Saturday, September 30, 2023

Plastic Ocean

Plastic
Everywhere
Fort Greene Park
Farmers' Market
On a rainy Saturday Morning
After Friday's Noahic rains.

People shopping for the vegetables
Artesian breads and meats
Fruits.

At a stand
A middle-aged progressive
Blissfully packs
Apples into Plastic bags


"Do you where that goes?" I ask.

Stumped by the unexpected question, I answered for him,

"To the sea, but you know that."

His eyes narrowed and brow goes eleven.
He hates me.
He hates my speaking to him.
I don't blame him.
I am a hypocrite.

"I don't want to get my bread wet."
Artesian bread.
"Would you want to eat wet bread?"

"Sure, may I have a hunk?

I like artesian bread.
I walk away
Happy to have upset him
Happy to be a hypocrite.

My fish is in a plastic bag.

Deconsume

Friday, September 29, 2023

Day Five of Forty Days of Rain

In Genesis 7:4 Yahweh said four thousand years ago, "For in seven days I will send rain on the earth forty days and forty nights, and every living thing that I have made I will blot out from the face of the ground.”

In early September the Eastern Seaboard had been torched by a heat wave. Day after day of 90 plus temperatures. I wanted to go to beach, but it was too hot for a stroll across the hot sands. A week ago the weather broke and the temperature dropped into the 70s then the 60s. A tropical storm struck New York dumping rain for three days. As much as 2 inches in a twelve hur period. Today we topped that with a torrential five inches of rain. I had been trapped in a car for any hour waiting for a break. This storm flooded the streets of New York, although not Clinton Hill, althugh on my bock long walk back to 387 I noted that several gutters were overflowing with water and the storm drains were overwhelmed by the deluge.

Still I had to admire that this drainage system was built over a century ago by hard labor from emigrants wanting an honest day's pay for an honest day's work. Like the aquaducts of Eternal Rome their work stand the test of time and climate change ie speicies extinction.

I'm heading down to the street.

I would take a trip to the Rockaways, but the Mayor has warned for the city's citizens to stay home and as much as I want to be free, sometimes it's best not to do anything.

Tomorrow is meant to be sunny.

So this Flood was short by thirty-five days. Maybe Next time.

October 7, 2023

I stand corrected.

Clinton Hill being on a hill was saved from the intense flooding in the lowlying neighborhoods. The sewers magnificiant as they are were not constructed for Global Extinction rains. Instagram featured a VDO of a New Yorker waddling waist-deep to catch a train. What the fuck are you thinking?

Thursday, September 28, 2023

Kibera The Slum of Hope - 2019

Kibera
The Forest in Nubian
Nairobi
Kenya
A million souls
Living by the Nairobi Lake
On $2 a day
A slum
Bigger than Boston
Filled with every tribe in Kenya, Uganda, the Sudan, Nubia, Somalia
Living together
On $2 a day
Never giving up
Kibera is the slum of hope.

I have walked through the paths
Between the colonies of mud shacks.
With young friends
On a sunny winter day.
Banda likikushinda, jenga kibanda.
An oldiu Swahili saying.

'If you can't build a hut, build a shack."

There are hundreds of thousands
Of huts and shacks
In Kibera.
We go inside Steve's shack
Pop posters
A single overhead bulb
Dirt floor
Clean
$20 a month
It is home.
He lives the same as we all do
From past to present to future

I am a mazungoo.
A white man
I am here thanks to Tim
We met in Tibet
He was shot in Nairobi
By slum criminals

His revenge was to help Kiberans

Why am I here?

To help the team walk through the Masaii Plains
And climb Kilimanjaro

I know nothing
Of Kibera
But
I live in a ghetto
Clinton Hill
I have lived in others
In Thailand
In Indonesia
In the East Village
The poor there are poor
Same as the poor here
Same as everyone
Seeking an end to greed
And happiness.
Furaha

My friends are young Kiberans
Felix, Slow Steve, Vanessa, Maureen, Ubah, and Jackmon.
This is their home.
My friends are young New Yorkers too
Larry, Laikyn, Nathalia
Red Hook and Queens
I am a mazungoo
But here my name is not my mazoongoo name.
My name in Kibera is Mzee
Old man.
I was once young like them.
Not today.

We walk through the paths
Of Kibera.
Mud and tin shacks rise two-storys
Over paths of compressed garbage and mud.
Children play
They smile
Kibera all they know
Their world.
Gunmen roam Kibera
I'm not scared
I'm only scared of my wives.
Steve knows everyone
Everyone knows everyone
Now they know Mzee.

A dirty stream trickles along the path.
No running water
In Kibera.
Only these streams.

Vanessa's eight year old sister recites SLUM GIRL
"I am a slum girl "
Proudly defiant a slum superstar.

Hope

We walk more.
I buy watermelons at the shops
For the children
They smile with delight
They follow Mzee
Throwing gnawed rinds
On the ground to join
Dried mud and garbage
Further on
I buy another watermelon
More kids
More smiles
Old toothless women
Eat watermelon
Toothless smiles
Gunmen eat watermelon too
Fast Steve, Maureen, Ubah, Jackmon, Young Steve, Larry, Laikyn, Vanessa and Mzee smiles too u
We all love watermelon.
It offers happiness
For Mzee
For the young and old
For Kibera
The slum of hope
For the world
We are us
We are family

Today Shannon and Charlotta walk Kibera
With Steve and other Kiberans
I cannot fly yet
u They are my eyes and ears
They saved my life
Steve knows that
2024
I will be in Kibera
I will walk the paths
I will buy more watermelon
Mzee is coming
Nakuja 2024
https://youtu.be/eBpYgpF1bqQ?si=D7jlEpaAsjah_sX4

Tuesday, September 26, 2023

ESSENCE

Essence

Last year I died three times.
Once on an airplane
Coming from Bangkok
Twice on an Operating table.

Passing from this life
To white oblivion
Not heaven
Not hell
Merely a white oblivion

Coming back
Not as a reincarnation
But
To this life
To this body
To the meaninglessness
Of the Now.

My body healed
Skin and bones
Looking like Willem Dafoe
My soul
Joyless
Still in limbo
Of a world Not of my making

Months pass
Healing
Winter to Spring
Healing
Alone
Spring to summer
Alive
No longer barely

Alive
Not looking like the before me
Not looking like Willem Dafoe either.
Halfway between the old me
And the new me

In June
Stronger and I went to the Rockaways
My friend FX
My lifeguard
A better than good swimmer.

The Atlantic shore break was dangerous
I stripped off my clothes
Naked to the elements
A long scar across my abdomen

FX looks at me
I at him.

I am not alone
I am with him
The wind
jThe earth
Water
Sky

The ocean calls

I race through the waves
Dive into the sea
Surface
The sun to the west

The glow of life
Surges
Through my veins
Duck under a wave
Surface
Alive
Filled with the memory
Of hundreds of beaches
Around the world

Higgins Beach Maine
My mother reaching down to pull me up
Nantasket Beach
A drowned man
Wollaston
Swimming around the sewer
The water warm
Moonlight Beach
California
LSD with seals
Mazatlan
Waikiki
Bingin Beach Bali
Nice, Cannes, Biarritz
Koh Phi Phi
I lose count

FX shouts
I shout back
The waves washing away the tears of joy

I am alive
And I no longer look like Willem Dafoe
Just another version of me.
Lazurus II

Monday, September 25, 2023

The Saddle - Kilimanjaro 2019 - Kili Initiative

Morning borke easrly and cold, but sunny. The porters are break camp, while we gather our belongings from the tnets to asssemble in kitchen tent for a breakfast of eggs, toast, and always Kigali, the Kenyan staple. Bad news.

Larry Fishbourne, my New York compatriot, and Jackmon, probably the most athletic of us, have to bail from from the next stage. Larry is dizzy as is Jackmon, who comes from Lake Victoria. Acclimating to the altitude is never 100% successful of these treks. Mawee is guiding them over the Saddle down the slope to Marangu. I'm feeling good, despite my stomach woes.

Snow topped Kilimanjaro. I could see my breath. It wouls be colder at Kibo Hut. I walked over to Larry.

Yom Kippur Humor

Yom Yippur 1972. Syrian and Egyptian tanks swarm over Israeli defenses on the Golan Heights and the Suez Canal. The Arab Forces initial successes are reversed by strategic blunders and Israeli air cover, however the losses to the IDF are catastrophic for the small nation. If a country the size of the USA had suffered the same casualties, the deaths would have mounted into the 100s of 1000s. Russian intervention was stopped by a stern warning from President Nixon.

DefCon 4 to DefCon 3.

Nuclear war.

Cooler heads prevailed over spreading the conflict to other parts of the world and Yom Kippur has resumed its position as a day of atonement for the Jewish People.

Not without humor.

A small town had two churches, Presbyterian and Methodist, and a Synagogue. All three had a serious problem with squirrels in their building. Each in its own fashion had a meeting to deal with the problem.

The Presbyterians decided that it was predestined that squirrels be in the church and that they would just have to live with them.

The Methodists decided they should deal with the squirrels lovingly in the style of Charles Wesley. They humanely trapped them and released them in a park at the edge of town. Within 3 days, they were all back in the church.

The Jews simply voted the squirrels in as members. Now they only see them at Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur.

Of course my father hates squirrels. Not so much hates them, but curses them during his drives to my mother's grave. The town cemetery is overrun with the tree rodents. They scramble into the paved roads before cars. A game. My father swerved away from one and crashed into a gravestone. Almost 100 feet from the road.

"Damn Squirrels."

And he's a Convert to Catholicism.

No Yom Kippur for him.

Sunday, September 24, 2023

KOSHER PIG - BET ON CRAZY by Peter Nolan Smith

In 2013 business in the Diamond District was spotty during the high holidays of Rosh Shananah and Yom Kippur. The Hassidim disappeared to the various shetls scattered around New York and tourists entered our diamond exchange to gawk at the diamonds and jewelry. At least twice a day out-of-towners asked in complete seriousness, "Are they real?"

"Everything is real," I answered the visitors before launching into a short spiel about the value of diamonds and gold. "Years ago we told the customers that diamonds were a good investment. It was sort of true then, but now diamonds appreciate in value better than houses plus they're easier to convert into cash at times of need."

The tourists nodded with understanding. Their homes had lost value three years in a row. My boss Richie Boy doesn't have the patience for these rubes, but occasionally they were buyers.

I sold an Italian diamond bracelet to a Vermont couple celebrating their 60th anniversary. They lived a short distance from Richie Boy's ski shack and he warmed up to them. Selling turned him on like a drag racer on nitro and the Thursday after Yom Kippur he delivered a 31-inch diamond necklace set with GIA-certified .40 ct. diamonds to a hedge fund investor.

The piece was a magnificent blaze of reflected light set in platinum. His customer coined millions every day. He could have shopped at Harry Winston, but Richie Boy and he went back to the 80s. Both were loyal to each other. Richie Boy returned to the store after closing and said, "That's it. I’ve had enough of Yom Kippur. I'm headed out to my surf shack."

“What about tomorrow?” his father asked from his desk. Manny would have remained open 24/7, if the exchange didn’t close at 6.

“Fridays are dead and nothing is deader than a Yom Kippur Friday.” Richie Boy needed his rest. He had rescued the firm through a series of near-miraculous sales. I had helped with a few deals out of the blue and neither of us were broke.

“What about trying to run this store like a business?” Manny was frustrated by his son’s laissez-faire attitude.

“There’s more to life than work.”

“Like what?” Manny lived for his work. His father had been the same. Somehow that relentless devotion to the grindstone had skipped a generation with Richie Boy.

“Surfing.” Richie Boy had a place on the beach out in Montauk. He could walk to Ditch Plains.

"What are you doing this weekend?" asked Marvin, the newly-married diamond dealer across the aisle.

"I'm having a kosher pig BBQ."

"How can pig be kosher?" The balding 50 year-old didn't follow the dictates of glatt kosher, but Marvin wasn't a bacon Jew.

“How?”

“Yes, how?” Marvin was a shrewd diamond buyer. He figured everything for a third of its value. He had been the president of the glee club of a summer camp in the Jewish Alps and was as gullible as a cheerleader on quaaludes.

Richie Boy wickedly went for the complete wind-up.

"A special rabbi consecrates the pig before killing it according to an ancient Hebrew tradition. It predates the Torah." Richie Boy is a great salesman and Marvin admired his chutzpah as well as his ability to thrive amongst the goyim.

"Really?" Marvin was swallowing the possibility of kosher bacon with a kvelling smile.

"100%. Come out to my BBQ and I'll introduce to the delight of kosher pork."

Marvin promised to show up at the beach BBQ. We laughed at his schmielism and Richie Boy prepared for his early departure from New York. His father continued to kvetch like an old yenta. At 83 the only choice were work or death. Manny and I fought every day. Our arguments flushed the blood through his body. I hoped that he lived to 103.

At 59 I had more in common with him than most of the people on the planet.

"You know the reason why pork is tref?"

"It caused people to have worms in the old days." Richie Boy checked the exchange. The religious don’t have a funny bone over pig’s feet. "And don't tell me that it's because Yahweh ordered the Jews give up pork as the ultimate sacrifice."

"Little tastes better than bacon." Richie Boy and I knew each other over 30 years. We had heard enough of our stories enough to give them numbers. I was still capable of catching him off-guard. "Pork is tref no matter what. Leviticus condemned pig for its cloven food, but there is such a thing as kosher pork chops. Not for the Hassidim, but it's cooked with pickle juice and kosher salt."

"Sounds as dry as an old shoe." Richie Boy possessed a better than average epicurean palate.

"Not something I'd eat, but maybe scientists can genetically modify a pig to have feet instead of hooves." I had eaten pigs' foot in Berlin. It was considered the city's signature dish. "Pigs with little toes."

"Stop. That's sacrilege." Manny hadn’t been to the temple in years, but once a Jew always a Jew.

"Sacrilege and heresy are my specialties." I set the alarm and I wished Richie boy a good weekend.

"You can come out on Saturday."

"Thanks, but I got to get ready for my trip." I was heading out to Thailand for a month. It would be the longest that I had spend with since 2008. "If there really was kosher pig I might change my mind."

"You never know."

"I know." Richie Boy and I had spent too much time together over the past years. It was time for a break.

Kosher pig or not.

KILIMANJARO 2019 - HOROMBO HUTS

Night falls fast on the Equatar and even faster at the 4000 meter plus altitude of Mawenzi Huts. I have been sick the entire trek. I should have listened to Tim's advice and not eatne any of the goat entrail stew at Kibo Slopes Lodge. I haven't slept soundly on the entire trip and the porters have set my tent away from the others, becausse of my frequent visists to the bushes to vomit. At least I can keep down my food during dinners.

Mawee and JR have led the climbers up a route to the cliffs of Mount Mawenzi. THe jagged peaks have rarely been climbed, as the fissile rocks present an unsurmountable danger. Tim and I have opted to rest in this break. Strangely I can get phone reception atop a hilllock and called Thailand to speak with Nu and Mem. Everyone in my family is good. I'm hoping to return to the states and then slip over to there, once Charlotta pays me what she owes me.

It's cold up here. Snow flurries on a stiff wind. I wonder how the climbed are doing in this cold. Only the New York contingent have experienced winter. The Nairobi gang complain about the cold. The only warmth comes from hot tea. There are no trees. There are no fires.. Only our parkas and sleeping bags protect us from the increasing cold.

The Kibo Huts under Kilimanjaro are only six miles away across the saddle between these two mountains. A ascent of 3000 feet, which will take five to six hours.

Breathe that's all I have to do.

That and stay warm.

It's only going to get colder.

Saturday, September 23, 2023

Thai Perfection or Lak-sa-na-tee-dee

The Standard English joke about the perfect girlfriend is that her father owned a pub, she’s 3′4″ with a flat head so you can put your beer on her.

Simple needs, but in Thailand more than likely your girlfriend’s father is distilling moonshine lao khao or rice whiskey, she’s 5-3, and there is no way any Thai will let you mess with their head even if it’s flat.

I’ve had several Thai girlfriends.

Vee was one-eyed and beautiful in sunglasses. My friends thought she was money-hungry. They were right, but at least she bought me a cake for my birthday.

Mem won the 2001 worst girlfriend award in voting from a UN of Western and Thai men. Even her brother thought she was wicked to the core.

Twice burned I came up with a list for the perfect Thai girlfriend.

So what qualities make for the perfect Thai girlfriend?

I googled ‘perfect thai girlfriend’ and the search engine came up with over 870,000 results.

The late Mangosauce’s contribution was his reverse alchemy factor where a Thai girlfriend can turn gold into Khorat dust. Funny, but more a warning shot over the bow than a helpful hint as to what pluses might answer a farang’s fondest desires.

Thailovelinks.com offered contact with the perfect Thai girlfriend.

The girl on the home page seemed right for me, but she was nowhere to be found within their promo pages, plus my attraction was only physical. Being near-sighted I don’t need a beauty queen. Pretty yes, but I don’t want to fight duels over the perfect Thai girlfriend with every other farang on Walking Street.

The next website was asiastreetmeat.com.

No one is looking for girlfriends on this XXX offering.

Only girlfiends who serve their sordid yearnings well.

I’ve had several Thai girlfriends. Nice everyone of them, until they weren't nice. I had my own list for the perfect Thai girlfriend.

No tattoos / Especially if it’s a heart with a name scratched out.

Minimal to zero English / Not long on the bar scene.

No cigarettes or drinking / nasty habits in a woman and especially English men cunts.

Dead Thai boyfriend / hopefully by a meteorite to the head so everyone would be scare shitless at the mention of his name.

No children / Mam and I have four. Pen Pen Fenway, Fluke, and Noi. Angie from Nu. I can deal with that number. Seven too. But I'm very happy with my two grandsons.

No internet skills / Dead give-away of a foreign boyfriend, who strangely shows up when you are leaving town. “Not worry, he only friend.”

No Gold necklaces / Another indication of sucker boyfriend, although we have to defer to Mangosauce’s theory of a Thai woman anti-Midas touch on how to turn 22K Gold into Khorat dust. elements.

Your first date should be a short-time from Soi 6 although no more is stronger than blinding passion than lust at first sight.

And penultimately of all no slash marks across the wrists / the warning sign of a true dangerous maniac. Also great sex.

Lastly she also has to be funny and loving.

Needless to say no such creature exists in Thailand or America or the rest of the world, because no one is perfect.

Charles de Talleyrand manipulated kings, emperors, and statesmen during the 18th Century. This eminence gris had been in love with the most beautiful and erudite woman of the Paris salons. The starlette ditched him for a captain in the Swiss Guards, who was supposedly gay. Being smart she needed a challenge. His marriage to the daughter of country gentry astounded his friends, until he confessed, “One must have loved a genius to appreciate the love of a fool.”

And I’m no different.

No matter what qualities I admire in a woman they will be never enough to satisfy my dreams, because as the the great philosopher MICK JAGGER said, “You can always get what you want, but if you try some time you might end up with what you need.”

Nowadays deviant Londoners would love to meet Mr. Jimmy, except the Chelsea Drugstore is a Mickey D. fast food chain instead of a nihilistic heroin connection featured in CLOCKWORK ORANGE.

Nothing is sacred anymore, except the profane.

Thankfully some wickedness exists, because sometimes you don’t need nothing if you’ve been to the Chelsea Hotel, where Sid Vicious the Sex Pistols bass player was found in bed with Nancy Spungen, his girlfriend. She had been stabbed dead. Room #100.

Sid and Nancy.

Now that’s perfect love.

Lak-sa-na-tee-dee.

Thai Tattoos Too

Pattaya must be the per capita capitol of farangs with tattoos. Shirtless westerners parade the streets to exhibit the beauty of their body art, despite the collateral damage to the colored flesh from the tropical sun. Most tattoos are eagles, dragons, and declarations of never-ending love to go-go girls festooned with vows of fidelity to previous girlfriends. Occasionally you come across tattoos of incredible stupidity.

Several years ago I spotted a twenty year-old with the name DAVID tattooed down his spine.

"Why David?" I asked him.

“So people know who they just saw.”

"You're David?" Conventioneers wear a simple name tag to say hello.

"The one and only." A name tag through his pierced nipple would have been a more effective form of introduction.

"If you say so." David is the second most common name in America. The same has to be true for Britain.

Later I mentioned the stupidity of this particular David to my friend, Jamie Parker. We were sitting at the Buffalo Bar. More than a few of the girls had tattoos and a trio of British lager louts bore years of blue ink on their forearms, necks, and faces.

"Can't you imagine Michelangelo's Statue of David with a tattoo?"

"Good if it wasn't on that little acorn of a penis." Jamie hated male nude statues and their mini-cocks. "You know that I don't have any tattoos."

"Me neither." The nuns at Our Lady of the Foothills warned their students that any skin art banned them from heaven. I had none, even though my faith was atheism. The sisters were excellent teachers.

"Last thing I needed as a kid was an identification scar or body marking." Jamie had been a criminal in his younger years. "In prison cons tattoo to their bodies out of boredom or rebellion. I was always thinking that one day I'd be on the outside and I intended to stay on the outside, but a couple of months ago I was taking a whitewater rafting trip at the Sabaii Massage."

"I know the place." Whitewater rafting was the local euphemism for a soapie with a naked girl or two.

"This one spinner had the PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE to the American flag tattooed on her back. Being with her made me feel a little patriotic."

"I can imagine the feeling." Neither of us had been back in the USA for years. "I have a friend who had MADE IN THE UK tattooed on his forehead."

"Stupid place for a tattoo."

"Even worse his mother told him he had been born in Poland."

"Dumb Polack."

"What about Thai tattoos?"

"I don't talk about that. I'm a guest of this country and those tattoos are magic." Jamie had a healthy fear of red-lom.

"Traditional Thai tattoos or 'sakyant' are supposed to protect the wearers from misfortune and evil spirits and anyone getting men tattooed are asked to obey the five following rules; honor your parents, be faithful to your wife, no drugs, don't eat any fruit from off the ground, and no oral sex with women."

"I'm good with honoring my parents, faithful to my wife, and fruit off the trees, unless you're hungry."

"I'm good with most of them too." The oral sex was impossible. "But my real problem with tattoos is finding one I could live with the rest of my life. 69, Born to be Wild, Mom, the name of my son or daughter might have fit the bill."

"But not the Pledge of Allegiance."

"Not a chance." I don't need to prove my allegiance to the USA. "I doubt that poor girl knows what she’s wearing."

"Probably true, but America salutes her patriotism."

We lifted our beer glasses to toast her.

"USA USA USA."

The Brits at the bar glared at us. Jamie glared right back. We weren't going to heaven, but we were in Pattaya and as anyone knows who has lived in the Last Babylon for more than two weeks it's paradise on earth.

Pattaya's 2nd World Tattoo Festival

Written May 23, 2008

My 5th Grade teacher, a nun, instructed her students that any souls arriving at the Pearly Gates with a tattoo on their deceased body would be dispatched immediately to Hell. Tattoos were a mortal sin for Catholics and despite having abandoned my Catholic faith I have retained the fear that a simple tattoo threatens my immortal soul.

Not so for the tattoo enthusiasts congregating in Pattaya this weekend.

It's tattoos away for the 2nd World Tattoo Arts Festival this weekend.

Tattooing is an ancient art dating back to Neolithic times as evinced by skin art on several Ice Age corpses, however the word tattoo comes from the Samoan syllables for striking twice. This Polynesian tradition spread around the world on the backs, forearms, and faces of whalers and naval sailors. The Thais have been tattooing their flesh to ward off evil spirits for centuries, however it is only recently that the art has achieved semi-mainstream attention.

My niece got one for Christmas. A butterfly on her ankle.

Those tattoo fans gathering in Pattaya will be a little more decorated than my niece and thanks to the over 200 tattoo parlors in Pattaya they will be able to add to their living museum at a price far more affordable than in the West, although any drunks seeking to brand their face with the name of the nearest bar girl will be surprised to be discover that most tattoo artists will refuse their business, since alcohol thins the blood, making for a less than desirable image of their host.

This festival is the brainchild of Joy Wong, daughter of Pattaya's first tattoo specialist, who is attempting to raise the ethical consciousness of both tattoo affecionados and artists.

She stresses three main rules.

Tattoo no one under twenty, use clean instruments, and never give a tattoo to a drunk or someone loaded on drugs, the last rule difficult considering there are over 6000 bars in Pattaya. 200 tattoo parlor, 6000 bars, 100,000 drunks.

Accidents are sure to happen, but this weekend is all good clean fun.

For a history of tattoos go to this URL

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tattoo

Thursday, September 21, 2023

DA AUTUMN LEAVES by Peter Nolan Smith

Written October 2010

Back in the 60s my family home on the South Shore bordered on a small woods and every October the trees beyond the old stone wall turned brilliant reds, yellows, and oranges. The glorious explosion of color lasted several weeks, then the colding wind ripped the weaker leaves from the branches and they fell by the millions into our back yard.

My brothers and sisters loved running through the rustling layers of decay, but come the weekend the fun ended with my father ordering my older brother and me to rake the leaves into piles. Once the lawn was visible my father lit our labor afire and the smoke of those gathered leaves filled the yard with the fragrance of another burnt autumn.

Of course the next morning the leaves were replaced by their cousins. Less than before, yet throughout the next week my brother and I reaped another harvest of leaves and my father lit another fire. This Sisyphean ritual was repeated until the trees were bare.

I hated raking leaves. The task seemed as senseless as mowing the lawn, which was a chore my father demanded from his sons and we performed his command without question. Young boys in the early 60s were prized for their devotion to obedience. Merit badges and gold stars paved the avenues of success. My older brother followed the path through university and law school.

In the 70s I rejected the lawn, the station wagon, the two-car garage, and raking the lawn.

The East Village became my home.

The tenements were wrapped by concrete sidewalks and the the wind disposed of the leaves from the ornamental pear trees on East 10th Street. I didn't touch a rake for most of my adult life and loved this freedom from the fetish of neatness tormenting the suburbs, although I missed the smell of a good autumn fire.

Recently my good friend AP spoke of an Easthampton client who ordered the landscapers to blow errant leaves from the estate's 20-acre lawn. Before the ground crew finished the job, the billionaire came out of his mansion and requested that the workers pick out the finest leaves for a pristine pile of leaves for his children to run through after school.

"That's the way of the rich." AP deals with such people all the time as a architect.

We laughed at their excess. That 1% knows how to spend the 95% of the wealth.

After hearing that story I went to shoot baskets at my local park on deKalb Avenue. No one was on the court, but several park workers were raking leaves. I thought about my father and the East Village and then the rich guy in Easthampton. No one could escape raking leaves and upon leaving the park I commented to one worker about this task and he said, "Yeah, we're bringing them to another park, so the kids can run through them. They love that."

Same as rich kids in Easthampton.

And me too.

It does make a pretty sound.

For the rich the poor and the in-between.

Beneath The Height Of Land

Beyond the windblown Height of Land
An equally windblown town
Off Route 17 running north to Quebec
Reached by rutted road
Neglected by county and state
The town has no name on a map The few score of inhabitants call it Dogtown

There are no dogs
Nor knowledge of dogs

The town is more a clearing with buildings
Worn weary by winters
Harsh and long
Under the Height of Land.

The houses and shops and church bear witness
To the cold, snow, ice, sleet, slush, and blizzards
There is no global warming here
There is no summer.

This is the true North
Beyond stretches the deeper North
With only two seasons
The season of preparing for wintah and Wintah.

The towns people, young and old, walk like the dead
They are not dead
They live
Sad, frightened, unattached to the modern world
No cable TV
No cell phones
No Internet.

They are where they are

Dogtown
Surrounded by swamps

A battered van creeps down the street
A young man behind the wheel
He parks before the church
He gets out of the car
A letter in his hand

A man rakes the church lawn
The young man lifts the letter
Written by a beloved grandmother

He reads the name.
His aunt.
He saw her once
Twenty years ago
At her brother's funeral
Outside Portland
On Falmouth Foresides
On Portland harbor

White blonde hair, translucent skin, bones visible,
Moving like an ancient reincarnation
Her finger touched his face
Fingers colder than ice.
Her silver blue eyes on Portland
Like it had once been hers.

No smell of the sea
In Dogtown
Surrounded by the vapor of swamps.

The young man says his aunt's name

Elyssas Commons

The man points to a house
Across the road
A big house
Desperate for paint
The lawn a jungle
A Benz rusting on its axles
Its last ride
A long time ago.

The old man returns to raking
The young man walks to the porch
Each step answered by a creak
The walls
The floors
Caked ashen dust
Unsullied by wind or rain or sleet
No one has been here in a long time.
A knock on the door.
Nothing
He calls her name.

Elyssas

Whispers of footsteps
The door opens
Her aunt smiles with yellowed teeth
Her see-through gown reveals magic
She has not aged a day
She
Maybe a child
Maybe a crone
Beckoning finger.

He steps inside
The house a mausoleum
Her bare feet
Pad on dust turned to powder.
The glossamer gown hides nothing
Skin white as Virgin vanilla ice cream
Haughty hips
Pancake breasts
Stiff cigartip nipples
She a wraith
Skin and bones
Driven by
Desire of the wanton

"Where's your husband?"

"Dead," his aunt whispered in the voice of a forgotten movie star. "Does it matter?"

"No."

She takes his hand
Lead him upstairs
There are no lights
More and more shadows
They are both alive
Also both ghosts.

Inside a bedroom
He hands her the letter
She puts it on a table
Next to a bed
Sheets smelling of dead flowers and her of the grave
Earthy.

His aunt parts her gown
His hand pressed against on
Wet
Her gash
Fevered
Unlike her skin

She lies back
Sighs
Legs apart
He
Enters
Her
She take him
Lost
Lost
Lost
Thrust into his aunt
His mother's sister.

Again
Again
Again


No words
Grunts and groans
Finish with a gasp

Again
Again
Again

Her bones creak with need


More
More
More


Small people bring food
Wine
Water
They wordlessly worship her
The young man only fucks her


More
More
More

He sleeps
She never does
His body surrendered to hers

Day
Night
Day Night
Fucking
Naked
Always
His skin
Raw
Tattered by her nails
There is no nos.
She a demon
He a willing victim
Lust savage godless lust

Elyssas
His mistress,

On the third midnight
He wakes to chanting
Then a scream
Firelight in the window
Red flames flickers through the cracked walls He crosses the room.

Outside
Elyssas
Naked
Dancing around a blaze
With the dwarves
Naked With her husband.
Naked
Not dead
Not alive
Like Elyssas.

There is no flight
No desire to run
He is one of them
Them
All of the same wicked blood.

His grandother's letter untouched on the floor.

Later
Elyssas lifts her head
Semen dripping from her lips.
A knife gleams in the candlelight
The blade traces runes on his skin
She wants him to cry
To feel his pain
To bury him under surrender
The blade cuts deep

He does not cry
He does not surrender
He is his
No longer of she


A right to her head
Elyssas topples from the bed
Knife on the floor
He grabs his clothes and the letter.
He does not run
Not from her.

From the house
Across the tortured garden
Past the fire
The dwarves
His uncle
To the pick-up

Naked

The F 150 starts
His foot revs V6
His eyes on the second floor
Elyssas at the window
With with her husband
Wraiths
His blood

The dwarves grab at tge door.
Drive
The wheels thump over small bodies
He'll have to wash the pick up later.

At Route 17
The young man opens the letter
One word
Shaky script
'Family'

Over his shoulder.
Only darkness
No one in the rearview mirror.
Only darkness.
His foot stamps on the gas.
Away from the Height of Land And Elyssas
And family
No one waits at his destination
New York
And that's a good thing
Sometimes.
Having no one is a good thing.

I'M GOOD IF YOU'RE GOOD by Peter Nolan Smith

Written March 25, 2014

Opening a jewelry store in the Plaza Hotel seemed like a good idea in the Spring of 2009. I was dead broke after my arrest in Thailand for copyright infringement and my wife Mam was pregnant with our son. The Plaza was one of New York's premier destinations. Wealth was in my cards.

Richie Boy launched the store in the Retail Collection in October. I was his store manager. His two partners were supposed to supply customers and merchandise and money. We saw little of three. Mario was stealing goods to pay for his sickly son's treatments and the Iranian had been soaked by a six-figure bar mitzvah. My check was late every week and one rainy Tuesday I went over to Chase to cash my wages. A smiling bank officer was at the door.

"Can I help you?" She was wearing a trim bank suit.

"I just need to cash a check." It was for $800.

"Do you bank here?"

"No." All my bank accounts were wiped out in April. The balances were zero.

"Would you care to open an account?"

"Why not?" Normal people had bank accounts and I wanted to live a normal life.

The bank officer led me to her office. Nancy was about half my age. She treated me with respect. I filled out the forms and she entered my social security number into the computer.

"Oh."

"Something wrong." Her 'oh' had an edge to it.

"You had an account here before."

"I did." I knew what she was talking about.

"A credit card debt of over $60,000."

"Yes." I was ready to run and my hand reached to snatch my check before the doors to her office slid shut and the police arrived to drag me to debtor prison.

"Did you go bankrupt?" A frown drifted across her lips.

"Something like that." I told the bank's debt collection service that I was going to prison in Thailand and asked for an extended line of credit. They said that they weren't bail bondsmen. The phone stopped ringing after that call.

"Well, because they wrote off your debt."

"They did?" $60,000 had gone poof.

"Yes." Nancy was smiling again. "You still want to open that account?"

"Am I good?"

"Yes." She was eager to score a new customer.

"Are you good?"

"Yes." Her bosses had greenlighted my banking with Chase.

"Then I guess I'll open an account." I signed the necessary paperwork and ten minutes later walked out of Chase a new man thanks to the bank's forward-thinking policy.

International Write-Off Day is coming for us all.

It's better than Burning and Looting Day by a long shot.

Wednesday, September 20, 2023

Welcome To Zimbabwe

WrittenJan 30, 2013

In 1979 the white Rhodesian minority lost its stranglehold on the landlocked African nation and the UNAC won the April elections. Power-sharing arrangements shifted in the coming years and Zimbabwe began a black nation on June 12, 1979. Since that time the country has been ruled by President Mugabe, who has driven the economy of the resource-rich land to ruin.

Today the country's finance minister announced to the press, "Last week when we paid civil servants there was $217 left in government coffers."

$217?

I have more in my bank, but tomorrow there might be nothing, so I understand Zimbabwe's pain, although I am ruled by the feckless foibles of Wall Street and not a demented dictator.

I don't know what is worse, but I am only one and Zimbabwe has twelve million people.

I don't even want to calculate how much $217 is when divided by that many.

Not much.

Welcome to International Write-Off Year.

GOP HYPOCRITES

Last week the Justice Department rescinded the plea bargain deal with Hunter Biden. his crime was lying about drug use while purchasing a 9mm. His girlfriend had thrown out the weapon supposedly fearing that he might harm himself. Someone traced it back to The President's son.

I am guilty of drug use, but only in the eyes of the police and various state and federal agencies pursuing the policies of a failed intervention policies. They are unwilling to admit losing the War on Drugs. Mostly because they support the trafficking of cocaine, heroin, fentanyl et al to repress the unelite classes.

The Justice Department was seeking for Hunter Biden to roll on his father's dealings while he eas vuce president. Hunter may have been a coke addict, but he's no snitch and the media is reporting that he could be sentenced to 12 years in prison.

Fat chance.

Far right Killers have walked without any penal time and are hailed as heroes for shooting protesters.

Do I think Hunter is guilty?

Everyone is guilty of something.

Even me.

But I was just lucky.

I'm no president's son.

Welcome Back to New York

Written Apr 21, 2008

My export business in Pattaya failed after the cyber-crime police raided my house. I was without funds for the three months prior to trial for copyright infringement and my finances soon mimicked Zimbabwe. I could have toughed it out, except the economic climate in Pattaya was also dire. The westerners in this town pride themselves on not lending a helping hand to farangs in need mostly because it's the one commodity Pattaya creates in surplus.

The only viable option was re-inventing my life in America and I bid farewell to my wife, daughter, and pregnant mistress. "I'll be back."

My flight from Bangkok to Taipei to Anchorage to JFK lasted the longest Sunday of my life. Gone were palm trees, elephants, mangoes, and the faces of the ones I love. Hello to Manhattan, my home of 27 years. My friends had promised a soft landing. I drank wine. They laughed at my stories. I went out at night. I thought this isn't too bad. At a gallery opening Vlad, the young Russian warned, "You shouldn't leave your bag unattended."

"Not to worry." I had placed it in the corner.

"This is New York. I can trust the people here. As far as my eyesight."

Baby-faced Vlad was not so sure and his mistrust was well-founded, for in the blink of an eye someone had dipped their hand into my bag to purloin my camera along with my address book.

I cursed myself for being a fool. An old fool, then remembered what my Irish grandmother said, "Whatever you lose wasn't yours to begin with."

Welcome to New York indeed.

Monday, September 18, 2023

We Are Coming For Your Children

P>A poem

We Are Coming For Your Children  A poem Revolution To save us all We are us We are the roads We are the cities The towns The villages The nowheres We are the World And beyond. We are a movement We do not vote We do not sign petitions We do not support capitalism Our dreams Life liberty and the pursuit of happiness For all For everywhere___ We reject 'Who wants to be Millionaire?" We reject SUVs, fast food, but not hot dogs___ We believe in cash We reject plastic credit. We believe in a global jubilee International Write Off Day__ The capitalists control the world Through our debt And our consumerism__ We own nothing of value Not gold Not Picassos Only expensive sneakers and clothing manufactured by slave labor. We are all slaves Until we free us from our chains. We are us. Our color The red of our blood. Our country this world Our future the stars___ Before we were all alone Before we had no friends Before we slept without dreams We are not woke We are Awake___ We have been to Occupy Wall Street Black Lives Matter Standing Rock Occupy City Hall And a thousands marches and protests around the world. We have stood For freedom We are not alone__ Together one plus one equals millions and then billions___ Put down your phones See instead of look Listen instead of heat Feel instead of touch Put down your phones. Deconsume. Live with all our senses___ This Movement The Revolution will be live___ We are coming for your children Someone has to save them__ WE ARE US__ r senses

This Movement
The Revolution
will
be
live.

We are coming for your children
someone has to save them.

WE ARE US

Friday, September 15, 2023

No White After Labor Day

Written Sep 9, 2020

Fashion has long dictated that no one should wear white after Labor Day.

The tradition began in the Gilded Age and many modernists of mode deem that the ban was instituted to separate the elite from the hoi polloi or lower classes, however the real reason was probably that at the end of summer people returned to the city and the smog of coal smoke, an enemy to white.

That be said, the author Tom Wolfe has worn white throughout the year. His first suit was to emulate southern gentlemen i.e. plantation slave owners, but the material was too heavy to wear during the summer, so the novelist waited till winter, completely freaking out the gentry class. According to Wikipedia Wolfe has said that the outfit disarms the people he observes, making him, in their eyes, "a man from Mars, the man who didn't know anything and was eager to know."

Not everyone agreed and Norman Mailer said, "There is something silly about a man who wears a white suit all the time, especially in New York."

Of course Norman Mailer was never known as a man of sartorial splendor and his bias was rejected by Coco Chanel, the czarina of style.

"Women think of all colors, except the absence of color. I have said that black has it all. White too. Their beauty is absolute. It is the perfect harmony."

She was right and few people sported white better than the 'droogs' of CLOCKWORK ORANGE.

No matter what the age.

Got Milk.

50 States of Hell

Hawaii is the happiest state in America. New York ranks as the unhappiest. It is my state and I wish that I could be with my children in Thailand. Holding my son and daughter is paradise for me. Maybe I can fly to Asia in two weeks.

One good sale would pay for the R/T ticket and I had two new good customers.

Several years ago I was speaking with an older woman in the diamond exchange. Everyone else had early closed for the Rosh Hashana. The nickname for the high holiday of repentance was 'rush-a-home-a' and people get very religious when it comes to getting out of work early.

Only our store and Marsha's were open.

My boss, Manny, was busying with paperwork. His son, Richie Boy, had left at 4 with his Brazilian wife and older brother. They were dining with Manny's ex-wife. Hilda had invited both of us to her table. Manny said the same thing as me.

"Thanks, but not thanks."

Neither of us wanted to schlep back and forth to the island.

Across the aisle Marsha was also in no hurry. She was meeting her good friend for dinner. Marsha had millions. Much more than Manny. Her wealth came from the hard work of her husband and herself. Marsha's wrist was marked by a tattoo. The work of the Nazis. Her late husband was a friend. We shared the same taste for good things. He could afford them. Not anymore.Paul passed away the previous year, leaving Marsha everything.

Marsha's children had begged for her to come to dinner. She wasn't going to the suburbs. She liked sleeping in her own bed.

Me too.

"Tomorrow I'll go to Long Island," Marsha spoke the two words as if the suburbs was purgatory. She had been brought up in Berlin. Her family had lived on Behrenstrasse. The good life. Even three years in a concentration camp had not destroyed her love for Europe. She knew my history of living in Paris and said, "It's not Ile St. Louis."

"Nothing in New York is Ile St. Louis." I had lived on Rue des Deux Ponts with a Vogue model during the 80s. She slept with many men. Never me. It was better that way. "I loved waking in the morning and walking to the cafe opposite Notre-Dame."

A cafe, croissant, and Calvados.

"This city is for animals. I'm sorry, but no one here has any class." Marsha adhered to the old ways and was appalled by the lack of dignity in America. "The people are good, but they are slaves to TV. No one reads anything. They speak about trash and the way they eat, feh."

Her tongue clucked with a disdainful hiss.

The city's restaurants were crowded with wealthy hedge fund bankers. They were the only ones with money.

"The reason that I don't get a laser operation is to avoid seeing the ugliness of this city." A 100 mph storm had devastated my neighborhood the previous evening. "After the tornado I looked at the sky. The end of the storm was beautiful. We have to enjoy these small moments. They make the ugliness forgettable."

Marsha shrugged with surrender.

"Three weeks ago I was in Switzerland. The mountains were everywhere." Her voice softened with the memory. She had been a widow for over a years I had offered to marry her on more than one occasion. Her laughter each time made us both happy.

Almost happy as Hawaii.

And that was a good state of mind.

Especially after Manny said that it was time to go home before 5.

It was most certainly 'Rush-a-home-a."

Tannah Shova.

Thursday, September 14, 2023

Pat Ivers Dream 2017

I dreamt

I was in a court house, some trial was going to happen, and you were there but had become a body builder with enormous arms. I was nervous about testifying so I called you over and let people look at your arms. It made me feel safer that they saw me with you. The end!

Pat Ivers Dream

Foto from the Balajo 1985 Paris

Wednesday, September 13, 2023

The Future of Now

In the Age of Species Reassignment
We seem to stand alone
Detached from the us
Embraced by the Me.ness of the Constant Now.


We breathe poisoned air
We eat poisoned food
Plastic covers the Earth
The oceans die
The stars disappear from view.


The world population in 2050
500 million I will be 98 Will you be one of us?


How do I know all this?
I know nothing.
But


I was born with the Caul
The placenta wrapped around my head
Giving the gift of vision
I see it all.
And I see
Nothing

Tuesday, September 12, 2023

Lost and Found

This afternoon I arrived at 387 in Clinton Hill and discovered my iPad was missing from my bag. I had at the Cafe Mogador in the East Village. Raoul and I shared a coucous merguez. I hadn't that Arab dish in ages. It was delicious as was the rest of our meal, but I was thinking about the good food, but that I once more had lost something. Vaguely recollecting putting it on the floor, I called the restaurant and the hostess said that they hadn't found the device, although I got the feeling she hadn't bothered to look.

Drat.

I searched the apartment thouroughly three more times, hoping for the iPad to magically appear.

Not a chance. After modeling clothing for WAIF magazine, I descended to Myrtle Avenue and crossed the street to my phone server.

"What now?" asked the manager with lifted eyes, since I had to replace two phones the past month. I explained my dilemma. Rashen explained that my iPad was unsured, however the replacement cost was $250 and said I had to think about it, because my funds were very low.

"You do that."

Walking back to 387 I cursed myself for being so absentminded about my material possessions, hearing my Irish Nana saying, "If you lose something, it wasn't yours to begin with."

The famed anarchist Proudhon said something equally dismissive.

"All possession is theft."

I've lost countless things throughout my life, although nothing as important as my water-logged wooden toy boat and one-eyed teddy bear in Maine. Hundreds of eye glasses, sets of keys, leather jackets and on a 2021 trip to see the Rolling Stones in Detroit a Russian fur hat and THE MC5's Live LP. Losing my iPad was just another thing, then I rerecalled the bag at my feet and once more phoned Mogador. I had left the St. Mark's cafe only an hour earlier. Back in the 1980s I had lived with young Candida at the Paris artist commume La Ruche. Across Impasse Dantzig was the city's Bureau des Objets Trouves et Perdues. I lost plenty of objects and reported the losses the next day at the office of objects lost and found. Once a month I would cross the street to ask about them. A functionaire checked the shelves lined with the wallets, jackets, and glasses. He returned and say, "Rien, Mssr."

I didn't bother to report my losing the love of Candida, although we still see each other in Paris.

Back in my fourth floor apartment I again called Mogador. A man answered and said he would take a look. Within a minute he said, "Yes, it's here."

"Thank you for looking." I thought retrieving tomorrow, but it was early in the evening and the East Village was only a few train stops away. "I'll come for it shortly."

Thirty minutes later myiPadwas back in my hands.

A miracle, but Lazurus II is used to miracles.

ps I lost and found the next day.

Monday, September 11, 2023

Osama Bin Laden arrested in Maine

Five years after 9/11 a man in Islamic attire appeared on the Maine Turnpike near South Portland. Numerous motorists called 911, because the man was carrying dynamite and bore a likeness to the infamous Osama Bin Laden. State Police swarmed to the scene. The bearded man was now brandishing a gun. The cops disarmed and arrested the wanted terrorist some fifty miles north of Kennebunk, the summer home of the Bush presidents.

Homeland Security officials sped to the jail with a portable waterboarding device and a CIA plane was dispatched for transporting the fugitive to a secret torture prison somewhere in a 3rd World country or Alabama. Unfortunately upon questioning the suspect tore off his Halloween mask to reveal he was simply a lawyer from Maine protesting higher local tax. The gun and dynamite also turned out to fake.

In 2000 the same lawyer, Thomas Connolly, released information about GW Bush's arrest for drinken driving. The GOp debunk this fact by claining it was done for politics. No one in the White House commented on today's incident, although GW Bush said at a speak before a picked audience that one day Osama Bin Laden will be caught.

Las Vegas has the odds of that happening during his last term as president as 250-1.

The lawyer was charged with criminal threatening with a non-deadly toy and released on bail. "I never expected to be arrested."

After long negotiations, the CIA plane departed from Portland International with an empty holding cell. Meanwhile OBL sits in plam beach at the Bush winter home, waiting for his chance to appear on SESAME STREET, which is his favorite TV show.

Big Bird will be waiting.

9/11 9 years minus 2 days

Written 9/11/2010

Last night I drank wine and smoked weed with my 18 year-old nephew. Odin and I left my apartment at midnight. I lifted my head to the sky. Two columns of light scorched the black-blue sky.

9/11 monument.

9 years later.

I still feel sadness.

Never fear.

You know where the lights lead.

Osama At Large (STILL)

Written Jul 4, 2010

Osama bin Laden has just released a new TV message to prove he is still alive. He said that the England Team performance at the World Cup was completely s**t. British intelligence have dismissed the claim, stating that the message could have been recorded anytime in the last 44 years.

An English friend sent this quip about his World Cup team, but the 9th anniversary of 9/11 is approaching this September and the US intelligence services and Pentagon have failed to capture or kill the Al Quada leader Osama Bin Laden, whom GW Bush blamed for the attacks on that dreadful day.

"The most important thing is for us to find Osama bin Laden. It is our number one priority and we will not rest until we find him." - George W. Bush, 9/13/2001The Pentagon failed to close the trap on Osama in the Tora Bora Mountains. Several secretive assassination attempts have achieved the same lack of success. The Maine State Police arrested a Somali man . He had a beard. He spoke Arabic. He worked at a 7/11. The Staties had no choice but to rendition the store clerk/father of 3 to a Syrian torture cell.

No risk is too small.

As for whereabouts of OBL this weekend.

"Wer wisst?"

Rumors have placed the world’s most wanted man in the tribal areas of Pakistan, Elton John’s penthouse as well as GW Bush’s Crawford, Texas ranch or the Breakers in Palm Beach. No one knows.

I actually met one of his brothers in London during the 80s. Bought us drinks at Annabelle’s.

Nice guy. He died in a plane crash. In the 1980s. Not 9/11.

Anyway I was surprised to overhear Osama Bin Ladin’s name at the Buffalo Bar a month ago.

Tuk was telling about an Arab trying to recruit girls to be celestial virgins for a training camp of religious devotees. Seems he was seeking to replicate the Muslim version of heaven on earth for his followers. Heaven A Go Go might have been a candidate, except the present clientele of Western go-go aficionados weren’t surrendering their stools to towel heads.

I interrupted Tuk’s telling the new girls to ignore the Arab’s offers.

“Osama Bin Laden?” I couldn’t believe my ears.

“He come three nights.” She showed me a photo of them together. “Bought me many lady drinks. Asked me to go to camp.”

“And why didn’t you?” It was Osama.

“He not tip. I think he Cheap Charlie.” Three other girls said the same thing.

“You know the whole world is looking for him.”

“He stay here. Have many farang in bar. Not one care about him. Only care about lady. Care about get drunk.” Tuk shrugged, because Thais are the most zenotrophic race on the planet this side of the frogs. “Police want I find him. Any Thai lady can. He not pay her. She find him with brother. Beat him with shoes. Me, I can find him one minute.”

“You know where he is.” The reward was a million dollars. That works out to one million beers, which would take me about 300 years to drink.

“Not anymore.” Tuk smiled knowingly. “But he come back. Where he find 77 virgins in Pattaya?”

Certainly not in the Marine Plaza where his cohorts hang out.

I called the American embassy with this information and was put on hold. The red-shirts had closed the embassy for the week.

The music during the wait was mostly western. Finally a recorded voice came on line and said, “Sorry, your call is important. Please leave a message. Someone will get back to you after the end of the NBA play-offs.”

I hung up and decided to mind my own business. My team was the Celtics. I had bet them to go all the way. I went up to the Arab soi of Sukhumvit. Maybe I’ll run into Osama. Take him to a bar. They know how to handle his type there. Especially if he doesn’t tip or is kee-nio.

By the way if Playboy can find his niece why can’t the CIA find him?

The answer; because he is CIA?

Huh?

The End of Knowledge

Donald Trump has lambasted the intelligence community and stated that daily security briefings have not been a priority for his White House.

"I don't have to be told everything, you know, I'm, like, a smart person. I don't have to be told the same thing in the same words every single day," Trump said in a Fox News interview. "I don' t need to be told ... the same thing every day, every morning; same words. 'Sir, nothing has changed. Let's go over it again.' I don’t need that."

I agree with the Donald.

The CIA lost all credibility by running torture camps to cover up their ineptitude on 9/11 and the NSA's covert surveillance of everyone is another assault on our freedom. The less said about the squares of the FBI and the criminals of the DEA the better.

Intelligence briefing.

Only if it's about torturing one of his competitors, otherwise Donald doesn't need yesterday's news.

"What for?" asked Donald, who once said, "I would love to read a book, but I don't have the time."

Most of America agrees with Him.

Reading anything more other than Twitter is a waste of time.

Too many words.

ps I still hold a grudge against the CIA rejecting my application in 1980.

Yet Another 9/11 Hoax

The circumstances surrounding 9/11 have been cloaked by theories of conspiracies and hoaxes. Many people believe that the US government brought down the Twin Towers with the help of the Israeli military or that the planes were drone jets and not commercial liners.

Everyone with a half a brain has questioned the discovery of hijacker Mohammad Atta's passport in the WTC wreckage or the lack of plane wreckage at the Pentagon. They still live with only half a brain and drink Bud Lite.

My favorite urban myth is that of a man surfing the debris on his desk to survive the collapse of the World Trade Tower.

None of these stories are true and neither is the above photo.

9/11 was a sad day for all of us.

And will be for the years to come.

The Paperboy No Cometh No More

Written Sep 13, 2011 I have read the New York Times for many years. Editors, critics, and reporters come and go, but the newspaper has held onto the best writers for the simple reason that they help circulation. Among that upper echelon is op-ed commentator Paul Krugman. The 2008 Nobel Prize winner has exhibited an uncanny insight into the international influence of wealth on politics and equality. The economist had long defended his liberalism with fierce attacks on the neo-conservatives of America and a recent blog about the lost decade following 9/11 has outraged a principal architect of the Iraq quagmire to the point of canceling his NY Times subscription. The article called THE YEARS OF SHAME attacked a host of Bush era heroes for polluting the memory of 9/11.

The Years of Shame.

Is it just me, or are the 9/11 commemorations oddly subdued?

Actually, I don't think it's me, and it's not really that odd.

What happened after 9/11 — and I think even people on the right know this, whether they admit it or not — was deeply shameful. The atrocity should have been a unifying event, but instead it became a wedge issue. Fake heroes like Bernie Kerik, Rudy Giuliani, and, yes, George W. Bush raced to cash in on the horror. And then the attack was used to justify an unrelated war the neocons wanted to fight, for all the wrong reasons.

A lot of other people behaved badly. How many of our professional pundits — people who should have understood very well what was happening — took the easy way out, turning a blind eye to the corruption and lending their support to the hijacking of the atrocity?

The memory of 9/11 has been irrevocably poisoned; it has become an occasion for shame. And in its heart, the nation knows it.

Donald Rumsfeld found fault in the viciousness of Krugman's blog and announced his wrath to the yawns of many.

I’m not going to allow comments on this post, for obvious reasons.
Donald Rumsfeld
@RumsfeldOffice
After reading Krugman's repugnant piece on 9/11, I cancelled my subscription to the New York Times this AM.

The current cost of a 3-month subscription is $70.

The former Defense Secretary must be feeling the pinch of the eight years of voodoo economics and seized on this moment to liberate his wallet from the cost of reading 'all the news that is fit to print' so that he can buy new underwear. ps bravo Paul Krugman

Friday, September 8, 2023

ONLY A GAME by Peter Nolan Smith

In July of 1986 Argentina beat England in the quarterfinal of the World Cup on the 'Hand of God' goal by Diego Maradona. The referees ignored England's protests over the obvious error in judgment and his team went on to beat West Germany 4-3 in the final.

Few people in the USA were aware of this infamous play.

Soccer was a sport for foreigners.

America's national pastime was baseball and that June the two best teams in the majors were the New York Mets and my beloved Boston Red Sox. The Damn Yankees boasted with a veteran lineup of Tommy John, Joe Niekro, Don Mattingly, Willie Randolph, Ken Griffey, and Rickey Henderson struggled to catch the surging Bosox, while sell-out crowds flocked to Shea Stadium to cheer on the Mets of Queens.

Earlier in the month a madman attacked passengers on the Staten Island Ferry. NYPD arrested him without a shot. The murderer was incarcerated at Bellevue Hospital, where a psychiatrist friend medicated the Zorro with various antipsychotics.

"What's he like?" I asked at the entrance of the Milk Bar, where I was the doorman.

"Calm, but who wouldn't be after all the drugs I'm giving him. They'd kill you or me, but a smaller dose only impairs your ability to operate heavy machinery."

I gave the concoction a try.

Scottie the nightclub's owner sent me home at midnight in a cab. I barely made it to dawn alive.

Discos continued to dominate the dance scene, but none of them recaptured the thrill of Studio 54 better than The Milk Bar, which dominated the night from 12am to 4am.

The triangular triplex’s decor had been lit by the legendary lighting genius Arthur Weinstein and decorated by his wife Colleen to replicate the film CLOCKWORK ORANGE's futuristic bar frequented by Alex and his sociopathic droogs. The plastic furnishings stylishly replicated a throwback to the 60s with the white plexiglass walls backlit by color-gel lamps.

Sometimes red, other times pink.

Never yellow.

“Yellow makes everyone look like they have the plague.”

Griffbag the DJ played an eclectic musical melange of Art of Noise, Michael Jackson, James Brown, the Cure, Run D.M.C./Aerosmith, Berlin, Bananarama, Pet Shop Boys, Run DMC mixed with 50s R&B, 60s garage, 70s punk and disco, and 80s new wave, rap, and pop.

Paul McCartney, John “Cougar” Melloncamp or Lionel Richie were banned from the turntables.

Dancing was forbidden by the cabaret laws of the State, but the West Village PD ignored toe-tapping and soul-grinding in our basement lounge. They liked Arthur. He spoke their language.

Most nightclubs were hell for anyone living near them, except the Milk Bar treated its neighbors well.

All three floors of the club had been soundproofed by experts. Rejects were dispersed before they congealed into an unruly crowd. Customers upon exiting the club were politely asked to be quiet. Cops got in free as long as they were off-duty. Neighbors were comped two free drinks a night and we were even let in some of the bridge and tunnel crowd.

Griffbag liked girls with big hair.

Everyone had a good time and everyone consisted of models, ballerinas, artists, rappers, film and TV crews, pro athletes, doctors and nurses from St. Vincent, staff from near-by restaurants, and neighbor people.

The dress code was the color black.

The blacker the better, but the color had nothing to do with the bar's popularity.

The Milk Bar had a reputation for luck.

Couples fell in love.

Drinkers got drunk.

People had fun.

Our door policy was simple.

“I don’t wanna see any suits or ties,” Scottie the owner told me at the door. “No Wall Street at all.”

“Not a problem.” I did as I was told, although a $100 cuffed into my palm allowed in the occasional exception.

On the weekend I collected a cover at the door and only a little of the take stuck in my pocket. Arthur and Scottie trusted my greed. We three went back to the Jefferson Theater and that mythic after-hour club had been all about coining cash.

My partner at the door was a giant Haitian bouncer.

Every night Big Joel and I gazed at the Empire State Building. The tower lights were extinguished at 12. Neither of us caught the turn-off. We were too busy taking care of business.

Our max capacity of 250 was exceeded every evening, but we rarely topped 300, because the fire marshals enforced that life-or-death restriction without exception and the manager insisted on obeying their unspoken edict.

Kilmer was their friend and the FD liked the blonde from Tampa.

With the neighbors, police, and fire department on our side The Milk Bar had a strong run throughout the summer, but we weren’t loved by everyone.

O’Sheas farther up 7th Avenue had been serving drinks to the artists and locals since the 1950s. Museum-class paintings hung on the wall. Famous writers had carved their names on the wooden bar. Faithful regulars were granted reserved stools, but the new crowd of Wall Street bankers and lawyers had invaded the legendary tavern like a flock of crows picking over the bones of a battlefield. These money hounds unloosed their ties after work shouted to each other about million-dollar deals.

As ordered I refused fratboy tycoons entry into the Milk Bar.

They loved O'Sheas.

An array of top-of-the-line Sony TVs hung over the long bar and the large screens featured sports and more sports. The good-looking bartenders were ex-college jocks. The attractive night waitresses worked days as aspiring models and actresses.

It was a formula for printing money, but The Milk Bar had been hurting the till and O'Sheas owner Old Jim was saying things about us. None of it was good and only a few of his stories were true.

“Fuck em,” Arthur said to Scottie one July evening before opening for the night. “They’ll be here long after we’re gone.”

“I don’t like bad blood.” Scottie was Arthur’s best friend. He usually followed the older New Yorker’s lead.

“So don’t drink it.”

“I’m going to talk to them.”

“About what?” Arthur was an expert at letting people stew in their own sauce. “Baseball?”

“No, about live and let live.”

“Suit yourself, but don’t tell me later that I told you so.”

Two nights later Scottie and I walked over O’Sheas. A drizzle in the 70s chilled the early summer night. The bar was crowded with Yankee fans.

“Are you sure this is a good idea?” I never drank at O'Sheas. My team was the Red Sox.

"I hate people badmouthing us.

"I wouldn't expect anything less from this crowd.

"Do me a favor and keep your mouth shut." Scottie liked peace and quiet.

"I'll try."

We entered the bar and sat at the bar.

Robert Palmer’s ADDICTED TO LOVE boomed on the sound system. The bar's softball team was celebrating another league victory in the dining room. Every TV was set to the Yankees playing the Os. Not a single TV showed the Mets. We ordered cheeseburgers. NEW YORK magazine had called the best in the neighborhood. I ate half of mine.

“What do you think?” Scottie signaled the blonde bartender for the bill.

“The cheese was barely melted.” I favored McBell’s on 6th Avenue or the Corner Bistro. “And the meat tasted of nothing.”

“The reviewer must have an open tab here.” Scottie paid with a twenty and told the square-jawed bartender in the Hawaiian shirt to keep the change.

“Is Old Jim around?” That was the name of the owner.

Old Jim?" the young man asked with an aggressive tone. "Who's asking?"

“Tell him the owner of the Milk Bar.” Scottie smiled with disarming charm. “Just wanted to say hello.”

“Sure.” His sneer revealed long hours of acting lessons, although the depth of his expression suggested his teacher might be a mime.

The bartender motioned to a slim blonde waitress and whispered in her ear, then tended to the two-deep crowd of drinkers.

“Here he comes.”

A waitress led a beer-gutted man in his late-30s to the bar.

"Old Jim doesn't look that old?" I was 34.

"Older than us." Scottie was four years younger than me.

"Forever young." I finished my beer.

Old Jim introduced himself with an overly forceful handshake.

“What can I do for you boys?” The mustached owner drawled the word ‘boys’ with a derogatory insinuation, denoting Old Jim traced his roots way back beyond Peckerwood City.

“We wanted to come over and let you know that anyone working here gets in for free.” Scottie wasn’t offering them free drinks. O’Sheas had a huge staff.

“That’s mighty white of you, but my people don’t frequent pick-up joints and drug dens.” Old Jim was several inches taller than me and stared down into my eyes. “Fag bars either.”

“Really?” At 5-11 I weighed 185. I played streetball five times a week in Tompkins Square Park. Three hours a day.

Old Jim had a soft gut.

“Fags aren’t allowed in here either.”

"This is the wrong neighborhood to say ‘fag’." I had lost more than a few friends to AIDS.

Two of the softball players took the owner's back. They weren’t twins other than in size and weight. 6-2 and 195. I figured them for Diversion 2 football benchwarmers and slid off my stool.

“Slow down, Rudie.” Scottie hated my temper and turned to Old Jim. “I’m sorry if we got off to a bad start.”

“Don’t be sorry about anything. I know your history. Two of your bars were raided by the police."

"That's right."

Internal Affairs had busted the doors of the Jefferson and the FBI had closed the Intercontinental as part of an investigation into police corruption.

“But I have nothing to hide.” Scottie stood a solid 5-7. His nose had been broken as a kid. Boxing was his sport, not baseball.

“Midgets rarely do.” Old Jim confirmed that bridging this gap was a lost cause.

“Midget?” As a native New Yorker Scottie had to say something to show that no one threw his father’s son out of a bar. “Good luck with your softball team. They are good-looking boys.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?” Old Jim’s face tinted red.

“Nothing.” Scottie pointed to the numerous softball trophies on the wall. “Looks like you’ve been lucky over the years.”

“Luck has nothing to do with it.”

“If you say so.” My boss turned to walk out of the bar.

I had his back.

“You think your lowlife bar can beat us?” Old Jim twisted the waxed tip of his mustache. He was no Rollie Fingers.

Scottie looked over his shoulder with a 'fuck you' smile.

“Only one way to find out. There’s a park next to the bar."

The field had real grass. The base paths were at least 80% dirt. The right-field fence was at most 150 feet from the plate. Deep left was no more than 200. It was a hitter's paradise.

“Jimmie Walker Park is our home field.” Old Jim hefted his chest like a rooster ready to fart dust. “So you dopefiends want to play a baseball game?”

"It's closer to our bar. Tell you what. We'll flip for last at bats.” Scottie took out a quarter. “Call it.”

“Heads.” Old Jim leaned forward to watch the result. His nose was red from drink. I hoped that the old sot was the pitcher.

“Tails.” Scottie showed the coin and flicked a quarter in the air

The quarter fell on the bar.

Heads.

Jim reached for the coin. Scottie snatched it back with the speed of a Sugar Ray Leonard jab.

“I'm a gentleman. You get to set the date.”

“Teams are staff and customers only.” Old Jim had his rules. “And no ringers.”

“Whatever you say.” Scottie handed Old Jim an invite for an Elle Modeling party. “Call me at that number. We’ll be ready whenever you are.”

Scottie and I walked out of O’Shea’s. I didn't say a word until we were down the block.

“You know that they’re the best team in the Village and haven't lost in four years?”

“And we’re the best bar.”

“But can we field a squad of nine?”

"Can we?"

"I think so. Here's the line-up

Scottie named players by position; Arthur had pitched for St. John’s. Nick the Dick was at 1st. I couldn’t stand the low-level coke dealer, but at 6-9 his wingspan could snag any errant throws and line drives. Scottie could cover 2nd. Ray Wood from Park Avenue was a sure shot for short and the buck-toothed DJ, Griffbag, was an eager beaver on 3rd, while Georg Rage had the arm to chuck home from centerfield. Tommie White Trash, our barback, was quick on his feet for left and Doctor Bob wouldn’t hurt us in right, plus he possessed a wondrous stash of magic from the hospital.

“And what about me?”

“You're catcher, but nine men on a field were nine men on a field and not a team.”

“Art can be the manager.”

“Isn't he a little anarchistic for that role.”

Arthur believed in every man for himself as long as we worked together.

“You want to do it, because I certainly don’t.” Scottie was a firm follower of Arthur’s modus operandi.

“No.” I was no leader and I wasn’t much of a follower either.

“So we have a make-up team of losers versus the best team in the Village.”

We stood on the sidewalk across from the Milk Bar. The traffic on 7th Avenue sped down 7th Avenue murderously fast. The cars with Jersey plates were bound for the Holland Tunnel.

“The squares against us will be a classic.” Scottie liked long shots. They paid better odds. “Plus anyone is beatable on a given night and we have a secret weapon.”

“We do?”

“Big Joel.” Scottie pointed to my 6-8 partner at the door of the Milk Bar. The Haitian giant sat on my Yamaha 650cc XS. His arm was draped around the mother of his baby. Darlene was the love of his life. All the other girls had merely been practice.

“Big Joel is from Haiti. Just cause Rawlins wraps their baseballs there, doesn’t make him a ballplayer. You ever see him throw a ball?”

“No.”

“I have. He has a vodou zombie arm. One morning after work we sat in the park smoking a joint. An abandoned softball lay in the dirt. I underhanded it to Big Joel. He fumbled the toss and then tried to chuck it back to me. His throw barely reached 30 feet."

“Don’t worry, I’m going to teach him how to swing a bat.” Scottie crossed the street through the rush of traffic. Jaywalking was a very New Yorker thing to do and so was playing softball.

I waited on the sidewalk for the ‘white man walking’ signal. I joined them thirty seconds later. Scottie spoke with Big Joel. A broad smile beamed from his face.

“Man, we gonna play baseball.” He was as happy as a kid getting his first glove. “Scottie gonna make me Dee-H.”

“Do you know what DH is?” asked Darlene. Her family had emigrated from Port Au Prince two generations before Big Joel.

“Dee-Ate.”

“Stupid. DH is for designated hitter." Darlene was tough on her man.

"Et?”

They argued at the front door in stiletto jabs of patois.

At the end of the night Kilmer announced that O’Sheas had called to schedule a softball game for a week from tonight.

Kalline, Tommie White Trash’s girlfriend, poured Arthur a vodka screwdriver. Her barmate, Rebecca cut up limes, lemons, and oranges with a sharp knife. They both dressed like runaways from a biker gang; tight leather pants and Daisy Mae white cotton shirts tied above their midriff.

This look earned them big tips.

"I heard you're playing a softball game." Kalline didn't give Arthur his drink.

"Yes. Against O'Sheas."

"I told you not to go there." Arthur glared at Scottie.

"I was just trying to be friendly," the part-owner of the bar recounted the confrontation at O’Shea’s. The bar staff muttered swears upon hearing how Old Jim had insulted the Milk Bar.

"The cocksucker said all that?" Arthur put down off his glass. The right-handed curve-baller didn’t care what Old Jim said about him. The scandal behind the Intercontinental had been published in the New York Times.

"Every word." I was no snitch, but Arthur had to know the opposition.

“We are who we are and I am who I am.” Arthur admitted to us. “But you ain’t me, so this beer-belly Buddha has a lot of balls to say anything. We’re gonna kick their ass one way or the other.”

“What’s the team?” Kalline demanded, suspecting the worst.

I ran down the roster.

Everyone groaned with the mention of Nick the Dick.

“I know, I know, but he can cover the base like no one else.”

“And what about us?” Kalline came from a trailer park in the Everglades, where girls grew ‘gator tough’. She picked up the largest lemon on the bar.

"This is a man on man game,” said Griffbag.

“Really? Says who?” The skinny blonde wound up from the stretch.

“Shit.” I ducked and the lemon whizzed over where my head had been to smack into the wall. The light went out behind the plastic panel. Kalline had an arm.

“My father didn’t name me after Al Kalline for nothing.” She picked up another lemon.

“Girls get to play.” I raised my hands in surrender. The best player in my Maine hometown had been a girl. Darlene had been banned from playing Little League. My father had fought for her right to wear a uniform, but Maine in the late 1950s was not ready for a girl on the bases. “Sorry for being so macho.”

“Macho is first nature for most men, which is why I love Tommie. He’s a pussy cat.”

Her reformed car thief sulked in the corner of the club. Nobody was lazier when there was nothing to do, but girls came to the bar to stare at the half-blood Sioux like he was Paul Newman playing a sullen Cochise.

“Everyone gets to play,” Arthur declared putting on his leather jacket. The AC in the Milk Bar chilled the basement to arctic temperatures, which our clientele loved on a hot summer’s night.

“Even me.” Big Joel clomped down the stairs and lowered his head through the door. Darlene was right behind him. Her stomach was larger than the last time I saw her. She was pregnant again.

“Even you, big man.” Arthur was on the same mind as Scottie. “You’re going to be our secret weapon.”

“I’m not hitting no one with a machete.” He shook his head. Like Scottie and Arthur he was a man of peace. I was the troublemaker.

“You’re his special project.” Scottie pointed to me and said to Joel, “Let’s see your stance.”

Big Joel planted his size 15 feet on the floor and swung his fists through the air. The whoosh of their passage would be scarier with a bat in his hands.

“I am going to kill the ball.”

The girls cheered his threat and Arthur scheduled a practice for tomorrow.

“Nothing early. Six ‘O’Clock. I expect everyone there.”

He gathered us into a huddle. Scottie was embarrassed by the intimacy, but put his arms around me and Sunny.

Kalline led us in cheer.

“Milk Bar 1-2-3 Kick them in the knee.” She thrust an Olive Oyl thin leg in the air and her heel thumped into Big Joel’s head.

He fell to the floor in a half-daze.

Everyone laughed, as he rose to his feet like Michael Spinks rising from the canvas after Mike Tyson KOed him in the 1st round.

It was going to be that kind of a game, because that was the kind of game at which we could beat O’Sheas.

Later that night Big Joel and I stared at the Empire State Building. The tower was shrouded by fog. The lights glowed through the mist. It was slow for a Saturday night, but the Milk Bar was always slow before midnight.

“You think I can hit the ball?” Big Joel blew in his hands. 70s was winter weather in Haiti.

“It’s easy. The pitcher throws it under-handed. The ball can’t be traveling more than 50 miles per hour.”

The famed pitcher Tris Speaker had said that it was useless trying to explain hitting to anyone and I was far from a good batter.

I looked back at the Empire State Building. The lights were out.

Over the next week the neighborhood heard about our grudge match with O’Sheas and wished us luck in the upcoming game. They liked drinking at O”Sheas, but few of them cared for Old Jim. He was a piece of work.

My live-in guest Elena showed up at 2. The twenty-year old from Madrid had danced three shifts at Billy’s A Go-Go. Crumpled $1 bills filled her pocketbook.

The raven-haired seductress danced a solo flamenco for the latecomers at the bar.

Several men offered her money.

The Spanish girl rejected them for me.

We drove home on my motorcycle to East 10th Street.

In bed we pretended to be boyfriend and girlfriend. Each of us was too wicked to believe the lie past the dawn.

The next day I had a hard time waking up. My bedroom with drawn curtains was as dark as midnight. Elena wasn’t through with me either. It was almost 5pm by the time I crawled out of bed.

“Where are you going?” Elena lay with a sheet wrapped around her ballerina body. The dusk light bounced off the living room floor and she shielded her sleepy eyes with a lazy hand.

“To practice and then come back here.” I threw some water in my face and grabbed my baseball glove from the closet. The leather was stiff from disuse.

“Beesball?” Elena laughed aloud. “You never play beesball.”

“I will tonight.” I pounded my fist into the glove and swung my right arm over my head. Several shoulder muscles agreed with Elena and promised pain, if I pushed them too hard. I kissed the dancer on the lips. Hers were bruised from last night. Mine were just as sore.

“I’ll see you later.”

“If I am not dance.” She taught an afternoon class next door in the art school. Normally I watched her from my rear window. Nights she stripped at a club on 6th Avenue. Elena traced a finger down the side of my face. “I want to see you look at me.”

Shivers flashed down the marrow of my spine. Elena was under my skin and the slender girl was trouble, because being faithful to one man wasn’t in her gypsy blood.

"I'll see you later."

I left the apartment.

Sunday's cold drizzle slicked the streets and drops of rain dotted the sidewalks. I arrived at James Walker Park expecting to be the only one there, but was surprised to find the whole crew and I crouched behind home plate.

Arthur pitched batting practice. I hit five balls off the fences. Georg snagged my grounders with ease and Nick the Dick snatched errant throws with his condor wingspan. Scottie coached Big Joel with the bat. Kalline hit the ball where they ain’t on the field. Doctor Bob struggled with high flyballs. Kilmer and Ray Wood made out in the stands. Sunny had a bet that they were in love. She was so right that no one took her odds at 5-1.

At 7:30 Arthur called it quits. The doors of the Milk Bar opened at 8. I was glad to be off on Sundays and headed back to my apartment and bought Chinese take-out. I sat on the window sill. Elena swirled on the floor in school across the alley. She was a better show than TV.

For the next few evenings the Milk Bar team practiced on the ball field between other games. Arthur bargained for the time with free drinks to the teams scheduled to play. 30 minutes wasn’t much, but it was more productive than drinking at the bar.

On Thursday night the pseudo-twin bartenders from O’Sheas scouted us. Both ridiculed at Scottie’s batting lessons with Big Joel.

When I pointed them out to Arthur and Big Joel walked over to the pair. His vodou scowl dissolved their mirth and they fled the park in a hurry.

“Milk Bar, Milk Bar,” the girls shouted from the dug-out.

Our game was in five days.

The next night Georg and I rode uptown on my motorcycle to catch an O’Sheas away play an Upper West Side bar in Central Park. Both teams wore on spotless uniforms and cleats.

Their curvy cheerleaders belonged in DEBBI DOES DALLAS. Old Jim walked over to us with three players behind him. They had bats on their shoulders.

I stood my ground.

“You’re the little runt’s sidekick. Robin, Batman’s fag.”

That line earned a good laugh from his players. I grabbed a baseball bat to smack his head into the outfield. It was not the way to start off a game and I counted to 10 instead.

“What’s wrong? Can’t speak.” His hand touched his mustache. Old Jim actually thought that the pussyduster looked good on him.

“Nothing wrong,” I spoke soft and slow, eyeing the tallest of his team. A boot to his knee would put him on the permanent disabled list.

“I did a little research on your boss. Not the runt, but the real one. I read that he wore the wire against the police. A lot of them lost their jobs. In my book we can him a snitch.”

After the arrest of Jimmy Featherstone, a gang of twisted cops assumed control over the Westie's territory. The uniformed arm-breakers had been involved in protection, loansharking, and robbery. Every bar and nightclub on the West Side had donated to their weekly fund. They were not good people. Arthur did what he had to do. I didn’t have to make any excuses for him to a man with a silly mustache.

“You weren’t there.”

“And what’s that supposed to mean?”

“That you don’t know shit.”

A loud thonk broke the tension and Old Jim turned his head to the field. The ball soared in the air and disappeared into the trees. O’Sheas was up 3-0.

“I know one thing, Robin. That boy played in the Cape Cod league. He can hit the hell out of the ball. What position are you playing?”

“Catcher.”

“Then Robin will have a good view of your defeat.” Old Jim cocked his head and returned to the dugout. One of his players pointed his finger at me. It meant 'after the game'.

“Tough team.” Georg knew his baseball.

“You think we have a chance?”

Another thonk of the bat and the score was 4-0.

“On a scale from 1 to 100 with 100 being the best.” Georg could call pitches without seeing the catcher’s signals. “I have to give us a 5.”

“Don’t tell Arthur or Scottie or any of the girls about this.”

They deserved to live in hope. Despair would come soon after the first pitch on Sunday. It was only three days away.

On Friday night Arthur’s wife surprised us with tee-shirts and hats. They had numbers on the back. I grabbed # 4 for Bobby Orr. I was a Boston fan in all sports.

Saturday night the bar was packed with anyone who didn’t have a place in the Hamptons. The girls poured double-shots. Elena and her fellow dancers from Billy’s arrived in cheerleader outfits. Victory was a dream for tonight, but the agony of defeat loomed large for tomorrow.

The next afternoon Elena shook me awake. My head felt like William Tell had missed the apple and his arrow was stuck in my forehead.

“What time is it?”

“5:30.” Elena was in her high school cheerleader outfit. Without make-up she passed for jailbait. “You have to get up.”

“We’re not going to play in that.” I looked out the living room window.

Thunder boomed long the Hudson River and rain slobbered down from a coal black sky.

“It will stop raining soon.” Elena threw me the Milk Bar shirt and my glove.

“How do you know?” I had fought too many fights. Flexing my knuckles predicted the weather. No cracking indicated that Elena might be right.

“Because I feel it in my blood. Get dressed.”

Arguing with a gypsy about nature was a waste of breath and I climbed out of bed. Elena practiced her cheerleader routine to ROCK ME AMADEUS. I got the message and showered in three minutes. We were out the door in ten.

The rain had diminished to a drizzle by the time we reached the West Village and the clouds cleared for the evening sun, as we arrived at the park on Leroy Street.

The clock tower of a nearby church rung six times.

It was game time.

O’Sheas had commandeered the home-field dugout. Their team resembled a casting call for a soap commercial. A self-absorbed narcissism beamed from perfect teeth. Their cheering squad consisted of Stepford Wives versions of the boys on the field with lustrous Farrah Fawcett hair. The stands behind their dugout was packed with regulars, who waved signs saying GO O’SHEAS.

The Milk Bar team sat on the right-field bench.

Sunny and Kalline had shredded their tee-shirts. They were bra-less underneath. Arthur's wife and very young daughter sat in the stands. Dahlia begged her mother to let her do the same to her shirt. Colleen said no.

Arthur had torn the sleeves from his tee-shirt. Ray-Bans hung off his nose. Someone had to wear the pants in the family.

Elena kissed me and joined the girls from Billy’s a Go-Go to lead a cheer laced with curses.

Coolers of beer lined the wall. Kilmer handed out ice-cold Heinekens to our supporters. Ray Wood made sure none of them went to the O’Sheas backers. Georg was the only player with cleats. Griffbag had a boombox set up with speakers and popped in ROCKAWAY BEACH by the Ramones.

“Oh, oh, here comes trouble.” Griffbag looked over my shoulder

Big Joel strode up to the end of the bench. A thick-ended bat rested over his shoulder. He wore a straw porkpie hat, dark glasses, and a blue denim shirt over the Milk Bar tee-shirt.

You look like a Ton Ton Macoute."

The name belonged to the death squad of Papa Doc.

“I am the secret weapon.”

He glowered at the nearest O’Sheas player. The Calvin Klein model wannabe dropped his eyes to the ground.

Big Joel laughed from his chest.

“Vodou not voodoo. I’m Haitian, remember.”

I checked his outfit for dolls with pins. His girlfriend lifted her bag. There was no telling what Darlene was carrying in it.

“Heads up, boys and girls, it’s game time.” Arthur walked onto the field and the referee from the Parks Department called for the captains. Old Bill met him at home plate. His mustache drooped in the humidity.

“Visitors get the call.”

The ref had closed our bar last night. His eyes were a sore shade of red.

“What call?”

“Who bats first.”

“We’re the home team,” Old Bill whined in protest.

“This is Jimmy Walker Park. Beau James was my kind of mayor.” Arthur surveyed the park. “I don’t see your name anywhere, plus you lost the coin toss the other night."

“You heard the man.” The ref hiked his thumb over his shoulder at Old Jim. “Batter up.

Our team scattered over the field.

I crouched behind the plate and pulled on the catcher’s mask. Arthur underhanded a few practice throws. They struck my mitt with force. He nodded to the ref and O'Shea's 1st baseman strode to home plate.

“Hello, Robin. Suck Batman’s dick lately?”

“Keep it clean,” the ref warned him and said to me, “And you don’t lose your temper. It’s only a game.”

Arthur’s pitch tweaked to the left or right and he sent the first batter down on two swings. The second batter popped up to Griffbag. The third batter swung at the first pitch. The ball screamed off his bat into centerfield. Georg caught it with both hands. He wasn’t a showboat.

It was our ups.

Kalline led off for the Milk Bar. Old Jim underestimated her and the runaway banged his first pitch into deep center. She reached 2nd base standing.

“Milk Bar, Milk Bar.” Our crowd cheered in the stands. "No pitcher. No pitcher."

“You’re next.” Arthur clapped my shoulder.

I picked up a bat designed for speed of the swing. I planted my feet in the dirt and studied the defense. They were playing back and to the left. Someone had seen me hitting in practice and I adjusted my stance to hit into the right-field gap.

The first pitch was a strike. The next two were called balls. I lined up a low toss between 1st and 2nd. The 1st baseman leapt to his right and snagged it by the tip of his glove. I was out.

Elena yelled a curse in Roma.

“Way to go, Robin.” Old Jim punched his fist in the air.

“What’s with the Robin shit?” Arthur grabbed the bat from my hand.

I explained in twenty words or less and Arthur mumbled, “Forget about it. We’ll make him pay somewhere down the line.”

Old Jim struck out Griffbag and Tommie White Trash squibbed the first pitch to short. He was out at first.

“I told you not to swing at the first pitch.” Kalline cursed him for not driving her home. She was tougher than she looked by a long shot.

“Keep it down. The score is still 0-0,” Arthur cautioned in the dug-out. “We got five more innings to go.”

We celebrated the score with beer. O’Sheas was playing straight. We ran onto the field with beers in our hands. The temperature lingered in the high 80s and the evening air was muggy as a weight-watchers’ sauna.

Old Jim led off the 2nd. The ball didn’t travel far off the bat, but Old Jim had spotted our weakness in right. Doctor Bob had finished a double shift on the psycho ward and his eyes were at half-mast.

They scored three runs. The bases were loaded and their rally could have become a rout, except the their man on third tried to steal home. Georg peppered the ball to the plate and I tagged out the runner. Old Jim challenged the play, but the ref pointed to the black polish on the ball.

“Old Jim.” I tossed him the disputed ball.

“What?” He twirled his mustache like it was a giant hair sprouting from his nostril.

“You ain’t no Rollie Fingers.” His mustache was a homage to Oakland’s ace reliever. “Wait till my next at bat.”

“Fuck you. Robin.”

“Nice language, loser.” I was under his skin and continued the verbal assault throughout the next two innings.

"I love to hear you swear." Elena hugged me. She wore nothing under her cheerleader outfit. The hem rose up her legs and I toldf Old Jim, "Keep your eyes on the game, Old Man."

Arthur’s pitching kept us in the game, but they scored another run off a long shot to left. Nick the Dick saved the inning with a graceful gazelle leap off the bag to snag a sharply hit ball.

We returned to the dugout with empties. Griffbag cued up AC/DC. Old Jim complained about the music. Kalline told him to shove it. Neighborhood people floated into the park and sat on the Milk Bar bench. Free beer bought their loyalty. The cheerleaders from O’Sheas were glomming beer too. The night sucked sweat from everyone with a vampirish thirst.

Old Bill tried to stop them.

“No beer-drinking during games.”

“This isn’t for the league. It’s just a game,” said one of the pseudo-twins.

I handed them two cold ones.

“Let’s play ball.”

Kalline ran out a bunt and Tommie swung on the very next pitch. The short bobbled the play and we had runners on the corners. Arthur came to the plate without taking off his shades and pointed to the right-field fence.

“You think you’re the Babe.” Old Jim directed his outfield to shift to right.

“I’m a Yankee fan. I could be anyone. Maris, Jackson, or Bucky Dent.”

I groaned at the mention of that last name.

"Anyone, but Bucky'Fuckin' Dent."

"He was a hero in 1978." Arthur hit a zinger over the 3rd baseman into left.

Kalline scored easily with Tommie and Arthur stuck on 2nd and 3rd. Scottie popped up to the catcher and Doctor Bob struck out.

“I’m shot.” He retired to the beer cooler.

Scottie signaled for Ray Wood to take Doctor Bob’s place.

At our next at-bats Ray Wood reached third and Scottie stood in the batter’s box.

“Batman the runt.” Old Bill was feeling good.

“Batting with the scoring run at the plate.” Scottie dug into the dirt and spit in his hands. He looked like he played every day. “Let’s see your stuff.”

The first two pitches were called strikes, then Scottie fouled off three pitches. The count was full.

Elena and her girls chanted, "Batman, Batman."

The next pitch railed straight down the pike and Scottie struck the ball with the sweet of the bat. It missiled direct back at Old Jim. He put up his glove a little too late and the ball smacked him in the forehead. He dropped on his back and the ball fell to the ground right before the 2nd baseman. Tommie and Arthur crossed the plate and we were within one run.

4-3

Old Jim was a shadow after that at-bat.

He walked Kalline and me, but Nick the Dick tried to be too much of a hero and the 3rd baseman caught a sky-high foul.

Still it had been a good inning.

Maybe too good, because the next inning was a debacle.

O’Sheas ran the batting order and we were down 9-3. Our bodies were sapped by the 4th inning's final out and Big Joel said, “Now time for me to do magic?”

“Soon.” Arthur massaged his right shoulder.

“When, bossman, when?” Big Joel's hands clenched the bat hard enough for sawdust to seethe from his grip.

“I’ll let you know.”

The ref called us to the bat. It was three up and three down with one innings left to play.

O’Sheas prepared to celebrate and their players came over to get some beers. Nick the Dick wasn’t going to give them spit, but Doctor Bob said, “I’m a doctor. These boys need some liquid or else they might get heat stroke. I have to obey my Hippocratic oath.”

“Bullshit.” Nick slammed his glove on the ground and left the park to score blow in Soho. He was the kind of asshole that nobody cared enough about other than Arthur.

“It takes all kinds.” Arthur handed the beers to the opposing players.

They thanked him, saying they would take it easy on us.

“Get away from those fags,” Old Jim shouted at the top of his lungs.

His players muttered under their breath and returned to their dug-out.

Arthur turned to Big Joel.

“Looks like it’s your time, big man.”

“Oh, man, I am going to kill that ball.” Big Joel strode to the plate.

“Not yet. You have to bat in order.”

“Seys who?”

Scottie explained the rules to Big Joel. The Haitian broke the bat before storming toward the ref. Darlene grabbed his arm and he stopped like a bull with its nose ring stuck on a stump. She waved her finger at his face and s he sat on the bench, she winked at us and said, “Everything is going to be all right.”

We lucked out with a run in the 5th. Doctor Bob and Elena brought more beer to the O’Sheas dug-out.

Old Bill drank two.

It was so hot that I felt like the marrow had been ironed out of my bones.

Doctor Bob offered me a little cocktail.

“What’s in it?” President Reagan’s wife had been telling America to ‘Just Say No’. She was preaching to the wrong section of the choir, for everyone at the Mi\lk all sang alto.

“A little this and a little that.”

“Just what the doctor ordered.” Arthur nodded with appreciation.

We ran onto the field with a renewed spirit.

Old Jim wavered at the plate and popped up to me. The next two batters reached base, but Arthur caught the one from the Cape Cod League napping at 1st and walked over to the bag to tag him out. The next at bat was the guy who pointed his finger at me. He slurred out something indecipherable and I looked over my shoulder to the ref at the plate.

“Too much beer.”

Arthur put him out of his misery in three pitches and the O”Sheas team lurched off the field.

Elena’s girls from the go-go bars put on a show to WALK THIS WAY by Run-DMC and I sidled up to Doctor Bob.

“What did you put in their beer?” Poisoning was a felony.

“A little of this and a little of that.” Doctor Bob eyed the tall redhead from Billie’s A Go-Go. “Nothing dangerous. They’ll live.”

“Will they finish this inning?”

“As long as you make it quick.”

And quick was how we scored our runs. Kalline bunted to the 3rd baseman. He slipped on the grass.

“Old Jim, anyone tell you that mustache is out of date?”

“Fuck you, Robin.”

“No, fuck you.”

I stroked a shot to centerfield. It hit a tree. The ref called it a ground-rule double.

I wasn’t Robin any more.

Ray Wood knocked in Kalline. Sunny was called out on strikes. Old Jim was throwing batting practice. Tommie hit the first home run of the game.

The score was 9-7.

Arthur and Scottie reached base.

With men on 1st and 2nd Arthur pointed to Big Joel.

Old Jim shook off his torpor and shouted, "No batter."

"I not bat. I break the ball." Big Joel stood at the plate like a man waiting for the subway to Brooklyn.

“All we need is one out,” Old Jim called out from the mound, almost losing his balance.

“Big Joel,” I shouted from the dug-out. “This one is for your babies.”

Big Joel threw off the hat and glasses, then ripped off the denim shirt. He wasn’t playing for Papa Doc, but the Milk Bar. Darlene screamed at him in patois. He was her Bondye and she was his Euzulie Freda. Griffbag cued up BURNIN AND LOOTIN’. He didn’t have any Haitian mizik rasin in his cases.

“Easy batter.” The O’Sheas cheerleaders chanted in Haitian patois. “Him so big.”

I looked to Doctor Bob and he shook his head. No one was getting lucky with those two girls tonight, unless the girls wanted lucky.

Old Jim regained his form.

The ball zinged across the plate.

Big Joel watched it without moving.

“Strike one.”

“Big Joel, just swing the bat,” Scottie shouted from the dugout.

“I know how to swing de bat and I know when.” Big Joel sat on the next pitch.

“Strike two.”

The Milk Bar was down to one swing and Big Joel turned around to blow a kiss to Darleen.

“This one is for you.”

Old Bill threw the fastball and Big Joel swung his bat.

No one saw the ball leave his bat.

No one saw it clear the trees or soar over the buildings across the street.

No one saw it land wherever it landed.

It was like the Empire State Building turning out the lights.

Something that happened whether you saw it or not.

We swarmed onto the field and greeted Big Joel at home plate.

"We win?"

"Yes, we win."

“Drinks at the Milk Bar,” Arthur shouted with his arms raised over his head.

“Half price,” Kilmer added, but nobody heard the blonde manager. It was a night for deaf ears.

The players from O’Sheas confronted Doctor Bob about the beers.

"All is fair in love and baseball."

They accepted the loss, since it wasn't on their permanent record.

Kilmer and Ray Wood disappeared for an hour.

When they returned red-faced, we had the answer where.

Kalline and Sunny served double shots. Tommie drank straight bourbon. Griffbag spun SEX MACHINE by Sly Stone and James Brown's POPCORN back to back to back. Big Joel left early with Darlene. The bat went with him. Scottie and I toasted each other with tequila.

He wasn’t a drinker, so I downed them both. The uniformed police came downstairs to congratulate our victory. Two of them worked the door for me and let in everyone, even a few Wall Streeters, but only for a price. My cut was 30%.

Arthur sat in the back with his wife. He looked at us repressing a smile.

Somehow the Damned Yankee fan had pulled out a miracle and I went over to him.

“Good win.”

“All wins are good and so are some of the losses. Now get back to having a good time, before I say something about your Red Sox.” Arthur could be a hard man when it came to the Yankee-Red Sox rivalry. That comment about Bucky Dent hadn’t been aimed at Old Jim, but me.

“Sure, Arthur, sure.”

I walked away to join Elena, because Arthur understood not one game is only a game.

They all are just a game.

Foto by Trigger