Thursday, July 31, 2025

Thai Fried Rat - 2011

“What did you eat for breakfast, fried rat?” Richie Boy asked his friend at Smith and Wollensky’s after he cut loose under the table.

“It wasn’t me.” The guilty party protested without forgiveness. “He who smelled it dealt it.”

Everyone at the table was over fifty. The restaurant was elegant. Our waiter was treating us like royalty. We had sold him a diamond this afternoon. A good deal for him and a nice profit for us. Our conversation should have been less puerile.

“Fast food for lunch.” I sniffed the foul wind. “McDonald’s 100% beef means all the cow, except for the moo. They drop whole cows into a vaporizer. Out comes pink poo for a Big Mac.”

“I like Big Macs.” Richie Boy’s friend exercised religious. His work schedule didn’t allow a healthy lunch.

“Better fried rats.”

“Don’t tell me that you’ve eaten it?” Richie is a bacon Jew. Little is tref for him, but rat is definitely off his menu.

“On occasion.” Rat, owl, vulture, and crow are four animals Americans will never eat and only owls will eat crow. I’m sure there are several other animals missing from any menu of the 50 states, such as seagulls, seals, jellyfish as well as a legion of endangered species, especially whale, which I ate as a child in Boston fish market next to Fanuiel Hall.

“Rat?” Richie Boy and his friend were aghast.

“It’s not so bad. The rats are raised on rice. They never eat garbage not like you.” This past January I was in Thailand.

Mem, Fenway, and I had spent a week in a Cambodian border town and she brought down several fried rats for her cousin, uncle, and me. The rats or noo yang are fat from rice. Her aunt gave her several splayed rats to bring back to Sriracha. The cousins back home were dying for some good rat.

It’s a five hour drive from the Cambodian border to the coast. The rats were on ice. At home her cousin opened the plastic plastic. Hooey is the top girl at the city’s best Japanesse karaoke bar. She wears Ungaro knock-off and Manolo high heels. A model in any other country in the world. Delicate and thin she bend over the tub of rats. Her nose twitched with a rapture like a glue-sniffer huffing a tube of Dupont after a year’s sabbatical.

“Noo Yang,” she cooed and her step-father pranced like a trained bear in anticipation of feasting on his two rat carcasses. Needless to say my enthusiasm was a little more decorous.

“You no want eat.” Mem was upset. Cooking rat takes hours. She had saved me the largest corpse. If I didn’t eat it, she would have been insulted by my refusal. Thais have thin skins and long memories.

“Who say I don’t want to eat rat?” I gave Nai money to buy 6 large bottles of Leo beer. it was good enough to take the sting out of a scorpion tail, on which I had dined the previous evening.

Mem happily fried the rat and cut the body into sixths.

It still looked like a rat and not Mickey Mouse either.

New York rat on a plate.

“Why you not eat?” Mem had her arms crossed. Everyone else asked the same question.

“Wait for it not to be hot.”

Two minutes later I cracked off a leg. The meat was dark. I took a bite. Not bad, in fact good.

Rat does not taste like chicken or pig or beef.

Something entirely different yet familiar.

I finished my serving and had seconds. We threw the bones to the mongrel dogs in the street. They fought over these scraps. Mem was happy and the assembled Thais said, “James not same other farangs. He eat same Thai.”

“That’s not true. There’s no thing I won’t eat. Chicken feet.”

Ting gai.

Bleech.

But the Thais love to suck on the rubber feet.

Even my son.

He’s definitely not 100% farang, but not 100% Thai either.

Fenway was scared of rat.

He was his father’s son.

“So how was the rat?” Richie Boy asked as the waiter delivered our steaks.

“It didn’t taste like chicken.” Or chicken feet.

And neither does the steak at Smith and Wollensky’s.


Good boy.

Welcome to 1938 Down with 47

Currently ICE agents are overwhelmed by the demands of the Trump Administration to arrest 3000 migrants a day and have moved from detaining illegals with criminal records to anyone within their grasp. Masked ICE agents show up at courts and haul out people attempting to go through the lesal process. In June alone ICE captured 965 legal applicants at 26 Federal Plaza. Just following orders adn they actions are applauded by Trump supporters, despite the obvious disregard for the 4th Amendment to the Constitution.

Internal finding from the Immigration Agency show that the daily arrest average has been about 2000. Still below the quota demanded from Kristen Gnome, the secretary of Homeland Security. More feet on the ground are needed to achieve the 3000 per day and ICE has announced at a recruitment plan offering possibly $50,000 in signing bonuses.

The guardian reported that the Secretary said in a news release, “Your country is calling you to serve at ICE. This is a defining moment in our nation’s history. Your skills, your experience, and your courage have never been more essential. Together, we must defend the homeland.”

Other perks are overtime for deportation officers and other benefits such as loan repayment or forgiveness options. Ten thousand vigilantes to carry out the exile of millions of illegals from the USA. How many millions. Maybe thirty million. At a million a year the task will take over thirty years, unless the prey decide to leave the country voluntarily en masse, leaving the USA underpopulated by workers in factories, hotels, restaurants, and fields.

Between 1958 and 1961 Chairman Mao as part of the Great Leap Forward instituted agricultural reforms establishing new farming techniques, the killing of sparrows which fostered a carefree life as well as demanding millions of farmers to abandon their fields for low level steel production. As a result of these plans millions starved in China.

"No need to pay to eat, focus on producing".

Despite the warnings of bureaucrats Mao continued with his folly, as Trump does now.

Millions of farm workers have abandoned the fields in fear of ICE. The nation is approaching harvest time. Crops are rotting on the vines. No words of warning from the US agriculture secretary Brooke Leslie Rollins, a graduate of Texas A&M with a law degree, but she speaks a good game.

“Every day, I will fight for American farmers, ranchers, and the agriculture community. Together, we have an historic opportunity to revitalize rural America and to ensure that U.S. Agriculture remains the best in the world for generations to come.”

Get ready for the call from the White House to vacate the cities and everyone move on up to the country as the Khmer Rouge demanded of Cambodians to wreak havoc on anyone opposing them. Millions died, but then judging from the GOP's success in cutting Medicare and Medicaid it is obvious that they want us all dead. Not so fast, Fatso 47. We are us. We will never be them.

Wednesday, July 30, 2025

Sand Between My Toes # 42


At the beach
Ditch Plains
>A gray Sunday morning in late July__
Sitting on a weathered wooden chair
Weekenders wandering the strand in Montauk hoodies__
I
In jeans shirt and trousers
My cuffs rolled
Not thinking of Michaelangelo
Or TS Eliot__
Breathe
Again
Breathe
A sip of coffee
A day off
A calm ocean
A surfing school bobbing on calf-high swell
Two tourist fishing boats
Close to shore
Anglers hanging lines off the port side
Two young blonde girls
Sipping smoothie
Sand between their toes__
I shut my eyes
Smell the sea
Listen to the waves
Rippling on the sand
Content without worry
For my family or friends or the world
Free of worries for myself
With sand beteween my toes___
80 of the 360 degrees
Around me
My vision
Freed of people
The horizon from Shagmoor Bluff to the Ditch Plains rocks
Just sea and sky and me
Content
Alone
With the sound of waves in my ears___
And sand between my toes

Later

Walking west I comb the beach for flotsam, mostly plastic borne to shore by the tides. Invisible to people, but I dream of a world before THE GRADUATE and a future without plastic.

Later

Taking the 11:47 train to Jamaica then Atlantic Terminal and a walk across Fort Greene walk home to Myrtle Avenue. Sand in my toes all the way.

Wednesday, July 23, 2025

MISSILE AWAY - 1968

During our youth my older brother was a pyromaniac. Frunk had nearly burned down our houses in Maine and on the South Shore of Boston. Each time my mother punished us both with a wooden spoon and my father sternly admonished our incendiary behavior, yet my older brother was undeterred by cracks across the knuckles and hards words. My crime was not stopping him.

The early 1960s were the height of America's Space Race with the Soviet Union and Frunk abandoned his fiery endeavors to conduct missile experiments by converting discarded hair spray cans collected from garbage cans in our neighborhood into tube missiles. Our blast site was a secluded sandpit not far from our suburban development on the South Shore of Boston, Chuckie, my next-door neighbor, Frunk, and I positioned the ersatz V-2 of taped Aquanet hair spray cans in a bonfire.

The fuse was a bundle of sparklers. Sometimes the cans exploded in fiery separate burst, but occasionally the strapped cans arced across the sky at low altitudes spitting toxic flames.

None of us suffered injuries from these experiments, however the town police warned our parents that we were a danger to the community and my older brother obeyed their orders to abandon our emulation of NASA's failed rocket launches.

At my parochial all-boys high school I resisted the draw of the Rocket Club.

Instead I ran cross country.

The five-mile course passed an abandoned mansion. Our competitors were never forewarned that their runners had to leap a stone wall to cross the estate, giving us an edge and my school won two consecutive state championships in 1967 and 1968, however our dominance was challenged by a mysterious government agency's purchase of the mansion. The men occupying the estate wore white shirts and black ties. Chuckie Manzi said they were CIA experimenting on apes and we listened for the shrieks of chimps, as we panted across the fields for the start of the 1969 season. They were none. Upon our arrival back at the gym, our coach informed us that the grounds were off-limits. "What about the wall?" "No more wall," said Brother Jude. Later that month we lost our first race in years. "We want the wall."

We protested to Brother Jude. He sided with us and the principal asked for special access for these bi-weekly races. The men in the white shirts refused this request. Every practice session we passed the mansion calling them 'assholes', then trained harder to regain our edge.

Few of our fellow students cared about the track team.

Our school's football team was State Champs. They had cheerleaders from the nearest Catholic girls school

Our only fans were the rocket club, who told us that this matter was not over.

None of us paid them much mind.

They were nerds and wem worried that nerdiness might be contagious.

We won our next race, although I barely beat out our rival's 5th runner.

Afterward the Rocket Club glared at the distant mansion and the cross-country team exchanged a conspiratorial glance with them. We nodded 'go for it'. Whatever they had planned was more than all right by us.

The next day the school's Rocket Club announced a test of their missiles and the brothers assembled the students in the field behind the high school. The principal instructed the collective classes to stand a good distance from the launch area, because these rockets were not small.

One of them was at least ten-feet long.

After running a series of tests, the president of the Rocket Club held up a flare and lit the rockets. A score of missiles soared into the sky.

Even the football team applauded the nerds and the brothers beamed with satisfaction, thinking maybe one of these boys might end up at NASA.

Off in the distance a few of the men in the white shirts stood outside the mansion.

The rocket club aimed this final missile, the ten-footer, at the estate.

The men shouted and the president of the rocket club lit the fuse. The men ran for cover.

The missile covered the half-mile between the field and mansion in less than a second. It exploded overhead to be muffled by out our applause.

Afterwards the men in the white shirts filed a complaint with the town police.

They ignored the filing, since some of their kids were on the track team and a week later we regained permission to run through the field and won the state championship for the third time in a row.

From then on no one ever said anything bad about nerds in our school. Not because they were heroes, but they were dangerous, although not to anyone on our side and that's the way it should be when you're young. There were and are and will be us and there is them and them don't mean nothing to us.

ps my older brother was really pissed that he hadn't been there.

May 22, 1978 - Journal

This afternoon after finishing the lunch shift at the Ebasco executive dining room high above the Trinity Church, I changed into my punk outfit. Juan and the rest of the Latino chaning out of uniforms of a white shirt and black trousers shook their heads. I am the only gringo. They were friendly, but generally kept their distance, figuring me to be a spy for the engineers of the nucelar power division. The workers only speak in Spanish and the executives have mistaken me for a Spainard. The bosses talk about how to secure the nuclear plants in foreign countries around the globe.

"Best to create a zone of fire around the plant," said a senior broadmember.

"No warning shots. They take that as a weakness. Shooting tokill stops them dead."

One of the execs noticed my listening.

"What's the probelm?"

"Nada, senor."

I hated all of them. Vicious capitalists. I wish I could poison them all, but I needed this job.I said nothing about the conversation to my co-workers. They had all heard another version from these murderers protecting their profits. We all needed this job, especially since they wer mostly illegal migrants. Thankfully they hid my gringoism. In the subway I waited for the uptown 7. Its approaching rumble announced its impending arrival. An attractive pale raven-haired vixen in black leather sat on the bench. Skin and bones. No breasts under her laced vest. I suspect she is a dominatrix. She's reading Carlos Castenada's The Teachings of Don Juan. The book about shaminism was dog-eared, either from other readers or she read it somfrequently that her fingers had tattered the pages.

Back in 1972 on a hitchhiking tour of the USA with a college friend, Peter Gorr, we met Diego Santos, a hispanic fakir in Haight-Ashbury, who claimed to understand eternity. Peter and I were majoring in mathematics. I understood the power of zero better than eternity. He had reefer and offered us a place to crash, which was gratefully accepted since we only had a couple of hundred hundred dollars and still had to hitch up the coast before heading back from Seattle to Boston on I90. That night after several hours of ranting Diego claimed to never sleep. Never. Two minutes Peter and I were grateful for the silence and we left before the dawn headed up the coast. I never read The Teachings of Don Juan. So much for Shamanism. I don't interrupt the vixen's reading. I know nothing of life. I am only a waiter for the lunch shift in an executive dining room.

I'm reading KEEP THE RIVER ON YOUR RIGHT by Tobias Schneebaum. A tale of cannibalism in the junlge of South America. The train stops at Christopher Street. We both get off. I follow her at a distance. She stops and turns around. I stop and she writes something on a piece of paper. I follow her out of the station down 7th Avenue in the opposite direction from my room at the Wesst 11th Street SRO. Her leather jeans. Tight. I imagine her naked. Then tragedy Her boyfriend meets her. She looks at me, as I go by and turns to pass her the piece of paper. Her parting glance says at another date. Farther down the block I opened the paper. A number. A name. Sharon.

Later

Sitting in Yogurt Delight, where Kyle Davis works as a waitress. The boss has a camera on the cash register. I pay for my coffee and sit by the window, opening the Times to the Sports section. The Bruins beat the Canadiens 4-3 in overtime with a goal by Bobby Schmitz. Stanley Cup Finals tied 2-2. Could this be the year the Bruins beat the Candians?. I get an erection thinking of Sharon. Not in a bed. At night. In a alley. I walk back to my room.

Mars the red planet is 30,000,000 miles from Earth, If one was to comunicate with someone there the radio signal traveling at 186,000 miles per second takes several minutes to reach them. No instant gratification even on Easrth. If I call Sharon on the phone, there will be a delay of almost no time, but still a delay as the call goes through the wires to the telephone excgange and back. Time travel to the past is impossible, but when she answers the phone it will be the future.

Only two words.

"Meet me."

MISSILE AWAY

During our youth my older brother was a pyromaniac. Frunk nearly burned down each of our houses and those of our neighbors. Each time my mother punished us both with a wooden spoon and my father sternly admonished our incendiary behavior, yet my older brother was undeterred by cracks across the knuckles and hard words.

The early 1960s were the height of America's Space Race with the Soviet Union and Frunk abandoned his fiery endeavors to conduct missile experiments with discarded hair spray cans collected from garbage cans in our neighborhood. Our blast site was a secluded sandpit not far from our suburban development on the South Shore of Boston, Chuckie, my next-door neighbor, Frunk, and I taped the cans together and positioned the ersatz V-2 of Aquanet hair in a bonfire.

The fuse was a bundle of sparklers. Sometimes the cans exploded in fiery separate burst, but occasionally the strapped cans arced across the sky at low altitudes spitting out toxic flames.

None of us suffered injuries from these experiments, however the town police warned our parents that we were a danger to the community and my older brother obeyed their orders to abandon our emulation of NASA's failed rocket launches.

At my parochial high school I resisted the draw of the Rocket Club.

Instead I ran cross country.

The five-mile course passed an abandoned mansion. Our competitors were never forewarned that their runners had to leap a stone wall to cross the estate, giving us an edge and my school won two consecutive state championships in 1967 and 1968, however our dominance was challenged by a mysterious government agency's purchase of the mansion. The men occupying the estate wore white shirts and black ties.

Chuckie Manzi said they were CIA experimenting on apes and we listened for the shrieks of chimps, as we panted across the fields for the start of the 1969 season. They were none.

Upon our arrival back at the gym, our coach informed us that the grounds were off-limits.

"What about the wall?"

"No more wall," said Brother Jude.

Later that month we lost our first race in years.

"We want the wall."

We protested to Brother Jude. He sided with us and the principal asked for special access for these bi-weekly races.

The men in the white shirts refused this request.

Every practice session we passed the mansion calling them 'assholes', then trained harder to regain our edge.

Few of our fellow students cared about the track team.

Our school's football team was State Champs. They had cheerleaders from the nearest Catholic girls school

Our only supporters were the Rocket Club, who said that this matter was not over.

None of us paid them much mind.

They were nerds and wem worried that nerdiness might be contagious.

We won our next race, although I barely beat out our rival's 5th runner.

Afterward the Rocket Club glared at the distant mansion and the cross-country team exchanged a conspiratorial glance with them. We nodded 'go for it'. Whatever they had planned was more than all right by us.

The next day the school's Rocket Club announced a test of their missiles and the brothers assembled the students in the field behind the high school. The principal instructed the collective classes to stand a good distance from the launch area, because these rockets were not small.

One of them was at least ten-feet long.

After running a series of tests, the Rocket Club held up a flare and lit the rockets. A score of missiles soared into the sky.

Even the football team applauded the nerds and the brothers beamed with satisfaction, thinking maybe one of these boys might end up at NASA.

Off in the distance a few of the men in the white shirts stood outside the mansion.

The rocket club aimed this final missile, the ten-footer, at the estate.

The men shouted and the president of the rocket club lit the fuse. The men ran for cover.

The missile covered the half-mile between the field and mansion in less than a second.

The explosion was muffled by out our applause.

Afterwards the men in the white shirts filed a complaint with the town police.

They ignored the filing, since some of their kids were on the track team and a week later we regained permission to run through the field and won the state championship for the third time in a row.

No one ever said anything bad about nerds in our school again.

Not because they were heroes, but they were dangerous, although not to anyone on our side and that's the way it should be when you're young.

There are us and there is them and them don't mean nothing to us.

ps my older brother was really pissed that he hadn't been there.

Free Palestine

Tuesday, July 22, 2025

The Long Reach of the Law - 2019

Back in the 80s Brion Gysin, the famed Beat poet and artist, was living his last days in Paris. I was working at the Bains-Douches. I fought a lot at the door. Brion liked rough trade. We were associated through a mutual friend, Jeffery Kime, a handsome English translator, who spoke impeccable French. Dinners, drinks, parties. The collage artist/poet was a gentleman in pursuit of the frontiers of humor. He once sneaked a recipe for marijuana into a cookbook by Alice B Toklas. Every head in America knows her name thanks to Brion's deceit. By 1985 his health was failing and an arms dealer suggested that I work for him in order to secure Brion a steady flow of income.

The man was renown for his dealing with 3rd world insurrections. No one ever said his name in public. My job was to be his right-hand man.

"Don't start any cars," Brion coughed through his oxygen mask. "Just joking. I don't need the money. Remember this is France and bad health is free. It's only good health that costs something."

Brion passed away in July 1986. The arms dealer prospered during the final stages of the Cold War. Later that autumn I was sitting on the rocks of Cap d'Antibes. A gigantic black ship steamed east toward Cannes. I mentioned aloud to my companion, a fashion model from South Africa, now known as the ex-model from Paris, that it looked like a sleath warship.

"No, your friend's friend's yacht."

The biggest in the world.

"Why didn't you work for him?" The model from South Africa was married with a French fascist. He had one time thrown grenades into an Algerian mosque packed with women and children. The massacre never made the LE SOIR.

"I like waking up in the morning without thinking someone is getting ready to kill me or that I've killed hundreds of people to earn enough money for a Ferrari."

"You'd rather make a little money being a thug."

"It suits my temperament."

The life of an arm dealer is not easy and this week Viktor Bout, the merchant of death was extradited from Thailand to the USA. He had been arrested last year by DEA agents pretending to be left-wing Colombian rebels seeking ground-to-air missiles. The story sounded funny to me after reading about it in the newspaper.

Arms dealers are savvy people. They normally only trafficked with kindred spirits. Viktor Bout probably knew the pseudo-FARC guerrillas were DEA agents, who were trying to link the rebel movement to cocaine trafficking, and figured that their business is their business. He was only in it for the money.

No arms or money ever passed hands.

It was all talk.

Until the Russian national said he didn't mind, if the weapons were used to kill DEA pilots.

The doors were busted down and Viktor Bout was remanded to Thai custody. His extradition angered the Russian authorities, but they said that the forty-three year-old knows nothing about nothing. Facing 25 to life Mr. Bout pleaded not guilty in a NY federal court. I would have done the same in his shoes, which are now government issue.

Another mouth to feed on the teat of the American tax payer.

Blows Against the Empire 2001

Early in April 2001 a task force supporting the aircraft carrier US Kitty Hawk anchored off Pattaya. Its 12,000 soldiers and sailors invaded the go-go bars of Beach Road and I avoided the chaos without taking into account my Thai girlfriend's displeasure at having to stay home night after night.

"I not leave farm to sit in house watch TV. I want to see friends."

I agreed to visit Walking Street, hoping the twenty-four year old would recognize the wisdom of my decision. Of course a had witnessed plenty of shore leaves during her two years at the Tahitian a Go-Go and enjoyed the attention of young sailors.

She sexied herself up in a pink halter-top and hot pants, then wound her long hair into a snaking braid.

"Not worry. I only love you. Not other Americans."

"What about other countries?"

"I only have you." She straddled my motorcycle with her thin arms around my chest.

"And I believe you." I drove through the diesel-belching traffic to Soi BJ.

On Walking Street teenage touts hawked sex shows to naive Chinese tourists. Toughs offered bootleg cigarettes with a keen eye for more profitable action from drunken Yanks. Legless beggars dragged broken bodies along the pavement. Cambodian illegals brandished mammoth snakes for farangs to photograph and a baby elephant competed in a chug-a-lug contest with a beer-bellied Swede to a Babel of pop songs blaring from over-sized amps. Pattaya's fun had been outlawed in every American town, which was another reason for its popularity with the US military.

Walking Street's main attraction were the go-go bars manned by bikinied dancers from the Isaan Plateau and discotheques filled with smiling girls in tight jeans and skimpy shirts.

The Thai government had benignly declared that nightlife was an example of young people having a good time, although even a blind man would have recognized the playfulness between Thai dok thongs and falangs bah as a facade for mercenary flesh transactions.

Ae and I were no different. She provided sex. I gave her money.

After her pretend orgasms she sometimes said, "Rak khun."

Love sounded good coming off her lips, but Ae had an Italian boyfriend coming in June.

He would save me from my 21st Century version of THE WORLD OF SUZIE WONG, so for now we strolled arm in arm through the Last Babylon's bedlam. When a trio of navy boys stumbled noisily from a go-go bar, Ae asked, "Why you not same sailor?"

"I'm old and they're young." Two months shy of 49, I felt 25 and acted 15.

"You not old." It was a nice thing to say, even if the mirror stopped lying years ago.

"You still not same other Americans." She tugged me to a line-up of bootleg Prada shoes on the sidewalk. "You work computer. Not drink too much. Take care of me. Other Americans cheap. One time I go to hotel to sailor. He have sex with me. Not pay. He cheap Charlie."

"Maybe he thought you were in love and wanted to do it for free." I hated these stories.

"No woman do for free. Not Thai. Not western." She tried on black platforms. With the extra four inches she could look me in the chin. "Maybe some time I make love to you for free."

I handed the salesgirl the equivalent of $8 to disprove her claim about American Cheap Charlies. We stopped at Hot Tuna, my friend's bar. Ae listened to the bargirls' gossip of who loved whom, who had left whom, and who had a broken heart, knowing one day that my name was destined to fill a slot in their conversation. Their talk accelerated into rapid-fire Thai and I listened to a young swabbie's boast about kicking Chinese butt.

"We'll knock their planes out of the sky in less than an hour and sink their ships in two."

The Chinese had bought down a Navy spy plane. The President was threatening action. It was all politics and I said, "It won't come to war."

"The gooks been begging for a whooping," A blonde sailor with a Panhandle drawled belligerently into his beer.

"We won't have a war, if our president exerts a little diplomacy."

The Commander-n-Chief's predilection for straight talk excluded soft power. "If it does come to a fight, you'll splash them, but they'll nuke the fleet."

"Then we blast 'em into the Stone Age." The Texan spilled his beer.

"And they'll wax San Francisco and LA to save face." Face was as essential to an Asian as driving a big car was to an American.

"Screw their face, we'll bomb 'em until their fortune cookies glow in the dark!" another sailor exclaimed, earning the scowls of more pacific farangs. My young countrymen were beyond caring about the opinion of Italian perverts in soccer shorts. I tried to lighten the mood. "A couple of H-bombs will start the nuclear winter, solving the global warming problem."

"None of those missiles would hit America, if we had NMD," The Texan referred to the President's grandiose Star Wars shield against North Korean, Chinese, Iranians, or Israeli missiles.

"The Commie rockets have a range of 1200 miles. They might reach the Aleutian Islands. A war with North Korea would cost about $200 billion. "About $6,000 per peasant family." This same sum would provide each American with a week's vacation at DisneyWorld. "We give them an out and they won't fight us."

"That's blackmail," the Texan snapped with a corded neck. "You serve in Vietnam?"

"No, I protested against the war."

"How? By wearing beads and smoking pot?" His friend chuckled sarcastically and the Texan added, "And he didn't inhale either."

"And we don't too." They play-acted puffing on a joint and then shunned me to watch the Muay Thai boxing in a nearby ring, but my participation in the peace movement had involved crimes against the State dating back to a warm spring day in 1965, which was a long time ago in the suburbs outside Boston.

Having returned to my split-level house from Our Lady of the Foothills, I tore off my Catholic school uniform and dressed in a tee-shirt and jeans. My mother was in the laundry room. My brothers and sisters were watching WHERE THE ACTION IS on the TV.

It was too nice a day for the lip-synching of Paul Revere and the Raiders and I went outside to chuck a hardball against the wooden backstop at the end of our driveway.

My pitches struck the splintered strike zone with a thud. I called the strikes and balls. I was pitching a no-hitter in Fenway, until Addy Manzi crossed the lawn. My teenage neighbor was sexier than a Playboy centerfold in her white shirt, blue tie, plaid skirt and white knee sox. To show off I was more than twelve year-old boy I wound up in imitation of the Red Sox's Dick Raditz, and hurled a speedball over the backstop into the yard.

"Have to work on that control," she commented and I jealously imagined her flirting with the local high school ace. As I started toward the ball, she said, "Wait a second."

Wearing a baseball glove, I couldn't stick both hands in my pockets to hide my embarrassment. "For what?"

"How about a drive?" Addy asked with a mesmerizing lilt.

My toes twisted in my Keds.

"W-w-where you want to go?"

?Nowhere special? She brushed back an auburn strand with practiced poise. ?Just around to feel the wind through my hair.?

At sixteen she existed in a perpetually cool world of teenagers, while thirteen year-old boys barely had hair on their chins. I swallowed hard. "I don?t have a car."

"We can drive my mother's Tempest. She's gone out with friends. My brother is at the dentist. No one needs to know." She dangled car keys from an index finger. "Can you drive?"

My grandmother had taught me to drive in her VW Bug. It had a shift and the Tempest had a push-button transmission. It couldn't be that hard. "I guess so."

"C'mon, it'll be fun." Addy cocked her head in the direction of the car in her driveway. She had babysat for my family and taught me the Twist. I couldn't refuse her anything. "Okay."

She clapped with more enthusiasm than a teenage girl should exhibit to a grammar school boy. I was scared.

"You mind if we go someplace no one will see us?"

"Fresh." She slapped my arm and I sputtered, "I didn't mean it that way."

"I was joking."

"Oh." I threw my baseball glove into a bush and followed her across the lawn to the car.

She slipped into the Tempest and turned on the radio. WBZ was playing 98.6 by Keith. I put the car in reverse and drove to the STOP sign on Rte. 28, where Addy said, "Now turn left to Chickatawbut."

"Chickatawbut?" The road through the Blue Hills was an infamous make-out spot.

"You said quiet." She raised an eyebrow.

I stepped on the gas. The convertible sped to forty.

At Chickatawbut Road I fishtailed through the intersection.

"Sorry about that."

"Drive like you belong in the car." Addy leaned closer to the open window. The breeze bore her perfume to me. My mother also wore Lanvin. Addy lifted her eyes to the canopy of trees overhead and said, "Stop at old CCC Tower. We?re taking a little walk to the next hill."

"A missile base's on top." My hands were damp on the steering wheel.

"Not anymore. LBJ pulled out the missiles to please the Russians."

?That means Boston is unprotected from nuclear attack.? During the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis the nuns had drilled us to duck under our desks in case of nuclear attack. We pray for peace and our eternal souls. The bombs had never come, reinforcing the sisters? faith in miracles.

"Don't worry, it's too nice a day to die." Addy's words calmed my fear and I parked the car. The other cars were empty. No couples parked here this time of day. They went into the woods and that was where Addy led me too.

We scrambled along a muddy trail. The sunlight dappled through the new leaves onto her golden skin. I grew breathless with anticipation. We mounted a hillock. Two teenagers in leather jackets waited by a chain link fence. I recognized the taller one.

Two months ago Addy had come home near dawn. Her mother had grounded her for a month and banned the car mechanic from seeing her daughter.

Little can render a teenage boy more attractive to a girl than her mother's disapproval, if you throw in a tattoo, oil-slick hair, black engineer boots, and a silvery SS-SuperSport.

"What's Dennis Halley doing here?" Half the boys in town wanted to be like him.

"Silly boy." She ran to kiss Dennis, who asked, "Who's the kid?"

"He's cool." Addy vouched for my presence. "He gave me a ride."

"Way to go, kid." Dennis patted my back.

I had done him a favor.

He pulled out a pair of wire cutters and opened a hole in the fence.

His squat friend crawled through the breach and ran over an embankment with a whoop. Addy was the next to go. She climbed to the top of the hill and Dennis turned to me. "What about it, kid?"

I had smashed pumpkins on Halloween and set fire to the woods on Easter Sunday, but was paralyzed by my mother's warning to walk the other way, if I saw trouble coming. "The sign on that fence says they punished trespassers."

Dennis lifted a rock.

"Who this belong to?"

"No one."

"And that sign?"

"The government." Running hard, my yard was only ten minutes away.

"And the government belongs to you and me and the people in Boston." He threw the rock at the sign. "So?"

"This place belongs to us." The FBI parents wouldn't appreciate his logic.

"Damn right, it does. I spent last year fighting in Nam. Shooting at strangers. Possibly killed them. There are people, who think shooting strangers is wrong and they might be right." Dennis' treasonous statement contradicted the nuns? prayers for the fall of communism. "You know any Vietnamese?"

The only Orientals on the South Shore were Chinese waiters serving Pu-Pu platters and we never spoke to them, except to make fun of their accents.

"No, I don't."

"Those VC were peasants. Same as my grandfather from Ireland. Same as you and me. So you gonna run home or come with me?"

Leaving meant leaving Addy. I hunched through the opening and raced Dennis to where his friend and Addy stood beneath a tall flagpole. The South Shore spread beneath us like a map slipping over the edge of the world into the sea. The thug with the chin beard pointed out his house near the Quarries.

"Where you live, kid?"

I focused below the hill.

"The tan house next to the greenish one."

"That's my houser the green one," declared Addy.

"That's not tan. Don't tell me you live in a pink house?"

"Shut up, Bush." Kevin Halley warned and his friend replied grumpily, "Nothing wrong with living in a pink house, kid."

"Where are the missile silos?" Addy suggestively raised an eyebrow.

Kevin took her hand.

"I'll show you."

They disappeared behind a half-buried building. Bush wandered off to explore the concrete bunker. The wind died to a whisper and the hill became an end-of-the-world movie. I was the last man on Earth and twelve years-old was nothing to a teenage girl. I threw a rock at the nearest Quonset hut. It broke a window. I smashed pane after pane.

Bush ran up to me.

"Kid, you pitch a baseball that hard, you can start for a Little League team."

"Thanks," I panted and Bush motioned with his hand. "I need your help. C'mon."

Hundreds of fire extinguishers had been stacked inside a garage. We lugged out twenty and pulled the levers. Jets of CO2 gas shrouded the hilltop and Bush declared, "It's like the planet Venus and we're two astronauts looking for space girls in bikinis."

"I like that movie." I stretched my hands into the fog without touching an extraterrestrial go-go girl. Hearing a whistle, Bush grabbed my arm. ?Kev must have found some loot."

We jogged out of the mist. Kevin and Addy stood staring down a concrete shaft. The sunlight only penetrated a couple of feet. Kevin dropped a rock into the silo. I flinched in expectation of an explosion. The stone clanged on metal.

"Missile silos. C'mon, I'll show you something fucked up."

We followed him inside a damp bunker. He stopped at a wrecked console. The electronics had been wrenched out of their brackets. "This is where the buttons were."

"The buttons to shoot the missiles," Addy whispered secretively.

"Or order more coffee." Bush joked, but Kevin directed our attention to a floor-to-ceiling glass map of the world. His finger traced a line over the red circles dotting LA, Detroit, New York, Chicago, Boston.

"Targeting cities in the USA isn't funny."

"Why would they bomb them?" A-bombs were for the commies.

"To squash any revolution out of control of the National Guard."

"That's crazy talk."Bush disagreed with a voice shadowed by doubt, for Watts had burned to the ground the previous summer.

"Crazy talk, I'll tell you crazy. I get caught for joyriding. The Quincy judge said either two years in the Marines or three years in Billerica Correctional. I was in Vietnam to fight commies. I never saw one. I shot at trees, burned villages. It ain't like the movies. Not clean. Things I saw made me sick and I got this for my troubles." Kevin lifted his shirt. A long scar had been etched across his abdomen. "Fucking war."

Kevin chucked a swivel chair through the map. I had believed in stopping communism until the heavy shards of glass continents cascaded onto the concrete floor. The transparent seas splintered into a thousand pieces.

Kevin didn't lie and we took his revenge through an orgy of vandalism. We rammed doors through walls and smashed furniture with clubs fashioned from chair legs.

After ten minutes our rampage of senseless violence was waning, so I climbed a nearby slope with the flagpole's lanyard. Addy looked at me with puzzlement, until I ran forward to let the rope carry me into space.

She shrieked with delight.

I had made her happy.

It was at this moment a police car crashed through the missile base?s front gate.

I released the rope and fell to Earth. My legs buckled and I keeled over in pain. The other three fled to the fence. Addy stopped at the hole. Her eyes swore me to silence. My wave signaled her name would die within my lips and she disappeared into the woods.

Two policemen manhandled me to the MDC cruiser. The older was Sgt. Tully. Everyone in my hometown had heard how he hated kids. He twisted my arm.

"Who were your friends?"

"They were from Southie."

"We have ways of making tough kids talk."

He shoved me into the rear seat.

His partner sat behind the wheel.

"You?ll have to pay for the broken windows."

Last week I had batted a baseball into the Manzi?s dining room. One pane cost about $1. Hundreds had been smashed on the hill.

"I only broke a few."

"Kid, you tell us names and I might go easy on you." The young driver offered with a kind voice.

Sgt. Tully shook his crew-cut head. ?No deals. Why were you destroying government property? You a commie?"

I wasn't giving up Addy.

"It was a protest against the War in Vietnam."

The driver stomped on the brakes. The cruiser came to a rubber-burning halt a hundred yards short of the Route 28 lights.

"Get out of the car."

I was dead meat and his partner smirked, "Now you'll get it, you commie faggot."

The young cop hauled me into the woods.

"Were you really protesting the War?"

"Not at first, but that's the way it turned out."

The billy club dropped at his side.

"Kid, I'm gonna let you go."

I blinked in disbelief.

"Why?"

"My brother went to serve his country and they had him driving a beer truck. A fucking beer truck. It ran over a mine and he died for 3.2 Budweiser beers. It was fucked and it's only gonna get worse. I can't say nothing about it or else___"

"Or else people think you're a commie faggot."

He slammed his billy club into a tree.

"Kid, get home before I forget you?re a kid."

I ran away to the dull thuds echoing through the woods. Kevin was right. Viet-Nam was not a John Wayne western. People died bloody deaths and if my not wanting to be any part of it made me a commie, then I was willing to join the KGB. I just didn't have to tell anyone about it.

Arriving on my street I spotted Mrs. Manzi's Tempest in the driveway. Addy's brother bicycled out to meet me. Chuckie's lower lip was numb from Novocain, as he said, "Man, my sister took the car without my mother's permission and met Kevin Hally. Man, did she catch it.?"

"She say anything about me?"

"Why would she say anything about you?" Chuckie gave me odds of one-in-a-million of ever kissing his sister. After today I stacked another bunch of zeros on top that number. "You weren't with her, were you?"

"No, I was throwing rocks at the Canyon." The less anyone knew about this afternoon the better. "I'll see you later."

Crossing the merger of our two lawns, I glanced at their house.

Addy stood at the window, a teenage Rapunzel with a ponytail. She raised a finger to her lips to indicate she hadn?t mentioned my name. She blew me a kiss. I walked on pillows to my house.

Entering the kitchen, my mother hung up the phone.

"You have anything to tell me?"

Mothers have a strange way of finding out everything, but only if you tell them. "No."

Her Medusa eyes studied me before softening to display the love deepest in her heart. She still believed whatever I said. "Then wash your hands and face before your father comes home."

I went upstairs, convinced that not telling the truth can set you free.

The next day Mother Superior called me into her office and asked me if I believed in God. I tried quelling her fear for my immortal soul by falling to the knees and saying the 'Our Father' in Latin. When I finished, the old crone blessed herself with her Rosary. "Stalin was an altar boy too. I have my eye on you."

She wasn't the only one. My classmates shunned me during recess. Chuckie and Kyla Rolla, who had been my sweetheart for the past two years, defied this silent treatment and I loved them for saying it didn't matter what anyone thought.

My protest against the War severed the ties holding me to this suburb. I accepted a scholarship to an all-boys high school ten miles away from my hometown. We attacked a nearby CIA lab during a rocket club exhibition. They had banned by cross-country team from using their fields. Only my father's intercession prevent the perpetrators? expulsion. I lost my free ride.

Chuckie knocked up Susan Fox in junior year. He married her before Christmas 1969. Kyla and I broke up before the senior prom. I still wonder why.

In May 1970 I hooked school to demonstrate against the invasion of Cambodia in Boston Commons. The government has rejected my pension claims for the years of protest. The money was unimportant, for my only goal had been peace. Now all America and the world gets is war.

After my fifth beer on Walking Street I gave Ae the keys to my motorbike. She helped me from my stool.

"Why Americans talk loud?"

"They think it makes people understand them better."

"Tam see-ahn-dang magh." Thais rarely complained about noise.

"No farangs are half as loud as your father and brother after they get a bottle of Mekong in them ___," My criticism was interrupted by the Texan sailor's bump. I clenched my fists and he raised his palms, "You weren't kidding about the war, were you?"

Informing him that a coke-addicted president concocted this conflict with China to get votes sounded like bitter grapes about the GOP stealing the election in Florida, after all Mayor Daley had robbed Nixon in 1960. I decided to play it straight.

"No, kid, it'll blow over by the end of the month."

"Thanks, sir, you had me worried. I didn't want the rest of them to know I didn't want to fight. I only joined the Navy to see the world."

"I understand completely." I had left Boston for the same reason. "And this is part of that world. Enjoy your leave."

"You have a good night, sir." He ran between two fat Germans, lifting his two fingers as a vee to the night sky. "Peace."

"Peace."

Before Ae sat on the Yamaha, I kissed her. She regarded me suspiciously, "What's that for?"

I straddled the bike, not explaining my affection.

Thais don't care much about the rest of the world and a go-go girl from the TQ bar with three kids even less, however a teenaged soldier flashing the peace sign in this century gave me hope for the future, since one peacenik will become two.

The many that follow will give us strength in numbers and in the end the balance will swing away from war. It always does in the end, because everyone is a better lover than fighter.

Man or woman.

Adam and Eve.

Monday, July 21, 2025

Conversation With Palm Beach # 2 - 7/2/2025

"Last night I was watching the TV," said Allison. "The subways were flooded by rains."

"Torrential rains. I slept right through it. I had been thinking that New York had been so lucky to have escape floods, but two inches of rain for four hours was Biblical."

"It must have been scary to sit in the trains watching the water rising. Strange the lights and AC were still on."

"The old Lenape called that island Manhattah or the island of hills. Up until the 19th Century streams ran down the hills. East 77th Street had the Sawhill stream with beeer gardens providing an escape from the city behind the tenements. Every stream had been buried under concrete, but the toprograhy of Manhattan is all downhill and the torrents overflowed the sewers. Cars were stranded on the FDR as the storm hit at high tide. The next day was sunny and no trace of the storm. New York is built to resist nature, although Sandy blew away people's sense of safety with a high tide thirteen feet over normal."

"I remember reading about families trapped in basement apartments. Drowning in terror."

"It might have happened in Sandy."

The air was thick with moisture before the storm. Heavy. Living in Florida all those years, you how a storm feels before it strikes. Downtown at Battery Park two years ago a king tide inundated the park. Three feet of the harbor. Since then the city has been building a dike, so the water will be shunted away from the downtown to other neighborhoods."

"At least there are no sharks in New York Harbor. I stopped swimming in the inlet. Bull sharks hang out there on the tides. A feeding ground. I used to swim off Lisa's place on Chilean. It was safe. Maybe still is. But I don't leave the house too much."

Strangely I've never seen a shark in the water."

"They are there."

"Once in LA, I think in 1986 I swam north of Malibu at Point Magu. Early spring. Water freezing. I stripped naked and swam out past the breaker. Floating on the current, thena surge of something came from below. I looked around me searching the surface for a fin. Nothing, but I swam back to shore. When I got to the car, a female CHiPs officer was at my car. I asked, if everything was all right and she replied, "Just making sure you got back to shore. That was a big tiger shark. We don't see them this time of year, but they are always there lurking for easy prey. If you had been wearing a wet suit, it might have mistaken you for a seal."

"A common error, but mostly sharks avoid biting humans. We must taste bad."

"Not enough fat for their taste. Not that sharks have a tongue. Plenty of sharks out off Montauk. No attacks."

"Like you said. We taste bad and smell worse."

I begged off the phone and wished Allison a good day. I got dressed in classic New England attire for the sultry weather. A rumpled seersucker suit and worn jeans. Not a cloud in the sky.

ps I have never seen a shark in the water.

foto stream on 77th street way back when___

Conversation With Palm Beach # 1

Yeah good morning Allison how are you feeling?

I had the last 3 days off and I basically just wrote. I didn't I didn't bother going into the city but I am heading in there today to pick up some Brooklyn. I just basically stayed around this neighborhood other than going to the Upper East Side to pick up some watches to repair and then sell a piece of gold. I don't't have to do that until tomorrow and I'll go see this book publisher about getting a small photo book published. I'm just going to stop in and see him and that's about it. As for the watches I'll show them to the 47th Street dealers and they offer a price, then I'll call up a private who mught want them.

Rolexes get good money, but most anything else are basically just 20 cents on the dollar. I'll do it, because I just want to get out of the house.

Professor Ollman's library has been sold to some person, who will make a fortune on them. No university wanted them. Raoul saw no value in them. His son sees no value in them. 10,000 books on Marxism and philosophy. Some intact. Others yellowed by age. Pages crumbling to the touch. I read a few, gleaming knowledge in paragraphs buried by words. hoping to understad the rest by osmosis. Maybe when I was younger I might have been able to read a few hundred in the two years I spent elder caring for the professor.

I can't blame him. Wanting to rid of it all. No one reads anymore. He might have gotten $50,000. He wanted them out.His father is up in Yonkers. A resting home. 91 years old. The professor can't remember anything from those books and only wants to go visit his parents in Milwaukee. THey are long gone. The same as so many people. Same for me.

My father in his late 80s always said, "I'm the only one left."

His generation was gone.

At 73 I get that feeling. No one calls. I speak with few old friends. Even fewer family. Thankfully I speak with people on the street. Just sometimes saying hello to feel part of this time.

The books.

Knowledge for scholars.

Most people in this modern society only reead emojiglyphs or badly written texts. Anytime to tell them a fact, the ask, "Really?

As if everything know is bullshit.

Another barrier to reading are the ambient lightbulbs. Yellow light. Candle light is better than them.

I'll talk to you later. I'm heading up to 79th Street.

When I get back this evening, I'll lie in bed lsitening to scinece. Investigating the cosmos with my eyes closed and my mind open to the universe.I have old school sixty watt tungsten bulbs, but they are still dim. Especially for reading philosophy. LATER

Friday, July 18, 2025

The Ghost of Pine Barrens

The Hampton pine barrens continue to be ravaged by the massive southern pine beetle infestation. The parasites bore into the trunks and suck the sap from within. Nothing stops them. Death spread within the ancient forest leaving a swarth of trees toppled by high winds. Towns struggle to cut down the zombie copses, fearing wildfires. So far so good.

Montauk woods are deciduous and pine beetles spare the non-delicious offering.

The world changing before our eyes.

Thursday, July 17, 2025

July 17th 1978 - Journal

On route via train with Alice to Boston. She gets the window seat, facing south. She holds my hand, maing it hard to read the New York Times. Pope Paul VI is seriously sick in the Vatican. It will be time for a new Pope soon. Certainly not a woman.

Now passing along the Connecticut shore with views of Long Island Sound. For welcome sight after the last 2 weeks in the mountains of West Virginia. I've made with trip many times over the past three years. Amtrak not the worst way to travel, even though the passenger cars has severely antiquated due to the federal neglect thanks to the restrictions of the Auto industry and air travel. Walking or hitchhiking is rough, but the worst is the bus. Stuck in a seat designed for a Corpses since they don't complain and and all the privacy of a cell in the tombs, but you're still open on one Center Street, despite there abysmal overcrowding.

Walking is impossible that best you can do 40 miles a day. Only losers walking America. I walk a lot. I guess I'm a loser. Not today. I'm with Alice and she's sleeping on my shoulder. The Times on the floor and we're passing through the Pine Barrens of Rhode Island. No one is sight, although last winter coming through here I spotted a young blonde naked showing off her stripper body. In the middle of the forest. I think about her often and to have been naked with her too.

Wednesday, July 16, 2025

No Tuba In Space

In Fort Greene Park Mid July Early evening Elongating on the lawn A cooling breeze through the trees Counting the sounds of the city Birds Voices Traffic The hush of wind through the trees The flap of wings A plane approaching LA Guardia A helicopter with a billionaire heading to the East River heliport Music. Indistinct music A dog More birds___ Overhead Summer clouds Baby blue sky To the West The sun burning 93 million miles away .its fire warm on my skin. The sun silent There is no sound in Space Only a frequency 57 octaves below middle C from the Perseus galaxy cluster Always inaudible to human ears And there are no tubas in Space Not in Fort Greene Park Only the hush of wind through the trees Traffic And voices Never no silence Always something__

Momma Tried - Poetry - July 15 1978 - Journal

Momma warned Bobby Bebadd
'Bout married women
To save him the trouble
Of learning what prison can do__
But like Merle Haggard sang
He was 18, the cars fast, and the women faster
Sheila was 32, blonde, and long wanting__
Her husband the mayor of East Bum Fuck, Texas
His love the incumbent
Bobby Bebad the opposition
He a loser
Losers only win one way
Strictly in it for sex__
People say
You can't fight City Hall
All Bobby did
Sleep in its bed
Fuck there too
More than once a night several times each week for two months__
Discovered in the act
At the foot of the bed
The mayor
Gun in hand
52 old
Fat
The mayor of East Bumfuck Texas__
The 38
Loaded
Steady in hand
The mayor of East Bumfuck Texas
Trying to figure out
Who to shoot first
His wife or Bobby
The wife's 22 in the drawer
"Don't even think about it young man."
And he didn't__
Now Bobby Bebadd in the slammer
Of East Bumfuck Texas
Not too bad
With Sheila in the next cell
No one else in the jail
Just the two
And no steel bars stopping them
And Sheila saying more more more
Bobby Bebadd be bad
Momma tried
Momma tried
But to the bad he kept on turning__

This poem sucks. A warm up exercise, but too confusing, not to me but maybe others who don't think like this. Unsexed. Why do I think about it so much?

Later

At the Figaro Cafe on Bleeker Street Kim AKA Pudd, my CBGBs sister and fellow Gemini, says, "Immigrants are stealing all our jobs."

I work at an executive dining room as a way to for lunch serving executives. Everyone else in there is Latino. I am the only Yankee Irish in the place. None of my friends would stoop this low to make money, but it is my only job. No one else wants to hire me. Why? I don't know. Maybe because I think of sex too much. I had recently watched BREAD AND CHOCOLATE about an guest worker from Italy in Switzerland, who loses his work permit caught urinating in public, so he begins to lead a clandestine life in Switzerland as a blonde Swiss. It is never an easy life for illegals and I answer Kim, "No, they aren't stealing jobs. They are our slaves. They do the jobs blacks did or Irish or the poor. None of us would do those jobs. Dishwashing, picking crops, all the non-union jobs. They are exile in a strange land and so am I."

Juan left Mexico in New York City He kissed Rosita goodbye Maybe their last kiss__ Train to the Border Two days walking in the desert A bus to New York A job as a waiter No one speak English The bosses like that No one hears their secrets Day after day one is treated like an animal He screams inside Rosita I am an animal Dogs eat better I am an American just not theer American Better I never came here Better I never leave you, Now I have to get ready For mañana

July 13th 1978 - Journal

Hung over from a night drinking at CBGBs. The English band Wire were headlining the the show. Another great set with their hit, I AM THE FLY IN THE OINTMENT. The front row loaded with young teenage girls in love with Richard Hell, who was in the audience. He gets all the girls. Bill Yusk offer me some grass. I turned him down. I haven't smoked anything in in the 2 weeks I was in West Virginia. I've never really liked marijuana and while many of my high school and townie friends in their 60s huff weed. I didn't smoke until I graduated from high school. My friends and I were my 1967 VW Beetle. The sunroof open. Coming back from Nantasket Beach. A beautiful day in the Atlantic. Tommy Jordan hit up a joint, and I said, "Let me have some of that."

After a few pops the world changed, slowed down, the clock stopped ticking. The Chambers Brothers TIME was on the radio. We stopped at the red light on Beale Street in Route 3A. A horn honked from behind us. The light had changed. Maybe once maybe twice maybe three times. The song was over. I shifted into first and we drove away. For the next year I smoked almost every day trying to relive that high.

LATER

I lie in the bed of my SRO room on 11th Street. It's a small bed. Too small for two people. Alice is dead asleep. She had been drinking Jack Daniels. Three glasses knocked her out. Her feelings were hurt because no one flirted with her. I flirted with no one. Klaus was with his girlfriend, Claudia. A starkly beautiful dominatrix. She wants nothing to do with me. Klaus is the opposite. We talked to it all leather bound redhead, who was passing from consciousness to Oblivion. I make out with her. Alice is too drunk to see. Klaus was caressing me, very friendly after our last tirade at Kiev when I called out Samo, for recording me with a tape recorder.

Afterwards I ignored everyone. Only interested in drinking and playing pinball.

LATER

Last night she wanted to make sex. She had she a hard time taking her clothes and I let her fall asleep unmolested. My hangover is brutal my head feels as if I have two barbell stuck in them

I get up and shower in the hallway bath room. It is relatively clean for once . And everyone has gone to work. I take my time and come back to bed extremely clean. Alice is still in a shambles where the dress down to her knees and your bra around her neck. We've been together for the last 2 weeks 24 hours a day. I love to get a real place soon so that we can escape from one another to another room instead of this one room.

She looks over her bare shoulder, "Please fuck me. Maybe cumming will help my hangover."

I do

LATER

Jimmy Carter's in Berlin. I hear it on the radio. A Berliner asks him, " when will Berlin be united?"

"Ah wish ah knew, but ah don't." it was an honest answer but the American people can't stand him. They blame him for the week of economics and are defeat in Vietnam can we have a 12% inflation rate it shows no signs of stopping.

LATER

CBGBs as I said was fun. Kyle serve me plenty of vodka tonics. She has a vicious Crush on Richard Lloyd who her sister Kim says his crazy. Kim loves Greg from the revlon's. Serena is pissed at Sean who inherited $300,000. At the bar he gave Serena and me shit about not having any money.

"We don't need money. We get drinks for free."

But Serena is hurt about the money, because he never told her. She found out from his father at Film House when she was taking care of the wife, old money bags. I don't care if he has money. I'm not getting any , and Sean is bald and short while my body is in good shape. And no one really bothers me, but I do like Sean he's smart and he's funny you're probably smarter than me . I certainly aren't smart after as much as I drink last night .

LATER

My hangover is gone. And I'm drinking a beer at Dojos the bartender loves me. The owner always waves for her to give me one. I don't know why, but I sort of vaguely remember saving him from some thugs trying to rob the place.. I spent the afternoon wandering through the village and Soho. Allison with Kim did you see the Three Stooges Festival. 3 hours of molary cheese. I had enough when I was a kid. They are still Our Heroes.

Drinking is destroying my libido. This morning and I was fucking and I couldn't come. Faked and orgasm again, as a Amazon top of me. Afterwards we have each other. Your body naked feels like flesh tailored from me alone.

PHOTO BY EUGENE MERINOV

Tuesday, July 15, 2025

Heavy Rain 7/14/2025 - NYC

I didn't hear the rain last night. It was pouring upon my arrival back to 387 from downtown Brooklyn, shopping for summer attire and food at Trader Joe's.

I slept right through the deluge. I have a friend staying with me and Jacob said that he had been caught in the hard rain. "I was soaked to the bone. I call your name. Nothing. You was asleep hard."

This morning I read the news. Almost three inches of rain. The second most in history after 1992, when Hurricane Ida dropped over three inches on the city. Sometimes when it rains, real hard, it will flood in my apartment. Nothing like that happened, which surprised me, since the FDR was underwater, meaning that the East River was over capacity.

The first I can recall the river jumping it's banks was the Perfect Storm Nor'easter in 1992. Motorists were still driving onto the FDR despite cops trying to stop them. Their cars were abandoned and floated into the river. The subway stations were flooded too. Their drainage can only handle like one and a half inches of rain an hour.

After last week's catastrophic rain in Texas, I recall thinking that New York was lucky never to be hit by such a cyclonic tsunami. Guess I wasn't seeing the future.

Glad I slept through it all.

High and dry on Clinton Hill.

It was worst in New Jersey.

Bright and sunny today in Brooklyn.

ONLY A GAME 1986

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