Month: August 2007

  • Tales of Tossman

    Horndog

    Great Horned Beast2  

    "Tales of Tossman"-Part 1

    Also serialized at http://www.lightmillennium.org/

    "You want to find an apartment in Manhattan?", exclaimed my parents.

    "Yes. It seems logical. It is where I work and where I hang out. Why not?"

    "It will cost you an arm and a leg!", said my dad. My mom thought worse. The only kind of rent I could afford would place me in a neighborhood where bullets were delivered like take-out Chinese food. She was certain that within hours after my relocation I'd be on a slab in a morgue, unknown, unloved and unidentified. Given their fears there would be no way logic or reason would calm them, so I just decided I'd move and that would be that. The only question indeed was the one they had given some worried thought to.... where?

    My co-workers all knew the names of real estate people who, for a modest fee, would find me a palace. After all, hadn't they also forded the river and made their home in the city that never sleeps? You expect New York rents to be high. It helps keep the riff-raff on rent control.

    On a sunny day in February I went apartment shopping with my agent. Agents usually have a place to show you right off the top of their head. They sit. They listen to you describe your dreams and then they show you the same apartment they were going to show you when you walked through the door. I think there is a law about that.

    I was taken to a small building and an even smaller studio apartment on the West Side. Even the thought of the East Side was so amusing that my agent nearly wet himself with laughter at the mere mention of it. East Side? Do you know what the cheapest rental is that I am aware of? You'd have to supplement your income with robbery and even then you might not have enough, he told me. The West Side and the older buildings there were soundly constructed and affordable. I'd be near everything. I'd be happy. I'd be able to work long hours at low enough salary to make this a dream come true. I believed him. I moved in April after a lot of haggling, packing and planning. In May my mother let go of my left leg, thus making the move from home quite final.

    Yes, it was a paradise. The small kitchen was hardly used. My whole studio was a bed and a table which doubled as my desk. I did have a chair. I did have TV. My window, such as it was, did not open. The air conditioner had been fit into it for year round use. It did have a nice southern exposure... of the building across the street. That building was the rear delivery side of an office building whose windows were constantly dark and appeared to be blocked by boxes or garbage of one kind or another. Paradise.

    As bad as this may sound to you, not much made the place interesting until the Tossmans moved in next door to me. Arthur and Yvette Tossman. A pair of humans who truly defy description. They were a match like a black dress shoe matches a brown one. You could argue that you had two pair like this. This was the Tossman household. No kids. Just Tossmen, if that would be the plural for more than one Tossman.

    I did not realize how thin the walls were until Ms. Tossman arrived to put them to the test. They failed. I think that her incessant dragon breath might have weakened the walls. The woman always shrieked and never softly. A shrill voice would be one you could get used to, but Ms. Tossman's voice was such that made such an adjustment impossible. Mr. Tossman worked during a night shift, so the arguments did not begin until he came home and woke up his wife, usually around 3 a.m. Arguments? No, more like lectures. I never heard Mr. Tossman do more than grunt. His grunts seemed to flow from out of the bathroom. They were of the sort that revealed some kind of strain he was involved with rather than agreement or disagreement. It was as if the whole life of this fellow was devoted to a rotten job with lousy pay and horrid hours. He arrived home for the one thing that gave his life some meaning: A good bowel movement. He apparently never used his office toilet because seven days a week I could hear the Tossman grunts followed eventually by the sound of relief. It would be too much to think that this could be Tossman sex, but who knows? During all the grunting I'd heard Ms. Tossman would be reciting a litany of invective about life and love in general. Would she have been shrieking about such things during sex? Possible but not probable.

    No, none of it was silent. I'd gotten into the routine of being awake at 3 a.m. simply because one did not sleep when Tossmen were awake. I'd be up making coffee just around the time that Tossman began his grunts, usually within five minutes after slamming his door shut. Tossman never closed a door, nor did his wife. The finality of a closed door could not be accomplished without a nice, loud slam. I was beginning to think the Tossmans were deaf. Whatever the case, they were indeed loud. The neighbor on the other side of their apartment often hammered on the wall and Ms. Tossman shrieked and hammered back. The people above and below the Tossmans came and went, usually not long enough to have to put up with the noise.

    Days were quieter. Ms. Tossman would be out shopping and Mr. T would be sleeping at some point in time. He did not leave for work until late afternoon. A brief argument with Ms. Tossman would be enough to get him running away to work. She was indeed quite a gem. I actually saw her once. It was early on and I tried being friendly enough to say "Hello, Mrs. Tossman". Ms. T read Sandburg, I think. Good fences make good neighbors. She turned to me and shrieked "I don't talk to strangers.... and my name is not 'Mrs'. I am Ms. Tossman!". On that note, the door was slammed shut. She did not talk to strangers. Hmmmn, I thought. How did she ever meet Tossman?

    What do the arguments sound like? I recorded a few. I will tell you the next time we meet.

  • Tales of Tossman2

    Great Horned Beast2  

    "Tales of Tossman"-Part 2

    Also serialized at http://www.lightmillennium.org/

    Never ask my mother to tell one of her jokes to you. She can't. There are some things in life that defy our own natural abilities. We all can't pitch in the major leagues. We all can't perform delicate surgery. We all can't be the President of the United States... ah... no, wait a minute. Most of us could be the President. I take that back.
     
    My mother would begin to tell the joke by asking you if you had heard it before. She would proceed to mention the punchline of the joke by way of inquiry. If you had not heard the joke before, the telling of the joke would be ruined by mention of the punchline. That is how my mom kept major comedians from unemployment. Of course, this was just one variation. The other would be if she began the joke and then, as it was being told, she would forget or confuse the ending. A long journey to a dead end or the edge of a cliff. Her success in life was to find a husband so devoid of humor that her lack of ability in this area made the whole issue quite unimportant. My dad would continue, almost immediately, after my mother had failed to arouse cheering gales of laughter with words like "Now, as I was saying....". It was like a good husband might if he was trying to cover up the sound of a loud fart his spouse had just left in the room.

    They are a perfect couple, my mom and dad. I think of them when I compare them to Arthur and Yvette Tossman. A neighbor, sharing gossip with me one day, told me that Yvette had actually not been Ms. Tossman's real name. It was Yentl. By choosing to change it, Ms. Tossman wanted the softer sound of French as it had more snob appeal. She would have been far more comfortable to be addressed, I suppose, as Madame de Tossman, were it but possible... adding the honorific "de" much as had Honore Balzac done to his own name.

    Yes, among other things, the charming Ms. Tossman [Yentl or whatever] was a snob who did not talk to strangers. She must have talked to someone, however, as how else would the world be led to learn via the grapevine about her true name? Aha! Has it perhaps occurred to you that the long-suffering Mister Tossman may have spilled the beans on his beloved child bride? Listening to the endless litany of taunts, accusations, threats, invective and more that was blasted his way, could this be the only defense poor Tossman had? Hang his beloved, sylph-like treasure to dry on the line of truth? A distinct possibility!

    Where did it begin and when? You are indeed bubbling with curiosity, aren't you? I promised to tell you of the battle of the Tossmans, didn't I? My regret is that I had not known at the outset what a great gift I'd been given by merely being fated to live right next door. More than a few of the best matches had gone by before I had the good sense to preserve the choicest of them on tape. Yes, the voice of Yvette Yentl Tossman was loud enough and strong enough to penetrate walls and reach a tape recorder's microphone. I did not need a hidden microphone inside her apartment to capture all she said. As a spy, Yvette Tossman would have been a failure. She was actually better suited to the Mafia.

    I will try to recall for you the gist of the first such encounter. It was at 3 am or thereabouts. I had rudely and shockingly been startled awake by the slamming of Tossman's door. The neighbor on the other side of their apartment, Curt Dell'Isola, had similarly been awakened [as he later told me]. The apartment below them was used only by prostitutes for their trade and, by 3 am, was quite empty. The apartment above was being renovated, or so I seemed to recall. Other neighbors did hear the noise, but it was far fainter as the acoustics of the Tossman family seemed to expand outward like a bomb and not up or downward.

    Tossman's grunts had begun shortly after his door slam. I'd say it took about as long as it might take to remove a jacket and pants comfortably. These were of a lowing nature. If you'd ever heard a cow groaning at a childbirth and then amplified the sound, this was what Tossman had sounded like. The noise penetrated not only his own bathroom door (assuming he had the decency to close it... but then there had been no accompanying door slam so maybe not), but I could hear each little burst of pain through my apartment walls as well.

    "OYYYYYYYYYYYY. UNNNNNNNNNN. VVVVVVVVVEYYYYYYY. EH. EH. EH."

    Do you get the idea? Such a child-birth pain had poor Tossman. He must have had an extremely infant-like colon. Our bodies grow as we mature. Everything except the head increases much in size, but what if poor Tossman's intestines had remained the size of a baby but his impactions had not? It would be like trying to roll a grapefruit through a straw!

    Never wish pain on someone. It will only come back to you. My mother told me this. I felt sorry for the poor man, even though he had woken me up. I could hear him almost screaming. Dell'Isola was less charitable. I could hear him knock on the wall to remind the Tossmans of the time. Dell was a graphic designer. Interesting fellow actually. It was his job to design all the labels you see on mattresses and the back of shirts. Yes, someone has to do it, and Dell had been doing it for umpty gazillion years... starting at 9 am promptly. Dell would have loved to sleep right up until his 8 o'clock alarm. Waking up five hours early made him a tad grumpy.

    Ms. Tossman must have woken up or had been awake, lying in wait for hubby to come home. At the first knock on the wall from Dell, I heard her loud voice screech at him "Get Cancer and die, you son of a bitch!". At first, I thought this was directed to Dell. It would have made sense at that point to think so. Now, a little later on in time, I am not so sure it was. I think Ms. Tossman would have ignored Dell. She did not talk to strangers, even ones who made contact through the wall.

    Dell knocked on the wall in response and I think the second blast of Ms. Tossman may well have been directed to him. "Stick your head up your own ass and fart to death!". Charming. Ms. Tossman was trying for humor at 3 am. Little did I know at this point how sincere her wishes were. As this dialogue continued for a while longer, there would be periodic grunts, wheezes and gasps of a decidedly male Tossman nature. These would continue for a near quarter hour and would conclude with a very strong and decidedly conclusive expression of relief. To cap off the event and put a period at the end of the sentence, the toilet would flush. It would be like the fanfare of an orchestra that was about to conclude a musical.

    What was lethal to me was the encore. All this sound and fury was the prelude for what would carry on for hours to come. Non-stop. No commercial interruption. A rat blast of fury like I had never heard before in all my given days. If you had asked me that very morning what color I thought was in the interior of the Tossman apartment, I'd have said I did not know. Whatever the color might be it would surely look scorched.

    Complicating things even more was that Ms. Tossman once had a dog. She had to put the dog to sleep, I was told. The dog was named Arthur, same as Mr. Tossman. I sensed a bit of grim humor in that because every other generation of Tossmans named their male child Arthur. Arthur's grandfather was an Arthur, as was that Arthur's grandfather. The practice came about apparently because each Arthur had the good fortune to die upon the news of a pregnancy, thus resulting in the naming of the baby after the deceased. The current title holder apparently was named for his grandfather because the good man was hit by a bus and killed. I wonder if, being in good health, he jumped. At any rate, history would never be repeated as Ms. Tossman was not about to have a child, let alone raise it. She was still mourning Arthur, the dog, not the grandfather.

    How do I know so much about this crazy couple? Gossip, of course. People love to share things about Ms. Tossman. Everyone leads into the gossip with some sort of revealing tid-bit they've discovered. No one has compiled these until now. Lucky me. I am the chronicler.

    The morning in question was a chill one. I suspect the windows of their apartment were open wide. In addition to a need for ventilation, the audio effect of the open windows merely increased the volume of the already none-too-silent household. Mr. Tossman had arrived home, slamming doors. I was instantly awakened and trying to slow down the pace of my startled heart. Ms. Tossman did not wait to lace into her spouse.

            "I put the wrong one to sleep, God," said Ms. Tossman to the ever present deity. "Forgive me. I know you wanted poor Arthur [the dog] to have a longer life. I just did not want him to suffer... unlike the thing that lived, my Arthur was a gem. Do you hear me Arthur?"

    At times I couldn't figure out which Arthur fit. When I have, I will try to place a helpful guess in parenthesis for you. Whenever there are no parenthesis, I think she referred to the husband. There are also times when Ms. Tossman used vague references. I will leave these do your own judgement.

            "My poor baby. Did you know it has been almost a year, Tossman? What? You could say that to me, you monster, you horrid nightmare? You have no heart Tossman. You are just a huge and slowly leaking pile of shit. If you had been the one who died, Arthur [the dog] would have visited your grave. Maybe Arthur would go just to pee on it, but he'd have gone. You sure you won't go with me? You would need a day off from work? So? Take the day off. They have to allow you time to grieve, don't they? Stop laughing, Tossman. Listen to me. Hurry up and drop dead, will you... God forbid. God is letting you die slowly, Tossman. Slowly. Every time you go to that bathroom it's a reminder. God wants you to die slow. Did you hear me?"

    Who could not hear? Curt had pounded Beethoven's Fifth Symphony on the wall all during Ms. Tossman's shouting lecture. She ignored it. Tossman himself was grunting out, in pain from what must have been a sizeable return to the universe of used Tossman meals.

            "You hate that job anyway. Missing one day would be such a tragedy? What? So you took a day already for moving. So what? You don't have any days left? It is not like we go on vacation anywhere. Look in a mirror Tossman. That is my vacation. I get to look at that face. It would be easier to look at that face if I was in Paris... but here????"

    I had been thinking of how much easier it would have been for everyone, God included, if the Tossmans were somewhere else. Is there any place at all for God to hide from that voice? Did He love it? The Bible tells me He does, but then there are no accounts of anyone resembling either Tossman in scripture. Not even Job resembled them, but as this was not the first such shouting match, I could relate a bit to Job.

    "I am telling you. Do you listen? Bread. You eat too much bread. You look like like a stack of pancakes that were dropped on the floor, Tossman. Burt Reynolds you aren't. Shut up [directed either to the incessant hammering of Curt Dell'Isola or directed to Arthur] ! Fall off the planet, and disappear! Die scratching at an itch you can't, God forbid, reach!

    "As for you, Mr. Tossman. You are taking me to the grave of our beloved Arthur [the dog, not the grandfather]. You'll tell your boss today that you are not coming in on Monday. What? Drop dead yourself. You'll do this or God help you when you walk through the door on Monday if you don't. You don't take that day off and I'll fix you. You may not be broken, but I will fix you but good. You think you're not broken? Well, I will break you into pieces and then fix you. Do you hear me?"

    Dell had shouted through two walls at this point, aided by open windows, something to the effect that the United Nations could hear Ms. Tossman. She actually replied. She told Curt to find his penis and, having searched for this microscopic organ, by mistaking it for a pimple, give it a good squeeze.

    Things did not settle down until Tossman had gone to bed. I could hear him snoring through the window until Ms. Tossman slammed the door to go out. He awoke, I guess, as the snoring stopped briefly. It began again all too soon.  Ah, no rest for the weary. I had looked forward to Monday. With the Tossmans at the graveyard, I thought, there would be one short, divine moment of silence. Thanks, God. There would not be many, but this is the first such match I put on tape. There were others.

    TO BE CONTINUED

  • Tossman3

    Tossman

    Tales of Tossman-Part 3
    A serialized saga of Manhattan


    Baseball is uniquely American. Soccer fans patiently sit and wait for Americans to catch their fever, but so far the infection has not taken a hold as deeply here. Is it a great sport? Enjoyable? Yes. It has its moments... but the one thing it is not is baseball. Someone once told me baseball is not interesting because it is too slow. I agree. So is chess! Chess is about strategy, and so is baseball. Moves and countermoves are argued endlessly by fans. The slightest thing a manager does will be taken apart and re-assembled by those with the skill to evaluate... and even a few clueless fans who think they can.
     
    The art of baseball lies in fan loyalty. My own is somewhat suspect. I grew up in Queens, you see. It was expected that you become a Mets fan and I did. I went to games out at Shea and saw some of the greats of the game. Keith Hernandez on first base, Bachman on Second. Elster at Short. Battling Terry Knight at Third. Montreal's Gary Carter catching for the Mets [I have to add that dig as Carter has not been much of a Met]. Darryl, Doc and that whole crowd that made 1986 one hell of a year. Everyone in Boston knows it. They tire of hearing about it. It was that ball that went through Bill Buckner's legs that symbolized the frustrated hopes of so many Beantown fans. Close once again... but no cigar. Not only did '86 play a significant part of Boston history, but it would take the Boston Red Sox 86 years to get rid of the "Curse of the Bambino", a legend that stated the trade of Babe Ruth to the Yankees would forever doom the team to failure.

    The Curse is over now, so Yankees T-Shirts say "There Never Was A Curse--- Your Team Just Sucked!". You can buy one at one of the stores that ring the stadium up in the Bronx. A short time after the Miracle Mets won the Series, management began to ruin the team. It was frustrating to see bad trades and egos out at Shea. I began looking cross town and fell in love with a 26-time World Champion team. Even during the lean years there was tradition and victories beyond number. I did the unthinkable. I became a fan of the Yankees. It is a team that some like to call "The Evil Empire".

    No doubt this is how Arthur Tossman felt. I refer, of course, to the current title holder of that name. His Grandfather was an Arthur Tossman, as was his Grandfather's Grandfather. His dog was also an Arthur, or should I say his wife's dog? Arthur Tossman was a Boston Red Sox fan who lived in Manhattan. It would be an unthinkable thing for Satan to reside in a corner of Heaven, wouldn't it? Tossman lived in enemy territory. He must have been a glutton for punishment. Not only a team like the Red Sox to cheer for, but the husband of Yvette Tossman as well. Perhaps fate had decided Job had it a bit too easy and a better example of suffering was called for. Enter Arthur Tossman, whose colon was the size of a newt but whose defecations were colossal.

    On the rare occasions when Tossman was able to watch his team being bashed by either the Mets or the Yankees, you could hear the same kind of moaning and  groaning. Old Tossman did not have the ability to see his team year 'round. The cable costs were not approved of by Yvette. Also, Tossman's work schedule did not allow him to be home for viewing a game... save on rare occasions. It must have really tortured him to spend his day off with his wife and not with his TV if a game was being played in the city by the visiting Boston Red Sox.

    I can only guess at these things, of course, as all I ever saw of Tossman was a fleeting glance from a distance. I mostly heard him shriek through my apartment walls. Today was no exception. Shriek he did. Yvette added to the peace and quiet of my apartment even more than Tossman did. She would shout at him to "Shut Up" or "Drop Dead", whichever came first would be fine with her. As far as their other neighbor, Curt Dell'Isola, it could not happen soon enough to both of them.

    "I don't care who is pitching, Tossman. I want you to shut up AND drop dead", said his wife. "Schilling, Schmilling. Who cares? You are a loser. Your team are losers. A monkey in a hat and T-shirt would be a better fan than you are, you vicious lout!". Tossman groaned, but given the location of the sound, it clearly was not a toilet groan. It was a baseball groan. I'd heard those from time to time, but not as often of late. The World Series win had created a newer, brighter Tossman... or so it seemed. I knew it would be temporary. All Yankees fans knew. Some of us love to wear 2090 T-shirts. A reminder that the Boston team will win once every 86 years. From the sound of things I could have given one to Yvette Tossman. She hated her husband, if not men in general. She hated the Red Sox... but then what New Yorker didn't.... Tossman aside?

    The taunting was non-stop. "Look darling husband at what I found for the bedroom," I once heard her shout. " A picture of Johnny Damon. Yes, a nice one. No beard. You remember how they said he had a flea infestation in that? You do? OK, so drop dead yourself. I like him better without the beard. Grow a long beard Tossman and I'll tie it up to your receding hairline so I can cover your ugly face!". [Damon, an outfielder, had moved from the Sox to the Yankees that year and had immediately shaved his beard. The point had not been lost on Arthur Tossman, the husband not the dog. The dog was dead and so was the grandfather.]

    The dog had an unveiling a few weeks before and there was silence in the house while the Tossman family had gone to the graveside. You can only imagine how Curt and I wished for them to pay more attention to this animal, perhaps weekly, by visiting the grave. Such was not our fate. If anything, we were in for worse. It began when I heard Yvette shout: "Mother is coming! She's staying for a month!". Tossman had protested in some form unheard through the walls and Ms. T quickly replied "She is not! She never was and never will be! Where do you come off saying a thing like that about my mother! Tossman, have some more Johnny Walker. I poisoned it just for you." Tossman was groaning once more, but since the game was on and I was watching it too, I knew it was related more to a bases load run being scored by the Yanks and Schilling being lifted from the game.

    I doubt that with this going on Tossman paid much attention to anything his wife said. Maybe he never did. Who knows? Wives shout when husbands stop listening. Did the arrival of Tossman's mother-in-law come as a surprise? I think it did. The groaning that first night was prolonged.

    TO BE CONTINUED

  • Older Wei-1

    Older Wei
    a new beginning

    Quite a few years ago I sat down to write a story about a boy and his grandfather. It did not start out taking place in China. I suppose the one question asked most often is "Why China?". The best answer I might give is that the China in my mind was a place less developed than the US. It was a place much like our early nation of the 19th century. It was a time before machines took away the nature of life as it had been known. The age of mass production has certainly changed the world. Now we are in the age of computers. People no longer socialize as they once did. The front porch style of life is gone... but not back in China and not in the days when this story took place.

    There were things I'd left open in the story and I've always wanted to go back for Young Wei's sake. He never had the chance to finish telling what things he had learned of the past. In the process of discovery of the past we learn about ourselves, not just about those whose lives we read and research. History makes the past come alive. When I was in school it did not seem so important. Now that I am older, the past becomes very much a thing I'd want to know more about... but all those who could tell me of the past are gone. Their secrets and the history of lives unknown are buried. If you cannot trace your ancestry back more than a generation or two, why not consider writing one? Isn't it just as much an adventure to create the world you came from? I feel a little of that as I begin to write "Older Wei". Here, then, is how the story continues:


            One of my last memories of Grandfather took place on a rainy, misty day. He had long ago retired from his job of heavy labor because his aging body could no longer perform the tasks they gave him. In retirement Grandfather seemed always to be waiting for something. He was impatient. It was not like his character to be impatient. If anything you may recall that I had said he was overly silent with his family. His rare journeys into town gave him a chance to meet with friends and talk, but the last time I went with Grandfather he just sat and listened, much as he did at home.

            He had not been at the table for lunch, an event he rarely would miss. He always had told Grandmother when he went out, but since her death some five years before there was no one to tell anymore. My wife loved him, but even though that love was returned in Grandfather's own fashion, he did not show her the same level of attention after Grandmother had died. The message was clear. No one could take his wife's place. No one could. No one did. No one tried to... or so I had thought.

            Knowing the behavior older people sometimes exhibited, it was my wife who told me to go out and search for him. The dinner would be kept warm... for both of us... when we returned. Had Grandfather gotten lost in the misty rain or somehow disoriented? We did not have an exact age for him because record keeping back in the days of his birth, whenever it might have been, was not clear. Grandfather did not much care about numbers, except when he was forced to endure a birthday party in his honor. I think he felt a certain amount of shame about not knowing the day of his birth, the month or the year. You did not measure life back then in terms of living long. You measured them in terms of surviving. It was a different China after all.

            Zhang Wei's parents were too poor to give him an annual envelope of "lucky" money or hong bao. There was not much to celebrate for Zhang Wei. When the times were good and rice was plentiful, songs would be sung in the evening. He told me this once. The songs were quite old and the lyrics made no sense, even though Grandfather said they were in Chinese. Grandfather and his family members were close enough to enjoy the tribal moments that close families have, even if they are less so these days. He sang songs with his family as if in thanks for one more year to be alive. Not all of his brothers and sisters did survive. Some died at childbirth, others died while giving birth to a child. You buried your dead each year. Found a new husband or wife if need be... and had new children to replace the ones whom death had taken away. Life was just a long march forward. Where were we marching? Who knew? Best to be silent and move ahead. Carry those who can no longer walk. Stay alive. Bury the dead and keep moving. This is what Grandmother told me. Grandfather said nothing of his childhood, or at least as little as he could.

            I was always curious about those times because Grandfather said so little. Who were his parents? No paintings of them were on the walls. Grandmother's parents were likewise long dead when I was born. My mother had never met them. My father? Ah, the less said about him, the better. He abandoned my mother forcing her to flee to Grandfather with child in hand. Grandfather took her in and took her shame. Everyone knew of her return. Tongues wagged non-stop, or so I as told. What silenced them? Grandfather's lack of shock, indignation, emotion. He was hard to read so there was really no gossip to believe. Only those with a long memory might have spoken... but they did not. It was perhaps for a good reason.

            Grandfather has never been a burden in the way some parents can be. They arrive making demands and suggesting changes their children might make to enjoy a happier "parent-approved" life. It was due to Grandfather being Grandfather more than anything else. He was also not a "parent" in the classical sense but rather a grandparent. He gave guidance only grudgingly and his life lessons were few and far between. When he gave them, the message lasted a lifetime. My lifetime.

    TO BE CONTINUED

  • Flip's Hole: Rabbi Dombitz-1

    Flip
    Flip DeGaetano look alike Mike Mazurki

    Flip's Hole: Dombitz' Kosher Cat Food-1

    It was our usual Summer. The weather had gone from frigid to obscenely hot, and all in a short time. People were sneezing from the colds that came with the sudden and unexpected change. How did women, God bless them, react? They wore their Summer clothes, even with pneumonia. Breasts were more visible as were legs. It was an idiot's delight, if you enjoy the sight of women. Flip's Hole was no exception, and our resident idiot was faring rather poorly with Lori DeGaetano, the one woman in all the world who would not wear skirts because they made her look fat. Buddy Taub was employing reason with her, or what passed for reason in Buddy's infantile mind.

    "You'd look great in a mini-skirt," Buddy opined.

    "You'd look even better in a coffin," said Lori.

    Right then and there any normal man would know enough to leave matters alone,but Buddy Taub was not a normal sort of man. He thrived best on rejection. In his mind it was only a matter of time before Lori gave in and accepted his lust for her. After all, Buddy Taub had much to offer a woman. Ah, he did, you ask? Well, not exactly. Let's just say that in Buddy's world it was not about what he could do for a woman, but more what she could do for him. Small wonder then that Buddy's bachelor days would string out into a life sentence.

    "I'd die for a look at your legs," Buddy added thinking himself as witty as Shakespeare.

    "If only, Buddy... if only...., " Lori added. "Hey, Pop, can I fix his next order of meat loaf? I want to season it for him."

    Flip looked at the two of them and then at me. "Bart, do something. Control your woman, would you? She's arguing with my customers". This from Flip DeGaetano, a man who had never controlled wife or daughter in all his born days. I stared at him incredulously. If Flip didn't want to get involved in this I sure as hell did not. The arguing and cajoling went on for a pace. No other sit-down customers were in the Hole and Flip did some occasional take-out work through the window at the front of the store. Flip hated to work at the window on days like this. It was hot.

    When Rabbi Dombitz appeared arm in arm with Lloyd Flahs the combination was enough to draw Flip's attention, especially from that front window. The good rabbi sat at the counter as far from Buddy Taub as was humanly possible. Buddy countered by moving closer.

    "Rabbi, does the Bible say anything about women wearing short skirts?", asked Buddy.
    Dombitz could only look in amazement. "Buddy, you're a good boy. Go drop dead, eh? When you get to Satan, tell him that Dombitz sent you. He'll have your room ready. It is a professional courtesy for all those I send to him." Taub, rejected on two fronts as regards the appearance of women in Summer, went back to his meal and started to pick at it.

    "What'll it be, Rabbi?", asked Flip.

    "What do you have that is cool?"

    I was waiting for Buddy to pipe up and say Lori's name, but Flip gave a look to Buddy that kept him quiet.

    "Cottage cheese and Jell-o?", said Flip. "You want something light and tasty, that's your best bet."

    "Done", said Dombitz turning to his seatmate, "and how about you, Lloyd?". Flahs took the same order and the two men continued what was apparently quite a debate.

    "No, ridiculous. Out of the question. Impossible. Never, and I might add, that this is final. Don't ask."

    Lloyd Flahs was never one to take no for an answer. He was in marketing. Marketing people view "no" as the first step towards "yes". Impossible does not exist for them. The most foolish product in the world can be sold if only you find the right reason for someone to want it... at least that is what Lloyd once told me. Considering our political climate and those who occupy various elected offices I think Lloyd could be right.

    "Rabbi, you know this makes sense. It is not foolish. It is pragmatic. If you don't agree someone else is going to, then all that revenue will be theirs and not yours. I am trying to help you. Just meet with the man. Listen to what he has to say. Give him your response if you insist, but let him make his case."

    "Are you Jewish?", asked Dombitz.

    "You know I am", said Lloyd. "What has that got to do with this?".

    "Genug," said the Rabbi. "Do you know what 'genug' means? It means 'enough'. It means stop. It means 'don't continue!'".

    "I know the word, but I've never considered it to be practical. No one ever has enough, Rabbi. They always need more, and so do you. If we ever have enough in this society the whole world will stop functioning. Be reasonable. Listen to this man and give him your answer."

    "You want me, Rabbi Morris Dombitz, to listen to a man who wants to hire me as an authority? No. I am not an authority."

    Flip and I were astounded. Rabbi Morris Dombitz not an authority? How could that ever be possible. The good Rabbi took credit for things that fell into his lap. How could he suddenly have an attack of modesty? It would be as shocking as Buddy Taub suddenly speaking with wisdom.

    Flip served up the two plates of cottage cheese and interrupted the flow of conversation. It was the one thing needed to fill me in on the nature of the conversation that Dombitz and Flahs had been having. Dombitz explained it all to Flip and I just listened.

    "Lloyd has a client named Kornbluth. Does Kornbluth have a company? No. Does Kornbluth have a job? No? What does Kornbluth have? An idea. He is a man with ideas. He is like a Hollywood scriptwriter who never wrote a single line and wouldn't know one if it bit him. He has a concept! An idea. This putz, who would not know how to breathe in and out if he had not taken lessons at a young age, wants to hire the great Rabbi Morris Dombitz! I tell you, it is an insult to even the intelligence of that human potato at the end of the counter."

    "He has a great idea. You just won't listen. You are not only the great Rabbi Morris Dombitz, you are the stubborn Rabbi Morris Dombitz. The man wants five minutes of your time. Five minutes. You need longer to go to the bathroom, Rabbi. Why be so obdurate?"

    "Five minutes for a Dombitz is nothing, I admit. For others such a time would be an eternity, I assure you. Yet in five minutes I can produce at least one very well formed bowel movement, a thing of beauty. What can Kornbluth give birth to? An idea? Ach, and such an idea! It is an insult."

    "Not if you would give the man a fair hearing. Your mind may be closed now, but if you just listen to the man make his points, then you can say that your reply is based on a fair hearing of the matter. Be fair, Rabbi, that's all I am asking."

    Lloyd Flahs knew well that the key word in his appeal had to be "fairness". The Rabbi prided himself on that above all other things. It was Lloyd Flahs' marketing strategy and one that worked... finally.

    "Ach. Ok. I'll speak with him here tomorrow. Same time. Five minutes only. Tell him. He's got only five minutes of my precious time, which is like centuries to others. He should thank you for this, Lloyd. I am doing it only for you. Now leave me alone about it, because the answer will still be no!".

    What was this epic meeting about to take place in Flip's Hole all about? That you will find out soon enough!

  • Flip's Hole: Flip the Artiste

    Flip2FlipFlip2FlipFlip2 Flip Flip2

    Flip's Hole

    Many years ago, and just shortly after we were married, my wife told me I should use my time learning to write stories. It seemed harmless and, in a way, a wonderful way to pass time. I started. I stunk. I probably still do a terrible job of writing stories, but now... thanks to the internet... I can bore more people with them than ever.

    My friend, Bircan started me off by using some of the early stories on her website... long before this blog existed. She still issues some of my writing there in her archives and current issue. You can visit this site at: http://www.lightmillennium.org/index.html  It is in Turkish and English. Take your pick.

    You may have noticed a few other stories are running here simulataneously. I am putting a few of them up here for storage and eventually when all the pieces are in place I will try to organize them logically and in order. For now it will have to remain a jumble as Xanga does not allow the writers to post anything in more than date order. :(

    How many Flip's Hole stories have I written? Many. It began with a small place that used to be on 32nd Street off of Park Avenue. I worked across the street. My first day on the job [in 1971] I walked into the place for lunch. I had many more lunches there over the years. The owner was a fellow who looked very much like the character actor Mike Mazurki. His name was Phil DeGaetano. Phil is the model for Flip, in appearance only. All the other characters are fictional, save for a very real Lori, the narrator's love interest and Flip's only child. I named her for an old friend, who I still adore in many ways, Lori Giordano. I think they would behave identically and Lori can shoot me for that.

    The real "Phil's Lunch" no longer exists. All things pass away and so did this postage stamp sized coffee shop. The parking lot on the south side of 32nd Street is still there, but the sign on the wall above it that said "Let me Phil you up" is gone. THe fictional Flip's Hole got it's name from a sign above the small store that said "Flip's Hole in the Wall Coffee Shop". A storm broke the sign in two and half was thrown away, leaving only "Flip's Hole". It is an amusing note that some might read this as a reference to something about one's lower anatomy. I'll let the few stories I've salvaged from among the many lost stories speak for themselves. Here is one called "Flip The Artiste":



    "Take that thing down," said Flip. He was talking to Lori, of course, who was once again trying to bring a ray of sunshine into the otherwise dirty and derelict place known as "Flip's Hole". The Hole is the world's smallest and least important coffee shop. It attracted a host of regulars that I have tried to describe over the years in adventures too unimaginable to believe.

    Lori placed her hands on her sizeable hips and gave Flip the malocchio, the evil eye. It was an unspoken dare that said in one look that not only was she NOT taking the painting down, Flip was not going to touch it either.

    I took a look at the thing and was amused. It was a picture of a cat dressed in a Victorian frilled collar and blouse. The cat was smoking a cigarette, but looked otherwise quite like a short-haired, white cat. I was told the painting was called "Aunt White". Lori also told me it was by the famous artist Donald Roller Wilson. I did not understand much about this fellow, but after looking at more of his work I began to sense the humor behind it.

    Flip, no connoisseur or patron of the arts, was more inclined to see paintings depicting dogs playing cards. These paintings, done on velvet, are supposed to be the lowest class and the lowest taste in art... much like paintings of Elvis Presley on velvet. It fit Flip DeGaetano to a T.

    No matter how low his taste was, old Flip did not think the Hole was the place for any kind of painting. For one thing, a painting in a frame attracted dust. Flip was well known for not dusting. Everything pretty much was left as it was in the Hole. The tables in the back dining room were left covered with boxes to discourage their use. Dirt covered both boxes and tables. The most notorious grime was the lengthy string of dirt that hung above the cauldron of soup that Flip kept warm on his hot plate burner. It was never longer and never shorter, but always poised above the soup like a Damoclean sword ready to drop at any given moment.

    "We don't need it". It was not a royal "We" that Flip was using. He was attempting to speak for the many customers who, given the narrowness between the counter and the wall on which "Aunt White" was hung, would surely be bumping into it. It was bound to be knocked down with every passerby, coming or going... just as coats were knocked off the hooks on the back wall. Flip had a point, but Lori was immune to her father's logic. He was all too often wrong, in her opinion.

    Buddy Taub sauntered in and looked at the new addition. "Fax looks better than this babe", he said. "What's with the picture?". Buddy was referring to our store cat, whose name was Fax. Lori normally ignored Buddy, but she was going to make her will made known to all of us. "It is my effort to bring a little class to this place. The whole wall should be filled with art and it will be. This is a very expensive work of art and you should have some respect for it." Lori reached out to Fax to show her the new "cat" in the store. Fax was having none of it. She leaped out of Lori's range and back into the kitchen. I suspect that Fax was smarter than any of the rest of us. A loud clatter and some curses in Spanish led me to think that Fax's escape route toppled something over and that Jesse Dominguez, the cook and delivery man, had some cleaning to do.

    "It stays". Lori's last word. Her mom would be proud of her. Mrs. Marie DeGaetano was not only the one with the last word in the DeGaetano household, but one suspects that she even gave God an earful when He had it coming.

    All this serves as a nice review of many of the names I've bandied about in my notes about Flip's Hole. My name is Bart, former production manager for the Pasmezoglu Publishing Company, now future husband to Lori and bottle washer to Flip.

    How did the rest of the day go? Well, as you can imagine "Aunt White" got a lot of stares and more than a few smiles. Take out customers loved it, but those who sat on the stools invariably knocked it down and had to put it back up. By the end of the day "Aunt White" had been on the floor more often than a fleet of drunken sailors on liberty. The frame was starting to show a little wear.

    Morris Ippai, known as "Moe" to his friends, took a look at the thing and asked "Why is the cat smoking? Isn't it illegal to smoke in the store?". Rudy Giuliani had enacted several measures to all but eliminate smoking in public places, and Moe Ippai was making a wonderful joke at Lori's expense. She glared at him. Flip lit a cigarette and took a puff.

    "Moe, this is the god-damned USA. I spent a year in Korea to fight for freedom and I'll be darned if anyone is going to remove my rights without a fight. If the cat can smoke in here, so can I. Sue me." I could see Flip was starting to appreciate the cat a bit more. Lori glared not only at Ippai, but back at Flip. Lori hated smoking. Lori hated farting. Basically her idea of the world's best husband was a man with a cork in his mouth and in his... well, you know.

    "I'm only a sign painter and window washer, but I can paint the cigarette out, if you want me to. I'd give you a good price." Lori glared at him even more. I think Ippai got the message as he turned to eat his tuna fish on rye.

    Sigmund Schnipple turned up for a coffee and knocked the painting to the floor. It took him a few minutes to find the right angle to be able to lift the frame without damaging it and a few more to hang it back on the hook. "Where'd you get this albatross?", he asked. Lori stared at him, too and the silence was deafening. Flip had his back to the world and was ignoring the whole thing.

    Mrs. Mohendas, a teacher from nearby Norman Thomas High School, stopped in and took a peek. "Why that looks just like my old cat Fluffy." Buddy Taub could not resist the opening. "So, was Fluffy a pack a day smoker?". Mrs. Mohendas cleared her throat and stared at Taub much as Lori did. A weaker man would have shrunk from the formidable looks of these two ladies. Taub was unaffected, lacking sufficient brain power or heart to be so moved.

    Mrs. Von Frompsing was next in line. She looked at the painting and a let out a shriek. "Oh, where did you ever find this? It is an original Donald Roller Wilson. Why is such a priceless treasure hanging in a dump like this?".

    "This ain't no dump," yelled Lori... but Flip was now interested. He knew Mrs. Von Frompsing was a lady with more money than Bill Gates. She was very frugal, which explains her habit of eating at Flip's. The quality was lacking, but he was also cheap.

    "This painting is famous?", asked Flip.

    "Oh! A Roller Wilson original canvas is very priceless. His artwork is constantly going up in value. If I could only have a few of his pieces, I'd have the dear man put to sleep. Dead artists are so much more valuable, you know."

    "How much did this cost, Lori?" Flip was now VERY interested in art.

    "It ain't important."

    "How much?"

    "I got a good deal."

    "How much is a good deal?" Flip raised his eyebrows. When a DeGaetano does this it means the talking portion of the exchange is over. Lori muttered something.

    "What? Speak up. I want to hear what you paid for this."

    "Eight", said Lori.

    "Eight? That's a bit high, but OK. I think I can afford eight bucks."

    Mrs. Von Frompsing was laughing now. "More like eight thousand, Flip. Don't you know what art costs? Why Roller Wilson's collected book of art prints was sold originally for $10 and is now worth 15 times that... if you can find it."

    Flip looked sick. He looked at Lori and mouthed the question again. No utterance, just the movement of his lips asking her 'how much'?

    "Uh, Hundred".

    "What! You spent a hundred dollars for this?" Flip misunderstood, as usual.

    "Eight Hundred." Lori finally said clearly.

    Flip looked at the painting of "Aunt White" and shook his head. He was so mortified that he could not speak.

    "Well, that certainly is a bargain. I'll give you a thousand for it. It is vintage Wilson, after all."

    Flip put his hand over Lori's mouth, which she promptly bit... but not before he could shout out "SOLD".

    Mrs. Von Frompsing wrote out the check and Flip saw it as a $200 profit. Lori was incensed that her efforts to sanitize the Hole had been frustrated again. No one else seemed much to care. The painting had not been around long enough.

    When Sigmund Schnipple came in the next day he noticed it was gone. "Where is it?", he asked, having wondered where his wrestling partner went.

    Buddy looked up from his soup with an evil smile. "Dunno. I think it was in heat and just vanished." Fax did not find this a bit funny. Her glaring eyes matched those of Lori, who sat in a corner holding onto Fax. Flip looked at the empty wall and smiled. I wondered what would happen next. In this place something always happens next.


    There is a real Donald Roller Wilson, artist. View his work at:

    http://www.donaldrollerwilson.com/

  • Young Wei and Old Wei-1

    Old Wei and
    Young Wei

    part one

    I have enjoyed writing fiction. I've written a good amount that has never been published and never will be. Writing is fun and does mix a bit of catharsis as well. I am able to kill a lot of ghosts by writing about them. It could be the same for you... if you tried.

    This story was originally "published" long ago in my email newsletter "The Runyon's Way Gazette". It appeared in serialized form from July, 1999 to January, 2000.  It has also been reissued through the web site of my friend, Bircan Culkin. That web site is called "The Light Millennium". It features articles in English and Turkish.


    Grandfather never liked to spend too much time with me. He was always busy. He came home late and no one would talk to him. He had to start all the conversation. It was our ritual. Grandmother was a quiet woman anyway. Many times they would speak to each other in shrugs and raised eyebrows. Who needed words? My mom was their second daughter. She had returned home after my father disappeared. If there was any conversation about what had happened, I was never part of it. It was just one more thing among many that was not part of conversation.

    One day my teacher came to my home. He told Grandmother I had been bad at school and had a fight with one of the other boys. Grandmother said nothing. She looked at me and raised her eyebrows. I could not imagine what she was thinking. The teacher went on and on about the fight and what happened to the other boy. He politely asked that my Father speak to me so that such fights would not happen again. Grandmother nodded her head. She brought the teacher a cool glass of tea as a way of thanks for coming so far out on the long, dusty road from town. Teacher did not know that Father was gone. He knew nothing about me except where I lived. It was on the records in the office. Those records had names and dates. Maybe some of it was true, maybe not.

    Grandfather came home that night. I thought I was safe. He was in no mood for conversation. The work that day was hard and Grandfather was becoming accustomed to the limits that age had put on his body. I could not understand this because I was still so young in those days. If Grandmother did not speak to him, he would not learn about the fight. I would not be punished. I would be safe. Mother had not been at home, so even she did not know about the Teacher's visit.

    "Safe", I kept thinking over and over. "Nobody knows and nobody cares. I am not in trouble." Besides that idiot Chen deserved a punch. He was always annoying me about something. He would brag about his grades. He would brag about his family. He would do nothing but talk, talk, talk. He talked about his own life and family, so that was ok. When he started to push me around, when he kept asking me why I was so quiet, when he wanted to know why I never said anything... that is when I told him to shut up and leave me alone! Hah! I might as well have invited him to continue to pester me, because that is what he did. He found my weakness. It would not stop until I shut him up. I think I broke his jaw. Two of his friends told me he would be more quiet than I am. He had to have his mouth wired shut! Chen would be drinking liquid for a month. Ha ha.

    How foolish I was. I thought Grandfather's silence was ignorance. He was testing me. Grandfather never spoke to me before Grandmother or mother. If he said anything at all to me it was usually "Good Night". Today he spoke to me before anyone else.

    "You fight?", he asked.

    "Yes."

    "You win?"

    "Yes."

    "Good."

    That was it. Grandmother heard all this and raised her eyes to look my mother. Mother looked back and shrugged her shoulders. Dinner went on without any further interruption. Before he went to bed Grandfather added only one instruction:
    "Wei, be up at 5 a.m. Tomorrow is market day. You come with me."

    I was going to spend Saturday with Grandfather Wei? After all this time... Ah! He was proud of me! He was pleased I won my fight. At long last he was going to treat me like his equal. My manhood had been proven to him. Finally! I could not sleep, of course. I spent the whole night thinking of this day to come. It would be memorable indeed, but not in the way I had thought.

    to be continued

  • Young Wei and Old Wei-2

    Old Wei and
    Young Wei

    part Two of ten

     

    It was 5:00 in the morning. It was still dark when Grandfather came to get me. I was awake already and when he saw me he just motioned with his hands for me to follow him. If he was pleased to see that I was eagerly awaiting him he did not say so. As usual Grandfather was waiting for me to talk to him first.

    I thought this was my chance to show my manhood to him. I kept silent, too. On the long walk to the market we did not talk about anything. Grandfather walked ahead of me and did not turn around once to see if I was still behind him. Maybe he could hear my footsteps and so was not concerned about me. If Grandfather felt I was now a man, why did we not walk shoulder to shoulder and talk? He always spoke with other men from the village when he walked to work. They always walked shoulder to shoulder. I tried to walk up near Grandfather, but every time I walked quickly, so did he. He was telling me this way to stay behind him. He did not bother to explain why.

    Grandfather was thin. He had been a strong man. I remember how he would hold me and play with me when I was younger. It was so long ago. I had a family then. I had a father. Now we lived with Grandfather again. Was he angry to have to support us? Did he now hate our need? He never complained. He never chased my mother away. In his eyes I always saw some sadness when he looked at her. It was not tears, for a man does not cry. It was a softness, a sharing of her pain. Her husband had left her all alone.

    What had these years done to Grandfather? He was less tall than I remembered. He had become old and gray haired. His skin was tougher. His laughter was less frequent. It had been replaced with silence... as if Grandfather was preparing for an after life of only a cold grave. I wanted to know so much about how he felt about us and about me. It might be a long time before there was another chance to ask him. I had to try to break down the wall between us, but I did not know how. I kept my distance behind him always thinking of how to reach out to him. I would wait for my chance.

    In the marketplace he would have to give me instructions. I would have to ask questions. He would be bound to teach me something, and in that exchange I had the hope to reach his heart and tell him the truth. I wanted to let him know I respected him. I wanted to thank him for taking care of us. I wanted to thank him with all my heart that in all our time together, words of praise were few, but so were words of criticism. I had wanted to tell him I had learned something valuable from him and that I would be sure that his name, which was my name, would always be a good name to all who heard it:

    "Young Wei? Oh, you mean Old Wei's grandson? Yes, a fine family. He certainly has made his grandfather proud. He is spoken about everywhere in the country now. The poor man can't find anywhere to be at peace without hearing the name of his grandson spoken. It is a problem we all wish we could have!"

    Ha! That would serve Chen right. That pest had been properly punished. he would drink liquid for a month because he could not chew his food. Hah! It is a mistake to pick on me or my family. That was for sure.

    We were almost at the marketplace now. I was wondering when Grandfather would speak. He did. He said: "Wait here. I will come back." I was surprised. Why did we walk all this distance together if I was not to go to the market with him? Was I not to carry his bags? Or help him to select the fruit and vegetables we were to buy?

    "Grandfather? Why do I wait? Don't you want me to help you?"

    "No. Wait. When I return we will go on."

    What did that mean? I was too afraid to ask another question and anger him. I watched his back disappear into the dust of the road. He was going to the market and leaving me alone.

  • Young Wei and Old Wei-3

    Old Wei and
    Young Wei
    Part 3

    Grandfather Wei, without much explanation had left me at the gateway of the marketplace with instructions to wait for his return. We had walked the long road to town together and I had surely thought he intended to do this so we might spend time together. I was confused, but with nothing else to do this day, I decided to wait as Grandfather had told me to. Perhaps upon his return he would explain his reason for not wanting me to shop with him.

    Our town is a small one. Local farmers bring their produce to town only on the weekends. If you do not shop, you do not eat. Many in the town are farmers but some, like grandfather, are laborers. It was for this reason that our trip to the marketplace was so unusual. Grandmother or mother would have made this trip today, not us.

    I took a seat by the side of the road to wait for Grandfather. There was a lovely, large tree that offered a good amount of shade from the heat. I sat with my back to the tree, thinking. I could see all the passersby and I suppose they also had a good view of the lazy, young boy braced up against a tree doing no work and not seeming much to care about what anyone was assuming.

    Fang Li and her mother were coming to market. I could see Li's distinctive walk and clothes from a distance. Li was a beauty. She dressed well, went places most others did not go and did things the rest of us could not do. She carried herself like a Queen, but her manner was always friendly. Her mother on the other hand had known our family for thousands of years. I think her mother must have given birth to Li when she was at least 90. She did not like me... and I did not like her. We never had a bad experience with each other, but if you noticed that Li was pretty you became a dangerous enemy from her mother's point of view. It was funny. Li would never do more than say hello to me, but her Mom behaved as if I was able to steal her only treasure away. I could talk to Li in school, but everywhere else she went some family member often was close by. Most of the times I'd seen Li it was her mother who had her in tow.

    Li smiled and nodded to me, but the mother elbowed her and she had to look ahead and watch the road. She did so, but kept her smile as she walked. Her mother was whispering in her ear and at one point Li put her hand to her mouth and giggled. Mother Fang obviously told her I had many problems and perhaps even listed a few outrageous things to frighten her daughter away. I imagined just what she'd say:

    "That Wei boy is bad. He has no education and will never make a good husband. Just look at the road and pay no attention to him. He once walked in front of me on this road and made bad sounds with his mouth. He is rude. He looked over his shoulder at me and waved his arms behind himself, waving the air toward me. He had made the air foul with his body and he was blowing this at me. Do not laugh, daughter. You want to marry such kind of man?"

    I knew this was the kind of thing poor Li was forced to hear. It was possibly worse. I am not even sure what might have gotten her to laugh, but I'd bet this was the story being told. The real truth was that it had been an accident and that I waved the air to send the bad smell far away, instead I had just looked as if I were trying to break wind in Mother Fang's face. From that day on I think I lost any chance to be able to return Li's smile.

    "You dream too much, Wei," I heard a voice say. "He has only dreams. Ha ha. He is in love," said a second voice. The Liu twins were behind me. Jwo was the taller of the two and Min was the fatter. They both annoyed me. These classmates loved to torture me as much as Chen did. You would think that in school only Wei was the one to find and insult, wouldn't you? It was almost true. It was the Liu sisters' good fortune that I did not hit women. If it were only possible I would begin with Min. I would probably break my hand trying to hit her big, fat triple chin.

    "Wei is like a fly landing on a turd and thinking he has found a treasure," said Min. "No," Jwo said, "Wei knows it is a turd but thinks that it is a treasure anyway."

    "Jwo, did you come to the market to sell Min? Ha. Sell her by the pound and you will take home many yen. Too bad there is not a donkey big enough to be able to carry the load home." Min hit me on the shoulder. Girls have so much freedom these days.

    "You could not afford to buy her eyelash if I sold her by the pound, Wei. You are poor as mud and not as smart. What do you do here sitting by the road? You look for a wife but find only angry mothers?"

    To be continued

  • Young Wei and Old Wei-4

    Old Wei and
    Young Wei
    Part 4

    [Please page down for the other parts to the story which were posted earlier. They appear in reverse order.]


    Jwo and Min had teased me for a time but I ignored them and, since they had
    shopping to do they soon left me alone.

    It was starting to get warmer. Grandfather and I had left for the
    marketplace early in the morning, so I did not feel the heat at that time.
    Now, even in the shade of the tree I had found, the Summer sun was making
    things quite hot. I hoped Grandfather would return quickly, but I knew he
    would not. If he took too long I would simply melt in the heat of the sun
    and he would have to carry me home in a bottle.

    I looked out on the road to the market and saw Gao. He was walking ever so
    slowly with his stick, sweeping the ground back and forth with it. If Gao
    had started around the same time we did, it took him a lot more time to get
    here and it would be longer for him to go back. How would this blind man
    carry his food and walk with a stick I wondered.

    "Gao," I cried out. "Nee How Mah?"
    "Wei, Nee How."
    "How did you know it was me?"
    "Who else would be you?", said Gao as he approached the shade of the tree.
    "Ah, you have found a way to escape the sun. I am not so lucky today. I
    should have begun my journey earlier."
    "Why didn't you?"
    "Too dark outside," laughed Gao. He was such a strange blind man. He knew
    me just from a few words. He laughed about being blind. He often joked
    about it. I wondered how he could do these things. If I was blind my eyes
    would still be good for tears.
    "You always joke with me, Gao. What did you come to buy today?"
    "The usual things: rice, fruit, vegetables. A good thing that I can smell
    the difference, eh? A good thing I can feel the difference. My guests would
    be upset to eat rice and steamed fruit. Ha ha."
    "Well, if you are not in too big a hurry why not join me under this tree.
    When Grandfather returns I can help you to carry your food."
    "Help? Hah. I am not buying enough for an army, Wei. I am buying only
    enough for myself. I can manage that, but I will sit in the shade for a
    while to rest."
    Gao put down his stick and rested beside me with his back against the tree.
    "Where is your Grandfather anyway? Why did he leave you here? Are you
    guarding the entrance from demons?"
    "He asked me to walk with him to the marketplace, but when we got here he
    told me to wait for him. I don't know why."
    "You didn't ask?"
    "Grandfather and I did not make conversation along the way. He makes it
    very hard to ask questions. He does not expect them. He does not like them.
    I have found he often ignores them."
    Gao stroked the small beard that was growing out from his chin.
    "Aha. You will just sit and wait then. Too bad. Waste of time, I think.
    What would you be doing today if you did not go to the market with him?"
    "I guess I would help my Mother to do some errands or to do some work
    around the house. Mother does not let me waste my time. She says I have to
    learn to use my time well since there is so little of it. If I am too slow
    she pulls my ear. She says if she pulls often my ears will grow big enough
    for me to hear her. Your mother was this way too, Gao?"
    "No. My mother died when she was young. My Grandmother raised me. She died too, eventually. Now it is just Gao and Gao alone who is the master of his
    destiny."

    I looked at Gao when he said this. Some of the humor was gone from his
    voice. He was not an old man, but he had some years behind him. They showed on his face. All his laughter could not hide the truth. He had been given a hard life no matter what his good nature was. It must have been frightening to be left alone. It ran through my thoughts. I wondered if I would be alone someday. It was bound to happen. I felt a ghost trying to enter my thoughts, and ghosts are best kept away. When I began to listen to Gao again he was in mid-sentence.

    "...neighbor. Good man. So kind and helpful, but how could I impose on
    anyone? They are not responsible for me or my circumstance, are they?"
    "You don't want help from anyone at anytime? Everyone needs help sometime
    Gao. People who can see need lots of help."
    "I don't argue that. I just know if I do not help myself then I will become weak and helpless. Now I can live on my own and be a man. What would they do to me if I was weak? Put me in a home for the blind? No. I would not want that. I would rather be on my own, even if it is difficult. Do you understand? I cannot be weak. I cannot."
    "Neither can I, Gao. Neither can I."

    We stopped talking for a while. I could feel a light breeze across my face.
    It was cool and gentle. Where had it come from? Gao felt it, too.

    "Ah. Grandmother is fanning me. She wants me to be strong and finish my
    shopping. Enough rest for me, Wei. I must move on. Say hello to Old Wei
    when he returns."
    "I will ask him to wait for you. Maybe we can all walk back together."

    Gao smiled and waved goodbye. I watched him until he disappeared into the
    marketplace. If I had to wait for him I would, even if Grandfather had to
    leave without me. I was determined to walk home with Gao. At least there
    would be conversation on the way home. I did not realize how much I missed it.