All the Fine Men

George Washington would have made a great boyfriend. As a young man he was tall, strong, had thick reddish-brown hair and, at the time, his own teeth. He was very focused on his career and carried good family connections. Even though he received no formal education, he displayed intelligence and practiced excellent table manners. When seriously courting Martha Dandridge Custis, he made it clear that he would take in the two children from her first marriage and treat them as his own. He did, and enlarged his already impressive house to accommodate the family and their frequent visitors.

Of course, eventually, the hair and teeth fell out. He was human. Martha wasn’t surprised. When she first met him, he was a feisty up and coming officer who knew the value of a rich widow when he saw one. For years, he’d suppressed adoration and desire for his best friend’s wife and avoided marriage, but decided to nab Martha before someone else did. Then he left his fiancé to fight the French. But he came back alive, and George and Martha Washington shared a long and affectionate marriage. The solidity and practicality of their situation fascinated me at thirteen, and I would visit their historic mansion, just to make sure it had all been for real.

The first time I fell in love it was with Beaver Cleaver. Something about his round face and spring jacket made my six-year-old heart beat a little faster. I doted over the black and white reruns, that is, until Beaver’s voice started to crack, which gave me the creeps. The entire affair was completely innocent, right down to the newsprint picture my mother found and cut out for me. It hung on my personal corkboard, where Beaver beamed for years, through the decades and thumb smudges.

In the late eighties, Jerry Mathers, the actor whose only claim to fame was playing Beaver Cleaver, put together a reunion show with some of the original cast, plus a whole slew of kids and pets. I don’t remember the premise other than the Cleaver family as thirty years older and just as phony. The show didn’t last, and a small portion of my early childhood memories were forever scarred. Fortunately, by then, I’d fallen in love with Ryan.

Ryan was a classmate from kindergarten through graduation. In first grade he chased me around the playground, once cornering me and kissing my cheek before I could whirl around to pretend I didn’t like it. In fourth grade we became an official item. Group projects and school functions created anticipation as Ryan and I hoped to be assigned to the same group. At skating parties our songs were Brian Adams’ Everything I Do and the Ghostbusters theme. In sixth grade we took first and second place in the spelling bee. I only felt a little bad about beating him, since we both got to go to the regional competition.

I didn’t mind that Ryan was almost a full head shorter than me, or that his hands were always sweaty when we skated together. The fact that I was stronger, but often let him win a good arm wrestling match only made me feel kind and supportive. I overlooked all of his pre-teen shortcomings until junior high. That’s when Ryan met Dawn and broke my heart. I didn’t speak to him again until the night of high school graduation. In the only existing picture of us together, from that final night, he is a few inches taller than me and we’re both smiling.

John Lennon didn’t make a good boyfriend. He was always off touring in Germany and couldn’t keep his dick in his pants. Rarely sober, he mixed pills and alcohol and played gigs with a toilet seat around his neck. His aunt told him to find a real job, as one can’t count on making any money with a guitar.

I’m not sure if I was ever really in love with Josh. He suited me at seventeen, with his Camel Lights and patchouli, tattoo and Honda Civic. I remember being impressed by his ability to smoke, mange the manual transmission, hold my hand, and change the radio station all while singing Ben Folds Five and never swerving out of the lane. He was eighteen and obtained my Marlborough Lights, but never offered to pay for them. When we went to the movies he would look at me and ask which one of us was paying for my ticket. I never offered him any gas money. We didn’t really talk much, but were together every night, sitting in Javasphere Coffee House back when the walls were still blue. Sometimes we made out. More often we just held hands. I harbored a sneaking suspicion that he was bi-sexual. I felt very attached to him. I have no idea why.

John Lennon made a fine husband on his second try, third if you include both rounds in his second marriage. He made brown rice and happy music. He spent hours with his young son Sean, and had a newfound appreciation for his wife Yoko. It made me sad to learn the nature of his death, which occured just two days before I was born. I used to send Yoko Ono personal letters just for the hell of it. In return I received Christmas cards and experimental CDs.

Johnathan was nothing more than the adorable, blond, 18 year old druggy who was dating my friend Christa. If I spoke to him, it was to timidly ask if he’d purchase my cigarettes, or to compare how much we knew about the Beatles. Everyone observed his and Christa’s relationship with a certain amount of reverence, calling them “greater than the sum of their parts” and “meant to be.” Distraught at their eventual breakup, and just coming through one of my own, I sat down by Johnathan in the goth dank of Liquid Room Coffee House, and listened to him talk about Christa, and then about other things. When our talking turned to kissing, everything else took a backseat.

I learned about Johnathan one step at a time. He was funny, and horrible at balancing his budget. His room was a mess, and walled with his own paintings and wax sculptures. His first crush was Laura Ingles as portrayed by Melissa Gilbert. We shared a taste for exotic food, but too often it wakened his paranoia. One rehab stint, a UK tour, and six years later we got married. We included Josh and Christa on the guest list, and played a few Beatles songs for nostalgia’s sake.

Marriage became the thing, our shtick. Teeth and hair may fall out. Pudge will grow, and senses of humor will dull. Hands might even be nervous and sweaty. There is an affectionate allowance for such things. The staples of brown rice and shared creativity can sustain a lot, and we look to our predecessors for simple reassurance.

Photo courtesy of http://www.lewrockwell.com/decoster/decoster29.html.

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Submarine Turtle of 1776

My name is Ezra Lee, Army Volunteer Sergeant Ezra Lee. I’m writing now from the interior of the Turtle, the world’s first wartime submarine. I wish you could be here. Someday, they might design a word for how it feels to be breathing and sitting up under water, and you can try to imagine my disorientation.

I’ll give you a little background. The Turtle was created, built, and tested by the Bushnell brothers, Ezra and David. It is a wooden shell covered in tar and reinforced with steel. It has only enough space for one man, and only enough oxygen for one half-hour.

To submerge, the Turtle takes water into a tank at its bottom. To become buoyant, it requires me to push the water back out with the use of a hand pump. Backward and forward movements are achieved with hand-cranked propellers.

Together, the Turtle and I are to approach a British ship, and drill into its hull. The goal is to plant gunpowder kegs, and win a war that has barely begun.

I can hardly see. Six small panes of glass allow light to come in through the top of the Turtle, and bioluminescent fungus is surrounding me with an eerie green glow. I wish you could witness the strangeness of my situation.

Should the Turtle and I not return whole to the shore, I want you to know that I was thinking of you, wishing that you could join me in this unbelievable and unholy journey. It seems almost a crime against God that we should take ourselves under their ships like this, defying natural need and inflicting unfathomable damage.

But I must do it, and I must do it soon. It becomes harder to breathe, and my legs feel stiff with sitting in this rigid position.

The ship is right above me, and the hull exposed and vulnerable, like the soft underbelly of a giant fish, or the skirted bum of the bar wench.

So why can’t I drill into it? Why will the ship’s skin not give?

Alone, I cannot steady the Turtle and drill into the hull at once. Is there a miscalculation in the balance between the hardness of the hull and the weight of my vessel? Is the hull’s copper too thick? Am I not strong enough to drill through it?

Am I failing completely?

I wish you were here to offer your advice. I hope you’ll be there when I get back, so that I can tell you what it was like, and you can reassure me that no one would have been able to drill through the hull.

I want to feel normal again, like the air is endless and the light is yellow.

My name is Ezra Lee, Army Volunteer Sergeant Ezra Lee, and the Turtle is my vessel of destruction.

Picture courtesy of http://www.drgeorgepc.com/Turtle.html.

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Ed

Ed sat high up in his tree, waiting for the deer. They’d come eventually, they always did. Whether or not he’d get one was another story altogether.

He was good at sitting still for long periods of time. He’d learned to do it after repeated beatings for fidgeting in church, wiggling at the dinner table, whatever his mother thought was irritating or inappropriate.

Forty years is too long to give a damn about what your mother thinks.

Ed couldn’t help it. The dead bitch held court in his head, reminding him that his large ugly body was in the way and offensive.

If he could, he’d kill her all over again.

Photo courtesy of http://thedudescorner.ca/Autumn%20Scenes-1.html.

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Pink Lighting: For Sex and For Corpses

pink

Pink.

Pink hues.

Shades of pink. Textures of pink.

Pink like the stuffed bunny from 1981. Pink like the thinnest stripe in the bubble gum carpeting. Pink like your favorite color because you’re a little girl.

Pink tastes.

Pink tastes like chemical Hubba Bubba soda. Pink tastes like cotton candy and the way you think that lollipop would taste if they’d ever buy it. Pink tastes like vomit after too much strawberry milk.

Pink like the new bedroom. Pink like goes well with retro black. Pink like nipples. Pink like outdated lipstick that she still wears. Pink like flatters your skin tone.

Pink like vomit after a bottle of Robitussin and the carnival. Pink like the orange that is always the new pink. Pink like her vagina.

I hate the pink lighting they put on dead bodies to make them look alive.

Pink like you’ll always love. Pink like her perfect kitchen. Pink feels and tastes like a girl.

Pink.

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Roman Cosmology, Part 2 of ?

white-wine-glass_2

Part 1

Lunch with her mother was a weekly occurrence for Imogen. Sandy had a sound philosophy for why this should be.

“We’re both housewives now. Kept women. You have plenty of time to let me make you poppy seed chicken salad. And if it’s after noon we can have white wine.”

Sandy was on a high. Widowed at thiry-eight, she had just remarried at sixty-one. She acted like a girl most of the time, excitable, busy, and always ready to talk about her newly established sex life. The details were graciously kept to a minimum, but the images entered Imogen’s mind anyway: her mother’s legs wrapped around the dimpled hips of her seventy year old husband, his sweaty nose and chin buried in her freckled cleavage.

Why was it allowed for her mother to possess better stories every Wednesday? How could a woman supposed to be walking into her sunset years have the sex drive of an eighteen-year-old boy? Imogen had heard several times that women reach their sexual peaks at thirty. It could be true, but only if the women boast advancing careers and eighteen-year-old husbands.

“How’s Mark?” Sandy blinked into the sun as she rinsed out the wine glasses in the sink. She looked surprisingly beautiful, Imogen decided, the light touching her blonde lashes and painted lips. The lines and peach fuzz only gave her the faintest sign of matronly grace, and Imogen sighed in response to everything.

“Excellent as usual. He’s very busy right now with this lesson of his. A junior class is lucky enough to have him balancing dangerously close to teaching Christianity with a ball of glass that has little people inside.”

“What?”

“It’s called ‘Roman Cosmology’. Apparently it has something to do with the development of both Christian doctrine and modern astronomy.”

“Okay. I’m already lost, but go on.”

“See, the Romans believed that the earth was at the center of the universe, the cosmos, the creation.” Imogen made a fist and waved her free hand over and around it. “It was made of rock, but outside, there were spheres of glass that encircled the earth. They were in layers, like seven of them, and in each layer there were beings. Each layer got better and better, like, first layer, sun, next, planets, next, stars, next, spirits, on and on. The higher spheres could move around and exchange beings and affect the lower spheres. Anyway, the Romans thought that the creator existed outside of the spheres, and was superior…”

“Why are the stars and planets better than the sun?”

Imogen froze her hand mid-wave. “Huh?”

“The sun. I thought the sun would be like a god.”

“Well, the astronomy part is that the Romans thought whatever was largest was closest. So, the sun, being kind of bigger than everything else, was closer than the itty bitty stars.”

“Ahh. My little smart cookie. How do you know all this?”

“Mark told me. When you’ve been married as long as I have you talk sometimes.”

“Stop it.” Sandy flipped the dishtowel in Imogen’s direction and flashed a mischievous grin. “I talk.”

“You might. So, in conclusion, class, Mark has a glass and porcelain model of the earth rock surrounded by glass spheres and supernatural things and tells these kids it is the basis for western progression. Meanwhile you’re here with your life and I think I am dormant.”

Sandy poured two generous glasses of Piesporter. She was silent for a moment and then looked steadily at her daughter. “I’m not so fabulous. I’m happy as a goose but not because of activity. I am happy because I have a reason to enjoy being still.”

A silence rang against the fluted wine glasses and Imogen studied her mother’s content disposition. “After your father died I thought that if I just kept busy I would be able to overcome the emptiness. But the emptiness was in my home, and what I really wanted was to be there, still. I knew middle age was approaching. When Bob came along I knew I could be still with him.”

“Oh.”

Photo courtesy of charlesscicolone.wordpress.com

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Roman Cosmology, Part 1 of ?

Cosmology

“But it is nobler and more perfect to be at rest than to be moved. Therefore, the highest sphere ought to be at rest…”

-John Buridan, early 14th Century

Imogen walked into her dining room and found Mark at the table, hunched over a clear glass ball. She could see small objects inside the globe, layers within layers. An onion universe of crystal and porcelain, resting in her husband’s palms. Like he was God. The scrunch between his nose and eyes kept pushing down his glasses, and his mouth was pulled up into a rabbit-like sneer. Ugly, sort of, but indicative of deep concentration. So motivated.

It felt like years since Imogen’s fall from grace into structureless living. An enjoyable and productive summer, ending all too soon, decided for her that thirty was the perfect age at which to take a hiatus. No shifts or classes wormed into her time, though her schedule was full of holes. The frills and pretensions that came packaged with occupational success held no place with the gardening and sock sorting. Imogen’s days became longer and quieter, so that she was certain the ages were passing. Years escaped her. But really it had only been since the autumn, and the snow had only just begun to stick.

There was nothing else to do. “What is that?” she asked Mark. “That ball has little people in it.”

“A very complicated project, my love. I am trying to explain the development of world religions to a band of eleventh graders, and am resorting to an antique model. I wish I could let them hold it, but it belongs to Dr. Wade, and is very old.” Mark held the ball up at eye level in his left hand, raising his eyebrows and squinting his eyes. The rabbit sneer was gone, but he looked sinister, nonetheless, and said, “They don’t deserve to be God.”

“What I was thinking exactly. Shall we go out for dinner? Or there is left over macaroni.”

“Out. I ate the macaroni for lunch.”

*

Mark and Imogen met when they were both twenty-four. He was in grad school and she was a lingering junior, hoping to stick with a major, any major, for the duration of its program. Too many choices, not enough fiery passion. Imogen could not decide if it was worse to be ungraduated and unemployed or cashing in a paycheck that reminded her of discontent with every signing. There was nothing she could do for big money anyway. With British history, resurrected bog bodies, and the evolution of color in film as her major interests, she knew that the options remained teacher or professional student. Both remained undesirable.

Mark worked as a teaching assistant to one of her history professors, and later claimed it was her papers that attracted him to Imogen.

“You always chose such weird topics. ‘The Advent of Wool’, ‘Pediatrics in Early Spain’, ‘Gothic Sex’. Christ, how could I resist?”

“I can give you good reasons for each title, and it would have more to do with modern civilization than does your current understanding of female anatomy.”

“Burn. My love, she cut me deep!”

Three years later they married. Imogen took a semester off to plan her new life and didn’t go back for another two years. Now here they were, Mark’s plans for his Ph.D. scrapped and replaced by a calling to teach teenagers, and Imogen working her way through to a history degree. But not at the moment. Today was about catching up on mail.

Imogen told herself that it wasn’t stagnancy, but primitive and sometimes creative needs that kept her from spending more than three consecutive semesters enrolled. Her physical and emotional states changed with marriage and home ownership and age. It only made sense that her academic pursuits would adapt. And that was that.

Part 2

Photo courtesy of godandscience.org

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Scene from a Window

window

 

From the yellow chair the orange cat watched his grey sister trot across the living room floor. She stopped to stare at him briefly through her mint green eyes, and then flopped onto her back to chase a pinwheel mint wrapper on the floor. Twisting and grabbing with her clawless paws, she was something to see. Far more entertaining than the elusive mouse living in the cold air return.

 

In a room on the other side of the house, the owner of these two cats folded laundry and hummed to herself. There was nothing in front her today. Nothing inhibiting a slow steady afternoon of household chores with interludes of wine and new music selections. It was the most ordinary of days.

 

Across town, in an office decorated with fake plants and pastel prints, was this woman’s husband. He was a calm man with dirty blonde hair and large brown eyes. Everyday he wore a variation of the standard office uniform: long-sleeved button-down shirt, solid colored tie, dark fitted dress pants and black shoes in need of a shine. He’d started his day with a sigh, wishing that he could be at home and naked and copulating. That would be a nice change of pace. For the past three nights his wife had slipped into bed next to him wearing panties, code for “not tonight.”

 

She was tired, his wife. A new temp job, early hours at the restaurant, and a few classes to keep her mind whirling at home. No wonder sex took the backseat. Who had time for a worthwhile orgasm, not to mention the prep work?

 

But maybe tonight would be better. She wasn’t working today, and would probably spend most of her time listening to books on tape and rearranging the books on the coffee table. A few glasses of wine and she would be randy and yielding.

 

And so the little family meandered through its fragmented day, he dreaming of the evening, she looking forward to the next track on her favorite album, and the cats scheming to nap on the dining room table. It was the most ordinary of days.

 

And then there was an interruption. In a rundown house, a few blocks from the home of this family, a young man was experimenting with drugs. Bored to irritation after repeated groundings, he’d discovered that certain household products could enhance a dragging afternoon. Now he wandered through the streets and alleys of his neighborhood, feeling absolutely euphoric.

 

He approached the home of the woman folding her laundry, intending to peer into her windows. He hoped to catch a glimpse of her doing something mundane. His own house sat directly behind, and the two properties shared a back yard, so to speak. This young man happened to know that his neighbor lady sometimes walked around her house scantily clad, or wearing nothing at all. Confident that it was too early for her husband to be at home, the boy crept around the house to a back window.

 

She was there, sitting on a couch in the den with a full laundry basket next to her.

 

She was not naked, which disappointed the young man. He was the most ordinary of boys.

 

But the way she folded her laundry, he thought. He’d never before noticed the grace of her arms. Without thinking much about it, the young man knocked softly on the window. Recognizing her young neighbor, the woman smiled and waved him around to the back door.

 

When she opened the door he was again struck by her. Her voice was soft and her eyes sparkled. In his mind she beckoned him with a crook of her finger and a sway of her hips. In reality she stepped back from the doorway and put her arm over her abdomen as if she didn’t know what else to do with it. There was a question in her eyes.

 

“I was passing your house and wondered if you needed your lawn mowed.” It was all he could think of to say.

 

“Oh, thank you, but no. Pete just mowed on Sunday. But that’s so nice. Trying to make extra money?” So trusting.

 

“Yeah, but I’d do yours no charge. You and Pete are good neighbors.”

 

“Oohhh. Aren’t you a charmer? Can I get you a drink?” She kicked off her cherry-patterned slippers and stepped to the refrigerator. She pulled out a soda and tossed it to the boy. “Sorry. Don’t open it yet.” He laughed and set the can on the counter.

 

She turned her back to dig through a cupboard, searching for crackers or cookies to offer her young guest. He moved to stand behind her, lightly pressing his body against her smaller form. She did not withdraw or even flinch, but leaned back against him with a murmur of delight. She reached back for his hands and when she found them she put one over her left breast and the other down the front of her drawstring pants. The heat and moisture there brought him to his knees, which was a convenient location for pulling down her pants and nestling his face between her thighs. She spread her legs and welcomed his hungry mouth.

 

“Saltines?” She was still standing in front of the cupboard, facing him and holding a box. He blinked at her. “Sure.”

 

Photo courtesy of commons.wikimedia.org

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Katie Reilly – A Fictitious Contributor’s Note

tipping the velvet

 

Katie Reilly was born in Co. Cavan, Ireland on June 10, 1908. She is a survivor of the famed 1912 Titanic ocean liner sinking disaster. The fact that she did survive is quite fascinating because she was a third class passenger and disguised as a boy. There was no real reason for the disguise other than that she preferred knickers to petticoats. It made running to the life boats easier, and her petite build let her slip in unnoticed.

 

Throughout the twenties and thirties Reilly worked as a waitress in a seedy lounge in Grand Rapids, MI. It was there that she met and married her first husband, Robby Hurte, who was a door-to-door rug salesman. Being a mobile rug salesman is a difficult job as the rugs are heavy and collect dust and bugs. Most of the time people slammed doors in his face.

 

Reilly grew tired of never having any money and left Robby Hurte for Morris P. Morris III, who was the third son of Anderson P. Morris II. She met him while working as a temporary welder for the carnival.  Morris P. Morris II was Morris P. Morris III’s great-grandfather, and Morris P. Morris I was a dead relative whose relationship to Morris P. Morris III had been disregarded and forgotten. It suffices to say that, though having an important sounding name, Morris P. Morris III was not an important person, and therefore made an ideal match for Reilly (who still preferred knickers to petticoats) in 1937.

 

A month into the marriage Morris P. Morris III began seminary training to be a minister in the Reformed church. This was an unforeseen event for Reilly and her preference for men’s clothing. It was at this point that she began to second guess her station in life.

 

On her thirtieth birthday Reilly gave birth to her first and only child, upon whom the honor of the name Morris P. Morris IV was bestowed. The oddest part about the name was that it had been given to a girl. Fortunately, Little Morris also preferred knickers to petticoats. In addition, she preferred her mother to her father and the stage to the church.

 

Reilly left Morris P. Morris III in 1950, and she and Little Morris joined up with an acting troupe as professional male impersonators. The work suited them and they stayed with the troupe until Reilly’s death in 1980. After that, Little Morris and her knickers opened a club for cross dressers in L.A. where she performs weekly with a large picture of her mother projected on the back wall of the stage.

 

Photo courtesy of calpernia.com, from ‘Tipping the Velvet’

 

 

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Mitchell Gold and the Bubble Gum Cave

Mitchell Gold

Mitchell Gold was the boy who lived in the bubble gum cave. Mitchell Gold was the nine year-old son of the woman who lived and slept with another, unrelated woman in a house they half lovingly, half begrudgingly referred to as “the bubble gum cave.” But the house was theirs. After four years of sharing a small, one-bedroom apartment with very little closet space, the decision to buy a home was made. Mitchell could remember the day the three of them first saw the house they would together call home.

 

The realtor, a short and chubby blonde named Sheridan, fumbled with the combination on the locked front door. “Sometimes these don’t work right away and I’ve gotta dink around until it gives. There!” She beamed triumphantly at the two tall women, her clients. The small boy between them strained to see what waited behind the door. He’d seen so many of those special locks on the houses up for sale. The anticipation that accompanied each one was wearing on him. He wanted a playroom and a front yard and his own bedroom. He wanted more than a heavy curtain dividing his side of the room from the side where his mother and her girlfriend shared a bed and several dildos. He didn’t want to watch this smiling fat woman waste their time with uncooperative locks.

 

The house opened into its living room. The wooden front door with its little circle of triangular windows had immediately impressed the two women. Mitchell thought the space behind it more important. It should look very welcoming. His gut reaction upon stepping inside was actually a turning stomach. The walls and carpet were pink.

 

“This is adorable!” The shriek came from Mari, the girlfriend. Mitchell eyed her suspiciously, knowing that she could easily influence his mother and have them living in a house with paint and carpet the color of healthy tongue. Mari didn’t see his glare as her small dark eyes took in the space. She was seeing the arched doorways and carved banister. “Some paint and new flooring is all it needs.”

 

Adella, Mitchell’s mother, was studying her print off of the listing. “But what year is it again? 1903? There could be a lot of under the surface work that eats up all our funds. Aesthetics are low on the list when there’s need for a new roof and furnace.” Mitchell watched his mother’s fine red hair glide over her ears as she moved to a spot where the wall was splitting to reveal crumbling plaster. She flicked at the dust with her middle finger. “But it’s definitely cuter than anything else we’ve looked at.”

 

“And cheaper,” Mari reminded her.

 

Mitchell and Sheridan waited while Adella and Mari silently calculated. “Well, let’s finish the tour at least. We don’t have to decide right this second.” Adella folded the listing and took Mitchell’s hand. He ran his thumb over the rough skin of her knuckles. Mari’s hands were soft and always warm, but he preferred the cool of Adella’s narrow palms. They were stronger, and held his own small hand with more conviction. Mitchell had no way of verbalizing this feeling. It was just something he had come to understand about the difference between his mother and her lover.

 

In the end the house sufficed and Sheridan squealed that it was always so wonderful to see people find “the perfect property.” Mitchell knew he wouldn’t be happy until the room to be his was colored anything besides pink.

 

Thirty days later Adella, Mari and Mitchell began loading boxes into a small U-Haul. There wasn’t much in the way of furniture. One trip with the truck and a full car would probably do it. Mari cried a little before leaving the apartment for the last time. She’d lived there alone for three years before meeting Adella, and it was a big adjustment for her when Mitchell and his mother moved in. But Mari said that her best memories were in that apartment. Once she’d gotten used to two other people in the place, she insisted, having Adella and Mitchell around created the most genuine home she’d ever known.

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Dowardin

Dowardin

The bus careened down the wet road at 9 pm.  The students on board were tired and half asleep, with no reason to mistrust the man behind the wheel.  They didn’t know he was no ordinary bus driver, no veteran of the mass transit system, no friendly face.  To be blunt, he was otherworldly.  But a rubber mask covered his freakish appearance quite well, as long as you didn’t look too closely at his ears, where the mask was peeling away from the collection of nervous sweat gathering there.

His name was Dowardin, and he was, as we said, otherworldly.  He did not come from the sky, the future, or Hell, but from the sea and the past.  He’d been to Hell, but didn’t consider it a former residence.

Dowardin was a creature who had lived off the corals and waters of every ocean in his long lifetime.  Beginning when he was a small mamaddin sometime before historical record, his life had, like the bus he was now driving, careened toward a glorious culmination of millennia spent living, eating, loving, dying, and breathing both air and water.

The easiest way to describe Dowardin is this: His coloring is green, black, and blue.  He can turn to a deep scarlet if he chooses, but finds the practice to be rather show-offy and childish nowadays, so generally keeps to his normal hues.  He is tall, broad, and has a gruff voice which he has spent centuries trying to tame – without much success – into a gentle musical trill which floats from his thick leathery lips.  That is Dowardin.

Tonight he drives the bus and prays to his gods that he can keep control of the vehicle and hold down his first regular job since the Industrial Revolution, when he was a shoveler at a sausage factory in New York City.  He’d been a hard worker and even given a few fingers in the name of cheap produce.  Lucky for Dowardin, his ability to naturally regenerate digits, limbs, and other body parts kept him from becoming completely disabled and losing his place at the factory.  But soon the all the factories were made new with labor laws and inspections, and Dowardin was forced to look for something more discrete.

Dead end employment and failure was the name of the game for the would-be hero, and soon he was living under dumpsters and eating rats.  His friends were all whores and vampires, and Dowardin started down a long road of self-hate and self-destruction.  There were the drugs and the venereal diseases and emotional breakdowns all throughout his darkest days in the nineteen eighties, but that’s how it was for everybody, and before it was too late Dowardin joined a support group of his peers and managed to get back on his feet with the bus driving job and a small studio apartment just outside Boston.

All of this was running through Dowardin’s mind as he mustered all his will to keep the bus on track.  But the storm was getting bad, and the road was full of oil and dead beavers.  With every swerve and sudden application of the brakes Dowardin heard little yelps and murmurs of discomfort from his commuting charges.  He began to sweat more heavily, and felt the fear of defeat rising in his gullet.

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