Irregularity

Always take care of your homeys.

That’s what Craig says.

It’s a good idea to remember what they drink.

Regulars like that.

If you can hold on to that alone, there’s usually a couple extra bucks in it for you. Anything else you hold onto is a bonus.

Jerry likes perfect Manhattans, straight up, ice cold without the cherry. He’s a retired bread truck driver from Kirkland and now he works for a rental car company two days a week.

Dale drinks double Tanqueray on the rocks. He brings his own peanuts and always has three drinks before aerobics class at the YMCA.

Bruce used to be a Dewars man, but lately he’s been getting in to Chardonnay. He always gets at least one shrimp cocktail appetizer, often commenting that the kale garnish is the best lettuce he’s ever tasted.

Tom and Sue drink everything.

Actually, Tom drinks most everything, but he prefers bourbon presses, Smith & Wessons, Brandy Alexanders and any kind of shot you set in front of him. Sue drinks anything with tequila.

Their kids are grown and off to college and they just moved north from San Francisco. I’d only been behind the bar for a few weeks when we first met, but we took to each other immediately. I know enough to keep their glasses full and pour heavy and they know enough to reward me for it.

I was working my usual Saturday afternoon shift and the restaurant was a ghost town when they walked in.

“Danny!” Tom waved as they entered the cavernous dungeon. It might be 85 degrees outside, but there was no way to tell in the giant, windowless barn.

Sue headed straight to the bathroom after a brief chat with Holly at the front desk. Tom sauntered down the ramp that led to the lounge.

“Hey, hey, what do you say?” I asked and held my hand over the bar, offering it to Tom as he sidled up to a stool. He snatched my palm and gave it a firm tug. His hands were strong, rough to touch and carried confidence.

“Where the hell is everybody, Danny boy?” he asked.

“Anywhere but here, man. You see that weather?” I responded.

“Hell yes. We just got off the Sound,” he said. “You guys are crazy though, that thing’s colder than shit. Damn near froze my nut sack off.”

Sue made her way out of the restroom and slowly down the ramp, her hand tight on the wooden rail. She wobbled to the stool next to Tom. Her head was down and her eyes led the way for her dragging feet. She gripped the chair and climbed on top, smiling with victory.

“Ah, it couldn’t have been that bad,” I said while holding up a bottle of Cuervo and motioning to Sue. “Margarita?” She didn’t move.

Tom continued, “Oh no, the Jet Ski, or Sea Doo actually, was perfect. The whole thing was great. But when the hell does that thing warm up, man?”

“It doesn’t really,” I said. “If we get a few weeks in a row of hot, hot weather, it will get more tolerable. But it’s deep man. It takes a lot to warm water that deep.”

“Shit,” Tom laughed and shook his head, drove a finger into his ear and tilted his head to the side. “Water, man. It’s everywhere,” he said.

I laughed. Still holding the bottle of tequila, I motioned to Tom, “You guys want margaritas?”

“Sue?” he broke her daze with a gentle nudge. “Margarita?” She nodded. “Me too,” he said. “It’s margarita weather. How ‘bout a couple shots back too?”

“You got it,” I told him. I limed and salted the rims of two ’rita glasses, loaded them with ice, and poured. Heavy. I finished with a splash of sweet & sour and lime juice, set them in front of Tom and Sue and leaned up against the coolers behind the bar.

Tom was focused on the TV above my head. The Mariners were beating the Devil Rays, 5-2, and Edgar Martinez was at the plate.

“Damn, these guys are unreal,” Tom said.

“You two been to a game yet?” I asked.

Tom shook his head as he gulped from his glass. He pulled away, chomping on ice, “Next month,” he said. “The Giants are in town and we got tickets for all three.”

“Nice,” I smiled.

Sue nodded. She raised her head in excitement but just as she was about to talk, Tom leaped out of his chair and screamed, “Jesus Christ!”

I looked up at the screen just as the ball bounced off the wall in center field. Tom Lampkin and Ichiro walked home as Edgar cruised into second with a double. Tom took his seat along with another pull from his glass.

“These guys are un-fucking-believable,” he shouted in amazement.

“He’s the man,” I added. “Edgar’s a beast.”

Tom took another long sip and started in again, “I’m telling you, I’ve never seen a winner, but these guys might be it. We’ve had a lot of good teams down there, but never won a Series. A few times we got close. ‘89 of course. We should have won that shit, by the way. Fuck Oakland. We should have gone in ‘87 too. Mitchell and Clark, that team was good. ‘71 was sweet, but they laid down to the Pirates. Who can blame them though? Clemente and Stargell, that was their year. We split at home, and then never came back from Pittsburgh. I was pissed.”

“Damn, that’s old school,” I said.

“That was the first postseason I really saw,” Tom continued. “My older brothers are always yakking about ‘62, but I was only eight back then. That still tears up my brother John though. Jesus, don’t get him started on that shit. Shut out in Game 7 at Candlestick. One-nuthin’ to the fuckin’ Yanks. John can still recount the misery pitch-by-pitch. I was only eight though. I remember everyone getting all pissed off and shit. I remember trying to get upset too, but I didn’t really care. I was too young. ‘71 was the one for me, man. They didn’t even get to the damn Series, but I was in it all the way. I was a senior in high school. I wanted that shit bad. Pirates were too good though. We all knew it going in. That was the best I’d seen until ‘89.”

“You guys got a pretty good squad now,” I said.

Tom paused for a second before responding, his mind lost in thought. Then, suddenly, “No, we’re good. Dusty’s a hell of a coach, and Bonds is unreal, obviously. But I’m telling you, these Mariners are fun to watch. I miss my Giants, but these guys have been a pretty damn good replacement so far. I think they really got a shot at–“

Before he could get another word out, Sue awoke from her daze and jumped into the conversation with a vicious shout, “THE GIANTS ARE GONNA KICK THEIR ASS!” She smiled as her head wobbled atop her dainty shoulders.

I caught eyes with Tom and we both laughed. Sue leaned toward us, resting her head on her right hand, her body was limp. She threw her left finger in our direction and slurred, “You guys don’t think I know what I’m talking about, but I do.”

Tom patted her gently and began rubbing her back, “No we do, Baby, it’s OK.”

“Fuck you,” She shot back, pushing his hand away. “You motherfuckers think I’m some kind of idiot. You think I’m stupid or something. You’re the ones who don’t know shit,” she added, louder and louder all the time.

Tom and I laughed again. He shook his head, downed the shot of liquor in front of him and motioned for a refill of his margarita.

“Both?” I asked.

He nodded in mid-swallow. Sue continued, “I know enough to know the Mariners haven’t won a goddamn thing,” she said. “This team might be decent, but they’re still a bunch of pussies from Seattle.”

“All right. All right,” Tom said, motioning for her to calm down. “Take it easy, Babe.” He reached again to rub her back in reassurance. She threw his hand away and shot back with more volume and fury than she had before.

“You’re the goddamn worst,” she said. “I can understand Danny’s love for the club. The poor kid grew up here. It’s not his fault his team’s a bunch of slack-jaws. He’s got to like ‘em anyway. In fact, I’d think he was some kind of asshole if he didn’t. But you. You’re the fair-weather motherfucker around here. You move in to town and just jump on board. Shit. Where’s your balls, huh?”

As she finished her rant, she stood on the crossbars of her stool, towering over Tom for dramatic effect. He looked up at her and the two of them laughed. So did I. She stumbled back to her seat and smiled.

“I gotta hit the head,” Tom said and he set his empty glass back on the bar and headed up the ramp.

“I’ll get those drinks,” I said.

Sue laid her head on the bar.

I leaned down to catch her eyes and asked, “How you doin’?”

She nodded and spoke softly, her eyes focused on the bar, “I’m OK.”

I nodded back to her and headed for the well. I grabbed both a ’rita and shot glass and went to work. Halfway through, the phone rang.

“Dan?” It was Dick, in his office.

“Yes,” I said.

“Could you come back here please?”

It was an order, not a question.

“Sure,” I said and hung up. I headed back to the well and finished Tom’s margarita, placed it in front of his empty seat along with a fresh coaster and started for the manager’s office.

“I’ll be right back, Sue.”

She nodded.

Dick was waiting in the doorway when I arrived.

“What the hell’s going on out there?” he asked.

“What do you mean?” I said.

“I heard cussing, yelling. Holly came back and said some drunk lady told her she pissed her pants. Said she left her undies in the bathroom.”

I laughed.

“It’s not really that funny, Dan.”

“I know. You’re right. But it’s just Tom and Sue. They’re cool.”

“Sounds like they’re drunker than shit,” he said.

“Tom’s fine, and besides, they just live right around the corner. They’re regulars. You remember, you were talking to them about the 49ers for like an hour the other night.”

“Well you got to calm them down or get them out of here,” he said. “They can’t be cussing like that. This is a family restaurant.”

“All right, I’ll talk to them,” I told him and headed back to the bar, slightly worried about the situation. Passing the employee bulletin board, I rounded the corner into the lounge. Tom was back at his chair, screaming at the television and Sue looked to be asleep, her head resting on varnished mahogany.

“There he is,” Tom shouted with a rub of his hands as I walked by. “Is that my shot?” he asked, his hand pointing at a lonely glass of tequila on the rubber mat in front of the ice bin behind the bar. In my hurry to talk to Dick I hadn’t served him his second tequila.

“Oh, yeah,” I said. “Sorry Tom.” I returned to the service side and delivered the small glass.

“Beautiful,” Tom said. He picked it up and slammed it back. “Abbott just gave up another run, Lou yanked him. It’s still 7-3 though.”

“Right on,” I said. “Is she all right?” I asked him and pointed at Sue, genuinely concerned.

Tom tilted his head to the left and leaned close to the bar. Peeling her hair back from her eyes, he examined her face. “Sleeping,” he said, and returned to the TV.

Shit, I thought. Dick might be right. These guys are pretty housed. I reached down and grabbed a wet towel from the sanitizer bucket beneath the bar and began to clean. Randomly, I went to work. I moved mats, glassware, and bottles, wiping the counters beneath. Trying to buy time, hoping that everything would work out without a confrontation.

Tom was focused on the game, shouting at the screen with every ball and strike. Sue snored with her face on the bar and the dinner hour suddenly seemed too close for comfort. Luckily, the place was empty. I decided to serve Tom one more drink when the time came with the hope he would move on shortly. Tom being Tom however, the time came quickly.

“Danny, another shot and a drink please, sir,” he said.

“No problem,” I said. Technically, it was two more, I suppose. But either way, there they went. The last two drinks I was going to serve him.

Craig and Tommy had given me a little advice on cutting people off, but I didn’t think any of it would work in this situation. Craig said it was one of the worst parts of the job, and best to be handled on a case-by-case basis. I hadn’t had to do it yet, but even if I had, this seemed to be a unique case. Tom and Sue were regulars.

Tommy told me he likes to fall back on the establishment, especially since it was a corporation. He would give the customer a line about company policy allowing only a certain amount of drinks to be served to any individual guest. No matter how wasted they were, he’d tell them he knew that they were sober and if he could, he’d serve them all night long. But the company just wouldn’t allow it.

Funny thing was, he said it worked better the drunker the people were. Sober folks could see through the bullshit a little better, he surmised.

Tom and Sue, of course, knew they were above the company line, I thought.

Craig told me he’d seen Tommy pull the company line talk and he admitted that it worked quite well on occasion, but he said he stayed away from it. He preferred to confront things head on. He said he’d often refer to state law and the miniscule 0.08 blood alcohol level. But more often than not, he’d usually just tell them straight up that they’d had enough and he wasn’t serving them any more. He made sure to point out the importance of telling them that they’ve had “enough” as opposed to “too much.”

Not only did customers get defensive with any talk of them going overboard, he said, but if they ended up totaling their car and killing some poor SOB on the way home, the bullshit law might allow them to come back after the bartender for damages. And if they or another customer were to recall the bartender telling them specifically that they had drank “too much” before they left, that might open up the case all the more.

At this moment however, cleaning the bar and trying to recall all of what my mentors had told me didn’t seem to be helping my feeling of impending doom. To make matters worse, Tom was ready for another round.

“Shot and a drink, Danny,” he called from the other end of the bar. “Sasaki’s in for the save.”

“All right,” I said instinctively, and trudged back in his direction. In the midst of my absent-minded, fake cleaning I had worked myself as far away from Tom and Sue as possible.

On my way back down to the well, I tried to rationalize. Two more, I reasoned. Besides, Sue’s been sleeping. Perhaps she’s sobering up.

“What the hell you been doing down there anyway?” Tom asked as I prepared his drinks. “This has been a hell of a game. 7-4. Top nine. Sasaki’s bringing in ‘the thang’ to close this sucker out.”

“Oh, shit,” I said. “Dick’s got me detailing the damn bar. He said he wants to see his face in the brass before Craig and Tommy get here for the night shift.”

“Ah, those sons-of-bitches,” said Tom. “Give all the grunt work to the rookie.”

“I guess so. How’s Sue?” Upon closer inspection it looked as though she was beginning to come around.

Tom looked at her briefly as she stirred, then back to the screen. “Poor girl,” he said. “Don’t worry. I’ll get her out of here after the game.”

“Who’s worried?” I said with what must have been a wry smile as I placed his margarita and shot in front of him. I turned to the TV and watched, but Sue was awake all right, and she let us both know soon enough.

“Who you gonna get out of here you motherfucker?” She screamed and sat up quick, strands of hair still clinging to the side of her face. Tom and I shifted our attention.

“Baby,” he said. “So nice of you to grace us with your presence.”

“Fuck you,” she shot back.

“Sue, how you doing?” I asked. “Coffee?”

“Tequila!”

“Hold on Baby, we’re getting out of here,” Tom interrupted.

“I told you I want a steak,” she said. “We’ve been here for over an hour and you’ve just been watching baseball.”

“Well, Baby dear, I figured it might be hard for you to eat a steak while snoring.”

“Dan, give me a steak,” she barked.

“You guys want menus?”

“No,” Tom said.

“Yes,” added Sue.

“Baby, the game’s almost over,” Tom pleaded.

“I don’t give a fuck,” she shot back, loud enough to wake the dead. “I came here for a goddamn steak, and I want a goddamn steak. In fact, I don’t even need a menu, just give me a big-ass filet Danny.”

“The twelve-ouncer?” I suggested with a nod.

As much as I couldn’t stand the screaming and was nervous as hell about what Dick was gonna do, I knew enough to not argue with Sue. I’d take my chances at pissing off Dick, Tom and every SOB in the restaurant before I argued with her.

“You want garlic mashed potatoes, rice pilaf or fries?” I added.

“Hold it, hold it,” Tom said. “We’re leaving. Look, Sasaki just shut the door. C’mon. What’s that make them anyway? Jesus, look at that, 30 games over and it’s barely June. Come on Baby, we got steaks at home. Daddy’s gonna fire up the grill.”

“I want a steak,” she said.

“I know, Baby. I’m gonna cook you a steak. Besides, we got Don Julio at home too. Come on.” Tom stood from his stool. “What do we owe you, sir?” he asked me as he pulled his wallet from his back pocket.

I motioned to the bill I had printed, folded neatly and served along with the last margarita. He flipped it over and studied. Looking up, he smiled and threw three twenties on top of it. I nodded to show my appreciation. He grabbed his drink and knocked back what was left of it. Then he grabbed Sue by the waist, picked her off the chair and carried her three or four feet before setting her gently in the direction of the door.

“Danny, thank you. It’s always a pleasure, sir,” he said as the two of them wobbled to the lobby.

“The pleasure’s mine, Tom. You too, Sue. Good to see you. Thanks again,” I said with countless levels of gratitude. Tom kept Sue in front of him as they stumbled out the door, but I could hear them going at each other.

“I want a steak,” she said.

“We’re cooking steaks, Babe.”

I retrieved their empty glasses and was wiping the bar. Dick emerged from the hallway leading to his office. “They’re gone?” he asked.

“Long gone, Dick,” I said with pride.

“Nice work, how many drinks did you serve them?”

“More to Tom than Sue,” I said. “But not many.”

“Good.”

I grabbed the three twenties and cashed out their bill at my register. Dick lit a cigarette and poured himself a cup of coffee. He sat by the well and looked at the TV above him. The two of us started talking baseball and Craig walked in. He wasn’t due to start work for another hour, but he always came in early on Saturday to write the schedule. He had on his black pants and slip-resistant shoes, but he was holding his apron and uniform in his hand, wearing just an undershirt on his back. He circled the bar and stared straight toward me, but he stayed at the other end as he put his keys and wallet in the closet next to the cable box behind the bar.

“Danny, come down here, yo. I got a question about your schedule next week,” he motioned with his hand.

I walked over, still smiling from my good fortune. He leaned close to my ear and half-whispered, making sure Dick was unable to hear.

“How many drinks did you serve Tom and Sue?” he asked.

“I don’t know. Too many probably,” I whispered back. “But they were shitty when they came in.”

He shook his head. “They’re shitty all right,” he said. “Damn near hit me pulling out of the parking lot. You got to be careful about that shit, man. Remember, it’s your ass on the line, and you control the flow of alcohol.”

“Yes sir,” I said sincerely.

“How much did they tip you?”

“Fifteen,” I said.

“Nice,” he said.

Kenny Via once considered himself to be a master of mixology. Now he writes about it on occassion.

Pretty is as Pretty Does

“Pretty is as pretty does.” What the hell is that supposed to mean to a ten-year-old?

“If you can’t say something nice, say nothing at all.” Oh, that one was productive.

“Men are like streetcars. When one leaves, another one comes along.” Well, kind of . . . sometimes.

“You have such a pretty face.” And the rest of me is for shit?

“Pull yourself up and be strong. You will get over this.” But . . . what if I’m not strong like you?

“Clean your plate.” But I’m full.

“Do you really need another helping?” But I’m still hungry.

“Never call a boy first. Let him call you.” Oh, and if he never does? What then?

“You know better than that.” Than what? I’m eight.

“Were you raised in a barn?” No, you raised me in our house.

“I swear, you’re going to walk down the aisle with your thumb in your mouth.” Well . . . that was helpful.

“I’ll give you something to cry about.” Trust me. I have enough to cry about right now. I don’t need something else.

“There are starving people in China.” And I can help them how? I’m five.

“If you know what’s good for you . . . ” Um, well, I don’t. If I did, I wouldn’t be doing this.

“Cigarettes will kill you.” And you didn’t stop because . . . ?

Mom: “Please talk to your children about telling me their church is the only true church.”

Me: “Please talk to your children about telling me I’m bad if I don’t go to church.”

Ad nauseam.

Wow. Sometimes we really do a great job of fucking up our kids! And other times?

“I love you forever, darling daughter.”

“I don’t like what you are doing, but I still love you.”

“How can I help you through this?”

“No one is perfect.”

“I’m here for you whenever you need me. Night or day.”

“I made mistakes when I was raising you.”

“I wish I had known then what I know now.”

“We all just want the best for each other, don’t we?”

From my mom in her last days: “Do you think I will go to heaven, even if I haven’t been to church in a long time?”

Me: “Yes, mom. You did the best you could with the information and knowledge you had.”

What’s my point? My point is exactly the last statement: “You did the best you could with the information and knowledge you had.” We all do that. Some of us seek out additional knowledge and information. Some of us don’t. Some of us flounder and wallow in our insecurities and ineptitude. Some of us just give up.

I guess I am somewhere in the middle. I refuse to accept the boatloads of guilt that could come into my life considering everything that has happened to me and to my children. I have done the best that I could with the information and knowledge I had at different points in my life.

And yes . . . how I wish I had known more when my children were little! Oh, I wish that above all. But we are what we are. We strive to grow and be better. We struggle. We fall down. And hopefully, we “pick ourselves up, dust ourselves off, and start all over again.”

I feel a song coming on . . . a very old song . . . pardon me while I go sing some karaoke.

Judy Ball is a wife, mom, stepmom, grandma, sister, friend, and working woman. She just tries to get it right most of the time, but knows she doesn’t get it right all of the time . . . and that’s okay.

Wanted

The daily walk has the opportunity to show me something new. I have to keep my eyes and ears open to fulfill the wish to learn “something new every day.” Today’s item of interest, which took me by surprise, was a Wanted poster. Stapled to an electric pole and they weren’t looking for their pets.

The poster read, “Wanted: Dead or Alive with an award of $500.” There was a sketched likeness of Red Bart, a known outlaw. Looking past the pole was the wide expanse of prairie. It was hot and the prairie was dry. There was a man riding towards me who looked strangely familiar and as he got closer, fear gripped my gut. Red Bart. His reputation meant that I would soon die.

“Hello stranger,” he said.

“Hello,” said I with a voice I thought was too low and with a throat I thought was too dry.

He continued, “Is that your farm down there?” motioning to my shack with the underfed goats, cattle and horses.

I replied that it was and then he asked me how old I was. I told him that I was sixty-seven.

He then said, “Sixty-seven. You know, I would be doing you a favor if I shot you right now.”

My mouth opened but nothing came out.

He then said, “I’m well known for not liking people, but I’m also well known for liking animals. If I shoot you, those penned up animals down there are likely to starve. So today, stranger, is your lucky day.”

He rode away and I stood there thanking God for his creatures. I looked at the poster again.

They weren’t looking for stage robbers or gunfighters, who in their time were actually called ‘shootists’. What they were looking for, and paying for, was information about a house robbery and a stolen car.

I continued my walk, down past the old farmhouse museum, with its well-fed goats, cattle and horses. A Wanted poster was on a pole.

Jack Sakalauskas is senior citizen and has the blog Pensioners Rants.

Myself and Me

Myself and me
Or, perhaps it’s we
Or, sometimes
It’s a legion
Inside of me.

Each one different
Each one the same
Some are delightful
Some are strange

There’s the harlot,
The whore, the simple maid.
The sultry shrew, that’s got to be paid.
There’s the mother, overfull with life
And the tender, caring, loving wife.

There’s the child, the brat
The selfish kid
Who screams and yells
Facing what she did.

There’s Pollyanna
All sweetness and light
Who smiles and serves
Always doing what’s right.

There’s the tomboy, the clown
The scholar too
Each trying to tell me
What I should do.

The teacher, the toddler
The wise old man
The scientific thinker and
The tipsy ham.

The actor, the baker,
The family banker
The doctor, the driver
The policy maker.

All live inside of me
At peace, at war,
These and more,
Wondering who I’ll really be.

Nancy Plagge struggles to broadcast words . . .

Roof Puncher

At three on a Monday afternoon, a helicopter positioned itself over Jen’s house. She wasn’t aware of it at the time, as she wasn’t home. Like most people at that time, she was out making a living.

The house was detached, on a country road miles from anything. She had inherited it from her mother, complete with red roof, pink walls and nice garden with carefully trimmed hedge. The bus only came twice a day, but in return for this isolation and lack of mobile phone reception, she was able to live in rural paradise. It was a good two minutes’ walk to the next house on the road.

All of those details made the plan a lot easier. The chopper hovered overhead for a second; a man in a flight suit was reported to have leaned out of the side door and looked down, as if checking their position. Seconds later, both the rotors stopped dead.

For a mile around, locals had been looking up, because flights overhead were rare in these parts. No sooner had they gotten used to the roar overhead than it fell silent. Like a bird with a sudden heart attack, it dropped. Not quite straight down, but there was no way it was going to miss Jen’s home.

It crashed through the roof tiles, scattering them across the grass, and rammed itself into the top floor, knocking the carpet aside before accessing the ground level. It seemed certain that everyone on board was dead, but the pilot was able to make one last move: he turned the rotors back on.

They managed a few turns, ripped a few more walls apart, before giving it up. Minutes later, both the crew passed away from their massive external injuries.

All of this happened in a matter of minutes, and would have been the closest Jen ever came to starring in an action movie, had she been at home. The first she heard about it was a phone call from a neighbour, which ran a little like this:

‘Good afternoon, Jennifer Campbell speaking?’

‘Hello dear, it’s Olive from down the road.’

‘Hi Olive; is something wrong?’

‘Well, I’m afraid I have some bad news, Jennifer.’

Still, Jen wasn’t that worried. ‘What is it? Has some kid pissed in my front garden again?’

‘No, I . . . ’ A pause. Jen wasn’t sure if Olive was upset by the bad news, or because the word “pissed” had been used. ‘I’m afraid someone’s crashed a helicopter through your roof.’

‘I see.’ That didn’t seem an adequate response. ‘Hang on, what?’

‘Yes, dear. It’s a terrible mess. I think your mother’s old chest of drawers ended up in four pieces on the lawn.’

It turns out Olive didn’t really have much else to contribute. Good news about that hideous chest, though; Jen had never been able to think of an excuse to set it on fire.

Her manager eventually agreed that a helicopter executing a comedy pratfall onto her roof warranted leaving work early, so she was able to stumble from the office. Due to the crippling lack of public transport to her village, she was faced with a half-hour drive back. She gritted her teeth and concentrated on not following the helicopter’s path into suicide.

When she finally arrived, the police were everywhere. Not only that, the security services had rolled up. That meant there were several expensive black cars along with a scattering of fully lit-up police vehicles. It looked like a drugs raid at a high-end dealership.

And next to all that was the smashed-open shell of her house. The tail of the helicopter stuck through a wall, with no one taking much action to remove it. There was a red smear visible through the window; the laws of chance suggested it was probably one of the pilots.

The disgusting pink walls were a little more exciting with the red blobs, though. Another win for artistic design over her mother’s tedium.

‘So, uh, Miss Campbell?’

A man in a suit was lurking nearby; she wasn’t sure how he’d known who she was. Still, she was hardly in any position to deny it. ‘Yes?’

‘We, um, it looks like this may have been a suicide attack, I’m afraid.’

That was fairly obvious, Jen thought, since they were both dead and must have expected to die. But she just said ‘Really?’ and tried to sound surprised.

‘Yeah, they seemed pretty determined to take this place out. And it’s possible these men may have been on a terror watch list already. Although we are having trouble identifying them conclusively due to their injuries.’

‘So were they Al Qaeda or something?’

‘I don’t think I can comment for sure.’

‘So can you tell me anything else?’

‘Not a lot, I’m afraid, Miss.’

‘Did that pink frilly shed out back survive?’

‘Completely totaled, I’m afraid.’

‘Oh. That’s a shame.’

Apparently well-trained in empathy, the spook in the suit nodded smartly before marching in the opposite direction, leaving Jen to ponder the wreckage of her pleasant country home.

For at least ten seconds before the phone rang. She thought it might be the press, asking for a quote on her apparent attack by international terrorists, but it wasn’t.

‘Evening, Jen.’

‘Hi there . . . guy from the pub the other night?’ She suspected that wasn’t his favourite nickname.

‘Ed.’

‘Right, Ed. Of course.’

‘So, what do you think?’

She took a few steps away from the authorities and lowered her voice.

‘Yeah, I know I said I hated the look of Mum’s old house and wished I could get the insurance money and redecorate, but . . . ’

‘And now you can!’

‘I really thought you were bullshitting about knowing a guy in Al Qaeda, though.’

Ed’s voice audibly inflated. ‘Can’t believe they bought the story about your house being a high-ranking safe house.’

‘No. Me neither.’

‘You can stay ’round mine while they rebuild if you like.’

She smirked. ‘No. Good effort, though.’

‘Damn.’

Bored suddenly, Jen hung up on him. Had she known Ed was serious, she might’ve checked whether her insurance actually covered terrorist attacks.

Nick Bryan lives in London with his messy hair.

Birthday Carols

I never liked having birthday parties. Yet every year my mother would successfully convince me that I needed to have one, and would rattle off a list of ideas she had to celebrate. I would protest, “It’s Christmas break. Everyone is traveling. It’s cold outside and there’s snow on the ground. This is the season of endless parties; why would anyone want to come to my party?”

What if they didn’t like the food, or the games? What if they got bored or couldn’t afford a present? After rehearsing the usual questions in my head, I would again tell my mother “No, I really do not want a party this year.”

Did she listen? No. Was I always glad afterward that she insisted I have one? Yes.

It was my Junior year of high school and mother had once again set a date and spread the word about my birthday party. All the girls would come over on Friday night and we would go Christmas caroling, then come back to our house and have a slumber party. And so began one of my favorite birthday parties ever.

On Friday, six of my friends and I piled into our Chevy Astro mini-van with gloves, scarves, and headgear as we drove the slushy streets to the first house. Marilyn and Harvey were home and after singing they invited us into their house for hot chocolate. Every surface and corner of their home had some sort of Christmas flair adorning it, as if Marilyn had attended a “Decorating for Christmas” class from Mrs. Claus herself.

We visited the home of our choir director next. Only his wife and children were home, but the children’s excitement over these unexpected teenage visitors tickled us and multiplied our desire to keep caroling.

After carefully climbing the icy stairs, we rang the doorbell of my voice teacher’s home. The dark windows made us doubt anyone was home. Suddenly, the door shifted and an elderly man appeared. He explained that my teacher and his wife were gone, but that he was my teacher’s father. We gladly sang for him, and by the second song that gracious gentleman was crying.

“Hold on a second,” he said and walked into another room. “Here, I want you to take this,” he said, pointing a ten dollar bill toward us. “You can use it to help with gas. I’m so glad you came and sang for me tonight.”

I’m still moved when I think of him standing in the doorway shedding silent tears at our music. I knew then that this was the perfect activity for a birthday party. What could be more memorable or special than encouraging a stranger with our simple songs?

Our last stop was the fire station where my friend Wendy’s dad worked. After we sang they showed us around the firehouse and let us take a few pictures on the fire truck.

Back at the house, we thawed out and ate cookie cake to give us the sugar high we needed to stay up late and giggle for no reason. We went down to our basement where I had taken brown paper grocery bags and placed various items inside. The girls split into two groups and each group had to perform a skit using all the things in the bag. I think we burned every cookie cake calorie with our laughter that night.

I never liked having birthday parties because I wrongly assumed they were all about me. I was wrong. The best birthday parties aren’t about me at all. A birthday party should be a time for me to say thank you for being my friend. A birthday party should be a way for me to say, because God has given me another year of life, I want to use this new year of life to make someone else’s life better.

Janna Antenorcruz is the founding editor of the blog Mommy’s Piggy TALES: Record Your Youth where women are encouraged to share their stories of growing up for future generations.

TKO’d

I took a beating once,
but no sense stuck;
just his ring,
which caught me on the eye
His hands felt cold around my neck,
but they were scalding in my mind
‘What the fuck?’ I thought
Where’s the yesterdays,
before Olde English took her place
and dreams of death arrived?

I took a beating once,
it was supposed to be a party
But what’d they use to shake it up?
Champagne? Liquor? Beer?
No, I think it was Molotov wine
Wrestling turned upside down,
we stumbled to the driveway
My broken nose healed in time,
but then,
it took longer for my pride

I took a beating once;
still not sure what happened
Woke up with raccoon eyes,
bloody knuckles, gravel burns and bruises
There was a chain link fence
It was a street corner
All I heard was screaming
The cops came by in time;
took a statement, poked around,
and offered me a ride

Kenny Via tries to write as much as possible, but usually plays video games instead.

Amy

Everything was coming to an end: moving from Utah to New Mexico, leasing her condo, finishing residency, taking the test that would validate her status as an Internist. The test would take eight hours, and was the most difficult test she had taken to date. The school monitored when she studied, what she studied, how long she studied. Three months of studying with only short breaks had her almost as exhausted as the years of residency and 30-hour-days had.

We watched as she would fall asleep to awaken not knowing what day it was and sometimes not even where she was.

Medical school had been as rigorous for her as it had been for the rest of the candidates, except that in the middle she was diagnosed with lymphoma, the cancer that had only a few years earlier taken the life of her grandfather. We wept together and grumbled and wondered as she did the hair-depriving chemotherapy treatments.

When she applied for a fellowship the interviewer said, “I thought you had cancer during your schooling.” She replied, “I did. I took the treatments during a month of vacation.” And gratefully, she is now in remission. But, there was still the test.

Amy has always been conscientious about health and exercise. Exercise equipment, gym membership, jogging, cycling. While she was studying for the exam she would take regular breaks for exercise. She decided to enter the Bear River Brawl Triathlon, Sprint division, which took place two days after her exam.

She said she had done cycling and running, and running and swimming, but she had never done all three. In training for the triathlon she balanced studying and running and swimming and cycling, helping handle the stress she was under because of the testing.

Thursday came and the test took a lot, it was extremely difficult. She had little sleep the night before and because of the triathlon she got little rest Thursday night and Friday. She had to be at the race at 6 a.m. Saturday, so not much sleep Friday either. Then, after driving up to the race, she discovered she had forgotten her running shoes.

She did the swim course first, swimming 750 meters or a half of a mile. As she jogged up the sand to the cycling event she smiled and pressed forward. On to the bike with head gear and quick water and energy bites. Back 24.8 miles later, she was off in biking shoes not running shoes to complete the run which was 3.1 miles.

I waited at the red ten-feet-high and twenty-feet-wide inflated finish line as runners from the three events sprinted in, bent and removed the ankle tag that announced the race they were competing in. Husbands came across the line supporting their wives in the race. A young girl raced with her mother for the last 500 yards and both received the high five at the finish line. And I was waiting for Amy.

She came flushed, breathing labored, and running.  The girl next to her sprinted and crossed the finish line just a little before Amy did. Amy bent, removed the ankle bracelet and stood. I called to her. She came to me and fell into my arms, in tears, and then said, “I need water.”

Afterward, several times that day she said it was the hardest thing she had ever done: as hard as the medical exam, as hard as residency, as hard as cancer. But she did it. She crossed the finish line, regardless of how hard it was. And we all agreed that not winning, but crossing the finish line was the most important thing.

And then I thought how nice it was to have someone waiting at the finish line, when we all come across. And, what a comfort that hug would be. Knowing that life is hard, the hardest thing we have done; knowing that life is like a triathlon, with different events, and that we need to do our best in each event. But also knowing there will be someone there to hug us when we cross the finish line.

I promised my children that day that I will be there to shout, “Well done! Good job!” as they cross the finish line, and give them a hug as they pass in to the next event in their progression.

Nancy Plagge is a ghost writer emerging from a cocoon.

Huffing

The gas can is dirty, old. Red and yellow paint is fading from its frame. Metal gives way to rust at the corners. Its long silver spout stares back at me as Steve places it in my awkward hands. He smiles and laughs. He falls back against the dirt and rolls between the trees. Leaves and pine needles attach themselves to his hooded sweatshirt.

Nervously, I glance at the can again and look at Nate. He’s just awoken from his frolic on the ground. He motions for me to try it.

The spout is warm against my mouth—an instant reminder of those who’ve gone before. The fumes are overpowering. Just as I had watched Steve and Nate before me, I hold the ringed nozzle to my lips and breathe quickly in and out. The can expands and collapses with my lungs. A spurting wheeze erupts from an airhole on the other end; it hisses and growls at me with every breath.

I watch the can closely while I keep at it, just like the others had done. My knees begin to shake. My arms grow weak. Nate notices that I’m on my way down and he snatches the can from my trembling hands. As he pulls it away, I fall backward like Steve. The back of my head plows into the dusty earth below and I feel my eyes roll into the upper corners of my mind.

There are no trees now. No woods. Nothing surrounds me but light. I am one with the world. I can feel everything and nothing at the same time. I must be in another dimension—somewhere outside of life. It is euphoria.

I can’t stop my body from rolling about, flailing, writhing. My arms and legs no longer belong to me. A pulsating, vibrating ecstasy overtakes every faculty of my body. I want nothing more in life than to feel this way for all time. I feel an echo, then laughter, always joy.

I am thirteen and I just got my first lesson in huffing gas. It is magnificent.

Kenny Via is an aspiring author who drinks way too much and writes far too little. He’s hoping to change the latter someday.