me

This weekend I went on a Judas Priest binge.

HEADING OUT ON THE HIGHWAY, DIAMONDS AND RUST, ROCKA ROLLA etc, until YouTube popped up the lead singer's testimony in a 1990 Nevada civil suit accusing the group of inciting two Reno teenagers' suicide pact via subliminal words 'do it' in their reprieve of the Spooky Tooth song BETTER BY YOU BETTER THAN ME.

The suit was thrown out of court to the protest of conservative lawmakers and church leaders threatened by the demonic aspect of heavy metal. Comedians rallied to the defense of Judas Priest and Rob Halford suggested that a better death command would have been 'buy more of our records'.

Those forces of revision; the church and the right, ruled the country for the last 40 years.

In the summer of 2009 in Iowa City I was siting in a bar whith Alan Lage aka Colonel Rockford, and Brock Dundee, a Brit spy serving the West's Endless War in Afghanistan, when I overheard one of three overweight corn middlemen say, "This country was founded on conservative values."

I put down my drink. My good friend Alan Lage lifted his hands. "Violence doesn't solve anything."

"You're right about that." I signaled I was cool, calm, and collected and said to the old hippie, "I'm just going to say one thing."

I walked over to them and glared , as I said, "This country was founded on life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness and it makes me very happy to tell you dumb motherfuckers to shut your holes."

The fattish trio were stylish attired in Midwest Stretch-band khakis and a blue skirt like they were cult members. I was in black leather. No one threw a punch, but I felt vindicated by my exercising the freedom of speech. The young bartender, who had recently returned from a National Guard stint in Iraq, gave Alan Lage and me a beer.

"I'm working, so I can't say a thing. Thanks for being my voice."

"Can I ask you a favor, can you play HEAD OUT TO THE HIGHWAY?"

Coming right up."

And I still love Judas Priest.

Rock on.

To hear BETTER BY YOU BETTER THAN ME go to this URL

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PqAPVB4u9Zs&NR=1&feature=fvwp

Saturday, October 16, 2021

BREAKING THE LAW by Judas Priest

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=psTUiQzNoxw

My landlord's wife read a book about Motley Crue. The mother of two was converted to heavy metal. AP her husband exposed her to Penelope Spheeris' DECLINE AND FALL OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION - THE METAL YEARS. For better or worse and I promised her a heavy tee-shirt as a belated Mother's Day gift.

"Black Sabbath or Judas Priest?" I asked, knowing the answer.

"Black Sabbath." She wasn't familiar with Judas Priest.

"Judas Priest was sued by several courts as accessories to murder." Two Texas teens read a little too much into the lyrics of "Better By You, Better Than Me" during a night-long session of drinking and pot-smoking. Their suicides was seen by the DA as a direct result of heavy metal and satanism. Judas Priest was acquitted of all charges. "And Rob Halford is the best dancer in Heavy Metal."

"And even better that millions of young boys idolized him without realizing that he was gay." AP was no Judas fan, but know his rock.

"Gay?" His wife seemed surprised that Heavy Metal didn't exclude gays.

"Very." I loved his dance sequence in BREAKING THE LAW. His sexuality was never a secret to those in the know. "Nothing better than HEAD OUT ON THE HIGHWAY. So I'll get you a Judas Priest t-shirt too."

"Okay." AP's wife had a good heart and a free t-shirt was a free t-shirt.

For a listen to Judas Priest's BREAKING THE LAW go to this URL

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L397TWLwrUU

SQUARES by Peter Nolan Smith

Who here has shot at someone? Who here has been in jail? Who here has been beaten by the police? Who here has cried after a mother's death? A father's death? A friend's death?

The birth of a child?

Who here listens? Who here sees? Who here speaks? Who here feels?

We all have these gifts. To use our senses to get at the truth, That Life is all there is. Birth, life, death. The circle.

One last question.

Who here is a square? You have heard the question. You know the answer. Only one answer will redeem you.

Love.

To love is to not be a square. Take it from me, Because I can answer all my questions with a single response.

I have, and, yes, I love.

It's the only answer to everything, even suffering.

Wednesday, October 13, 2021

From The North

In October of 1995 I hitchhiked out of Tibet to Nepal. I stood at the edge of Shigaske, the last town before the border. Most of the traffic was trucks loaded to capacity. A van stopped on the dirt road. It was heading to pick up tourists. The driver wanted $10. I gave him a ten-dollar bill and sat in the back with two other westerners on their way out of Tibet.

Later that afternoon we crossed the highest pass at 16500 feet. The other passengers were unconscious from oxygen deprivation. The Tibetans were telling jokes and smoking cigarettes. I asked them to stop. This was as close as I got to Everest.

I wanted to stay there forever, except my China visa was up the next day.

The Tibetan driver said, "I see this every day. It's called Chomolungma or the Holy Mother."

"There might be climbers on it." It was late in the season for summiting.

"Koreans and Sherpas." News traveled fast on both sides of the Himalayas. He lit a cigarette and motioned for me to get back to the van. "It's a long way to the border."

"Thoo jaychay." I thanked him for stopping.

"Kay-Nang-Gi-Ma-Ray."

We didn't stop until the border.

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

SPICE MAD DAY by Peter Nolan Smith

Last year I celebrated Columbus Day with my doctor on Staten Island. Nick was Italian and cooked great meatballs. The doctor and I had met during our freshman class of European History 101. We had received Bs from the professor.

His kids had the day off and we enjoying the meal.

"Hey, Nico, I have a question for you."

"Yeah, what?" He was studying film at a state university.

"What year did Columbus sail to America??

"Why you asking?"

"Because it's Columbus Day."

"And?"

"I was wondering if you knew the date. Do any of you?"

"Sure."

"What is it? Any one you."

"It's not a school day," Nico's best friend replied through a mouthful of meatballs.

"So you don't know."

"Nope," they answered in a collective chorus of ignorance.

"Did we know that little when we were that age?" I asked Nick.

"We went to nun school. The sisters forced us to remember Columbus' three ships by name; the Santa Maria, the Nina, and the Pinta."

"C'mon, you gotta know." I looked to the young people around the table.

"1882?" His youngest son was the only one brave enough to offer an answer.

"You got two numbers right." The doctor shook his head in disbelief. "In 1492 Columbus sailed the ocean blue. You never head that?"

"Never." The kids ranged from 8 to 21. Columbus was a blank to them and I explained that Columbus had been seeking the back door to Asia.

"For Chinese take-out?" His older son?s friend Squeak asked with interest. He liked pu-pu platters.

"No, for spices."

"That's why no one knows about him. No one knows about spices." His oldest son's only connection to spice was the Spice Girls and they hadn't scored a hit since the turn of the century.

"Spices were the most important commodity in the world 500 years ago." I had been a history substitute teacher at South Boston High during the bussing riots of 1975. "Spices are pepper, cinnamon, cloves, garlic, chili, nutmeg and many more."

"Chili came from Mexico," Nick's youngest son announced from the table.

"Correct."

"The gardener told me that. He's from Mexico."

"Yes, but many other spices came from Asia." I had spent the 90s and 00s in the Far East. Nick had graduated from a medical school in Manila. We liked the cuisine of the Orient.

"Why they need spices on their good, when they had ketchup?" Squeak was spinning linguine on his fork.

"Ketchup is not a spice and it is not a vegetable." Even if the majority of American teenagers choose Heinz ketchup as their favorite veggie. "I'll tell you a story. Back in 1991 I arrived by boat to Ternate in northern Indonesia. The volcanic island was a backwater then, but in the 15th Century European nations fought to control its treasures of cloves and spices. Hoping to discover a short-cut to the fabled island, Christopher Columbus set sail west across the Atlantic Ocean. His fleet of three ships made landfall on an unknown continent. It was not China, Japan, or Ternate. Undeterred by this disappointment, the Genoan adventurer claimed the new world for the King Of Span and his patroness the Queen Isabella. He was as good a salesman as he was a sailor and called it the West Indies to promote future expeditions."

My friend's teenagers were gazing off with disinterest, although Nick's youngest son and daughter were listening to what I had to say. Their attention span respected an adult, so I continued my tale, "Columbus' first voyage was remarkable, for the fact that he was traveling through unknown waters and only lost one ship, the SANTA MARIA on his first voyage. It sank on Christmas Day, but not one sailor drowned in the shipwreck. There was not enough room for everyone to return to Spain and 39 men elected to stay on 'Hispaniola' to further explore the virgin territory for gold and spices."

"What happened to those guys he left behind?" Nick's younger son was showing promise as a scholar. Julien was a straight B student.

"They were'massacred by Carib warriors who detested the newcomers' enslavement of their women, children, and friends, thus initiating the long conflict between Europe and the New World."

"Massacred as in eaten." Squeak was an ace at shoot-em-up VDO games.

"Yes, eaten."

"Did they use any spices when they ate them or just ketchup?" Squeak's comment earned all-around laughter.

"I quit." I got up from the table and went out on the terrace with a glass of wine in my hand.

Outer New York Harbor spread beneath the highest point in Staten Island. Henry Hudson had sailed this bay. His namesake river ran straight north into the Adirondacks. He had been stranded in the Arctic by his men.

Exploration was tough on failures.

In truth Christopher Columbus carried little gold back to his Spanish sovereigns, but he introduced corn, manioc or cassava, potato, the peanut, tomato, papaya, pineapple, avocado, chili pepper, cotton and cocoa to the Old World. It took about 30 years for the chili to reach Thailand, which adopted the fiery spice as its own.

My wife Mam loved chili on her sum-tam salad. All Thai women loved the fiery mango dish and they have Columbus to thank for their pleasure.

Columbus might be forgotten by the young and no longer considered to be a hero by those who blame the destruction of the Indians on his discovery, but I celebrated his discovery of the Bahamas with rum and coke. Nick joined me and raised his glass.

"To Columbus."

He was Admiral of the Oceans.

Monday, October 11, 2021

Sell-Out At The NY Times

The New York Times was a great newspaper in my youth. Their reporters helped publish the Pentagon Papers for Daniel Ellsburg, Neil Sheehan ripped off the government's cloak of invisibility over the Viet-Nam Invasion, and I loved their motto 'All the news that is fit to print.'

Times have changed since the 70s. The Drug War, AIDs, and the nation's cult of ignorance have forced the publishers to seek new readers from the Right and a week ago their Op-Ed writer Brett Stephens praised the two Democratic Blue Dogs from Arizona and West Virginia for resisting President Biden's $3 trillion stimulus package.

Joe Manchin protests that the Federal Government will spend too much money on the Working Poor and Middle-Class, which might jeopardize the country's will to work. and Kyrsten Sinema, a flack for Big Pharma, claims the USA can not afford Climate Change to protect her financial backers.

Few Democrats and almost no newspapers are reporting that the $3 trillion is to spread out over ten years or that the Endless War has cost the economy over $10 trillion. That sum is a wild guess, but then again the Pentagon gave away $1 trillion at the Bagdhad Aeroport without anyone signing a release form.

Thank you Brett Stephens for your thoughts, I hope I never hear your prayers.

The New York Times sucks.

October 11, 1978 Journal Entry - East Village

I woke early for a change. The clock said the time was 7:19. Alice is asleep after a long night at CBGBs. I nuzzled her neck. She mumbled, "Not now."

"I'm going out to eat." My usual breakfast was a coffee and bagel at Veselka, but I dress thinking maybe someone from the scene was at the Kiev. I almost brought my journal to write poetry, but I hate writing in public. It is not a spectator sport.

I had played pinball for money at CBGBs. $1 per ten thousand points. The money roll in my jeans held about $190 and I shouted to Alice, "You want something?"

"Sleep."

I left the apartment and walked down the block. Hakeem was on the opposite side of the street from the gang controlling the sinse trade. The junkie was harassing passers-by for drugs. He sneered at me and looked up to my floor. I read his mind and warned, "I'm only going to the bodega and if you ever lay a hand on my girl, you're a dead man.

"We got you, gringo," said Franklin, the # 1 dealer. I had never bought anything from the young Puerto Rican, but he always tried and I respected him for his drive.

I didn't trust him for any good and got a coffee, a bagel, and the New York Times from the corner store. When I exited, I glared at Hakeem, who shambled away, muttering, "You white boy think you own this block, but no one own this block. Not you. Not me. Not the cops and not the mayor. The Lower East Side belong to all of us. Remember that, white boy."

I sat on the stoep and read the sports. The Pirates were playing the Orioles later. After finishing my breakfast, I went up stairs. Alice hadn't moved in my absence. "I've got to go out. I'll be lack this afternoon."

"I'll be working on the show late." She reached up and pulled me to the futon. "No telling when I'll be home."

"No problem," I said, but sensed the New Wave Vauville Show was stealing her away from me. I kissed her with tenderness, wising she had more energy. Not a change. She was already asleep again.

I traveled by bus to the Path Train on Sixth Avenue. I jumped the turnstile. The next subway was packed with New Jerseyites from across the Hudson. They looked scared of New York, but happy to live in New Jersey. I got off at Penn Station and went to my landlord's office on West 35th Street. I paid Mr. Golding $182 for October and he said, "You're ten days late. I hope this isn't a trend." "

"Leave the boychek alone. He's a poet. I'll always find the rent."

Yes, but never on the first."

Jerome and his wife were good people and I thanked the old Jewish couple for understanding my situation.

"How's that girl of yours? I hear she's putting on a vaudeville show. Give her my besst wishes."

it was only 10 am and I wasn't ready to return to the East Village. I walked up to Times Square, counting women in my age group. Only one caught my eye. A blonde model with a portfolio. She was so different from Alice. I trailed her north and she spun on her hell at the door of a high-rise.

"Are you following me?"

"Yes, but I'm no threat. Just a poet on the way to play pinball. Two fellow models exited from the building and laughed at me., as the blonde entered the building. They were used to being followed by strangers and we all looked alike.

A weirdo.

I spent two hours at the Amusement Center on Broadway, beating all comers. Nobody wanted to gamble against me and I departed from the pinball emporium to catch the R Train.

Alice was gone. I laid on the futon and picked up Melville's TYPEE. The sheets smelled of her sweat. Before I could turn a page, the telephone rang. It was Mark Amitin, who asked, "I've been calling since noon. Where were you?"

"Uptown."

"You want to meet later?"

"I'm not feeling so well." I lied rather than tell the truth, that I had blown off Mark, because he hadn't paid me for my assistant tour manager gig for ALBEE DIRECTS ALBEE. "I'll call you in a few days."

Not likely, I was tired of doing unpaid favors from friends, who abuse you for not working extra hours.

Day went to night and night got late.

Alice hadn't showed up at 1am and I wandered over to CBGbs, where she was leaning into the bar with Susan Hanneford, who didn't even bother to say hello. Her boyfriend, Tom, was high on smack. Walter Stedding was on stage droning on his violin. Normally his screeching was intolerable, but I suddenly understood his magic. Alice looked cute in a green two-piece dress and black tights, although her hair could have been cut more to accentuate her eyes. The Hillbilly actress could see that I didn't want to be there and asked, "You don't mind if I stay out a little more?"

"Not at all." I hated her friend. Tom would have been okay, except he was in love with the skinny bitch.

I took a taxi home, said hello to Franklin, bought an apple juice, and played solitaire, at which I cheated more than once, wondering where is Alice. Something told me Susan's Chinatown loft. I put away the cards and got under the covers. They no longer smelled of Alice.

"Baby, where are you?"

Tuesday, October 5, 2021

THE NAME IS FENWAY by Peter Nolan Smith

I was born in Boston in 1952. My childhood, teenage years, and college career were spent within the confines of New England. My heart belonged to the Celtics and Red Sox. These allegiances were never challenged by my decades of living in New York or anywhere else in the world.

When in 2004 the Red Sox came back from a 0-3 deficit to defeat the Yankees, I was sitting in a bar in Thailand. The only fan in the bar. The other drinkers were finishing off the night. I cheered the ending of the Curse of the Bambino by buying everyone at the bar a drink. We toasted the triumph. None of them cared since they were Thai or English wankers.

I was sober and they were drunk.

I got my way and celebrated the victory by buying everyone at the bar a drink. After my explanation of the Curse of the Bambino, we toasted the the Red Sox. Few of them cared about baseball, although the Brits understood the pain, since England hasn't won the World Cup in over a half-century.

Four years later my Thai wife Mam announced that she was pregnant with a boy and I consulted my overseas friends for a name.

Jesse James Smith sounded good, until someone informed me that the Missouri outlaw had owned slaves. Malcolm X Smith was a little too heavy a name to carry through his life. My favorite runner as a teenager had been 2OO-meter champion Tommie Smith, who had raised his fist in protest of racism at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City, but Tommie Smith Smith was too much Smith for my boy.

"What about Fenway?" suggested Shannon Greer on a long distance call to Brooklyn. We were good friends, despite his status as a Yankee fan.

Four years later my Thai wife Mam announced that she was pregnant with a boy and I consulted my overseas friends for a name. Jesse James Smith sounded good, until someone said that the Missouri outlaw owned slaves. Malcolm X Smith was a little too heavy a name to carry through his life. My favorite runner as a teenager was Tommie Smith. He had raised his fist on the medal podium at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City.

Tommie Smith Smith was too much Smith.

"What about Fenway?" suggested Shannon Greer. He's a New York fan. We are good friends.

"Fenway Smith." I liked it and googled Fenway Smith. None showed up on the search for Smith, Jones, Williams, Lee, Sanchez, Miller, or Martin. I explained the origins of the name to Mam.

"Can not name your son Fenway Park Smith."

"Why not?"

"Everyone think he Korean not Thai with name Park."

She was right and we have a loving son Fenway.

His middle name is Superstar.

Back in 2012 I had to leave Thailand. I traveled back and forth every 2-3 months until COVIDS hit the world. Fenway is always in my mind as are the rest of my children; Fluke, Noi, and Angie. My younger sister disapproved of naming my son 'Fenway'.

She's a lawyer. They have strong opinions.

"You'll see why it's stupid."

She's has a funny way of being right, but Fenway has many names; Wey-wey, One-way, and always Superstar.

Presently I live in Brooklyn. It's more Mets territory than Yankee land. My friends at Frank's Lounge appreciate the name and on many occasions I proudly tell people, "My son's name is Fenway."

Last week I bought him a Red Sox suit. I walked back to my brownstone and saw a young man with a small dog. He was wearing a Red Sox cap. We spoke about our faith and I asked him, "What's your dog's name?"

"Fenway."

I didn't tell him about my son, but several days later I ran into another young Red Sox fan with a dog. Once again the mutt's name was Fenway and I understood the reason parents don't name their kids 'Fenway' is because young men name their dogs after the Bosox park.

But I'm not a young man anymore, yet I have memories.

Back in the early 60s my father took me to see the KC As at Fenway. I sat on the steps of the 3rd base line for the 1975 World Series. 2004 I was halfway around the world. A Red Sox fan to the core and my son is Fenway Superstar Smith.

One day I'll take him to the temple and that destiny is written in the stars.

Monday, October 4, 2021

The Death Of Baseball

In 2012 I was invited to a Red Sox-Yankees game at the Rich People Stadium. Our seats were behind home plate and I wanted to show my gratitude to my host and ordered four beers and hot dogs. The bill came to $70. At least the Red Sox won the game, but despite the taxpayer picking up the bill for new stadiums major league baseball has priced itself out of reach of the common man and every evening thousands of seats are empty in the new parks. The game's fall from grace has extended to ballfields across America, as boys have rejected the National Pastime in favor of skateboarding or playing murderous video games.

Baseball is in danger of becoming extinct.

The MLB games start too late for young viewers and last 3-4 hours thanks to TV ads.

And the play on the field is uninspired.

Empty seats.

Players saying what the fuck.

Nothing could get me to go to New York's Rich People Stadium, although I wouldn't mind watching a few games of little league or sitting on the wooden seats of the Cape Cod League.

That is baseball.

And that kind of baseball will never die in the hearts of the eternally young.

Even in the land of the dead.

Washing Of Hands

The regular MLB season ends tonight with a tiebreaker between old rivals; The New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox. The night game will be played at Fenway Park, where tradition is eternally tradition and that die-hard honor of men not washing their hands at a baseball park will remain sacrosanct until the last out of eternity.

One survey conducted at the Atlanta Braves stadium revealed that while 95% of female Braves fans washed their hands while only 54% of their male counterpart attempted this ablution.

Someone once told me that at the old Yankee Stadium less than 20% of men put their hands under a faucet after finishing at the urinal. 8000 men out of 40,000 Yankee fans.

After hearing that information I always wash my hands, even if other men think it's effeminate.

Also I never shake anyone's hands at a game and I certainly don't make eye contact.

That is a baseball game no-no.

Unless of course it's someone famous and then you want to see how big they are.

Does that make me gay and do women wash their hands at Fenway?

Friday, October 1, 2021

TIME HAS COME TODAY by the Chambers Brothers

In the late-60s I attended Xaverian Brothers south of Boston ten miles away from my house underneah the Blue Hills. No buses or trains ran between the suburbs on the outskirts of Boston to the all boys Catholic high school and only connection between these bedroom communities was Route 128 orbiting Boston from the Quincy Quarries on the South Shore to the North Shore fishing port of Gloucester.

Boys from my high school had three choices of transportation from my high school. Freshmen and sophomore were stuck on expensive private buses, while upper-class students organized car pools sharing gas and driving. The final option was hitchhiking, which required walking from the school to 128. For some reason townspeople never picked up Catholic schoolboys, but getting a ride from the East Street exit was easy, since sex predators cruised the highway for teenage boys.

"You ever seen a naked man in the shower." They loved that line.

Car pools avoided that sexual confrontation and mine was divided between my VW Beetle, Chuckie Manzi's Plymouth, Frank Monaco's Comet, and Tommy Dangree's Mercury Cougar. Every afternoon we hit 128 to race the other teenagers on the three-lane east-bound highway. My daredevil driving skills in the VW beat out more timorous drivers behind the wheel of muscle cars, except for Tommy's Cougar GT powered by a 390 FE V8.

Tommy's specialty was the speed record between East Street to Rte. 138 beneath Big Blue Hill. The distance was three miles. His best time for the autumn of 1968 had been 2 minutes and 21 seconds, until one spring afternoon WMEX played the Chambers Brothers TIME HAS COME TODAY upon our reaching East Street.

"How long is this song?" Tommy shouted back over the salt-marsh grit of the 50,000 transmission.

His car's sound system had one volume.

Loud.

"The AM single is 2:37," I answered knowing that WMEX's format never allowed the 11-minute-plus version.

"I'm going for the record. Time it." Tommy stamped on the accelerator. His tank was filled with Sunoco's best octane 100 from a musclehead gas station near Wollaston Beach. The tachometer redlined and the speedometer swung right beyond 100.

110.

We had an open road.

120.

The other cars were a blur.

"Time has come today." The four of us sang with the windows shut for aerodynamics.

He hit 126 heading up the incline to 138 and Tommy braked for the exit. The Cougar fishtailed through the cloverleaf followed by the smell of burning tires and us singing the final chorus.

Now the time has come
There are things to realize
Time has come today
Time has come today

"How fast?"

"2:05." According to my Timex.

"I'll break that one day," Tommy boasted with high hopes.

Speed was his drug, however he failed on numerous occasions to better that time. Traffic or weather interfered with his many attempts and twice state troopers stopped him for violating the speed limit.

My efforts in the VW Beetle were pathetic. Its top speed 85 with a tailwind and the 60s ended without any of us bettering Tommy's speed.

The record seemed as safe as Babe Ruth's home run record, then in the Spring of 1973 my favorite cousin dropped off his prom date near my high school. Her name is unimportant. Errol wore a black tux. His shirt had ruffles and his red tie was undone. He might have had a few beers before getting behind the wheel of his father's Sky-Blue Lincoln IV with a white hard-top. A 460 in³ (7.5 L) Ford 385 series V8 engine was under the hood. The twenty-foot long sedan was a monster.

It was 3am.

There was no traffic on Route 128.

Errol tells the story this way.

"I gave the beast the gas and saw the fuel gauge drop a few inches." The Mark IV sucked gas like a black hole. "Zero to 60 in two seconds. I stomped the pedal to the medal and within a few seconds I'm at 100 mph. The speedo went to 160 and I kept both hands on the wheel, as the car hit a small bump on 128. Only at that speed with that car's suspension there are no small bumps. I was launched into the air and the Mark IV hit the highway in acceleration mode. I swear on our grandmother's grave that I made the 93 exit in 35 seconds and 138 in a minute-ten. I must have broken the sound barrier. I was traveling that fast."

Errol loved telling this story and I sort of believed him, since for me all stories are true if interesting and no one is going to break his record.

Not on 128.

Not with all the traffic.

Not in this century for some pleasures have been lost to the 21st Century like driving a Mark IV Lincoln at full speed without worrying about the police. That sensation is lost forever, but not the excitement of hearing TIME HAS COME TODAY and to view the Chambers Brothers classic hit, please go to the following URL

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hIqwzQ7g-Cc