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1993-03-28
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154KB
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2,585 lines
:Main
Smoke and Mirrors
April 1993
|A Pen and Brush Publication
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:Intro
Smoke and Mirrors
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Writing is an art and a science . . . and a little bit of magic.
The storyteller is sleight-of-hand artist, guiding his audience with
feint and flair. The storyteller's aim is to entertain and inform by
weaving a web of words scintillating to the senses. Writers are
storytellers, above all else.
Gathered here are storytellers. Poetry, fiction, gardening,
and cooking--with a little bit of legerdemain in all. It's all just
smoke and mirrors . . .
?Contents
:(Contents)
:Contents
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Table of Contents
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1* Smoke: "Laudamus Te" ............................ by Cecilio Morales
2* The Muse: "Bringing On The Muse"................ by Phil Gottfredson
3* "Is There a Doctor in the Car?"...................... by Del Freeman
4* "Writer's Block"................................... by B. Z. Niditch
5* "Virtually A Summer's Day"........................... by P. A. Brush
6* "The Wall" ........................................... by Karl Weiss
7* "When You Ain't Here the Circus Ain't Fun"........ by Franchot Lewis
8* Why John's Diner? ................................. by John Chambers
9* Review of John's Diner ............................ by John Chambers
10* John's Diner Story: "Ruby Does D.C." .............. by Del Freeman
11 Recipes from John's Diner:
11a* Figs and Walnut Bread ........................ by Dave Winer
11b* Jane's Baked Grits ........................... by Jane Winer
12* Garden Feature: "Landscaping a Fragrance Garden".. by Lucia Chambers
13* ArtTech: "Lead Antimonate Yellow" .............. by Phil Gottfredson
14* Gorgeous VGA GIFs: "Shells" ..................... by Michael Heinich
15* "A Messaging Aid for BBSers" ...................... by Jack McGeehin
16* Mirrors: "I'm Getting Better?!?" ................... by Michael Hahn
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Credits* Others* to Read Submit* Info Acknowledgements*
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:Acknowledgements
Acknowledgements
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|"When You Ain't Here the Circus Ain't Fun" Copyright (c) 1993 Franchot Lewis.
|"Landscaping a Fragrance Garden" Copyright (c) 1993 Lucia B. Chambers.
|"Is There a Doctor in the Car?" Copyright (c) 1993 Del Freeman.
|"Lead Antimonate Yellow" Copyright (c) 1993 Phil Gottfredson.
|"I'm Getting Better?!?" Copyright (c) 1993 Michael R. Hahn.
|"Bringing On The Muse" Copyright (c) 1993 Phil Gottfredson.
|"Canyon" image Copyright (c) 1993 Lucia B. Chambers.
|"Shells" image Copyright (c) 1993 Michael Heinich.
|"Writer's Block" Copyright (c) 1993 B. Z. Niditch.
|"Laudamus Te" Copyright (c) 1992 Cecilio Morales.
|"Murphy's Law" Copyright (c) 1993 B. Z. Niditch.
|"Ruby Does D.C." Copyright (c) 1993 Del Freeman.
|"The Wall" Copyright (c) 1992 Karl Weiss.
|"Why John's Diner?" (c) 1993 John Chambers.
|"Review of John's Diner" (c) 1993 John Chambers.
|"Virtually a Summer's Day" Copyright (c) 1993 Pen and Brush,
|property Lucia B. Chambers; author rights belong to those who
|contributed to this story.
?Contents ?Credits ?Others? ?Submit
Laudamus Te
by Cecilio Morales
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Great dollar god
gracious dime
in this our time the unshod revile thee.
We work for thee
we give thee thanks
we whisper in thy Holy Banks
we bow before NASDAQ
before Dow;
the beggar knows not how.
Infidel, he squanders healing
treasures not thy budget ceilings:
Panderer to the poor;
his spoor, a trail of children wanton,
haunts thy grail, skill-less,
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Laudamus Te
continued
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debasing productivity and growth:
Thy hand, invisible, shall smite him.
Thy prophets profit
thine acolytes count
thy trust rides secure the dreaded bust
thy stocks unlock the horn of plenty;
turn thy gaze to us, thy workers,
we discount all gloom
(at its proper rated credit)
and we abate the debit
of payroll-bloating shirkers.
How sweet the scent of anxiety
its piety
its spur to maximize!
We awaken to thy prizes
to our video and to our VCR,
to our car, without a care ...
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Laudamus Te
continued
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small, unstoppable
the urge to hold Thee in the palm;
another day, another pay
thy grace speeds my pace
leaves the maudlin to their own.
I avoid the goblins of doubt
and the pints of stout
that degrade and threaten thy empire:
I devote to Thee, to appeal and to desire,
my finest waking hours.
---
|Copyright (c) 1992 by Cecilio Morales
?Contents ?2
Bringing On The Muse
by Phil Gottfredson
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Bring on the Muse! Muse is an interesting word, sounding
indifferent to its intended meaning....."He mused awhile, but not
in doubt, not trace of doubt was there, it was the steady solemn
pause of resolute despair..." Is it not different for different
people? I muse awhile but not in doubt, no trace of doubt is
there, just the steady solemn pause of resolute despair.
Seriously.....I get my inspiration from the person I'm
doing the work for. I listen intently, not at the words so much,
but to their heart. I study the piece I'm framing, I look for
line, balance, texture, color, subject, and most of all I try to
see the piece I'm framing through the eyes of the Artist, or the
client. I use my imagination to empathize, feel what they feel,
then channel that information to my artists' soul. I become
emotionally involved with my task, then I again channel that
emotion into my artists' soul. I then interpret all that I have
heard and seen and felt into the piece I'm creating. All of the
parts and elements that I use to make my frame are my dictionary
of terms, every color, every texture, each line and curve are
words.
To illustrate, I recall one evening when I sat with my
client on the front steps of his house. Above, the city below,
we had this spectacular view of the valley. In the distant sky
was a thunderstorm, and as we watched the lightening and listened
to the thunder, he told me something about himself when he was a
boy. "I was very frightened by thunderstorms," he said.." I would
hide and cry and prayed that I would be okay. When the clouds
parted and I could see the shaft of yellow sunlight streaming
through, I had hope, hope that all would be okay." He went on to
say...."Phil, as you create the entry hall of my house, I want
you to do something that will give me hope. When I come home from
a long day, tried and frightened from the battles I have fought
to earn my keep, I want to come into this entry hall, look up and
feel hope, hope that all is going to be okay."
I sat there as the evening sun with its golden light
broke through the clouds, just the way he had described it to me.
I felt the warmth, I felt the hope about which he spoke.
The focal point of the entry hall was the ceiling dome,
twenty-two feet from the floor. A perfect place to paint the
storm that ends with the golden rays of hope. Surrounding the
dome, I placed seven mystical white horses with golden manes and
hoofs emerging from the storm to carry my client to safety.
Surrounding the dome and all its parts, I colored the ceiling
with the softest azure blue, my way of saying, "All is well, all
is well."
As I relate this story, my eyes fill with tears. I still
feel the same emotions I had when he told me his story six
years ago. My client was an elderly man, and it was not easy for
him to admit he was so vulnerable; to do so went against his
ruthless masculinity. As for me, being vulnerable is my asset,
yet I'm ruthless when I create.
My `muse' is awakened by my interreaction with the people
for whom I create. I engage them in conversation that causes them to
share their passionate side, which sparks my imagination and
desire to create for them in a way that has purpose in their
lives. I think motive has a lot to do with turning on the `muse;'
without this interreaction with my clients, I have no `muse' at
all, just wasted energy, and a palette of colors dry and covered
with dust.
|-end-
|Copyright (c) 1993 Phil Gottfredson
?Contents ?3
Is There a Doctor in the Car?
by Del Freeman
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He replayed his friend's suggestions in his mind like
fingering an endless string of worry beads. Should he? Should he
not? No flower petals to disengage toward resolution of the
problem. No eeney, meeney stuff. Only his own "good sense."
"You have a problem," she'd said definitely. "Granted, it may
be a problem no one knows about yet, but it is a problem with great
potential for revelation. Now, just who do *you* think is in the
best position to put a positive spin on it? I say this as your
friend as much as a former investigative reporter, Don - take the
bull by the horns before it throws you off and gores you to death.
Well, he couldn't deny the good sense part. It could only help
him to give his own interpretation - might even be a political
asset, as she'd said, although he had his doubts. Still, facts were
facts and if they came out - well, there would be nothing for it
except to offer lame excuses that would ring as hollow as she said
his head was if he didn't heed her advice.
Jeez, what had ever possessed him to run for office in the
first place, he wondered, knowing full well the answer. It was that
part of his past life that best fed his ego - that time when he was
firmly in office almost a decade ago - long before the booze
brought him down from his lofty position; down all the way to his
knees and beyond. Part of the challenge was to see if he could get
there again. Part of it to see if he could resist the temptations
which had destroyed him the first time around.
He spoke about his recovery - frequently. She agreed with him
that it was politically advantageous to do so. After all,
statistics indicated the number of recovering addicts was maybe the
only thing on the rise in the waning recession, which still clung
to the economy like the aroma of early morning stale beer to a gin
joint.
"Hey, America loves a come-back," she said bluntly. "There
are enough people recovering from something or other to put you in
office with their votes alone, and the ones who've never been down
and out will support you because they believe it is the humanely
right thing to do. Who among your opponents is foolish enough to
stand up and declare that you don't deserve a second chance?"
He'd smiled. She was savvy, his new friend. He was inclined
to trust her, despite their brief acquaintance. She'd moved to
Miami after Andrew whipped through and left mounds of destruction,
following her husband whose pseudo-construction line of work placed
him in high demand and high remuneration. He'd liked the two of
them immediately, but trust ... well, that was something else
again. That she'd been an investigative reporter was an open fact.
Whether she still was, was the question that bothered him; caused
him to wake bathed in sweat after dreaming that the both of them
were in cahoots to do an expos
on him. When he'd told her about
that she'd only smiled. They both had.
"It's only smart to reveal your shortcomings yourself,
presenting them in your own spotlight, Don," she'd urged that
morning. "God knows, the other side's spot is pretty intense and
unforgiving.
Hell, he knew that. What sort of moron did she think he was
anyway? He'd figured all the odds before he'd gotten back into the
crap shoot, and thought he had a pretty good chance. He also
thought there was a good chance he'd skate through without
detection. If he didn't, however, the advantage of presentation
would be lost, just like she'd said. He felt like he was being asked
to choose between column A, fatal accident, and column B, fatal
disease. It was a little like committing suicide while still in
perfect health.
"What are you gonna' do lad," he murmured aloud. "What are you
gonna' do?"
***
The sunlight fell warmly on his thinning hair, bathing the
crown of his head in a heat that caused a light perspiration to
mist his brow. He shaded his eyes and looked up toward the podium
where his opponent stood. Would he say it? Did he know? If so, it
would be impossible to learn who might have told him... anybody
could have done so.
"Is that rental property where you live in the Gables, Mr.
Harlan? Can you give me the name of your landlord?" The reporter
had either been asking an idle question or was a heck of a
good actor. Don had casually answered that he was renting a room
from his former business partner while attempting to locate an
efficiency apartment in the area. The hurricane had placed a premium
on housing, as the reporter well knew, and Don thought his answer
had satisfied him, but the speaker's words would soon reveal
whether the phone interview had been a set-up.
The empty rhetoric went on - droning like a fat, lazy bee. His
thoughts drifted to the stunt that had turned this thing in his
favor. That too, had been her idea. Of course, she'd presented it
like a joke, laughing as she spoke. He'd laughed in response.
Laughed, and then sobered. "Alert the media," she'd advised. "It
can't hurt you, and it might just be the kick in the pants this
campaign needs."
And he'd done it - doubtful to the last. Still, she'd been
right again. The media gathered around like zoo animals at feeding
time - giving him the opening he'd needed and he'd swooped in for
the kill. "That's a bit much, isn't it Mr. Harlan? Don't you think
those who are truly down and out might resent this?" "What? Resent
a man for carrying a sign saying 'Will work for votes?'" he'd
countered. "I don't know why - it's true." "Sure, but everybody in
the race is working for votes. What makes you different?"
Ah! Pay dirt! Lord love the inquisitive, earnest-faced
journalism graduate. He assumed his most serious expression.
"You're incorrect in that assumption, sir, although it is a
natural enough mistake. My worthy opponents are quite content to
campaign for votes. Working for votes, however, is a concept
totally foreign to the political persona. I think it's safe to say
that I am the only one who will work for both votes and the
voters."
That had drawn a round of applause, some appreciative smirks.
They had seen it coming - the veterans of campaigns of old - but
they admired his finesse, just the same.
The crowd's applause as his opponent finished up brought him
back to the moment - the revelation obviously hadn't come. Stunned,
almost as though he'd been awakened from a deep sleep, he felt
himself moving lethargically toward the podium, slowly
comprehending the latest narrow escape. Yes, he decided in the
split second before he reached to adjust the microphone - yes, she
was right. He'd bloody well do it.
***
He looked out at the mass of smiley faces, recognized that of
his friend and her husband. The husband smiled. It had been
painful. And embarrassing. For a while, he thought he'd thrown away
any chance he had. The press had questioned him - grilled him, more
like. He'd held firm. She had sold her article, and it had helped
as much as anything else. And she'd been right. Everywhere he went,
people said they were for him - would vote for him. Hell, if he'd
known it would be such a boost to his campaign, he'd have announced
his candidacy from his back seat, he thought. Still, who could know
the voters would understand a candidate who virtually lived in his
car? And that's what it amounted to when it all boiled down. Maybe
in another time, one less aware of how fast the good times can turn
bad - some time when a killer hurricane and a faltering economy
hadn't touched so many lives... . But this wasn't another time.
They'd played it for that and a great deal more, maintaining
that the address under which he'd qualified was that of a long-time
friend; and a residence where he did occasionally sleep over,
shower, shave, eat a meal; he'd also admitted that at least part
of the time he lived in his car. And they'd bought it. In a Miami
where the vacancy rate was less than one percent for rental
property, the public understood and accepted his housing dilemma.
In a world of therapeutic treatment for every known maladjustment,
they respected his status as recovering alcoholic. The bugaboo had
been let out of the closet, dressed in regalia of his choice and
introduced to the world by his friend's article - in words he'd helped
form. The image was favorable despite its dis favorable limitations.
"See, I told you it could be turned to advantage," she'd said
following publication of her article, when the phone at the AA club
room had been ringing off the hook. "Who, but someone who's been
there, could be as valued to the homeless, once in office? Look at
these quotes...". Again, she was right. The newspaper was full of
opinions from the man on the street, almost all saying they'd vote
for what they considered one of their own. It had followed as
naturally as could be - from his front-page photograph holding
aloft the "will work for votes" sign as he stood in the middle of
U.S. 1 afternoon traffic, to admitting that he, too, was literally
as homeless and needy as the next guy holding a sign. It had been
as easy as falling off the proverbial log. He looked out at the
audience, caught her eye and nodded. And why not? He'd won easily.
Thanks to her advice and skillful handling of the story, he was the
first-ever homeless commissioner to be elected. He'd turned his
addiction into an asset before she came along. She'd helped him
turn his homelessness into the winning stroke.
"Candidates will be moving into refrigerator cartons and old
cars in droves," he'd laughingly predicted, patting the fender of
his ancient Buick. "Unless somebody comes along who lives in a
Volkswagon, I'll be in office indefinitely."
"Don't get too smug," she'd cautioned.
"Me?" He'd laughed. "Not me. But I'm going to plant a square
foot garden under the radiator; erect a patio awning and buy a
hanging plant." He felt like a million bucks. He'd had the best
medical attention a would-be politician could hope for: that of a
born spin doctor."
|-end-
|Copyright (c) 1993 Del Freeman
?Contents ?4
Writer's Block
by B. Z. Niditch
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Among sunless times
falling like paperweights
in polished midnights
wanting pot
when I do not smoke,
railing to ride out
this second wind,
looking at playbills,
bookjackets, my watch
thinking of moron jokes
about time,
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Writer's Block
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murdering this donut
taking the whole spring
to lose out,
hating this winter cold
but without family remedies
for a cough that droops
into the morning.
I watch the large Evergreen
socketed by rain
wondering if it's all
about reflection.
|Copyright (c) 1993 B. Z. Niditch
?Contents ?5
Virtually A Summer's Day
by P. A. Brush
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I sit in the darkened room, the soft glow of the monitor before me
is the only light in the house. Nothing breaks the silence. After
taking a few more swallows of that amber liquid that quiets the fever in
my brain but makes my throat burn, I lift a wisp of gray hair from
before my eyes and turn to face the computer. The antique keyboard is
warm and comfortable under my hands. If only my dreams were as empty as
my days life would be tolerable. Not pleasant, or the least bit
worthwhile, but at least livable. But memory doesn't sleep, and
without the liquor to damp it at night it comes alive and invades my
dreams. If only I could suffer a mere nightmare! But no, all too often
my dreams are the real images of the terrible past I want to leave
behind and recreate at the same time. It is the only way I will ever
see any of them again, and wanting that more than anything, I still
can't pay the price of my dreams. You see, in spite of all that
occurred I am still proud. Oh Arabella and Markus, forgiveness is too weak
a word for what I have to ask of you! How could a man be as arrogant as
I was, and as blind to the danger that I put us all in. If only I could
pay for my conceit myself, but no, if there is a God it is crueler than
that.
I watch my age-spotted hands on the keyboard as they call up the
communications program and begin the nightly ritual that I long since
gave up hoping would help to right some of the horrors that I
perpetuated that January evening so long ago.
Those of you who still have your youth probably know something of
what I felt. Knowing that I was different, special, could do more than
others, and do it better. I was going to leave my mark on the world
(and so I did, but in so awful a fashion that I could not speak of it to my
closest friend).
All was light and laughter when the experiments began, and it
stayed that way much longer than it should have. That is what deceived
me. That something that appeared so innocent could have so much power,
and be so vengeful still seems incomprehensible. It was just the next
logical step in the exciting microcomputer revolution at the end of the
millennium. The experiments with virtual reality were of special interest
to me, and I must admit that I accomplished things in this field that
have never been equalled. The price I have to pay for my success is the
two silent boxes in this dark, dusty room where the two people who meant
most to me in the world once sat.
I reached for the tattered postcard once again, and in the dim light
reflected by my ancient monitor, read aloud the phone number
shown in smudged black ink. "Take A Chance BBS" was embossed on the
front of the card. "Most interesting," I thought, "indeed."
My hands trembled for just a moment and then my fingers swept
the keys so expertly that individual motions were impossible to detect.
I whispered, "Computer please dial now," and reached for my glass,
waiting to see what would happen next.
All of my promises and all of my dreams merged for one flat
instant when all was forgotten and time collapsed into trivia. I was
young and excited for that second between DIALING and WAIT and Markus
and Arabella grew dimmer and dimmer in the shadows of my room...
The screen flickered and then went black except for the green
characters in the center,
Who are you?
I typed, Dr. Alfred Stringer
and pressed Enter.
The screen returned:
Thank you. One moment, please . . .
"Welcome to Take a Chance. You've stumbled upon one of the truly
unique opportunities in today's modern society.
This electronic bulletin board is dedicated to enlightenment,
encouragement, and excitement. Too many people in today's
technological jungle feel isolated. They spend their days entering
useless bits of information in computer terminals much like this one.
This is the era of simulated realities, instantaneous travel, and
globally networked environments.
Many people have advocated a return to the ways of simpler days.
We at Take a Chance regard our modern society as a new opportunity,
however. Take a Chance is an avenue for personal growth, wealth,
and sexual satisfaction. In this information renaissance, more is
available than at any other time in our past. The key is in finding
your access to opportunity. With Take a Chance, we hope to provide
that key.
Please, sit back, relax, and prepare yourself for a new adventure.
In a moment, your journey into the world of Take a Chance will begin.
We are sure it will be a truly rewarding experience. You may leave
the world of Take a Chance at any time by typing "Stop", or pause your
session by typing `p'. Type `help' for assistance.
Hit `enter' to continue, please . . .
"Useless bits of information," I echoed. Yes, that was what
Markus had said when our virtual reality experiments had just begun and
we were only defining universes and not immersing ourselves within them.
I started, rubbed my eyes, and vowed to not get lost within my memories
until I'd at least tried out this BBS.
I pressed enter, and watched a delightful menu print out
on my screen. The options:
1. Enlightenment.
2. Intense Sexual Gratification.
3. Soul Mates.
4. Personal Wealth
5. Power and Fame.
6. Global Thermonuclear War
Enlightenment. Arabella often said that a new Renaissance was
upon us, but that to partake of it, we must prepare to add to it.
She was convinced that the term "enlightenment" referred to a state of
mind and in fact, her insistence was what inspired me to propose our
initial experiments.
I could hear my heart pounding as I reached for the "1" on
the numeric keypad. I typed the "1," and then pressed Enter.
The screen cleared to black, and then an image which sent me
careening into the depths of horror presented itself with utmost clarity
on my screen: Four Doors. These doors had no description, no
numbers, but each was a different color. They seemed to be suspended
in space, and as soon as my mind registered "space," clouds appeared behind
them. I wanted to turn off the machine and I wanted to try each door
simultaneously. I could not resist the temptation to explore what was
presented to me, yet I knew with certainty that each door was a virtual
reality unknown to me and yet all too familiar in my worst nightmares.
In the end, I couldn't resist. I typed, "The Red One," and
the red door within the universe of my screen slowly opened wide.
Behind the door was an intense, three-dimensional red grid. At
its center was a silver, sexless figure. The figure approached and
began to speak.
"Good evening, Dr. Stringer. Welcome to the world behind the Red
Door. I am your guide--you may call me Derfla. You are here seeking
enlightenment, and I must warn you: All enlightenment carries a
price. Are you willing to accept the terms of this universe?"
I reached for the keyboard to respond, but my fingers had become
silver, digitized images. I floated toward my guide, settling inside
the virtual universe. I regarded the grid around us; I gazed for a
long moment at the figure before me. We were mirrors of one
another--silver and sexless. "Yes," I said, "I accept your terms."
"Very well, Doctor," it responded. "Follow me." The grid
expanded, rotated, began to swirl. It formed a vortex with a dot of
blue at the center. We swept toward the blue dot at a dizzying speed,
the spinning of the virtual whirlpool increasing as we approached its
center. We broke free of the vortex, and the blue dot expanded
rapidly.
It was the earth, floating in a field of stars. We rushed toward
it, the continents resolving themselves as we approached. We rushed
nearer and nearer, toward North America, toward the eastern seaboard,
toward Boston. I suddenly realized our destination, and with the
speed of thought we settled before an apartment house in Cambridge.
It was a place I hadn't seen in forty-five years. It was the place my
torment started.
We passed through the walls of the building like ghosts, moving
toward the large apartment in the back. In the apartment were three
people--myself, as I had been at eighteen; Markus, my older brother
and closest friend, and Arabella, the woman we both loved.
And I fall into melancholy, into thought and into
memory. "Arabella... Arabella?" I think of Arabella. I see my
Arabella. The fragrant maiden who the angels named--Whore! No! No,
no. . . She was my friend. My sweet friend. My blessed friend.
"I am back there--in a rain storm. I'm rained upon. I am a
rubella: a fellah without an umbrella, all because of Arabella.
"Arabella, Arabella--my silent Belle.
"I dwell in this cell where I fell. It's hell, this shell.
"Arabella--I worshipped you, mademoiselle. I cursed you as a Jezebel.
I mocked God. I was an infidel. I cried at the highest decibel.
"I bellow like a noteless cello. I was yellow. I wouldn't say
hello, it's me who needs you. I was jello.
"Arabella, I dream of your bella--ah--your belly. It's naked. I
kiss it. It's delicious like deli jelly--and I read to you from
Shelley.
"How could I? Arabella, not then, you belonged to another, who was
my friend and brother too. What could a poor depressed, repressed fellah
do?
"Over the years I've thought of you and little else. I've kept my
jealousy to myself. Why now is all of this bursting forth? I am an old
man. I know I am an old man. I am young. I am here. I am there. I am
eighteen. I am sixty-three. My body is hard and lean and young. I feel hard
and strong and want and need. I have the power to take. You, Arabella,
are beautiful. But, oh, darn, darn, darn, Markus is still my brother."
These are my thoughts, only my thoughts. I dare not speak them
aloud to myself, or to Arabella or to Markus.
Arabella sat curled up on the upholstered chair with a glass of wine
in her hand. Her long curly red hair framed her delicate small face--
such a beautiful face with features so soft that they belied the
intense intelligence within. She was laughing that easy laugh she
always made available for one of Markus' risque jokes. He was
so much better at telling jokes than I. I always screwed up the punch
line. Markus was sitting on the couch opposite of Arabella and I was
perched on the stool in the middle. We were having a wonderful time
just as we did 45 years ago. Drinking, laughing, so full of promise
and hope, ignorant of what lay ahead. God, I miss them so.
But this was the night that it all began, the night when we began to
lay the foundations of a new level in the information renaissance that
had swept the nation and the world--virtual reality. We had often
talked about the promises of virtual reality and what rewards that
could be realized for the betterment of humanity, but tonight we
would embark upon the journey to a new plateau of awareness. A
new development in virtual reality that not only gave the individual
the perception of being in an artificially-generated environment, but
also provided stimulus to the remaining senses of the human
experience, i.e., senses of touch, taste and smell. A complete
environment of escape from the present into alternate worlds without
the use of chemicals or hypnosis.
Tonight, we began that journey to create a world that gave so
much, but took much more in return.
Arabella's smile slowly faded into the prisms within her eyes,
and she distractedly tapped a fingernail on the rim of her glass.
"Alfred, all of our preliminary tests indicate that our original
premise was right on target. You can't isolate one specific incident to
the contrary. So why are you so nervous?"
"I'm as excited about this as you and Markus. I just don't feel
that we're ready to launch a human being into any of our pre-defined
virtual realities. At best, they're too sketchy."
Markus recrossed his legs and rolled his eyes. "Alfie, you're
wrong. Arabella re-defined the weight ratios, and every single
result indicates success. You can't argue with Crayon!"
"I'm not arguing with the Cray. I just don't think we've thought
of everything. And stop treating the Cray as though it were a
real, thinking human being; you trust it too much."
Arabella stood up and began pacing the room. She looked like
a caged animal, tense and ready to leap at the slightest provocation.
She suddenly stopped in front of the window, looked out into
the snowy streets, and said, "Okay. Let's define our first human
reality. Alfred is right, we've been playing with mice and it's time
to develop the next level of depth. I say we begin our structure by defining
the sense stimulation realities for, oh, a grassy park somewhere."
Markus and I exchanged silent nods, he walked over to the
blackboard, and I flipped on the video-recorder and sat on the edge of
the old oak desk. Arabella turned to face us both, and we all three felt
electric, the adventure beginning all over again.
Markus reached up and pressed the "clear" button, and the
blackboard first turned gray and then black, clean and ready. He leaned
back and glanced at the paper supply, and then picked up his stylus.
"Arabella, you go first. Give me all the sensations a woman would
detect in a grassy park." His stylus was poised over the blackboard,
waiting for input.
I felt uncomfortable again. "Wait. We must refine this with
empirical fact. Let's agree to make some preliminary definitions
and then back them up by going to the grassy field and recording our
sensations."
"Agreed." Markus smiled. "Always the skeptic, and rightly so."
"Right," Arabella grinned at me. "First, smell. Slightly ozone
such as ten percent, and perhaps another ten percent sweetly mossy. I
think another ten percent should include whatever trees are nearby,
including their bark and if there are flowers on them, and add five
percent for damp and humusy earth. We can refine these numbers later,
oh and let's add two percent body talc, presuming awareness of self."
I was suddenly in agony. I looked at the Cray and began to back
out of the room, painfully aware that this moment in history was the
exact beginning of our disaster. Arabella's words continued to echo,
and the three of them continued to define that grassy knoll, as my
present self was swept out of the room and backward, weightless, through
a red door.
"Tumbling through the crayon door, and for a canyon that seems
to have no floor, I begin to fall like lead. Mists, sounds, and ghosts
rethread dread in my sorehead. I've been a blockhead, I know. A
bonehead. Never a hothead--still my forehead burns! What's ahead? More
of what I dread?"
"Doctor Stringer!" Derfla snapped, breaking the spell. He was
once more an image on a screen, and I was once more a flesh-and-blood
entity.
"Why must we always return to the beginning?" I asked.
"The enlightenment you seek must begin with an acceptance of the
causes of the disaster. In all the years you've suffered, you've yet
to accept the full measure of your responsibility in what happened."
Derfla softened his tone. "Doctor, you must accept what happened and
your part in it before you can put it behind you."
"You're right, of course. May we begin again?" I asked.
"No, that door is now closed to you," my guide responded. "You
must choose another door."
"Then I choose the yellow one," I said, and as it opened, my
consciousness once again leaped into a virtual universe.
I and my silver companion sped along a landscape that strongly
resembled the circuit diagram of a computer. A very powerful
computer, it seemed, and I realized we were moving along the
data pathways of the Cray system Markus had called Crayon.
We reached an output junction, and exploded into a meadow.
Arabella, dressed in a gossamer gown of pure silver, stood gazing at
the grass and flowers that surrounded her. She took a deep breath,
and I could see the delicious curves of her breasts outlined by the
sheer fabric. I felt a flash of arousal, followed immediately by a
flash of guilt. She sighed, said, "Exit," and began to fade.
My silver guide and I also faded, rising into a room with a couch,
medical monitors, and a terminal for Crayon. Arabella was regaining
consciousness on the couch, as Markus monitored Crayon's output, and I
monitored the medical displays.
Arabella sat up, and smiled. "Very close, guys. We still don't
have the scents down, though. I could only smell the ozone, not the
flowers."
"Neural induction has its limits," said the young Alfred. "We
need some way to enhance the interface."
"Little brother, you can figure it out. You've put us on the
right track with this direct neural stimulus. Programming Crayon for
the environments is easy--converting those environments to a form our
sensory nerves can directly access is difficult. But we're getting
there!" Markus seemed so sure of himself and of us.
I had my doubts. I had my jealousies, too, as he bent to kiss
Arabella.
I knew that if I wanted to change anything, to recreate my
present and future, that I would have to stay in this past, but I
couldn't bring myself to do it. I just couldn't.
Once more I tore myself out of the simulation--a trembling,
sweat-soaked human in an old leather armchair, sitting before an
obsolete video monitor. The expressionless face of Derfla regarded me
from the screen. We watched each other for a long moment, human and
video image, before he spoke.
"Dr. Stringer--Alfred, we must continue. You were very close just
then, before you abandoned the scene." He swept his arm backward to
the two remaining doors.
I shuddered. I'm an old man. I don't have the capacity for too
many shocks at one time, at least not any more. But I felt compelled
to play out this little drama, perhaps to find what I once lost. I
took a deep breath. "The blue, please," and once again found myself
moving at lightspeed, a silver image in the mind of Crayon.
We were pioneers in a technology that would become the standard by
the end of the twentieth century--and be outlawed a scant ten years
later. The crude neural induction system I designed became a direct
cortical implant. People could feed information directly into their
synapses. The world was a better place . . . for a while.
Too many people began to live in a virtual reality. The real
world became a pale imitation of the scenarios they designed. The
first deaths took the world by surprise--locked in a world of their
own making, the victims died of dehydration just a few feet from the
kitchen taps. The disappearances were even more startling.
These were my thoughts as I sped along the circuitry of Crayon,
the Cray mainframe that housed our early programs. It was on display
in the Smithsonian now, and this electronic bulletin board had somehow
accessed it.
Derfla and I left the Cray, travelling along the cable to the
neural induction array that a young Alfred Stringer was working on.
We entered his hands, his mind.
Goddamn William Shakespeare. Shall I compare thee to a
summer's day? shall I create thee a summer's day? Shall I make THEE
a summer's day? When I heard Markus muttering these hackneyed
sonnets to Arabella, I began to lay my plans. They wanted the
virtual reality of a summer's day? Well how about I make Markus
into a summer's day? Arabella could only love a summer's day so
far, no matter how beautiful and temperate.
I began studying wet ware, and biosensors, everything having
to do with biological components of electronic systems.
Everything worked perfectly. We all three "went in"
wet wired through the contacts most people would have permanently installed
to directly access their cortexes at the end of the 20th century. Arabella
and myself were standing in a beautiful park. Markus was nowhere to
be seen. She wasn't too upset at first. I reassured her that it
was probably a hardware problem--a malfunctioning line or jack,
and that Markus would be sitting in the computer room when we got
home--fuming over missing our first outing. In the meantime I
basked in the glory of her undivided attention. We strolled down
the lawn, and paddled our feet in a little pond, and fed some
squirrels. Both of us marvelled at the reality we were
experiencing. We were so proud of our work. I was especially
proud, because I thought I knew exactly what happened to Markus,
and knew that now Arabella would be all mine.
But she kept saying "I can't believe Markus isn't here! It
just feels like he should be here."
And indeed, I felt Markus's presence strongly. Especially by one
large live oak tree in the middle of the park. Right where I
sent him.
When we finally exited the program and she found Markus's
empty contact-cluster sitting on the floor she was distraught. Then I
pointed to the time. What had seemed minutes to us, and taken
slightly over 12 hours.
"Markus is probably at home sleeping, or getting something
to eat somewhere."
"No, He went with us didn't he? You know something you
aren't telling me!"
"Really, Arabella, I'm sure that you are overreacting. You
call his house, and I will look through the house here."
I wandered upstairs calling his name. My heart was full.
Arabella was mine at last, my brother was gone forever. When I
got back to the comp room Arabella was gone. There was a note to
me on the screen of the small lap-top computer that just said.
"I've gone looking for Markus."
At first I assumed that she went to Markus's home. Then I
saw the program on the screen of the Cray, and realized that
Markus's cable now ended in Arabella's chair. She had re-executed
the virtual reality program using Markus's terminal. Now they
were both a mere summer's day in the virtual reality we had
created.
No matter how many times I tried to go back to that summer
day I couldn't find it. I began to feel that Markus and Arabella
were playing games with me. Leading me on a chase through the
microcircuitry, and laughing like children behind my back. They
obviously had the ability to change the virtual realities from
within because I accessed the same programs to find alien
landscapes, arctic winters, and sometimes total blackness. I
always felt them nearby, but never managed to connect.
They were gone, and they'd left me behind. They were dead, and I
had killed them. Guilt drove me out of the program once again.
As we faced each other now, I recognized my guide.
Derfla--Alfred. He was me, I was him. He was the part of me I left
behind with my betrayal, the part that reported two missing persons to
the Boston police. I knew where they were, though, or at least what
was left of them.
"Let's go for the last door." I said, and allowed myself to
be swept through on a tide of electrons.
I was sitting in the den once again. But I couldn't
remember if this was real or created. There was only one thing
left to try, and I knew there was no going back once I tried it.
I picked up the cluster that I had rigged for Markus so long ago and
slipped it onto my head.
It was a summer's day in the park. Markus and Arabella were
feeding the ducks at the pond. Arabella turned and looked up at
me as I approached.
"Oh look, Markus, he's finally here!"
"How long has it been?" Markus asked as he turned and laughed.
"Forty-five years." I began to sob.
Arabella came and held me. As my sobs slowed, I began to
beg them to forgive me. I looked up and saw Arabella scowling at
Markus.
"You'd better tell him. I told you it was a cruel thing to
do!"
"Hey, he was going to turn me into a tree! Listen, little
brother, don't feel bad. You didn't do anything to us. We've
been fine. I saw what you were doing, and wrote a different
virtual reality program working on a closed loop and taking
feedback directly from your subconscious. You see, you've never
left your virtual reality. Wherever you've been--whatever you've
done from the moment you plugged into that Cray was created by
your own devious mind. It may have seemed like 45 years, but in
real time it's only been about an hour. I had it working off a
timer in the den."
"What are you saying Markus? You mean that you and Arabella
have been sitting around the park here while I've been suffering
the tortures of hell for killing you both?"
"Well, the short answer is yes. But remember that whatever
tortures you suffered you also created for yourself. Your
conscience just wasn't up to fratricide, little brother, and I
guess we both knew it at heart. "
I didn't know what to feel. Relief, anger, and dismay fought
for attention in my psyche. Before I could say another thing
Arabella spoke.
"Why, it looks like rain, did either of you program rain
into this reality?"
"Hey, you did remember to turn on the surge protector didn't
you?" Markus asked.
A huge bolt of lightning flashed out of the sky and hit the
live oak tree that I was once convinced was my brother Markus,
and everything went black.
# # #
When the smell began, the neighbors called the police
department. A few firemen and cops were casting about in the
ruins of what was obviously a long-abandoned house. There were
no records of the owner, or owners, and it was a bit of a mystery
what should be done with the house and lot. They found a room full
of ancient electronic equipment, and what was left of the body of a
man seated in an old leather armchair.
"Jesus, Al, look at all of these antiques! They must be
worth a fortune to a collector. There's a keyboard and a two-
dimensional monitor, and look--printers that use paper."
"Yeah, and look at this little dandy." Al said holding up a
dusty cable with a nasty looking bundle of wires on the end.
"Wow, bioware. That's been outlawed for at least 20 years. I
wonder what happened here?"
"We may never know, you know." Behind the two men, a single line
blinked on the ancient monitor:
NO CARRIER
-end-
|Contributors: Lucia Chambers, Michael Hahn, David Holloway,
|Franchot Lewis, and John Wallace. Final edit by Michael Hahn.
|Copyright (c) 1993 Pen and Brush
?Contents ?6
The Wall
by Karl Weiss
>.fill[1 2 76 3 blue]
>.hilite[2 36 43 lightred]
>.hilite[2 64 76 lightred]
I walk along the path
and a chill wind sends shivers up my spine.
I reach panel 9E
and my unseeing eyes look beyond
to the crash and flames of the past.
My fingers press into the stone, unfeeling,
bringing remembrance. Again,
the pain, the sorrow.
I look inward, and see through my tears
long forgotten places, our callow, shallow faces,
aged long before our time.
I remember! I remember the wrath
of the Gods of War,
bringing fire, shrapnel,
burning flesh, loose entrails,
ours, theirs.
Wiping my eyes, I continue
>.pause[]
The Wall
continued
>.fill[1 2 76 3 blue]
>.hilite[2 36 43 lightred]
>.hilite[2 64 76 lightred]
down the stone path, hearing my heels
click in the dark.
It is 2 in the morning. Dark.
The best time to be here.
I see others, dressed like me,
field jackets, boots.
We acknowledge/don't acknowledge each others presence.
With a nod, or not.
Lost in our own memories,
sharing a common bond, never
understood by those who were
never there. Brothers.
Each of us lost in our own memories
from that time of the not distance enough past.
I stop at 5W. Tenderly run my fingers
along the stone, remembering friends,
>.pause[]
The Wall
continued
>.fill[1 2 76 3 blue]
>.hilite[2 36 43 lightred]
>.hilite[2 64 76 lightred]
days of heat, light, sound, fury that came from the
clear sky, ending day and night for so many.
My eyes fill once more.
When I can see again I look at
the things left behind. Detritus of our
past, or healing? Boots, medals, pictures.
Some have meaning to me, others I can guess at.
Some are totally private. A stuffed bear, an
empty candy box.
I cry again. Through the tears I
see pictures - some against the wall, others
from my past, lost in time and space and my mind.
I wander to the end of the wall, not seeing
the others, them not seeing me. Each alone.
I wonder why I am here, and others are not.
Will I ever find peace?
|-end-
|Copyright (c) 1993 Karl Weiss
?Contents ?7
When You Ain't Here the Circus Ain't Fun
by Franchot Lewis
>.fill[1 2 76 3 blue]
>.hilite[2 16 55 lightred]
>.hilite[2 60 76 lightred]
"Yo, Wanda?" He called from the other side of the park. She
turned. She looked, taking care not to lose her place in the Book.
She placed her finger on the word where she had stopped. She
looked again. The blurred shape of his face formed. He was not
in range. She sighed. She wished he would walk faster. She hoped
he would learn to come on time. She mumbled to herself, "Why
should he?" He knew that she would wait.
His features formed slowly. Her eyes went back and forth,
from him and to the Book. He took small steps. She mumbled,
he was waiting for her to get up and jump. He was her favorite
one. She mumbled, she would go anyplace with him, and even in a
room where he had broken wind - providing he had cracked open
a window, enough for a breeze.
She saw him now. He brushed his hand across his crotch.
The heat of the summer-like day was shrinking the cotton of his
slacks. He smiled at her, as she squinted her eyes to see him.
"Where are your glasses?"
She squinted more. He shook his head, "Stop peeping at me
like that." He took her glasses from the purse in her lap. "Put
them on, four-eyes," he said.
She glanced away from him, and at the Book in her lap, then
she looked back, and when she did her eyes glared. They went
through the puffy whites of his eyes and the red that seemed to
have drifted to the side. She smiled when she realized, he was
teasing and asking her to laugh.
"How dare you call me four eyes?" she said. "Imagine
how I would look with four eyes? I would have one in my forehead,
the other extra one in my ear."
He quickly bent forward and kissed her cheek. She frowned
again. The stubble of his beard scratched her, and she remembered
him bearded, with hair growing wild around his face, and her
hair, bunched up, and in dread-lock rolls like his, and growing
down to the top of their backsides. She wanted no more hair
like that, or of them in their little hut house, the one room, and
the shared bath down the hall. He shaved, kept his hair
short, and she kept hers shoulder length and combed, but for some
reason, he had not gotten all the hairy stubs. To her, for a
moment, they looked the same as the thick beard that grew when he
and she lived gross.
He sighed. He said, "I can't think of anything that could
make me happier now."
She pulled back. He took her face in his hand and gazed
as if considering kissing her again, then he heard her
complaining, "You didn't shave?"
"Man, I did," he answered.
She pulled free, gently, and smiled softly, blushed. If
she was not careful, then she would be right back in a grungy
room. She knew why he was there, though he was late.
II.
She awoke. She saw her Daddy's eyes, his hawk face
glaring. His gruff voice has caused her head to buzz like
a swarm of wasps had stung her. She sat on the bed, shaking
from remembering while she slept what her father had told her
about junk. "I don't mess with that bad ass stuff anymore," he
said. "Not this hard head, no way. When I got off the stuff,
back then, in the not enlightened times, when nobody shed a tear
over a fool. The way they got you off of stuff was to put you
in a straight jacket and lock you in a cell. And they let you
scream. I remember how I screamed - and everyone of the giant
spiders that crawled out on me - and the gorillas, grabbing my
bounded arms, and my legs, biting them."
"Ugh,"she groaned at the crumbs and the trash in the
bed, the residue from the box of cookies he had eaten. She
mumbled, "He's making roaches." He always left crumbs on the
bed and floor. She knew the crumbs would draw more roaches.
"Gawd!" she cried. He wet the middle of the bed with sticky
glop. "What is that?" Chocolate syrup. She wondered what had
he been doing? "Shit, this place stinks," she said. The smells
of the sheet, the sweat and syrup, the sex and the feet were
almost as bad as that of the dead mouse, she found under the
bed the previous week. She had almost died. She only stayed
in the room because the manager promised that professional
exterminators had been killing the mice, and he gave them a
night's free rent. The smells of the sheet on the bed made
her almost barf, but she could not barf. She had nothing on
her stomach. She coughed up spit, and placed her hands over
her mouth to prevent the spit from running. Still, some spit
dripped from her fingers and on the sheet. She flung herself
up from the bed and wobbled on her legs as she tried to stand,
then she leaned against a chair.
Four pages - one a summons, one a warning, one a notice,
the other with the numbers of her lawyer and of her mother -
lay on the night stand. These were important papers dealing
with her court dates. She glanced at his paper - one raggedly,
wrinkled sheet, with many stains, soiled like a mat on which a
barnyard rooster had stood. The paper lay on the floor where he
left it. Pieces torn from the paper, as though a rooster
pecked and tore the paper - All over the paper, numbers and
letters were written as though the rooster had scratch them
there.
"Hey," she called to him. She reached for the paper, her
legs were still wobbling. She mumbled. "His paper probably's
too ruin to touch." She left it. "Do you know your court date?"
she yelled.
The door to their room opened and he walked in, "What
you yelling about?" His hair was wet. He wore a robe. He had
showered.
"Oh? You were out there?" She spoke in a trembling, loud
whine.
"If I were you, I would get to the shower while it's empty,
before the rock stars wake up, and the hot water's gone."
"We're out our minds," she whined. "What are we doing
here? On this floor are the rock stars, on the top floor,
the winos."
"You want me to help you in the shower?" he asked.
"No."
"You better put some speed on the rump," he said. He
slapped her on the butt.
"Darn, don't hit me," she said.
"Don't be flaky," he said. "I don't hit you, that was
a sexy slap on the butt."
"I've got to get something solid on my stomach before
I throw up."
"Don't you want to shower first?"
"Where are the crackers?"
"Gone."
"Food disappears when you are around, don't it?"
"Do you want me to run and get you something?"
"No, if it's not too much bother."
"What do you want?"
"Food."
"Let me get dress."
She dropped into a chair and waited. He dressed and went
out for food. The room was quiet, except her head buzzed. Loud
people in the hall, on the floor above, in the street outside
her window, kept making noise. She cursed. The noise did not
stop for a blessed moment. She mumbled, why had she followed him
to this rat and roach hotel?
III.
"What would Mama say about him? Daddy would hate him.
He reminds Daddy's little girl of Daddy ..." she whispered
and mooed softly, as she lazily rolled her tongue up his
sleeping face, pouring gross amounts of love that she long
held, stored for her prince. She stopped at his lips. Her
tongue pushed opened his mouth. She showered her love on his
two chipped teeth. "I've got bowls and bowls of good stuff for
you," she cooed in his ear. "If you wake up now, you will think
you've got yourself one flaky woman."
She met him on the bus while she dropped sixty pennies,
one penny after another, into the fare box. The fare was one
dollar. She held up the line for two long minutes. The bus
driver became angry. He growled, "Lady!"
"What?"
"There are people who want to get on this bus, some of
them are on their way to work, others are on their way home
to their children."
She barked back, "I'm paying my damn fare."
"Humf!" the bus driver grunted.
At sixty pennies, she stopped, waited. The driver gave
her a hard stare. After a moment, she sneered, "Now who's
holding up the bus? Give me my damn transfer."
"Put the rest of the fare in, lady."
"Say what? You've got the fare from me, a solid dollar
in pennies."
"Look, this bus is going to sit here, and these people
are going to get mad at you until you put the rest of the fare
in the box."
"I've put a solid dollar in. You want me to open up that
damn box and count out all of those pennies for you, again?"
"Look, lady, bring your head around here and look down
there. See that? It's something new, an electronic coin
register. Metro is concerned about passengers being short
with the fare. This here registers the amount that people
drop in the box."
She looked. On the back of the fare box was a digital
dial showing the number sixty in red light. "It must be
broken," she said.
"Lady, put the rest of the fare in or get off the
bus."
"I've given Metro all I've got," she said.
"Lady, get off the bus."
"Bertha," he called. He was waiting to get on the bus.
Three people were ahead of him. "Girl, what you doing
getting ahead of me? I told you, I've got the damn transfers.
What you doing paying that man for? God in Heavens knows we
can't have the same mother. Let me get up there." He pushed
his away passed the three people ahead of him. He climbed
the steps and pushed her away. "Bus driver, our mama dropped her
when she was a baby and she ain't been right since." He
stopped and glared as she rolled her eyes at him. He pushed
her. "Girl, get back there and get a seat."
"What?"
"Get back there."
As she sneered, he turned to the bus driver. "She's
retarded. Here are our transfers."
The driver nodded, "Thank you."
"C'mon, Sis."
She kept sneering as he walked toward the seat across
the back of the bus.
"Lady will you take a seat and let the other people on
the bus?" the driver asked.
From the back of the bus, he whistled, "Sis," and
smiled. She went to him.
"Who in the hell are you?"
He put his finger to his lips and whispered the word hushed.
"Fool, who are you?"
"Sit, Sis," he grinned. "You're on the bus, right?"
She pouted, "Will you answer me? Who in the hell are you?"
He smiled.
Her prince, that is whom he was. She looked toward him
and smiled as she lifted a half pint carton of milk to her
lips.
"You like to drink milk, don't you? " he asked, displaying
his elastic grin.
She held the carton from her lips, showing the white
circle on her mouth. "Don't you wish it was you drinking
milk from my titties?"
He laughed, "Yeah, why not?"
She finished, discarded the carton in the waste can, and
she belched.
"Full?" he asked, grinning again.
She shrugged her shoulders. "I'm full of fast food."
"Fine, get your shower and we're going out."
"I stink?" she frowned.
"Yeah."
She smiled, "I supposed I do. But, let me sit here for
a moment. I suppose, I might need you to help me - to scrub
my back and to help me lather up."
She waited for a moment, until she felt steady enough to
stand on her legs. She leaned on his shoulders and giggled
girlishly, as he took her two hands in his and cradle her
chin. She brought her hips up close to his. Her breasts
pulsed, as she felt the heat in him, surging like something
liquid. "Don't I smell?" she asked.
"I can't notice," he said.
"Why did you bring me steak-in-cheese when you know I
don't like cheese steak?"
"You needed something solid on your stomach."
"Where are we going after I shower? Out to get something
more to eat?"
"No, I thought -"
She stopped his mouth with her lips. His body shuddered. He
pulled her tight, with one hard move, then he relaxed,
accepting what his nose was telling him, that she needed to
shower.
"Let us go to Trios?" she said.
"The Restaurant?"
She giggled.
No, I don't think so," he said.
She remembered Trios as an early experience in their
relationship. The day was warm - blue skies and bright sunshine-
a perfect day for lunching in the sidewalk cafe. The food was
fresh and good. They ate a big meal, double helpings of everything,
and two desserts. The waitress was nice, a foreign girl from
Tanzania who was going to school. They were both nice to her
until the check came.
"Leave the rest of the dessert," he whispered. "Don't
stuff too much, remember you've got to run."
"It has an almost light taste, I never had cake like
this," she said too loud, her eyes trying to focus on the
morsels still inside her spoon.
He put the green colored check under the empty red wine
bottle on the pastel colored plastic table cloth. He took a
napkin scratched a note, begging the waitress pardon, and
he placed the note under the empty bread basket. He breathed
in once, then twice, and waited until the waitress had gone
inside for another patron's order. He whispered, "C'mon,
now, babe, time to split."
They were both tall, with long legs and could run. "Trios
has fat people working in the restaurant," he had told her to
get her to join him for lunch at Trios. "The food is good. You
can tell by the fat people working there. They got fat on the
food. They are good cooks, but no good at chasing customers
who walk out without paying, and customers like us who are
going to split and run. Those fat people will get a heart
attack if they try to chase us. They'll get heart attacks
and die. They're all middle age anyway. The youngest one is
thirty, and he's fatter than a hog."
"C'mon, babe," he said, as she wiped her hand on the
table cloth.
She heard a scream. The waitress returned and suddenly
realized the two of them were running out on the check.
"Stop! Stop!" the waitress screamed. " Help! The manager
is going to dock me. Stop!"
"C'mon, babe!" She was running. She felt her breasts
swelling, jiggling, as though she was not wearing a bra.
Carefully, she picked up her feet and ran, as the waitress
behind her howled. She placed her feet down faster and
faster in front of herself, as she raced to cover the
ground between herself and his bouncing butt, and his both
of his thumping legs. He had the point, pushing people
aside, opening a path for her to run. Her dress whipped up as
she ran, exposing her thighs. She usually was careful of
how she looked, making sure she covered her self. Now, she
did not care how much her dress showed.
The waitress, the cooks and the others in the restaurant
never came close to catching them, and nobody along the
escape route tried to stop them.
As she walked with him to the hall bathroom to shower,
she reminded herself of the incident's thrill. She smiled
warmly at him. They were younger and invulnerable, and running
was not as painful. After lunch at Trios, he took her
to his apartment. It had a sitting room, and a bed, and a bath
of its own. They fell into bed, she on him. She grinning in his
face.
She looked at him now with a look of appreciation. He
had her stripped. He and her were in shower. He lathered
both of their naked bodies.
Somewhere along the line they had found their way into a
rat hole. Rent had to be paid on the apartment, and the rent
money went to the newest thrill he showed her, the injection
of the juice delivered by the crack man. The landlord booted
them out of the apartment.
She was not dwelling on the lost of their private bath.
She was shrieking. He was on her back with his tongue. She
swore, she felt a telephone pole somewhere on her back. She
howled and sent both of them flying to the shower floor,
giggling.
IV.
A week later, they were in the hotel bed. She had cleaned
the room a little. He told her, he had a couple of dollars for
food, and a couple of dollars was all the cash he had. She winced
when he told her of his plan to get some cash by robbing a store.
"Ain't got no money, we need some cheese," he said. She did
not like his plan or the sound he made as he explained it. He
spoke in sputters, in a voice, strained and hoarse. "Gotta get
some cheese," he croaked like a frog. He cocked his head. "Think
I'm breaking wind, talking through my ass?"
She stumbled from the bed, opened the night stand's drawer
removed her four papers, and the raggedly one, his.
She said, "Don't need no more beefs, gotta speak to
these first, Babe."
He looked grim. "Hello?" he said. "No, you don't have the
wrong number. There's no one here named 'Kennedy' or 'Rich
Heiress.' Either we get the cheese to pay the lawyer or that
rat is gonna dump us on the tender mercies of the merciless.
We'll be locked down in a hole until our short hairs turn
white."
"No."
"If you're scared, say you're scared."
"I'm scared," she said.
"Ain't that terrible? Obviously, you think I don't know
what I'm doing? I know what I'm doing. That is why I don't
worry about what I'm doing."
"Man?" she said.
"Put those papers down. They scare you with them. I
don't look at such things when I plan."
"Man, how are you going to rob a store?"
"With a plan, a gun and a ... backup lady."
"No," she said.
"Look at yourself," he said. "Every morning, we wake up
about this time, and every morning, I get out a ten spot and
you tuck it in your hot little jeans, and you run out, if I
haven't already run out for you, and you get a little piece of
the rock. You never say no then. You never can wait to say
yes. You need that little piece of rock, Man, like I need
cheese. I ain't got no more cheese to get you those rocks,
Man. You're hungry for it like you're hungry for me. I need
cheese, Man. I need you to back me up."
Then, she shook her head and softly said, "Oh, shit."
He whistled and grinned.
She remembers, something from high school, "Once more unto
the breech dear friends. Once more unto the breech."
V.
She screamed, "Hallelujah! My Lord and Savior, Jesus
Christ!" From the back of the hall, she opened her mouth and
let out another scream. The scream came deep down from her
stomach. She had screamed like that only once before, when
early in her relationship with her lover, she wrapped herself in
him, while he thrust in her, deeply, showing his love. Jesus
was in her now. She felt Jesus deep, moving in her. Every
head in the hall turned to her. The preacher lady laughed
and clapped her hands. The other women, except one, joined
in the clapping. This one person stood in the back of the room,
and watched the ladies' assembly. This one chuckled to herself,
when her intended silent laughter got too loud, this
person coughed, and then began to clap with the others.
The guard was clapping, the preacher lady was clapping,
everybody was clapping. The clapping got louder. She knew
what it meant. Soon she would have to stand, let her
emotions burst, and testify. Fifty of her fellow prisoners by
their thunderous applause urged her to stand.
She fretted. Her mind filled with thoughts, rolling all
the scenes of her deeds and misdeeds that her conscious
credited had merited her being there.
He had robbed a store, and she was with him. They got
caught. The detective said, they were such bad robbers, they
were asking to get caught. She did not remember much of the
robbery. He had let her get a toot. She needed courage. She was
geeking. Her legs wobbled. She spoke fast, sounding like a bird
who chirps. She needed the stuff to stay on her feet.
After the police arrested her this time, her mother took
charge, got her a legal aid lawyer. Her mother fussed like
fussing was something a mother must do. "He is no good for you.
How many times have I told you that? Look at yourself and think
about where you are, and who you are. Did I raise a child to be
a fool?" Her mother and her lawyer insisted that the court
separate her trial from his. He entered a plea of innocence. Her
mother and her lawyer got her to confess. The judge gave her only
a quarter of the time he could have given for the crime.
The court released her lover on personal bond pending his
trial. He came to visit her in jail, asked if there was anything
he could get her. "No, nothing," she said. She asked him how he
was getting along. He said he would be sweating until the trial.
"Gotta get some money for my lawyer," he said. "I had a legal aid
lawyer," she said. "Yeah," he said. "And you're in here." She
said, "But, we did wrong." He said, "Yeah, but we can't give
up. After I leave you, I've gotta hit the bricks hard. I've
gotta get a thousand dollars in my lawyer's hot little hands. I
gotta sell, gotta sling some rocks -" She said, "What?" He said,
"You know, I've gotta stay out of jail, gotta get the lawyer's
money." She said, "Be careful."
Now, she was being cheered. In a calm voice she was telling
her story of how she found Christ, and was in the process of
being born again. She was nervous when she stood, but their
cheers were like magic. That is how she will describe it in a
letter to him.
VI.
"Yes! Yes! YES! I feel fantastic and clean, indeed,"
are words she wrote him. "I am a witness to the awesome,
forgiving power of God."
He wrote back, carefully to print the words slowly, so
she could read his handwriting. He had gone to trial and
been acquitted by a forgiving jury of senior citizens, the
majority of whom were old ladies who lived in government
housing. Clean shaven and rid of his long hair, and showing
watery, contrite, puppy eyes, he looked like somebody's grand
son, a nice, sweet boy. His lawyer beat the prosecutor,
like the prosecutor was somebody's raw hamburger from a
Jewish delicatessen. Feeling regrets, because she was were
she was, but feeling no regrets because he was free, he
wrote her a sweet letter, telling her how much he missed her
and that he could not wait until she is free.
She wrote back. "Baby, it is by God's Grace that I feel
good about myself. I have grown spiritually and am a true
witness for God. I am saved. Baby, I love you, and I want
you to find Jesus too, and be saved. To help you, I want you
to be my prayer partner. I want you to kneel everyday at the
same time everyday and pray. Write me back and let me know
what time is best for you, and at that time I will kneel
with you, and stop whatever I might be doing and pray for us.
Is that a deal? Things will start going better for both of us.
I just know it. Stop frowning and smile, and pray with me.
Believe it or not, this will work."
He wrote back. "Okay, Babe, how about at seven every
morning for ten minutes?"
"I hear you laughing," she wrote. "But, do this for me.
If you haven't tried prayer yet, try it. Please?"
He wrote her back, swearing that every day at seven he
was on his knees.
VII.
He sat on the bench. "What do you want me for?" he asked.
"In D.C., they shoot wayward lovers, I know. They shot six
of them in one night last week, all at about half-past three
in the morning."
"You're safe, it's just past three in the afternoon,"
she said.
"What do you want me for? To put me against the wall
and shoot me? To have pools of my blood at your feet?"
"I want to talk to you," she said.
"Why? We're like dead leaves in the park even though
it's a sunny day."
"Shit," she said.
He asked, "Why do say that?"
"I love you," she said.
"Love me? I'm a bit lost. Isn't this the woman who is still
telling me that she won't leave that other dude?" He took
her hand and squeezed. She thought of pulling away and
stopped. She was drawn to the scar on his arm, and she remembered
a drug deal that went bad. She and he were selling crack to a
blonde couple. The blonde girl did not want to pay. He threatened
the blonde girl and her blonde boy friend. The blonde girl began
to curse. She slapped the blonde girl. The blonde girl went to a
car and returned with an aluminum bat, and beat her about the back
and legs. And, he was beaten up by the blonde girl's boyfriend.
The blonde couple chased them down the street.
"Baby?" he called her from her thoughts.
She answered, "Man, I really wished you had come back in
my life before I fell in love with him. You know, I really had
intentions on marrying you. Maybe if we had been together,
and I had been stronger -"
"You're in love with him? Why do you keep calling me?"
He scratched his head. "Man, I get this mental image of
you with this middle age, old dude. He's sixty. He's
dressed up in a black suit. You have on a black dress.
It's a cold, gray day, like night, though it is day time.
He's dropped his black pants and has pulled up your dress.
He's got you bent, face up, across a short brick wall, and
he's doing it to you. I know why you keep calling me. It is
because you need some. You need to melt again. You get no
thrill, no nothing from him. I see no love there. It gets
messy between your legs with him. It gets like a waste dump.
Maybe if you would come clean we can get to developing
something. We can get busy together and make something
happen."
As he talked, she turned out some of the stark ugliness
of his words. She heard herself thinking, almost aloud.
This muffled some of his mocking tone. She saw herself
walking.
She walks up the stairs toward the bedroom, to sleep
with dear, old, weather beaten, hard working, long-time
employed by the same employer, Mister Green. Mister Green is four
years her senior, but he seems like a thousand years older. Her
mother likes him. When her mother comes to visit, her
mother always looks at Mister Green's face and smiles. Her
mother keeps a smile for Mister Green. Like her mother, at the
first sight of Mister Green, she looked up and smiled. She calls
him, Greenie. However she feels, she always has something nice
to say to him. She likes him. She is like a child toward him. She
trusts him. Mister Green is like the windows of his house, clean
and clear, giving light an easy surface to pass. She opens the door
to the room. Though the house is big and they are alone, Mister
Green wants the door closed when they are in the room together.
Mister Green said, closing the bedroom door is a good habit to
develop even before the children come. Mister Green wants children,
as many as he can count on one hand, five. Mister Green has a
bathroom on every floor for the children. Yes, she is willing to
be the mother of his babies. She feels Mister Green will be a
good father. Mister Green has been borne again and is saved.
"Maybe this is not a good day for this, you're in a moody
mood."
"One thing I want to know is, does that dude know
about me? And what did you tell him? And have you told him
about me recently? No, I bet?"
"Baby-"
"Man, you know yourself, I'm the one who will go over
there and tell that dude about us, and if shots get fired,
well, let the thing be."
"Why?"
She has asked herself many times, "why?"
Why? The need, she answers. The buzz in the head like
fuzzy whizes until she can't see. She needs clarity. The
charity of of his penis, she thinks, as she needed the
charity of his dope.
She became angry. "Look, Baby. I don't know what kind of
women you've been dealing with, but I can tell you they were
not on their jobs." She stopped, listened to what she had
said, heard herself whining, and started softly. "Don't mean to
talk about them, but that is really how I feel."
"My women?" he shook his head. "What about your dude?"
Her dude, Mister Green - Mister Green or him? She thought.
With him people disappeared, friends, associates, people you
knew. They were in jail. Some were dead. Some got tired and
left. She did not see them anymore - only him. With Mr.
Green - well, Mr. Green was Mr. Green.
She thought, she dreamed, she remembered.
Even with light in her eyes as she lay naked, waiting for
Mister Green to begin the baby making, and feeling that she
likes him an awful lot, probably loves him, she can not help
thinking of him who was her lover before she was born again
and saved. After sex with Mister Green, she feels less tired
than she had with her ex-lover. On that first night with Mister
Green she felt a slight buzz. With her ex-lover, she thought of a
rooster, saw a barnyard cock. Mister Green is a dependable husband,
a homebody. To her, sex to him is like climbing the front steps on
a slippery icy day - careful, so not to fall and hurt herself. She
remembered racing up a hill with her ex-lover, fleeing around the
corner, to the blacksmith's, watching the hammer going hard. She
has not counted the number of steps Mister Green climbs as he huffs
and puffs. Sometimes while Mister Green is climbing, she turns and
looks at the closed door; other times, she recites in her head a
poem she learned in the third grade, a poem that starts, "How do I
love thee? Let me count the ways."
"Babe," he tapped her gently on the shoulder. "Where 's
your mind?"
"Huh?"
"You 're not listening."
"I am," she said. "And, if I left him, I wouldn't have you,
you're still messing with that crack."
"What?"
"Still letting it get the best of you? Huh? I told you
when I got out of jail if you were still messing with shit -"
"Shit? Watch your language. You're a church lady now."
Her face twitched and she looked from him to the
ground. He laughed. She glared. "If you had stuck with me
when I got out and stopped messing with all those crack head
bitches, you'd be better off. Now, see if I left him where
I'd be?"
"Crack head bitches?" he grinned. "Church lady has
dropped her religion. Her religion is a twitching corpse,
fallen into the dust." He giggled.
She asked, "Did you ever love me?"
He replied, "Yes."
"When?"
"From the beginning, when I first saw you on the bus.
Why do you think I gave you my transfer?"
She smiled. "Are you still hustling transfers?"
"Man, where is this going?"
"You're on shit, aren't you?" she asked. He did not
answer. "Because if you weren't you would have been at the
circus, yesterday."
"I'm here today."
"After I had to call you and leave messages everywhere.
Anyway, I still love you, though I had to spend my damn
money on tickets, and I spent the whole afternoon waiting for
you."
"I didn't want to go to the circus," he said.
"You said you did."
"I didn't want to go."
"It was your idea."
"I talked about going -"
"That's was all you talked about the other day."
"Since I was a kid, I've always liked going. I mentioned
it, and you took up the ball and ran with it, said you would
get the tickets and we would make a day of it together. You
even suggested a little nookie afterward. But, I couldn't go."
"Because?"
"Don't know."
"Because?"
"Not going to tell you."
"BECAUSE?"
"The circus wouldn't be fun, with you not there for me
to take home afterward."
"Baby," she said, "I can't."
"You've got to go home to that dude, don't you?"
"Yes."
"Nothing I say can change that?"
She stood. She knew. Each night when Mr. Green finishes
with the baby making, Mister Green smiles and is happy.
Knowing that Mister Green is happy makes her feel better.
"My birthday is next month, " she said.
"You don't want me to forget that, I won't forget
that."
"Don't forget," she said.
"Wait," he said. "Maybe we can go someplace for the
next couple of hours?"
"No, you promised me you would get off the shit
first."
"Oh, Man," he said.
"No, baby," she said.
He raised his hands up in the air, said, "See you," and
he began to walk away. She called to him, "I'll call you?"
He waved, acknowledging, and kept walking without
turning to look back. She watched him until she could not
see him any longer, then she tucked her Bible under her arm
and took the subway home.
|-end-
|Copyright (c) 1993 Franchot Lewis
?Contents ?8
Why John's Diner
by John Chambers
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I remember the first time I ever visited a diner. The memorable
event occurred in August, 1968, in Red Bank, New Jersey. Being
raised in the South, I had never seen such a marvel before. Things
in the South close at 10 pm each evening, just before they roll
up the streets.
I was delighted to find that the local diners in Jersey were open
24 hours a day, and that I could order a steak at 3:00 am, or
breakfast at 5:00 pm. It was a whole new concept for me, and a
very convenient one. I was 22 years old at the time, and spent
many late nights and early mornings running the streets of northern
New Jersey. A guy could build up quite an appetite doing that
sort of thing.
When my tour of duty in New Jersey ended, I very sadly left the
diners and submarine shops of the northeast for the New Mexico
desert. It was back to the South again, and diners were gone
from my life for many years to come.
In the eighties I moved to the Washington, DC area. While I didn't
find any diners (at first), I did find the love of my life. Lucia
was living in New York and making many business trips to DC. I soon
began making frequent visits to Long Island to woo my future wife.
And there I found them. Names like "Embassy," "Empress,"
"Princess," even the "Sayville Modern Diner." All shared similar
decor, and that 5 pound brown leather covered menu that diners like
to drop on your table. I visited almost every diner I saw, and
delighted in an array of giant plates of hot food, freshly baked
breads, pies, cheesecake, and endless cups of coffee. I had truly
found "Diner Heaven!" For each of my birthdays I was taken anywhere
I wanted for dinner. You guessed it - a diner! Back in Washington
diners weren't so plentiful, so I plodded along with unacceptable
substitutes.
John's Diner first appeared a couple of years ago. Lucia was
suffering from "painter's block," and was looking for a subject for
an oil painting. In the interest of getting her painting again I
"commissioned" her to do a painting for me. We agreed that I would
provide the subject and the canvas, and she would produce the
painting. I had a small postcard of Picadilly Circus in London. It
was a very colorful and "busy" little postcard of this famous
square. I purchased a HUGE canvas and presented both items to
Lucia.
She spent almost a year on the painting, and the final product is a
joy to behold. The oil shows London at sunset, just after a rain
storm (among her many modifications). Amidst all the buildings,
automobiles, neon signs and posters stands one little store with a
bright pink neon sign, hidden away in the lower left corner of the
painting. "John's Diner" was now a permanent part of the London
cityscape. A little gift to me, my name on a diner!
The diner surfaced again several months ago. Lucia was naming
conferences on our bbs, and suggested John's Diner for the Cooks
Conference. She passed that by for the time, reserving the name for
a future newsletter article instead.
So John's Diner came into being, and has now evolved into what we
see as a diner in downtown Washington. It's a nice place to visit,
and very unique in it's own way. Open 24 hours. Stop by and visit!
| -end-
|Copyright (c) 1993 John Chambers
?Contents ?9
Review of John's Diner
by John Chambers
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|MEMORANDUM
TO: Mr. W. G. Caldwell, Senior Editor
Washington Daily Journal
FROM: Jeff Epstein
DATE: March 28, 1993
SUBJECT: Review of John's Diner
I have completed my assignment to review John's Diner for next
Thursday's Dining Out section, although I admit I am somewhat
confused concerning this matter. Although I have grown accustomed
to many people in our fair city having some well placed political
connections, it baffled me as to why we would even consider
publishing anything about this particular restaurant. I have since
learned that things are not always what they seem. Following is a
collection of the notes which I have compiled concerning my recent
visit.
- - -
Somewhere along J Street near the heart of our nation's capitol can be
found John's Diner, an unusual dining establishment. If you follow J
Street past the last of the male transvestite hookers of DuPont Circle,
going not quite to the fake Rolex vendors of Georgetown you can locate
the newest of Washington's pubs.
John's Diner is sandwiched between the "Magic Crystal," a shop which
advertises metaphysical books, crystals, herbs and palm reading by
FAX, and a small rare bookseller who also peddles lottery tickets,
cheeses from around the world, and tatoos. It's an easy place to spot,
mostly due to the very creative and colorful neon sign which flashes
"EATS" in letters approximately four feet tall. Beneath this
monstrosity John boldly hawks his "Steaks, Chops, Cocktails, Beer,
Wine!" -- also noting that the Diner is open "24 hours."
Once my eyes managed to readjust and react to this visual assault, I
peered through the plate glass windows to note that a few people were
actually seated in the diner - in spite of the "CLOSED" sign which was
displayed prominently on the door. A slight push to the door allowed
me entry into one of the more unusual places this reporter has visited.
The violation of my optic nerves which had been so painful on the
exterior of the Diner continued in earnest on the interior. John's
Diner is filled with a collection of some of the most unusual
furnishings I've ever seen, a collection even the Salvation Army would
reject.
The bar was the least offensive of the furnishings, and was of a highly
polished cherry wood with the standard brass rail. As I turned my
head from the bar I spotted 5 booths which were obviously original
equipment for the diner when it was first furnished in the early
nineteen twenties. The booths had apparently not been refinished
since their installation, and boasted numerous tears, rips and
abrasions - many creatively mended with duct tape or merely covered
with scraps of cloth. In addition to the booths there were five or six
tables, all different sizes and shapes. These ranged from 1950s type
formica and chrome dinette tables to heavy round wooden antiques, all
in a state of obvious disrepair. I noted that several of the tables
boasted huge chess sets and scrabble boards. The odd collection of
tables was only surpassed by the accompanying chairs. Truly a yard-
sale-junkies' gold mine, they consisted of every possible shape, color
and height. There was even one obviously broken Barco-Lounger
which had been retired from use in some suburban home.
I returned my gaze to the bar where a smiling, bespeckled man was
wiping the polished surface with what appeared to be an old pair of
boxer shorts.
"Hi!" he said, "what can I do for you?"
I noted a distinctive southern drawl in the voice, and walked toward
the bartender saying "Hi, I'm Jeff Epstein from the Washington Daily
Journal. I stopped by to take a look around for a possible article. You
are?" The man behind the bar beamed and motioned to one of the bar
stools bearing numerous strips of duct tape. "Have a seat. John
Chambers, owner and barkeep." He stuck out his hand and continued,
"Coke or coffee? Don't have my liquor license yet."
I asked for a coke, and watched John disappear around the corner of
the bar. Located on the wall behind the bar was one of the most
fascinating paintings I had ever seen. It was a view of Picadilly
Circus in London, and was painted to show the busy street scene at
sunset, just after a summer storm. I gazed at the painting for a
moment, then noticed "John's Diner" on the left in pink neon,
positioned over one of the windows in the painting; on the right side,
in yellow, "Lucia Chambers, 1992" painted in as a theatre marquee.
To my left was a painting of swirls of blue and white, with a placard
underneath titling it "ANGELS by Michael Heinich DO NOT
TOUCH."
John returned with my coke and offered to show me around.
The first thing I noticed was a table in the corner of the bar that was
covered with a high structure made of saran wrap -- it looked like a
greenhouse. "Oh, that's my wife Lucia's orchid collection," my host
explained. "Touch it and you're dead meat." I didn't touch it.
We moved on, and John pointed out the ornate ceiling moldings,
custom-made by Phil Gottfredson, an incredible mural above the front
door of a french caf
street scene by "~MAX~" (Maxine Urso), and The
Bookcase. I should have noticed it sooner, because it ran the length of
wall along the longest row of tables. I jotted down some titles: "The
Collected Stories of Michael Hahn," "Ruby's Pearls Collectors' Set,"
"Poetry In Motion," "The Poetry of Cecilio Morales," "Recipes by Dave
and Jane Winer," and "Bedtime Stories, by Franchot Lewis."
Perched above The Bookcase, standing on a wooden dowel that
supported an incredible tapestry depicting the art of winemaking, was
a huge blue and gold macaw parrot, staring down at me with general
disfavor. He was just plain menacing.
John told me the tapestry was by Karl Weiss and the bird's name was
Cosmo. He said Cosmo was just a kid and didn't bite. I didn't believe
that for a second.
John opened a couple of doors and I couldn't see too well, but one was
a storeroom, another was the bathroom, and there was a huge room he
called "The Back Room" where a couple of people were screaming at
each other in Spanish.
John offered me a meal and I accepted, expecting the worst. However,
John explained that while no-one fussed over any of the decor except
the orchid collection and the artwork, that John's Diner was about the
best food to be had in the District of Columbia! The menu is a
gourmet fest. John explained that the dining consultant, John
Wallace, has made a superb collection of dishes from different cooks in
the area. I took some notes off the menu: John's Teriyaki chicken,
Dave's Chili, Jane's Baked Grits, Dave's Foccacia bread, Jeff's Pasta
Salad, Debbie's Chicken Salad, Lucia's Rosepetal Pat
, John's Bundy
Burgers...
I ordered the chili. It was delicious, and, I was told, contains a special
ingredient that Dave Winer will only tell while on a "Birdwalk,"
whatever THAT is.
I was so impressed with my meal, I asked John to introduce me to the
cook. John dragged out of the Back Room this guy who was whining
and screaming in Spanish and wringing his hands. John said, "This is
our chef, Raoul, please tell him you're not with Immigration. He
doesn't speak much English. We found him in a shopping cart out in
the alley."
Then, a tremendous noise shook the building. The walls shook, the
glasses rattled, and I thought we were having an earthquake. A huge
motorcycle pulled onto the sidewalk in front of the restaurant. The
front door blew open. The biggest guy I have ever seen in my life
stood in the doorway, blotting out the sun. This wild-eyed fellow, well
over six feet tall and covered with tatoos, stared into the diner. He
made a Hell's Angel look like Don Knotts. Suddenly I heard a woman's
voice coming from behind the man, "Get out of my way you idiot!" and
he was pushed aside by a petite woman with green legs who barged
into the bar yelling "John, Lucia! We're here!"
The giant looked at the saran-wrap tent, his eyes grew big, and he
rushed over exclaiming "Phalaenopsis! Lucia added a new
Phalaenopsis! Give me some coffee while I look at the new orchid!"
The petite woman ran over to the macaw, yelling "David Look It's
Cosmo! We have fruit testicles Cosmo you sweet thing lookie what Del
brought for you!"
I didn't want to know.
While Motorcycle Man "David" gushed over the orchids and "Del" fed
Cosmo strange yellow things shaped like walnuts and Raoul broke into
tears at the entrance to the "Back Room," I decided I should leave.
That's when I noticed the incredibly beautiful black Steinway partially
hidden behind the front door. The Steinway, as shiny and professional
as it looked, had some odd assortment of caramel and chocolate stuck
into the strings. John Chambers wouldn't say what had happened to
the piano except "Ruby" which I presume has something to do with an
exploded dessert glaze.
On top of the piano was a little bulletin board with some green
thumbtacks stuck into it. Ripped pieces of paper and dollar bills were
taped to the outer edges. Some of the tape was old and yellowed, but
the the newest covered a yellow post-it note that said, "Pen and
Brush, (703) 644-5196." I plan to follow up some time, and give that
number a call.
|-end-
|Copyright (c) 1993 John Chambers
?Contents ?10
Ruby Does D. C.
by Del Freeman
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A Story from John's Diner:
RUBY DOES D. C.
The small group of regulars were gathered at the large corner
table in the rear sharing a plate of John's Melon Spice, a varied
arrangement of fresh melon balls lightly sprinkled with a mixture
of fresh nutmeg and powdered sugar, and sipping mugs of fresh 'house'
coffee, brewed with just the right amount of cinnnamon, when the chime
of the front door indicated a new arrival. They looked up, and
quickly returned their eyes to the melon plate, recognizing the
nemesis of the Chambers household at once. Starving writers and
artists they might be, - stupid they weren't. John and Lucia fed them
out of a concern for the advancement of the arts at no cost, and if
Ruby Begonia was a thorn in the Chambers' side, well, that was reason
enough to avoid her.
"Hi, gang," Ruby greeted them brightly, and they collectively
murmured polite acknowledgments, concentrating intently on their
melon balls. "Where are John and Lucia?" she asked of the group
collectively.
Everybody responded at once, making it difficult to determine
who said what, but she clearly heard "...French Foreign Legion..."
and "Died. Very sad."
"Ah, you guys are a great bunch of kidders," she grinned. Just
at that moment, Raoul emerged from the kitchen with a steaming plate
of fresh pasta and homemade marinara sauce with baby clams which he
deposited in the center of the large table, removing the empty melon
ball plate. He deposited bowls and small bread plates in front of the
regulars and returned to the kitchen, emerging once again with
a basket of fresh-baked garlic rolls. The regulars looked at one
another, shrugged, as if to say 'we tried', and fell to devouring the
food. Raoul moved to a small table for two and continued to read the
book he had been reading before the regulars appeared. Ruby sauntered
over and joined him.
Raoul looked up from the book and crossed himself, murmuring "Es
muy mala."
"What'cha readin', Rools?" asked Ruby.
"Es o si que es," answered Raoul, flinching at her
bastardization of his name but flipping the cover over for her to see
nonetheless.
"1,999 Ways to Prepare Fowl," said the title. Raoul had
earmarked the page dealing with South American birds.
"Ferget it, Rools," advised Ruby. "The Chambers are never gonna'
let you get your mitts on Zack or Cosmo. Besides, I got something
even better," she promised.
"No theen ees batter than cook bird," pronounced Raoul. "I
know." He glared imperiously at Ruby. "Een my country I am master
kook," he reminded her, emphasizing the ooo' sound.. "I have master kook
hat." He pointed at the jaunty chef's hat, with 75 flutes, set
rakishly atop his dark curls.
"Yeah, well in America hats are pretty commonplace," Ruby
answered, indicating her own chapeau, complete with ostrich plume and
felt-heart dotted veil. "A hat's not enough, Rools. You got to have a
gimmick."
"Geemeek? What is this geemeek?"
"It's a ploy. A come on. Something unique to make the customers
stand up and take notice. And I got it," she grinned proudly. "Now,
where's the boss?"
"Boss and Missus gone to awkshun. Buy meny nice theens... make
restaurant sheek. Back late. Vary, vary late," he added, seeing the
determined gleam in her eye.
"No prob, Rools. You an' me'll just do a little innovative
experimenting while they're gone. Come with me," she ordered,
plucking him from his chair and propelling him toward the kitchen.
"You guys stay right there," she called to the regulars. "You can be
our official tasters."
Assorted murmurs rose from the table in protest. She made out
"scheduled root canal," and "open-heart surgery," and turned, placing
hands on hips.
"Okay, you bunch of ingrates," she charged, "if you don't want
to help your patrons turn this into just the hottest eatery in
Washington, that's okay by me."
The regulars flinched under her gaze, dropped their heads and
meekly nodded acquiescence. She disappeared into the kitchen,
dragging a reluctant Raoul along with her.
***
"I'm stuffed," said Jeff Epstein, reaching for another
french-fry. David Winer and Michael Heinich nodded in agreement,
continuing to much happily. "Ruby, I think you've got a winner,
here," said Howard Palmer. "What did you say these are called?"
"Hot mustard fries," Ruby answered, popping one into her own
mouth. Raoul stood by, watching anxiously as the group polished off
the last one.
Randall Hahn, who'd dropped in just as Ruby and Raoul presented
the first plateful, smacked his lips and winked at Ruby. "They're
sensational, all right. What's in 'em?"
"John's secret ingredient," Ruby winked back. "If it works for
an old white-haired guy in a funny suit with chicken, it'll work for
John," she declared confidently. John and Lucia entered just as Raoul
brought forth the second platter-ful from the kitchen, Cosmo and Zack
seated comfortably atop Lucia's shoulders. Cos promptly hopped off
and inspected the platter.
"Fowl?" he inquired, eyeing the crispy-ochre wedges.
"No fowl," promised Ruby. "Eat it. It's good."
Cosmo tried one. "Good schtuff, good schtuff," he pronounced,
snagging another.
Raoul crept into the kitchen, emerging with a baking pan which
he held up against Cosmo's length. Cosmo eyed him darkly. "Pierce
your nose, pierce your nose," he offered, snapping in the direction of
Raoul's face.
"RAOUL!" John bellowed. "How many times do I have to tell you?"
"Slow-witted, slow-witted," explained Cosmo, helpfully.
"Brain-dead, brain-dead," he shrieked.
"Ees beeg bird," explained Raoul, dark eyes pleading with John.
"Make mucho good pollo en shallot weet babee carrots."
"I don't care what you do in your country, Raoul. In America, we
do not eat our pets," John insisted. "Now just forget about it."
"Buzz off, buzz off," ordered Cosmo, capturing another fry.
"Pierce your spleen, pierce your spleen," he offered again as Raoul
moved quickly away.
"So, Ruby, what have you done now?" asked Lucia, approaching and
peering into the quickly-emptying plate.
"Only come up with the ultimate weapon to make your diner a
culinary success in Washington circles, that's all," bragged Ruby.
"Here," she proffered one of the still-warm fries. "Taste this."
Lucia took it delicately, examining it closely.
"Eat it. It's good," advised Cosmo, diving back into the plate.
Lucia munched tentatively. "Hmmmm," she murmured. "John," she
turned to her mate with a confused expression, "I think she may
finally have done something right." He, too, tried one of the
french-fries. "Wow, Ruby, this is really good," he said.
"Well, of course it is. When have I done anything that wasn't
good?" she asked huffily as all eyes turned to look accusingly at
her. "Okay, okay, maybe coating Lucia's sleep mask in avocado-puree
wasn't such a good idea. How was I to know it would melt all over the
couch like that? I still say nobody should sleep that close to an
open fire, anyway. And didn't the eye doctor say that the green tint
would wear off her eyebrows eventually?"
"That was six months ago," Lucia reminded, batting green-tipped
eyelashes at Ruby.
"Well, this'll make up for it," Ruby promised. "In fact, it'll
more than make up for it. It and the mmmpho," she dropped her voice.
"The what?" asked John and Lucia in unison.
"The peeahmo," Ruby lowered her voice even more. "Never mind.
It'll clean, and I can retie that string thingie myself," she rushed
on. "You'll make millions with these fries. Zillions. You can buy
another one, if necessary."
"Did she say piano?" John and Lucia asked one another. "Oh GOD!
Did she screw up my Steinway?" moaned Lucia.
"Screw up is far too harsh a term," judged Ruby. "Now about
these fries..."
John patted a distraught Lucia on the shoulder and followed Ruby
and Raoul into the kitchen.
***
"Yum," exclaimed Ruby Begonia, lifting another forkful of
John's 'Loaf de tuna with persimmon sauce to her mouth.
Every available seat in the restaurant was taken and Lucia stood
at the front door taking names for the waiting crowd. Raoul and his
cousin, Jesus, worked frantically to prepare meals for the clamoring
group, of which all but a handful had ordered Washington's new taste
sensation - hot mustard fries.
"Ruby, I have to hand it to you... you've come up with a winner,
this time," John allowed as he watched the patrons exclaim over the
side dish. "How'd you think of it, anyway. And how do you make it? I
can't always be waiting for you to come in and add a secret
ingredient, you know. Raoul has to be able to whip these up himself."
"Well, Raoul knows everything but the base coat for the fries,
and I mixed up enough to last 'till my next visit," Ruby said. "Let's
face it, John - I'm not sure how hospitable you and Lucia might be
next time I'm in town if I just tell all," she said, studying him.
"You've got a point. I don't think I've ever seen Lucia quite so
upset about anything as she was about that piano," John agreed. "She
spent three days just cleaning the caramel popcorn out of the keys
and then when she found that broken string I thought she'd have to be
sedated. You know the piano tuner literally cried? Of course, he's an
old man and he's been doing this for years, but I don't think I've
ever seen a man weep quite like that."
"Sure you have," Ruby reminded him. "Don'cha remember those
friend of yours that went on the tour of Washington with us when they
visited last summer? That guy... let's see, Dick... that's it, Dick
Barkhammer. Don'cha remember? I had that whole case of those
knock-off perfumes, the ones that came in those cute little
containers shaped like hand grenades? What was that... Devastate,
yeah, that was the name of the perfume. Anyway, remember I gave them
some just to be friendly, and then when Dick wandered onto the White
House lawn that secret service man grabbed him and frisked him and
they took him away? He cried. Cried like a baby. How was I to know
they were real hand grenades? I didn't open them up to smell the
perfume. That wouldn't have been polite to give a guest a gift and
then open it. You ever hear anymore from Barkhammer? I thought I read
that they tried him for treason or some such."
"Burkhalter. The man's name was Burkhalter, and no I didn't hear
anymore from him. I understand from a mutual friend that he's still
on soft foods and lithium, though."
"Well, anyway, he DID cry, so I don't know why you say you never
saw anybody cry like the piano tuner. Why, I've seen lots of men..."
John wandered off, shaking his head as Lucia approached the
lunch counter, reservation list in hand. As she neared Ruby, Cosmo
reached out to snatch the jalapeno pepper from behind Ruby's left
ear, murmuring "It's good. Eat it."
"Absolutely everyone is here," said an excited Lucia. "I could
almost forgive you for ruining my piano," she told Ruby. "Almost."
"You know, I don't understand you, Lucia," said Ruby. "Okay, so
the caramel popcorn wasn't a great idea, but how about those little
kitties and bunnies I decoupaged onto the cover? Ya got to admit it
adds a nice homey touch and it took me hours to cut them out of all
those children's books you had on the shelf. Jeez, you'd think a
person would be grateful," Ruby huffed.
"That was a Steinway, you twit," Lucia said. "And those cute
little bunnies and kitties you cut out came from an illustrated first
edition, a personal gift from David Holloway! Next, I suppose
you'll try to sprout carrot tops and potato vines in the Baccarat."
"Not if the Baccarat is that big glass bowl with etched purple
zebras on the coffee table, I won't," promised Ruby. "It's too
big for growing veggies, and besides, that's where I put my marble
collection. They look real pretty through all those little
handcut designs, except that one rock I had in there sort of
chipped off a little piece of the edge."
At Lucia's horrified gasp, Ruby rushed on. "Now don't get your
panties all in a wad, Lucy. I fixed it. I super-glued the little
chunk back on and you can hardly tell it was ever broken. If I hadn't
been eating that peanut butter Reese, you couldn't tell at all. I
kind of think the chocolate streak adds more color, though."
"Do NOT call me Lucy," said Lucia, low and menacing. She studied
Ruby intently. "I may kill you," she mused. "I may have to. I think
the world will understand." She smiled a satisfied smile at the
thought.
***
"Ruby alert! Ruby alert!" shrieked Cosmo, watching her enter
during the following day's lunch time rush.
"Yo, Cos, I thought we were friends," Ruby admonished.
"Bribe me," said Cos. "You got cherry tomatoes?"
Ruby opened her purse to reveal an assortment of grapes and
cherry tomatoes.
"Never mind!" shrieked Cosmo and fell to devouring the fruit.
"Behave yourself, Ruby. We've got important customers. Senator
Doal is over in the corner," shushed John.
"Doal? DOAL? What are you doing serving Sweet William's
albatross?"
"The poor guy's having a hard time, Ruby. Give him a break. Seems
like he's the only one in Washington who is not employing illegal
aliens. His constituents think he's gone uppity on them. He just
wants to sit over there and munch a few ouzo Baby Ruths to get his
perspective back," said John.
***
"Ye Gods, they've been over there for three hours, sucking up
ouzo Baby Ruths like they were going out of style," complained John
later in the afternoon to Michael Heinich.
"Well, looks like that's about to end," answered Michael, as an
unsteady Senator Doal and a perfectly sober Ruby Begonia rose to
leave.
"S'no problem," protested the Senator when John expressed
concern. "My driver's right outside and the lovely Miss Begonia has
agreed to take a turn around the fountain with me. Perhaps you could
fix us up a box of those chocolates for sustenance on our journey?"
John checked his pockets, finding nothing. He remembered the
last time Ruby tried to help the President. She'd spent a long
afternoon consuming tequila bon-bons with Senator Joe Byeden. Byeden
ended up being carried out unconscious and a sober Ruby Begonia left
the restaurant alone. Later that evening, John discovered where she
had been secreting the unconsumed chocolates only as a result of an
amorous advance to his lady fair which left Lucia stuck to the wet
bar in the rumpus room by a mass of dark goo smelling of tequila.
Ruby winked at the crowd as the twosome exited into the night.
*****
"Wow, have you seen this headline?" asked David Winer the next
morning.
"SENATOR DISCOVERED DOING BACKSTROKE IN FOUNTAIN" Screamed the
bold, black type, and underneath, the drop head: "Unidentified female
companion remains unidentified."
"How's everything this morning?" called a cheery Ruby Begonia as
she entered.
Lucia emerged from the kitchen at that moment with David's
breakfast, Cosmo on her right shoulder. The scent of fresh basil
wafting heavenward from the fresh, soft-scrambled eggs. As the
twosome passed Ruby, Cos reached out and captured the apple slice
hanging from Ruby's dangle earring, muttering, "Eat it. It's good."
"You have absolutely no scruples, whatsoever, do you?" charged
John, glaring at Ruby.
"Sure, I have. I put the chocolates I didn't eat into the
deep-fat fryer this time, didn't I?" responded an irate Ruby.
"Eeeeek," shrieked Lucia, running for the kitchen. She emerged
with a plate of home fries with onions in some sort of dark sticky
mass and slammed it down in front of John.
"This is your fault," she accused. "We are NOT wasting food. Now
eat it."
John looked down at the mess. Looked up at Cosmo. "Hey, Cos," he
coaxed, "Eat it. It's good."
Cosmo trained one bright eye on the mixture and shook his head.
"Not none a' me," he declared and snatched the apple chunk from
Ruby's other ear.
All watched as John tentatively tasted the unappetizing mass.
"Hmmmm. You know this isn't half bad," he pronounced. "What do
you think about hot chocolate fries?"
|-end-
|Copyright (c) 1993 Del Freeman
?Contents ?11a
Figs and Walnut Bread
by Dave Winer
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5 C bread flour 6 oz (1/2 pkg) dried figs
1 C whole wheat flour 1 C English walnuts
4 T dark brown sugar 2 oz dark rum
1 T salt 2 C water
1/4 t cinnamon 3 T butter
2 pkgs yeast
Prepare figs: Remove stems, chop coarsely; soak in rum for an
hour or more. Makes about 1 cup.
Mix all dry ingredients in a Kitchen Aid bowl with a beater or
whisk. Switch to dough hook.
Cut butter into pieces, add to water, heat to 130
F. Add
water slowly to dry ingredients while beating slowly. Add figs
and rum mixture, and walnuts. Knead for 6 minutes at speed 4
(medium).
Put the (sticky) dough into a buttered bowl, cover with plastic
wrap and place in a warm place to rise for one hour or until
doubled in volume.
Punch down dough and form into four equal balls. Knead each one
briefly. Arrange the four loaves-to-be on one or two buttered
baking sheets; with space for expansion. Dust with flour. Slash
tops in any desired pattern, e.g., criss-cross. Let rise one
hour or until doubled in volume.
Preheat oven to 400
F and bake at this temperature for 30
minutes. Remove loaves from baking sheet and cool on rack.
?Contents ?11b
Jane's Baked Grits
by Jane Winer
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Follow cooking instructions on Quaker Quick Grits box for "Stove"
Top." While grits are cooking add: 1/2 stick butter, 1/2 Cup or
more of chopped onion, 1/2 Cup or more of grated sharp cheddar, 1
Tablespoon of dry mustard, and 2 lightly beaten eggs. You may
wish to add a little cayenne pepper while cooking.
When cooked, pour mixture into a buttered casserole and bake in a
preheated 350
oven for 20 minutes. Sprinkle top with
paprika.
Serve hot. Leftovers may be sliced and fried for breakfast, or
topped with chili for an anytime snack.
Adapted from "Fun for the Cook" from Satsuma Tea Room in
Nashville, Tennessee. If you are ever in Nashville, be sure to
lunch downtown at Satsuma for authentic Southern cooking!
... Jane Winer
?Contents ?12
Landscaping a Fragrance Garden
by Lucia Chambers
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By following just a few simple guidelines, you can landscape
for the purposes of utility, harmony, and fragrance, all at the
same time. The simple solution is to plant shrubby herbs in
place of privets, and then orchestrate a potpourri of scents with
the prevailing, ever-changing wind.
A fragrance garden becomes a large perfume vat, where the
various scents intermingle on breezes, drift on the wind to your
nose, and then change spontaneously with the next shift in wind
direction. You must plan your main garden feature around what
you like, and most importantly, the scents that will move and
combine to create your living potpourri.
First you must decide what your main feature will be. Do you
enjoy cooking with basil? Do you snip rosemary for the stew pot,
and lemon verbena for your iced tea? Do you want a large swath
of color in your garden, or would you rather have a colorful
blend of flowers, a smattering of pointillism in the shimmering
heat of summer?
No matter what style or palette you use, it's best to include
several plants from the following list of "most pungent" plants
as your "fixative" so that all other plants will intermingle in
strongest combination:
Lavender Rugosa Roses Lilies
Sage Wisteria Stocks
Mint Daphne Nicotiana alata
Rosemary Lilac Hyacinths
Camomile Jasmine Sambac Orchids
Basil Gardenia Mignonette
Coriander Boxwood Carnations
Wormwood Fragrant Roses Dianthus
Southernwood Violets
Savory
You can mix similar fragrances to heighten a specific effect,
such as mixing lavender with fennel and mignonette to achieve
an extremely sweet edible aroma, or basil with tomato and lime
pelargonium (scented geranium) plants for a garden that smells
like a Bloody Mary!
When visitors discover the source of the fragrance, they
often begin to touch leaves, to ask permission to pluck a leaf
or tendril, and so you must consider the scented geraniums as
important additions to your summer garden as well as the more
permanently resident plants. All pelargoniums* are excellent in
>.hilite[2 51 51 lightred]
combination too, and there is an enormous variety of fragrant
flowering and non-flowering varieties, including: Rober's
Lemon Rose, Apricot, Peppermint, Lime, Grey Lady Plymouth,
Oak Moss, Cinnamon, and Rose.
Boxwood is a good backdrop for any other plant, and in fact,
makes a more beautiful and denser hedge than privet. Boxwood is
an acquired preference though; it's fragrance is both herbal and
slightly stuffy, an instant reminder of English maze gardens.
Now that you have identified the base ingredient for your
fragrance garden, feature it as the focal point to your garden.
Put the plants right in the center in abundance; or edge your
driveway with them; or if all you have is a deck, arrange them in
tall tubs in the center of the deck and place the other plants
around the perimeter so that their fragrances can easily mingle.
Where you put the plants is nearly as important as
which plants you choose, because if they are hidden, or their
scents waft downwind and away from your house, their scents will
be wasted -- lost forever to your neighbors. Use the main plant
feature in a strategic place, and then carefully place the
"mixture" fragrances around it, or at least within range of
the direction of the breezes.
For example, my own deck faces southwest, and a strong wind
sweeps around the house from north to west, around from right to
left and off into the woods. I choose to trap the wind and force
the warm convection to bring out the oils in the flowers and
leaves. How? I planted a stiff line of rosa eglanteria, the
"apple-scented rose" whose leaves smell like fresh green apples in
rain, heat, and wind. The eglanteria is right next to the glass
doors and forms one arch up the wall and over the doors, and
another arch along the shorter length of the (rectangular) deck.
At the adjacent corner is a large tub planting of a huge old
bourbon rose, Madame Isaac Peri
re, and her long canes wrap
around the entire corner and extend almost half the length of the
deck (which is 22' long). Eglanteria's branches stop the wind,
and the scented leaves give off a very pleasant sweet smell; when
Peri
re is in bloom she is covered with literally hundreds of
rose madder blooms, each having at least a hundred petals, and
each blossom absolutely *stinks* of sweet rosey raspberries. The
combination of fragrances is blown into the house through the
screened glass doors; it is both heady and beautiful.
Think of the possibilities! You can use this strategy on a
line of scented basils with lemon verbena, lavender bushes with
mignonette and stocks, or if you like the scent of cloves all
summer, try rugosa rose bushes which will also reward you with
bright orange hips in the fall. Line your driveway, plant under
a main window, or heap in tubs, on your deck.
Think of the moonlight, and the plants that perfume the night
air, too. Nicotiana alata for example, opens her long trumpets
in the early evening and releases her fragrance to the the many
moths attracted by the gleaming white flowers. Plants such as
this stately annual belong beneath an open window, or along a
walkway that you favor in the twilight hours. We have planted
Nicotiana along the north side of the house, under the livingroom
windows. The fragrance mixes with the mossy scent of the woods;
and the scent is there in the morning, lingering on even during the
worst dog days of summer. Dianthus ("pinks") are especially
fragrant at night, with the white-flowering varieties being the
sweetest and strongest-smelling of all.
So far, you have been thinking about main odors, prevailing
winds and mixed fragrances, and guests wishing to touch the
fragrant sources. Let's not forget about another very important
rule: containers. Containers can be carried anywhere you
wish to mix a particular scent! They are portable, and so
becomes your fragrance garden. Move them around, and feature one
as a focal point. Raised containers or high planters encourage
touch, and also bring the fragrance closer to the curious nose.
I have tried a number of combinations with raised tubs, and
the least rewarding was a high white pedestal type containing a
low mat of dianthus "Tiny Rubies." The "rubies" did *not* bloom
all summer as advertised, and quickly became a boring fixture. I
ripped out the dianthus and filled the tub with "Sans Souci"
lilies ringed with nepeta catmint; the pink freckled lilies
flutter atop a mass of fragrant blue blooms for the better part
of a month, filling a wide area with the heady perfume of the
Nile. When the show is over, I drag the tub from the center of
attention to a far corner, leave the blue-blooming nepeta, and
fill the center with a tall salvia ("Lady In Red," multi-tiered
glowing rose-red spires), essentially giving it to the
hummingbirds for the rest of the summer.
I experimented one summer with a camomile lawn rather than a
grass lawn. Camomile has been used for centuries as lawn
material -- it is beautifully fragrant, doesn't require mowing,
and revels in being walked and stomped upon. In fact, the more
you roll and smash it into the ground, the more it takes root and
flourishes. I have since added camomile to various tubs and
planters because when it is planted around the edge of a tub, it
will hang over and down most gracefully, and the little yellow
mid-summer flowers float sweetly in the breeze. And, now that the
camomile is in higher places, I am more tempted to snip the
flowers to make tea or hair rinses, which is yet another benefit
of a fragrance garden.
But the camomile example is more than that, it is a ground
cover, and that is our final rule for fragrance: put fragrant
plants underfoot so that your walking stirs the air while
releasing the smell. Other favorite ground covers for this
purpose are the very low mints such as mentha corsica (the very
strongest peppermint-smelling mint), various thymes such as lemon
thyme or mother-of-thyme, camomile of course, which smells of
apples, and oregano, which doesn't like to be walked on *too*
much but will withstand some abuse if you're careful to not break
any woody stems.
Favorite sources for fragrant plants (and seeds):
Shepherd's Garden Seeds, Torrington, CT (203) 482-3638
White Flower Farm, Litchfield, CT (203) 496-9600
Nicholls Nursery, Albany, OR (503) 928-9280
The Antique Rose Emporium, Brenham, TX 1-800-441-0002
Park's Seed Co, Cokesbury Road, Greenwood, SC 29647
Wayside Gardens, Hodges, SC 1-800-845-1124
Books to read:
"Landscaping with Herbs" by James Adams, Timber Press, 1987.
"Geraniums for Home and Garden" by Helen Krauss, MacMillan, 1955.
"The City Gardener's Handbook" by Linda Yang, Random House, 1990.
"The Scented Garden" by Rosemary Verey, Marshall Editions, 1981,
published in the U.S. by Random House
NOTE: If you would like more detailed addresses, or a more thorough (and
less discriminating) list of suppliers and books, please do not hesitate
to ask!
|-end-
|Copyright (c) 1993 Lucia B. Chambers
?Contents ?13
:pelargoniums
Pelargonium v. crispum varieties are the bulk of the
lemon-scented plants and their leaf texture is notably
"crisped," the plant, pyramidical. Pelargonium v.
odoratissimum (the apple-scented) has flat leaves that feel
like cool silk and the plants bush low and drape down like
fuchsias; they make good hanging container plants. Scented
geranium leaves are very pungent and contain enough
essential oils that the perfume industry uses rose-scented
geranium leaves more often than rose petals for expensive
perfume extracts and oils. Their flowers, however, are not
extraordinary. P. odoratissimum produces little white
summer flowers, and the other varieties make small violet or
pink single "geranium" flowers on and off through the year.
>.pause[] .return[]
Lead Antimonate Yellow
by Phil Gottfredson
>.fill[1 2 76 3 blue]
>.hilite[2 28 49 lightred]
>.hilite[2 58 76 lightred]
Some time back, we were discussing the fact
that the Old Masters would use white pigment only as a
highlight, and that they would cut their colors with a pale
yellow to keep the colors from graying out. I promised you
that I would research what the yellow pigment was that was
used to lighten other colors, and allowed the lightened
colors to remain translucent, which doesn't happen when you
lighten your colors with white pigments. Bear in mind that
there are both opaque and translucent versions of this
pigment, the latter being a lake color.
Lead Antimonate Yellow dates to the
sixteenth-fourteenth century B.C. It was the only yellow
pigment in use in the Egyptian and Mesopotamian glazes.
This pigment was most likely obtained from the
deserts of Egypt, and the regions of Asia Minor, Greek
islands, and Persia. Since the ore was refined to pigment
largely in Naples Italy, it was given the name of Naples
Yellow. The most historic formula would be Pb(SbO2)2 and
Pb2Sb2O7 mixed with barium sulfate.
The Naples Yellow of today is most likely an
imitation of the original formulas, but I believe it is
still available from a good Colorman, which I'm sure you
have access to in your area. Please keep in mind
that because of the original Naples Yellow being made from
Lead, and also containing tin, this is highly toxic, and
today's manufacturers of the pigment will have eliminated
the lead and are probably making the pigment from chromium
and sulfates. But the idea of not using pure white as a
dillutant for other pigments resulting in dull and murky
colors is the point of this discussion. The Old Masters
used white as a highlight only, this being the reason that
their palettes were so translucent and opalescent.
You want Pale Yellow, over moderate, or dark.
A good example of its use can be seen in the
painting "Arrest of Christ" by Matthias Stomer (1630-1632),
and works by Thomas Bardwell (1704-1767), Rubens, and may I
add that it was also extensively used in stained glass.
|-end-
|Copyright (c) 1993 Phil Gottfredson
?Contents ?14
Press enter to view "Shells" by Michael Heinich.
>.fill[1 2 76 3 blue]
>.hilite[2 15 62 lightred]
>.pause[]
>.execute[shells.exe]
This image was created by using 3 different programs. DKBSHELL was used
to create the shell definitions. POV was used to raytrace the finished
shells. IMPROCES was used to combine all 4 separate shells into one image.
Correction regarding last month's image, "ANGELS" - just Fractint
was used to create that image.
... Michael
|"Shells" Copyright (c) 1993 Michael Heinich
?(Canyon)
?Contents
A Messaging Aid for BBSers
by Jack McGeehin
>.fill[1 2 76 3 blue]
>.hilite[2 27 52 lightred]
>.hilite[2 61 76 lightred]
Do you ever feel strongly about something but find that you just don't
have the time to put in writing? The following simplified message form
will help you put your beef into words, quickly and accurately, without
having to mess with all those annoying grammar rules and punctuation. Give
it a try on any of a thousand and one issues...
I have had it up to here with ___________; clearly, the fault lies with
__________; I feel strongly that what should be done is ________. While
your opinion that _______ was certainly ________ I would have to say that
_________. (Optional words of encouragement) __________________.
Example: the flap over gays in the military
inexorable homophobics
let the gays serve in the military
gays should not be allowed in the military
well-expressed
you were wrong
Hope you have a nice day
| Copyright (c) 1993 Jack McGeehin
?(Canyon)
?Contents
I'm Getting Better?!?
by Michael Hahn
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>.hilite[2 27 47 lightred]
>.hilite[2 62 76 lightred]
I'm turning thirty-five this month. Yeah, I know it's not
supposed to be a big deal, but after a lifetime of filling out
forms of one kind or another, I find myself moving into a new set
of demographics. It's the box titled "Age:"
-----------------------------------------------
under 18 [] 18-34 [] 35-55 [] 55 and older []
-----------------------------------------------
and for the last sixteen years, I've been in the second category.
This year I join the folks in the 35-55 range.
What does it mean, exactly? Well, those under 18 are "just
kids." The 18-34 crowd is composed of "young adults." I'm moving
into the bracket called "middle age." Middle age. It brings to
mind mid-life crises, where middle-aged men divorce their wives,
buy toup
es, and date high school cheerleaders. Middle age means
spreading waistlines, gray hair (provided you don't lose it
first), and a whole new set of creaks and groans. Middle age is
when the music of your youth is now playing on the oldies station.
I guess I'm one of the lucky ones. I still have my hair, I'm
only ten pounds overweight, and I haven't developed any particular
attraction to teen-aged girls yet. The creaks and groans are
beginning to surface, though, and I've found a couple of strands
of silver among the blond locks. The morning walk to the bathroom
seems a little bit longer than it used to be. I just quit my job
of the last six and a half years to take a new job in a different
field. Oboy. Mid-life crisis?
Whatever the reason, I'm feeling this birthday a little more
than the last few. Maybe it's that little box on the form. Maybe
it's that I'm halfway between thirty and forty. Maybe it's just a
shortage of bran in my diet . . .
|-end-
|Copyright (c) 1993 Michael R. Hahn
?Contents ?Submit ?Credits ?Others? ?Acknowledgements ?(Canyon)
:Credits
Credits/Copyright information
>.fill[1 2 76 3 blue]
>.hilite[2 27 55 lightred]
|The contents of Smoke and Mirrors are copyrighted
|property of Lucia B. Chambers and/or the respective authors.
|The contents may be distributed freely only as a whole
|package containing the complete file package as listed in the
|CONTENT.DOC file enclosed with this package.
|No other changes, additions or deletions are allowed.
|Editor/Publisher: Lucia B. Chambers
|Thank You for reading Smoke and Mirrors!
?Contents ?Others? ?Submit ?Main
:Ruby's
:Others?
Ruby's Pearls
>.fill[1 2 76 3 blue]
>.hilite[2 34 46 lightred]
READ: - RUBY'S PEARLS -
Electronic Magazine
AND: Call Ruby's Joint (BBS) at 1-305-856-4897
>.hilite[8 33 45 lightred]
?Contents ?Submit ?Intro ?Credits
:submit
Submit!
>.fill[1 2 76 3 blue]
>.hilite[2 36 42 lightred]
SUBMIT! SUBMIT! SUBMIT!
(no, this isn't a hypnotic suggestion)
It's a call to writers everywhere--
SMOKE AND MIRRORS
(a Pen and Brush production)
Featuring:
computer tips and reviews short stories
gardening and cooking hints poetry
local events humor
book and movie reviews art
Submit all stories, recipes, cartoons, poems, and articles to:
SMOKE AND MIRRORS, c/o Lucia Chambers. ASCII text preferred,
but we'll accept WordPerfect format. Graphics may be in any
standardized electronic format.
Upload submissions to Pen and Brush BBS at:
|703/644-5196 (2400-14400 baud)
|703/644-6730 (300-2400 baud)
Your work will be published on a one-time, showcase basis. All
rights are retained by the respective author/artist.
>.pause[]
>.fill[1 2 76 1 white]
>.fill[2 2 76 2 white.blue "*"]
>.fill[3 2 76 3 red]
|Uncle Sam Wants Your Money!
|Have you done your taxes yet?
>.fill[ 7 25 55 12 white.red
>.fill[ 7 25 36 10 white.blue "*" ]
>.fill[ 13 25 55 13 red
?Yes (Canyon) ?No {ohno}
:{ohno}
>.text[ center center 22 75 S 02 Hhatch ] .clw[]
>.text[ center center 20 70 S 03 Mhatch ] .clw[]
>.text[ center center 18 64 S 05 Lhatch ] .clw[]
>.text[ center center 16 56 S 07 ThinSolid1 ] .clw[]
>.text[ center center 14 50 S 08 Solid ] .clw[]
>.text[ center center 12 45 S 09 EvenSolid ] .clw[]
>.text[ center center 10 40 S 10 Vdouble ] .clw[]
>.text[ center center 08 35 S 11 Hdouble ] .clw[]
>.text[ center center 06 30 S 12 double ] .clw[]
>.text[ center center 05 25 S 13 single ] .clw[]
|Oh NO!
>key=N .beep[ l2o1eeel7c ]
?Cry&DoIt {Murphy} ?MoveOn (Contents)
>.beep[o4t4l4]
:{Murphy}
>.cls[] .window[] .wcolor[text 11 7 2 blue]
Murphy's Law
by B. Z. Niditch
>.fill[1 2 76 3 blue]
>.hilite[2 30 41 lightred]
>.hilite[2 61 76 lightred]
The cashews
were cold
and you insisted
on watching
"The Day of the Triffids"
but the video store
was robbed
and so we agreed
to go to the opera
though you hated Boris
with a Russian passion,
kids knocked out
the shrubbery
and our cook
at the Italian was out sick
perhaps I should meditate today,
but on whom.
|Copyright (c) 1993 B. Z. Niditch
?Main ?Intro ?Contents ?Ruby's
:(Canyon)
>.execute[canyon.exe]
|"Canyon" was made using Vistapro virtual reality software:
|the terrain is the topographic calculation from a fractal.
|I added the balloons in Micrografx PhotoMagic,
|then exported the file to GraphWorks 6.1t and turned it
|into an executible.
|"Canyon" Copyright (c) 1993 Lucia B. Chambers
?16 ?Submit ?Acknowledgements ?Others ?Credits ?Contents