What do you do with a premonition? I think I didn't even know the word for a long time, using its synonyms, hunch, foreboding, omen, rarely portent, more often suspicion, and never to any such apprehensions that I myself felt, because I never had them, only others reported such things, some of them close to me, most elsewhere, in newspapers, television or books.
One dictionary definition (and there are several with subtle but significant differences) has 'premonition' meaning . "a strong feeling that something is about to happen, esp. something unpleasant." (the 'especially unpleasant' part doesn't figure in all definitions.)
It just happened a month or so ago, around the Thanksgiving Day that I had a premonition, and it was not about something 'especially unpleasant', but about something either pleasant or neutral. It hit me strongly and unexpectedly, I don't know why or how - I was awake and perfectly sober at the time, standing in front of the city's Central Post Office and hesitating a minute before dropping into the mailbox some envelopes containing checks or business correspondence, nothing personal anyway. I hesitated trying to remember if I had signed and dated some document or check, I no longer recall.
And it came to me that before the New Year's Day I would receive in the mail Christmas Greetings from an unexpected source, someone I hadn't seen or heard from for years and decades. It wasn't a fantasy, wishful thinking, no one's name came to mind, no speculations, no guesses. I shook it off and forgot about it, the way one forgets most random thoughts and observations.
What do you think happened next? A story must have some point, a pay off, and if we're lucky, even a moral. It's now New Year's Eve, the last day of the year, the postman reaches my house late in the day on his route, after 6, sometimes 7PM, so there is still a chance for the premonition to prove itself, because (if I have to serve it explicitly) nothing happened.
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Monday, December 30, 2013
Not Into What I Like
Have you ever tried to change your identity? I don't mean changing your first, last names and the middle initial, no, I mean changing your persona, the way that others will or ought to perceive you. I suppose that joining a mad religious cult or becoming a drug addict on the streets of the city would be changing one's identity, but again, I have in mind a conscious effort to do it.
It's a subject that has fascinated me since childhood. Literature and arts are full of explorations of it: The Count of Monte Cristo, Jekyll and Hyde, Michelangelo Antonioni's Passenger, examples off the top of my head, not even including the novels I've read this year, where in at least three of them this topic dominates or comes up in one way or another in countries such as 18th century France and 21st century North Korea. (Here allow me to recommend Jean Renoir's excellent adaptation of Stevenson's classic, titled Le Testament du Docteur Cordelier, with the great Jean-Louis Barrault.)
It was a marvelous opportunity. My friend James, whose sister married into the family that owned Desmond Industries, alerted me to it. The job was that of a public relations man for the family and for the privately held company. But it required someone from a higher social class than mine. I hadn't gone to the right schools with the right people, didn't speak French or German, only colloquial Puerto Rican Spanish that I had picked up while living in the islands, didn't have the proper manners, and my socks didn't reach my knees. "You can do it," assured me James, whose own sister had climbed the same steps becoming a refined New England princess in the process. It would be like the carefree and clumsy Bertie Wooster trying to become the fine Mr Jeeves, a prole more aristocratic in manner than himself.
And so I bought a navy blue suit, white shirt and red necktie, all for $15 at a Salvation Army store downtown, and I headed to the mansion in Connecticut for the interview with the family. I had prepared myself recalling from high school all the Latin sayings and cliches, and looking up some French proverbs, as well as a handful of Russian ones. "No, not the Russian!" warned me James, "That would be going downscale, peasantry and tsars!". After a lookover by a couple of stiff looking servants, I was led to the library and met there by Sylvia, the attractive thirtyish matriarch of the family and chairwoman of the company's board of directors, who I later learned was separated from her husband, an executive there, and her brother Laurent, whose middle initial on the business card he handed me was "D", making me wonder if it stood for Desmond, because their last names were not Desmond, and neither was the last name of the founder of the company one hundred years earlier, but I didn't dare asking.
They described the job and told me that it was being held by Jacques B. a French Canadian, who, after training me, would be leaving in three month's time for Canadian diplomatic service. They asked me a few questions about myself, and I managed to pepper my answers with a few of those Latin and French bon mots which they understood perfectly, before Laurent excused himself saying he had a polo game to attend with writer Jerzy Kosinski. After he left, Sylvia pulled her dress above her knees, and insisted that I join her in a drink of sherry and espresso coffee which were brought on a silver tray by one of the servants.(Yes, there was a button by her chair to ring up a servant.) She asked me if I had read Kosinski, and I had, in contrast to the popular New York writers, whose neurotic topical novels I disdained, and she offered before I said anything that she hated them too, preferring Borges, Cortazar and Cela, the only American I've ever met who read Camilo Jose Cela. I lied and told her that I intended to read Cela in the original Spanish. Then she asked my favorite Mozart symphony, and I said the Haffner, which happened to play on the radio as I was driving there, "Especially the second movement", and I hummed the melody for her. "Yes, the Haffner!" she exclaimed, and I figured she must have been listening to the same station.
I was hired for a month long trial period, which suggested to me that they would be testing two more candidates before Jacques' departure in three months. They gave me a cash advance to fill my wardrobe, I bought suits and shirts and neckties, returning the sales receipts as requested.
Jacques turned out to be a pleasant chap, and a character I figured I'd have to emulate to succeed at this job. I aped his relaxed manner, his half-smile and his light joke making, suppressing as well as I could my usual crude habits, backslapping and "a man walks into a bar with a crocodile" jokes, while we traveled to Washington where we met both Senators from the state, and to New York where we spoke with the mayor. No hard bargains were made with the politicians, just casual conversations about the weather and sports (I needed to catch up on baseball knowledge), but however obliquely they were discussed, there were deals, favors, and promised contributions to re-election campaigns. "Don't ever mention or even think the word 'bribe'!" told me Jacques after one visit, "We're not in Paraguay!" He had an office at the company headquarters, and a salary paid by the company, but he reported to Sylvia. He assured me that I wasn't to be overly concerned with the internal politics between the company and the family. "Easy does it," he advised.
I was acquiring a new identity. My girlfriend Marilyn confirmed it shortly before the month passed, telling me:
"You've changed!"
"Well, thank you very much, my dear lady," I replied.
"Not into what I like!", she retorted. She used those exact words, which I've retained in memory all those years, 'not into what I like!'
Her worries would soon be over, as after a month I was thanked, paid in cash, tax free, and asked to sign a secrecy agreement. I didn't get the job, and didn't get it two months later after they presumably tried two other candidates. Who got it, I didn't know, and didn't care to know. As to why, James told me, "It was Sylvia!", just as I had suspected. She expected me to make a pass at her, I was certain, and I hesitated, kept postponing, waiting for the right occasion that never arrived. Time was short, and I simply flopped. And then, it was the matter of a test. She tested me once, telling me in confidence that her husband's time at the company was coming to an end. It sounded like I was the only one to know about it. I can keep a secret, and kept it, which was, I figured later, not what she intended me to do. She was hoping (I suspect) that I would share it with James who would spill it to his sister, and then it would take a path that Sylvia had planned for it. I failed. Women test men all the time, often realizing only afterwards that the little intrigue they had concocted was a test, especially when men, clueless as we often are, fail these exams. It's happened to me a number of times, with, as you well know, sometime tragic results for my career and private life.
In any event, I brought the envelope filled with cash home, threw it on the table, sparkling new $100 and $50 bills, and said to Marilyn, "Look baby, I'm unemployed and we're rich, let's go to Disneyworld!" Which is what we did.
It's a subject that has fascinated me since childhood. Literature and arts are full of explorations of it: The Count of Monte Cristo, Jekyll and Hyde, Michelangelo Antonioni's Passenger, examples off the top of my head, not even including the novels I've read this year, where in at least three of them this topic dominates or comes up in one way or another in countries such as 18th century France and 21st century North Korea. (Here allow me to recommend Jean Renoir's excellent adaptation of Stevenson's classic, titled Le Testament du Docteur Cordelier, with the great Jean-Louis Barrault.)
It was a marvelous opportunity. My friend James, whose sister married into the family that owned Desmond Industries, alerted me to it. The job was that of a public relations man for the family and for the privately held company. But it required someone from a higher social class than mine. I hadn't gone to the right schools with the right people, didn't speak French or German, only colloquial Puerto Rican Spanish that I had picked up while living in the islands, didn't have the proper manners, and my socks didn't reach my knees. "You can do it," assured me James, whose own sister had climbed the same steps becoming a refined New England princess in the process. It would be like the carefree and clumsy Bertie Wooster trying to become the fine Mr Jeeves, a prole more aristocratic in manner than himself.
And so I bought a navy blue suit, white shirt and red necktie, all for $15 at a Salvation Army store downtown, and I headed to the mansion in Connecticut for the interview with the family. I had prepared myself recalling from high school all the Latin sayings and cliches, and looking up some French proverbs, as well as a handful of Russian ones. "No, not the Russian!" warned me James, "That would be going downscale, peasantry and tsars!". After a lookover by a couple of stiff looking servants, I was led to the library and met there by Sylvia, the attractive thirtyish matriarch of the family and chairwoman of the company's board of directors, who I later learned was separated from her husband, an executive there, and her brother Laurent, whose middle initial on the business card he handed me was "D", making me wonder if it stood for Desmond, because their last names were not Desmond, and neither was the last name of the founder of the company one hundred years earlier, but I didn't dare asking.
They described the job and told me that it was being held by Jacques B. a French Canadian, who, after training me, would be leaving in three month's time for Canadian diplomatic service. They asked me a few questions about myself, and I managed to pepper my answers with a few of those Latin and French bon mots which they understood perfectly, before Laurent excused himself saying he had a polo game to attend with writer Jerzy Kosinski. After he left, Sylvia pulled her dress above her knees, and insisted that I join her in a drink of sherry and espresso coffee which were brought on a silver tray by one of the servants.(Yes, there was a button by her chair to ring up a servant.) She asked me if I had read Kosinski, and I had, in contrast to the popular New York writers, whose neurotic topical novels I disdained, and she offered before I said anything that she hated them too, preferring Borges, Cortazar and Cela, the only American I've ever met who read Camilo Jose Cela. I lied and told her that I intended to read Cela in the original Spanish. Then she asked my favorite Mozart symphony, and I said the Haffner, which happened to play on the radio as I was driving there, "Especially the second movement", and I hummed the melody for her. "Yes, the Haffner!" she exclaimed, and I figured she must have been listening to the same station.
I was hired for a month long trial period, which suggested to me that they would be testing two more candidates before Jacques' departure in three months. They gave me a cash advance to fill my wardrobe, I bought suits and shirts and neckties, returning the sales receipts as requested.
Jacques turned out to be a pleasant chap, and a character I figured I'd have to emulate to succeed at this job. I aped his relaxed manner, his half-smile and his light joke making, suppressing as well as I could my usual crude habits, backslapping and "a man walks into a bar with a crocodile" jokes, while we traveled to Washington where we met both Senators from the state, and to New York where we spoke with the mayor. No hard bargains were made with the politicians, just casual conversations about the weather and sports (I needed to catch up on baseball knowledge), but however obliquely they were discussed, there were deals, favors, and promised contributions to re-election campaigns. "Don't ever mention or even think the word 'bribe'!" told me Jacques after one visit, "We're not in Paraguay!" He had an office at the company headquarters, and a salary paid by the company, but he reported to Sylvia. He assured me that I wasn't to be overly concerned with the internal politics between the company and the family. "Easy does it," he advised.
I was acquiring a new identity. My girlfriend Marilyn confirmed it shortly before the month passed, telling me:
"You've changed!"
"Well, thank you very much, my dear lady," I replied.
"Not into what I like!", she retorted. She used those exact words, which I've retained in memory all those years, 'not into what I like!'
Her worries would soon be over, as after a month I was thanked, paid in cash, tax free, and asked to sign a secrecy agreement. I didn't get the job, and didn't get it two months later after they presumably tried two other candidates. Who got it, I didn't know, and didn't care to know. As to why, James told me, "It was Sylvia!", just as I had suspected. She expected me to make a pass at her, I was certain, and I hesitated, kept postponing, waiting for the right occasion that never arrived. Time was short, and I simply flopped. And then, it was the matter of a test. She tested me once, telling me in confidence that her husband's time at the company was coming to an end. It sounded like I was the only one to know about it. I can keep a secret, and kept it, which was, I figured later, not what she intended me to do. She was hoping (I suspect) that I would share it with James who would spill it to his sister, and then it would take a path that Sylvia had planned for it. I failed. Women test men all the time, often realizing only afterwards that the little intrigue they had concocted was a test, especially when men, clueless as we often are, fail these exams. It's happened to me a number of times, with, as you well know, sometime tragic results for my career and private life.
In any event, I brought the envelope filled with cash home, threw it on the table, sparkling new $100 and $50 bills, and said to Marilyn, "Look baby, I'm unemployed and we're rich, let's go to Disneyworld!" Which is what we did.
Sunday, December 29, 2013
Suffering in the Sunshine
That's the lyric I heard in the infectious happy song I discovered online this past Christmas Day. Or thought I heard it. In fact, as I soon found out, because unfortunately for my piece of mind, the complete lyrics were published on another website, I had misheard it, not the first time to do so, not the only listener mishearing not the only popular song, there are entire websites dedicated to the comedy of misheard song lyrics, people misinterpret song lyrics all the time, which is occasionally the intention of performers, or at other times an unintended consequence of the machinations by the artists of the recording mix, and it seems that the only song lyrics that are always understandable are those that don't make sense, such as for example The Whiter Shade of Pale, or remain forever inscrutable such as the smash hit about (among other things) that cake that someone left out in the rain, for which the singer, we are informed, will never have that recipe again, OH, NOOOOOOOOOOOOOO...
My song was titled Everything's Fine, and its title was also the first and second line of the refrain, followed by the line that I misunderstood, and contradicting what I thought I heard, you might think, but on the other hand possibly revealing a deep existential insight, however in this case unintentional.
Be that as it may, the actual line reads "Surfing in the sunshine", and the English band's name, which you can also interpret as your heart desires is Phat Bollard.
I'm undecided, a bit misguided
In this rolling wave that's been provided
Which is up, which is down, going round and round
Searching for breath before I drown
Everything's fine
Everything's fine
Surfing in the sunshine
Makes everything fine
(Lyrics: Pat & Aaron)
http://phatbollard.bandcamp.com/track/everythings-fine
Saturday, December 28, 2013
Busking at the Station
Yes, the station was the best stage. And in some ways the worst. Best because of the money, of course. I calculated that if we played there five or six times a week, we could have all quit our day jobs and lived on the tax free donations that were overflowing the guitar case in front of us. My bandmates did not believe me, and we never were able to test this theory as we played the station only twice or thrice a week during my time with the band.
Anyway, it was a popular spot for bands and solo street musicians, jugglers and mimes, and you had to compete for the space. We chose to play the morning crowd, 7 to 9 or 10, when not many other guitar and mandolin wizards were willing to get up at 6 and drag their butts and gear downtown. We played our gig, packed up, and headed for our day jobs. This was the time when flex time was starting to get popular, and you weren't expected to arrive at the office at a certain hour but only before a certain hour. It fit us the working stiffs perfectly.
And the worst, as I said. It seemed that everyone who lived in the city and its suburbs passed through there at one time or another. Not only the passengers of trains arriving every few minutes, but passers-by coming from god only know where crisscrossing the sidewalk in all directions. And tourists during the season. I think I must have said "Hello!" while playing there to everyone I had ever known. Well, the problem was that if you were avoiding the law, bill collectors, ex-wives or your enemies, sooner or later they'd run into you there. And our bass player Bill's adventurous existence happened to include all of the categories I just mentioned.
Bill was a good sport and a clever man, who wasn't going to skip the train station busking because of the dangers he potentially faced there. He appeared wearing a false red beard, wig covered by a hat to make it look like natural hair (he was balding), a jacket with padded shoulders, and shoes on one inch heels with another inch added inside by orthopedic inserts. His new height changed his physical relationship to the bass fiddle, his posture and body movements, he was truly a new man. And it worked. People who knew us, knew his name (I don't know if they were his creditors or enemies), would approach the band between songs asking "Where is Bill?", and we'd make up some excuse saying that he had to babysit his kids, or something, but he was still with the band, and when we felt like pulling his leg, because he was right there listening to us, we'd say that he had a court appearance to attend, or was arrested last night at a 4th Street whorehouse.
In any case, we had an understanding with him that in face of danger, he'd casually and quickly put down the bass, run for his life, while we finished the set and took care of returning his instrument.
What is meant to happen will eventually happen, you can't cheat fate. A man looking like an undercover cop, you learn to read the types after a year or two on the street, stopped to see us one time in front of the station, and he started watching Bill, with just too much of interest for comfort. We finished a song, Bill put down the bass, whispered a word in my ear and walked inside the station. Through the glass door I saw that once inside he took off running. The cop, if that's what he was, hesitated for a spell, turning around to walk after Bill, then turning back to the original position, figuring I guessed that a musician wouldn't abandon his instrument. We kept on playing, and after a couple of songs the man approached me and asked "What happened to the bass player?" "Oh, he had to pee pee, went to the bathroom, will be right back," I told him. But Bill never came back, and the man got tired of waiting and walked away shaking his head.
"He'll be back," I told Bill the next day. What to do? It was Bill's idea. We hired Chuck, another bass player, to sub for Bill, dressed him in Bill's getup, sans the platform shoes, he was taller than Bill, and we set out for the station. Sure enough, the cop, or whoever he was, showed up. He waited patiently for us to finish a set, and then approached Chuck saying, "You are Bill D. and I have a court summons to serve you!"
Startled, Chuck said loudly: "What? I'm no Bill D., get away from me!"
"You are Bill D., I recognize your bass!"
That was a lie or bluff as Chuck was playing his own instrument. For some reason the man hasn't yet pulled out his summons document.
"You're insane, go away!", demanded Chuck.
There was a uniformed cop standing nearby, there is always one in those places, and I waved him over, told him that "This gentleman is harassing our bass player."
The cop, as we were hoping, and as if he were an actor in on the act, asked both of them to produce identification, and of course Chuck pulled out his driver's license, which the policeman read out loud. He told the summons server to get lost and warned him that if he sees him here again he'll have to arrest him.
Anyway, it was a popular spot for bands and solo street musicians, jugglers and mimes, and you had to compete for the space. We chose to play the morning crowd, 7 to 9 or 10, when not many other guitar and mandolin wizards were willing to get up at 6 and drag their butts and gear downtown. We played our gig, packed up, and headed for our day jobs. This was the time when flex time was starting to get popular, and you weren't expected to arrive at the office at a certain hour but only before a certain hour. It fit us the working stiffs perfectly.
And the worst, as I said. It seemed that everyone who lived in the city and its suburbs passed through there at one time or another. Not only the passengers of trains arriving every few minutes, but passers-by coming from god only know where crisscrossing the sidewalk in all directions. And tourists during the season. I think I must have said "Hello!" while playing there to everyone I had ever known. Well, the problem was that if you were avoiding the law, bill collectors, ex-wives or your enemies, sooner or later they'd run into you there. And our bass player Bill's adventurous existence happened to include all of the categories I just mentioned.
Bill was a good sport and a clever man, who wasn't going to skip the train station busking because of the dangers he potentially faced there. He appeared wearing a false red beard, wig covered by a hat to make it look like natural hair (he was balding), a jacket with padded shoulders, and shoes on one inch heels with another inch added inside by orthopedic inserts. His new height changed his physical relationship to the bass fiddle, his posture and body movements, he was truly a new man. And it worked. People who knew us, knew his name (I don't know if they were his creditors or enemies), would approach the band between songs asking "Where is Bill?", and we'd make up some excuse saying that he had to babysit his kids, or something, but he was still with the band, and when we felt like pulling his leg, because he was right there listening to us, we'd say that he had a court appearance to attend, or was arrested last night at a 4th Street whorehouse.
In any case, we had an understanding with him that in face of danger, he'd casually and quickly put down the bass, run for his life, while we finished the set and took care of returning his instrument.
What is meant to happen will eventually happen, you can't cheat fate. A man looking like an undercover cop, you learn to read the types after a year or two on the street, stopped to see us one time in front of the station, and he started watching Bill, with just too much of interest for comfort. We finished a song, Bill put down the bass, whispered a word in my ear and walked inside the station. Through the glass door I saw that once inside he took off running. The cop, if that's what he was, hesitated for a spell, turning around to walk after Bill, then turning back to the original position, figuring I guessed that a musician wouldn't abandon his instrument. We kept on playing, and after a couple of songs the man approached me and asked "What happened to the bass player?" "Oh, he had to pee pee, went to the bathroom, will be right back," I told him. But Bill never came back, and the man got tired of waiting and walked away shaking his head.
"He'll be back," I told Bill the next day. What to do? It was Bill's idea. We hired Chuck, another bass player, to sub for Bill, dressed him in Bill's getup, sans the platform shoes, he was taller than Bill, and we set out for the station. Sure enough, the cop, or whoever he was, showed up. He waited patiently for us to finish a set, and then approached Chuck saying, "You are Bill D. and I have a court summons to serve you!"
Startled, Chuck said loudly: "What? I'm no Bill D., get away from me!"
"You are Bill D., I recognize your bass!"
That was a lie or bluff as Chuck was playing his own instrument. For some reason the man hasn't yet pulled out his summons document.
"You're insane, go away!", demanded Chuck.
There was a uniformed cop standing nearby, there is always one in those places, and I waved him over, told him that "This gentleman is harassing our bass player."
The cop, as we were hoping, and as if he were an actor in on the act, asked both of them to produce identification, and of course Chuck pulled out his driver's license, which the policeman read out loud. He told the summons server to get lost and warned him that if he sees him here again he'll have to arrest him.
Friday, December 27, 2013
River Flow
It was Henry's idea. "I'll get you two back together yet!" he threatened, the eternal optimist. He managed to obtain printed invitations to the premiere of the latest film directed by S., her favorite filmmaker, a film that received an award at the Berlin Film Festival, Silver Bear or something, and on the back of the folded card he wrote inviting her to come see it with us who'll wait for her at the Bertolli's Cafe by the riverside, promising that S. himself will attend the premiere, "us" only implying my presence, he stuck a stamp on the envelope and dropped it in the mailbox. The film, like all foreign films nowadays, wouldn't last a week at a theater. The 60s are over, Americans won't or can't read English subtitles any more
We arrived early at Bertolli's, ordered cappuccinos and waited. 15, 20 minutes, after the appointed time, half hour, she doesn't show up.
"Maybe she's spending the Holidays with her son's family in Berlin," I suggested. Her son, who, as she once informed me, wished mommy would get back together with his father whom she had divorced, was a young brain virtuoso on a semi-permanent diplomatic or CIA connected mission in Germany.
"Holidays are a month away," answered Henry.
It was late afternoon and we still had plenty of time before the movie show. "Let's walk over to her apartment", said Henry. She lived in an apartment on Riverside Drive, not half a mile from Bertolli's. We walked at a fast clip.
"The river flows against us," I observed as if I had just stumbled onto a deep philosophical truth.
"Yeah," replied Henry, "but when we return with her, it'll run with us!"
I rang the doorbell, rang it again, an old man, unshaven, wearing pajamas opened the door. Night worker?
"What?" he said.
Was it her notorious philandering, wandering father? I guess not.
"No, she doesn't live here any more, moved out nine months ago, I don't know where to. Her mail? The post office forwards it, they know the address."
We stepped back on the street and rushed back to Henry's parked Jeep, running faster than the lazy river beside us. S. didn't show at the premiere, only the producer and one of the actors, who, strangely enough, lisped a little, whereas his diction in the film was perfect.
"If she's in Germany," offered Henry, "she'll watch it with German subtitles."
"Or dubbed into German which she doesn't speak!", I added. "That'll teach her!"
"That'll learn 'er!", corrected me Henry in his best Yosemite Sam voice.
We arrived early at Bertolli's, ordered cappuccinos and waited. 15, 20 minutes, after the appointed time, half hour, she doesn't show up.
"Maybe she's spending the Holidays with her son's family in Berlin," I suggested. Her son, who, as she once informed me, wished mommy would get back together with his father whom she had divorced, was a young brain virtuoso on a semi-permanent diplomatic or CIA connected mission in Germany.
"Holidays are a month away," answered Henry.
It was late afternoon and we still had plenty of time before the movie show. "Let's walk over to her apartment", said Henry. She lived in an apartment on Riverside Drive, not half a mile from Bertolli's. We walked at a fast clip.
"The river flows against us," I observed as if I had just stumbled onto a deep philosophical truth.
"Yeah," replied Henry, "but when we return with her, it'll run with us!"
I rang the doorbell, rang it again, an old man, unshaven, wearing pajamas opened the door. Night worker?
"What?" he said.
Was it her notorious philandering, wandering father? I guess not.
"No, she doesn't live here any more, moved out nine months ago, I don't know where to. Her mail? The post office forwards it, they know the address."
We stepped back on the street and rushed back to Henry's parked Jeep, running faster than the lazy river beside us. S. didn't show at the premiere, only the producer and one of the actors, who, strangely enough, lisped a little, whereas his diction in the film was perfect.
"If she's in Germany," offered Henry, "she'll watch it with German subtitles."
"Or dubbed into German which she doesn't speak!", I added. "That'll teach her!"
"That'll learn 'er!", corrected me Henry in his best Yosemite Sam voice.
Thursday, December 26, 2013
The Mansion of Dovetown
On Christmas Eve afternoon, never mind of what year, I prepared myself a glass of eggnog with a dash of Wild Turkey 101, drank it, prepared another one, emptied it as well, and by five in the afternoon, unused to drinking hard liquor, too dizzy to stand up, I had to lie down and take a fast nap.
I dreamt about an old adventure in which I found myself drunk, lost and confused in a city 75 miles from home, wandering its dark streets, unsure how I ever got there. I don't have a car, did I take a bus, train here, and for what purpose? I searched my pockets for a ticket or some other evidence of a journey undertaken. I looked through my little address book for names and telephone numbers of people who lived here. Nothing.
It was a dark and stormy night and I kept walking. Lost. I have never been in this city before. Aha, I suddenly remembered, I arrived here with a pair of friends and another woman, who wasn't keen on me, as I wasn't keen on her, the four of us in the friends' Volkswagen, visiting their friends house, where we drank, listened to music and smoked, when I stepped out to go to a store with instructions on how to find it, and to buy munchies, chips and crackers or pretzels, and somehow I became lost. I passed a few people on the street, but I forgot to note the street of the hosts' house, so what directions and to where could I ask anyone?
I must have been walking in circles - the streets and houses all looked the same, uninterrupted rows of two story tenements that must have been build at the end of the 19th century if not earlier, narrow streets, no cars parked or driving. Are cars forbidden here or are the residents too poor to own them, I asked myself. Anyway, a parked car would have blocked three quarters of the street. A handful of low powered or very old motorbikes stood next to the houses on the sidewalks. If a truck roared through this place, these wooden houses would all crash down. A few small stores were all closed, signs in their windows in foreign languages. And bars. Open and on almost every corner.
There were bars on every corner of the intersection where I finally stopped, and where I thought I had been before a few minutes earlier and a few minutes before that. I decided to go to one of them and get a drink. But which one? I spotted an empty Coca Cola bottle standing up smack in the middle of the intersection. I approached it, leaned down and spun it. It stopped pointing to one of the streets, I spun it again and got the same result. A motorbike passed me, the rider cursing me in Russian. I spun the bottle for the third time, and when it stopped, I set the bottle standing where I had found it and walked into the bar on the corner to which it pointed me.
It was crowded, Friday night, the faces of people told me what I already knew that this was a working class neighbourhood, they were boisterous, friendly, singing in what I thought I recognized as Lithuanian language. Someone handed me a beer can, and I joined in the singing, not understanding a single word. I was reminded of those people you sometimes read in the newspaper about who wake up from a coma speaking perfect French or some other language they never studied or had known.
Someone told me that the bar on the opposite corner outside was Ukrainian, the bar to the left Polish, and the bar to right some other ethnic group, I forget which now. Another watery beer or two and I forgot that I was lost and joined in the revelries like a native Lithuanian.Or Latvian, because to this day I'm not sure the nationality of these revelers. Definitely not Estonian.
The next morning I woke up in the room above the bar, in a wide bed next to some woman. I don't think we had had sex. She served me breakfast, coffee, I thanked her and went out heading straight and without any directions to the bus terminal where I boarded a Trailways bus home. I checked my wallet, my watch on my wrist, no one had robbed me.
I didn't see my friends until Monday afternoon and they weren't angry or concerned about my disappearance, and only casually asked me what had happened. I told them that I ran into a couple of high school friends and followed them to their mansion located in the wealthy section of the city, that somehow or another I knew was called Dovetown. They believed me, or pretended to believe me, better than I pretended to believe my own story myself.
A month or two later, I ran into the woman who had not been keen on me, she was keen on me now, and told me that she had heard the story I told Tim and Kate, our mutual friends, and didn't believe a word of it. I then told her the story I have just told you.
I dreamt about an old adventure in which I found myself drunk, lost and confused in a city 75 miles from home, wandering its dark streets, unsure how I ever got there. I don't have a car, did I take a bus, train here, and for what purpose? I searched my pockets for a ticket or some other evidence of a journey undertaken. I looked through my little address book for names and telephone numbers of people who lived here. Nothing.
It was a dark and stormy night and I kept walking. Lost. I have never been in this city before. Aha, I suddenly remembered, I arrived here with a pair of friends and another woman, who wasn't keen on me, as I wasn't keen on her, the four of us in the friends' Volkswagen, visiting their friends house, where we drank, listened to music and smoked, when I stepped out to go to a store with instructions on how to find it, and to buy munchies, chips and crackers or pretzels, and somehow I became lost. I passed a few people on the street, but I forgot to note the street of the hosts' house, so what directions and to where could I ask anyone?
I must have been walking in circles - the streets and houses all looked the same, uninterrupted rows of two story tenements that must have been build at the end of the 19th century if not earlier, narrow streets, no cars parked or driving. Are cars forbidden here or are the residents too poor to own them, I asked myself. Anyway, a parked car would have blocked three quarters of the street. A handful of low powered or very old motorbikes stood next to the houses on the sidewalks. If a truck roared through this place, these wooden houses would all crash down. A few small stores were all closed, signs in their windows in foreign languages. And bars. Open and on almost every corner.
There were bars on every corner of the intersection where I finally stopped, and where I thought I had been before a few minutes earlier and a few minutes before that. I decided to go to one of them and get a drink. But which one? I spotted an empty Coca Cola bottle standing up smack in the middle of the intersection. I approached it, leaned down and spun it. It stopped pointing to one of the streets, I spun it again and got the same result. A motorbike passed me, the rider cursing me in Russian. I spun the bottle for the third time, and when it stopped, I set the bottle standing where I had found it and walked into the bar on the corner to which it pointed me.
It was crowded, Friday night, the faces of people told me what I already knew that this was a working class neighbourhood, they were boisterous, friendly, singing in what I thought I recognized as Lithuanian language. Someone handed me a beer can, and I joined in the singing, not understanding a single word. I was reminded of those people you sometimes read in the newspaper about who wake up from a coma speaking perfect French or some other language they never studied or had known.
Someone told me that the bar on the opposite corner outside was Ukrainian, the bar to the left Polish, and the bar to right some other ethnic group, I forget which now. Another watery beer or two and I forgot that I was lost and joined in the revelries like a native Lithuanian.Or Latvian, because to this day I'm not sure the nationality of these revelers. Definitely not Estonian.
The next morning I woke up in the room above the bar, in a wide bed next to some woman. I don't think we had had sex. She served me breakfast, coffee, I thanked her and went out heading straight and without any directions to the bus terminal where I boarded a Trailways bus home. I checked my wallet, my watch on my wrist, no one had robbed me.
I didn't see my friends until Monday afternoon and they weren't angry or concerned about my disappearance, and only casually asked me what had happened. I told them that I ran into a couple of high school friends and followed them to their mansion located in the wealthy section of the city, that somehow or another I knew was called Dovetown. They believed me, or pretended to believe me, better than I pretended to believe my own story myself.
A month or two later, I ran into the woman who had not been keen on me, she was keen on me now, and told me that she had heard the story I told Tim and Kate, our mutual friends, and didn't believe a word of it. I then told her the story I have just told you.
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Resemblances
The young woman walking towards me on the downtown sidewalk was tall, pretty ('the kind of girl I'd like to meet', as the song says), attractively dressed. Our eyes met when we were still a dozen yards from each other, and I thought I noticed a sign of recognition in hers. Strange, I don't know her. She stopped when we got close, I stopped too, what else could I do, she pulled out a notebook, a pen, and asked if she could have my autograph.
Caught off guard I stammered "Who am I, what name should I sign?" I have been told before more than once or twice that I look like this or that or another famous person, none of them looking like any one of the others, these resemblances residing in the minds of the beholders more than in one's own appearance, so who does she think I look like, and whose name should I sign, Bruce Welch's? I doubt she's heard of Bruce Welch, I doubt many people today have heard of him.
I remembered the time when I was sitting at the bar in the same neighbourhood where we were now, the place was busy, when two men walked in, sat down at a table near the door, the only one available, and one of them, I thought, looked like one of the Righteous Brothers, the tall one, his brother the short one had just died. He and his companion were definitely outoftowners, dressed casually like everyone else around, but unlike the rest of the clientele of workers, bums and students, expensively, Hollywood style. I shared my observation with Bob the bartender, and he immediately ran upstairs to the office to check the Righteous Brothers picture (this was before the iPhone and the iPad were invented for such emergencies), came back after a minute without a solid verdict. "Maybe," he said. An hour or so later, someone, maybe it was Bob, built up the courage to approach the man and ask. "No, I'm not," the Righteous Brother replied and the questioner reported, "But I've been told I look like him."
A defense mechanism used by celebrities to protect their privacy. Maybe that's what I should tell her, I thought. She wasn't much help though. She answered, "Your own, you're the artist!" I signed my own name in her notebook, not any more legibly than I sign it on credit card receipts rushing to leave a grocery store, and I noticed on the page of it handwritten questions about ancient Rome, which just happened to have been the subject of my studies.
"So you are studying Rome?" I asked. She was, and I informed her as humbly as I could that this was my area of expertise.
You meet a girl and before you part, you dare to ask for her telephone number. That's how it usually works, doesn't it. This time, I met a girl, or rather she met me, and before we said 'Goodbye', she asked my telephone number. It's not a fantasy, it happened.
Caught off guard I stammered "Who am I, what name should I sign?" I have been told before more than once or twice that I look like this or that or another famous person, none of them looking like any one of the others, these resemblances residing in the minds of the beholders more than in one's own appearance, so who does she think I look like, and whose name should I sign, Bruce Welch's? I doubt she's heard of Bruce Welch, I doubt many people today have heard of him.
I remembered the time when I was sitting at the bar in the same neighbourhood where we were now, the place was busy, when two men walked in, sat down at a table near the door, the only one available, and one of them, I thought, looked like one of the Righteous Brothers, the tall one, his brother the short one had just died. He and his companion were definitely outoftowners, dressed casually like everyone else around, but unlike the rest of the clientele of workers, bums and students, expensively, Hollywood style. I shared my observation with Bob the bartender, and he immediately ran upstairs to the office to check the Righteous Brothers picture (this was before the iPhone and the iPad were invented for such emergencies), came back after a minute without a solid verdict. "Maybe," he said. An hour or so later, someone, maybe it was Bob, built up the courage to approach the man and ask. "No, I'm not," the Righteous Brother replied and the questioner reported, "But I've been told I look like him."
A defense mechanism used by celebrities to protect their privacy. Maybe that's what I should tell her, I thought. She wasn't much help though. She answered, "Your own, you're the artist!" I signed my own name in her notebook, not any more legibly than I sign it on credit card receipts rushing to leave a grocery store, and I noticed on the page of it handwritten questions about ancient Rome, which just happened to have been the subject of my studies.
"So you are studying Rome?" I asked. She was, and I informed her as humbly as I could that this was my area of expertise.
You meet a girl and before you part, you dare to ask for her telephone number. That's how it usually works, doesn't it. This time, I met a girl, or rather she met me, and before we said 'Goodbye', she asked my telephone number. It's not a fantasy, it happened.
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