Friday, November 20, 2009

The Drunkard's Tale


ITN wasn’t going to win any awards for journalism. Our most controversial and important article in the last year had been on the subject of the university’s landscaping. Specifically: Were the hedges out of control? Not that I hadn’t tried. My articles were hard-hitting; they exposed what was going on behind the scenes, where no one really wanted to look. For example: During one homecoming celebration, I slipped the Dean of Students some acid and showed his latent homosexual tendencies when he—voluntarily—dressed up like Marilyn Monroe and humped the county sheriff. Of course, that one didn’t make it into the paper. The editor said it was too risqué, that the dean would probably shut us down. Of course, I then suggested we use it as blackmail leverage to get more funding, but, once again, the pansies on the editorial board backed down.
Still, they knew I was the only one on staff who wasn’t doing their job just to pad their résumé. I cared. I knew what good media practices could do. I wanted to be like the guys who busted Nixon. I wanted to change the world, to show people that they had a choice in life. That they didn’t have to be stepped on day after day by the authorities. The press, when it’s not in it just to sell papers, is a tool for the people, the only way they can have their voices heard in an intelligent way. Of course, try telling that to the suckers at Newsweek, or, God help you, the putzes at CNN or FOX News.
So, come election time and when the full staff is back at the presses—being on a university paper means that you are held in thrall by summer and winter breaks—who do they turn to in order to get a good look at what’s going to go down on the election trail? Yours truly. Of course, the editor approaches me with a certain amount of fear in his eyes—I was suffering from a massive hangover that day, the result of a night with a Beta Phi and a bottle of tequila, and was in deep thought that I had contracted crabs as a result of said contact with said sorority member—and broached the subject with me. I’d learned that the only way to deal with an editor-in-chief, regardless of whether or not they’re of a magazine or a newspaper, is to treat them like the shit they are. The scum-sucking, brown-nosing schmucks whose main concern is to keep the newspaper selling ad space, and this patsy was the worst of them. So, naturally, I treated him like he was the worst. I shit on his desk once after he struck a paragraph from an editorial of mine on the war. It was more out of principle than anything else: the paragraph was total crap. I listen to this scum’s offer, tell him to wait one second. I pull over a trash can, puke into it, then say, “You give me a spending allowance, then I’ll go.”
He can’t believe me, says that in all his career (career my ass, he’d been EOC one year, and before that he worked at a desk in one of the dorms) no reporter had the gall to demand an expense account.
“Ah,” I said, “you shit-kicker, it’s not an expense account. Truly, that would be absurd. I just want two grand up front so I can afford modest accommodation and sustenance along my merry way. Don’t want your star reporter to starve, do you?” I pulled the trash can close again, puked.
The insect gagged and agreed. That’s why I didn’t have any respect for him: he gave in too easily. All you had to do was say something that sounded even a little bit like logic and the man would cave. If he fought tooth and nail for that meager expense fund the paper had, then maybe I wouldn’t have puked in front of him or shit on his desk. But, there you have it; there are some people in this world that stick to their guns, and some people who don’t. He gave me two grand and a three week deadline. It was September first right now, and I was to have the article in the offices of ITN by the beginning of October, when the editor figured that the election circuit would be winding down—not that I gave a damn about deadlines. Deadlines are for people whose editors have a pair of testicles to their name. I was a senior at this point, one class away from graduation. The university had given me the shaft and essentially forced me to only have one class in my final semester, leading to my almost omnipresence at either the ITN offices or the bar across the street in which I worked and wrote. I arranged with my professor to have a creative project for my grade in the class, and managed to wiggle my way out of work for a month and a half—turns out that they’d make more money without me there to scare off customers.
After I got done with all the administrative bull, I took the check from the editor, cashed it, and got in my car to start my way. My car was an old Chrysler Lebaron that was constantly on its last legs. Emily, as I named the car, didn’t take to starting up and expressed her discomfort by backfiring five times in rapid succession, sounding like a burst from a machine gun. I loved her for her eccentricities. I drove her off campus, down the only road into town, onto the only road in town (Eldritch, Tennessee was a town that didn’t even have a stoplight to its name) and into the only liquor store in town. The county was a dry county by law, but the district representative was from Eldritch and owned the liquor store, so, of course, allowances were made.
The manager and workers knew me by name, knew what I liked, and how much of what I wanted just by looking at me. If I came in slouched over with bloodshot eyes, they knew I wanted vodka. If I came in with bags under my eyes and looking pale, like I had a weight to rival Atlas, then they knew I wanted whiskey. However, today I came in whistling in joy and greeted them in a singsong voice. This they had never seen.
“Now,” said Rob, the manager in the early shift, “I have no idea what we can give you to make your day better.”
I walked to the counter and plopped down my wad of cash totaling two grand. “Fill her up, my boy.”
“That money’s not dirty, is it?”
“Rob, give me credit. I only take money from those who don’t deserve to have it in the first place; and those who would willingly give me two thousand dollars sure as hell don’t deserve to have two thousand dollars in the first place. So,” I said, “fill her up.”
And friends, I had such a cornucopia of booze that Dionysus would be in shock. A gallon of Jack Daniel’s and Southern Comfort each. A case of half-Grey Goose and half-Smirnoff. I had such a wide variety of malt liquor that I could not begin to describe it in anything resembling list form without completely losing your interest. I had the best Scotch I could find, and then, for balance the worst Scotch I could find. I made my way to the exotic, high-alcohol beers, took a look at the selection, and bought it all. Since I was a loyal customer and was spending so much, Rob gave me a fantastic discount that, essentially, had me buying double what I would have been otherwise. About the only thing I didn’t get was wine and tequila. Tequila since it is the devil’s piss, and wine because what I had in mind for the trip was nothing that would justify wine.
We carted the lot out to my car, hoisted it into the trunk and the back seat, and wiped our brows. I still had a twenty left. “Anything else?” asked Rob.
I thought for a moment. That twenty could get me twenty hefty meals from Taco Bell, or a bottle of champagne for when I finished my plan. I scratched my chin—which at this time, sported a fantastic goatee—and came to the conclusion that I could easily purloin champagne where I was going. “No, Rob,” I said, “I think I’ll keep the twenty. Man’s got to eat somehow, am I right?”
Rob nodded. “Right on, man.” Rob may have been a pusher in his own right, but he was an ethical one. He wouldn’t force you to spend your last cent on his product, but he wouldn’t mind if you did. Ask me, that’s the difference between a legal drug like alcohol and an illegal drug like… well, most anything else. That’s also why I didn’t touch the other stuff: It’s easier to get off the hook with a bottle of Budweiser in your hand than it is with a joint.
Rob and I did our handshake. It’s a special relationship, the one between a liquor store owner and his favorite client. “Be seeing you on the news, Rob,” I said.
“Of course.”

# # #

The first beer on the road is a special one, so I made it a special beer. It was a brew gleaned from the trace remains of alcohol on a cup from, I think, a pharaoh’s tomb. Wherever it came from, the contents of the bottle were delicious. There was definitely some grape in there, as well as some hints of honey on top of the usual barley and hops. What was more important was that it was powerful and delivered a hell of a kick. “Em,” I said, patting the dashboard, “if we make it out of this trip alive, I’m taking you to the car wash.”
I backed out of the parking lot and started down the two-lane roads until I reached the Interstate. Now, if I had been coming from somewhere like Knoxville, then I would have been fucked. There are cops infesting I-40 from Crossville to Knoxville, just waiting from some drunk yokel going to get his kicks in the closest thing to a metropolis he’s ever seen. I, however, was not a yokel, nor was I planning on going to East Tennessee any time in the near future, for it’s one of those places you should avoid like the plague. The accent grates on your ear worse than country music or yodeling ever could and blowing up an abortion clinic is seen as a form of legitimate political protest. Aside from the University, an oasis of thought in the madness, there’s nothing for a discerning man like myself in that direction.
I popped the cap on another one of the ancient beers. The road twitched a bit in front of me. It didn’t swim, but there was a definite twitch. I blinked a couple of times and checked the alcohol percentage on the bottle. 20%. Stronger than wine. Fuckin pharaohs knew how to party. I put Emily on cruise control, took another swig, and steadied my hands on the wheel. The road could twitch all it wanted, but I sure as hell wasn’t going to. What I was going to do was check my dashed-up itinerary. I reached in the back, knocked aside a couple of Jack Daniel’s bottles and took a glance. The candidate was first scheduled to appear in a city called Murfreesboro, a little less than an hour south of Nashville. I could get there in about that time, if I wanted to rush it. And, brother, I didn’t.
A very harsh sound came at me from in front of the car. “Fuck!” I shouted, spinning the wheel to the right and just avoiding a semi-truck that had been blaring its horn at me. Now the road swam. I drove another mile and finished the beer when I passed a hitchhiker on the side of the road. Emily’s brakes hadn’t been changed in what would have been eight years, but damned if they didn’t act like pieces of high performance engineering. I left skid marks that went about a quarter mile, then I put the car into reverse and stopped in front of the kid. I poked my head out, turned towards him, and squinted into the sunlight. “Where you going, kid?”
“Murfreesboro,” he shouted. He stood about six feet tall, had feathery blond hair, wore a black suit, carried a black duffel bag, and was just about the ugliest son of a bitch I’d ever seen.
I opened the door, staggered out, and walked up to him. He was virtually standing on the grass at the side of the Intestate, and when I approached, he almost tumbled into the fence marking the border of someone’s tree-lined farm. “Stand still,” I said. “I’m not in my right mind.” I staggered up. “My right mind’s back in my apartment,” I said, belching out laughter.
He let out a crooked grin. “Mister, you smell like booze.”
“Yup,” I said, “there’s a very good reason for that. Hung over. Know the best way to cure a hangover, kid?”
“Mister, I’ve never drank before on account of its being—”
“Shut up. You start drinking again. Thus, in the spirit of good health, I am drinking again.” I looked him up and down. “You’re an ugly son of a bitch, you know that?”
He scratched his head.
“How old are you?”
“Well, I reckoned that I’m probably twenty-one or –two. Mr. Chang, the Census man what got chased off the farm by Mr. Gamble didn’t tell me my age, but he—”
“Old enough to drink, and you never done it?”
“Well, Mr. Gamble only drank after watching me on the plow all day, and then he’d start shouting about the gumment, so I never been that interested in drinking, and so—”
“All right,” I said, “shut up. Let’s get in the car so we don’t attract attention having a chat on the side of the Interstate.” I started walking back and he picked up his duffel and followed. “What’s your name, kid?”
“Cloyd, Mister.”
“Well, Cloyd, can you drive?” I opened the trunk, tossed the duffel on top of a couple crates of vodka.
“Dale let me drive his truck, but that was a few weeks ago, and I think I remember, but it didn’t look nothing like this an—”
I shut the trunk. “Same thing. Press the pedals, turn the wheel. You seem like a reasonably intelligent man, I’m sure you can handle it.” I opened the passenger’s side door and tossed a few bottles of whisky in the back seat before sitting down.
Cloyd got in the driver’s side and whistled. “Gosh, mister, you got a lot of alcohol in here.”
“Sure do, my friend. It’s a celebration.”
“Oh boy!” he said. “What for?”
“The political demise of a charlatan and scoundrel whose goal is the governor’s mansion. Now, this celebration may be a bit premature, but I assure you, it shall not be in vain.”
“No kidding?” Cloyd said. “I don’t know what a charlatan is. Is that a Frenchman?”
I laughed. “Yeah. To the French!” I shouted, raising a bottle of whisky and taking a swig.
“Apple used to tell me about the French. He said that they ate horses and snails and drank wine and did the sex about eight times a day.”
“I…” That was definitely a new one. “Apple? Are you from a commune?”
Cloyd scratched his head. “What?”
I leaned over and turned the key in the ignition. “Let’s get moving, Cloyd.”
He put his foot on the pedal and Emily lurched to a start. It was a little too much for me, and I belched. One of those belches that, if it were just a little bit harder, would have turned into a stream of vomit. “Try to go a little smoother, Cloyd. All this fun is going to make me get sick.”
“Oh, sure. Sorry, mister.” To my surprise he did go a lot smoother. The car, actually, ran better than it ever did with me. “Say,” he said, after a minute or two of silence, “did you mean what you said earlier about me being smart?”
“Sure I did,” I said, taking another drink from the bottle. If this guy were as dumb as he seemed, then he was either stoned, retarded, or from a sheltered life in the lovey-dovey world of some hippie commune. He didn’t stink and he wasn’t so bad off as to be retarded, so I was pretty sure the poor bastard was from a commune. Maybe not The Farm, but it wouldn’t surprise me, someone leaving that place. I did a story about The Farm once: it ended up with me setting fire to their crops and running away in the middle of the night. I never got along with hippies.
“Well gosh! I wish Apple were here to hear that! He always said I was dumb as a big bag of rocks, ‘cept that rocks could pull their own weight and I couldn’t,” he said, a look of either pain or indigestion crossing his face. Yep, he had to have come form a collective; kicked off for being too stupid, probably. Heartless, gutless hippies. “Tossed him by the wayside, I did. I kind of miss him, though. Apple had some great stories. He had this one about a fella named Mack Beth—which I always thought was a strange name for a guy to have—and him going all crazy and seeing knives and spots and witches.”
“The spot was Lady Macbeth,” I said.
“Gosh!” Cloyd said, getting so excited he stamped his foot on the gas pedal and sending the car jerking forwards. He looked at me and said, “Oh, sorry, mister. But you know that story? How?”
“Everyone knows that story, pal. It’s Shakespeare. Macbeth. ‘Out, damn spot!’ ‘Double, double, toil, and trouble.’ ‘Lay on, Macduff.’ Fucking Macbeth, man.”
“Well gosh, I never heard it.”
Those bastard hippies didn’t even teach the kids Shakespeare. How could they expect anyone to get through life without knowing a bit of Shakespeare? It was downright uncivilized. I found I had to take a drink in order to quell the rage rising within me. “Fucking hippies,” I muttered.
“What’s that, mister?”
“Nothing. So tell me, Cloyd, why are you going to Murfreesboro? It’s not exactly a tourist destination.”
“Ah well I’m not going there for to be a tourist, mister. I’m going to go find my dad.”
“And your dad’s in Murfreesboro?”
“Nope, Apple told me he’s in Nashville, but the Silvers—they were this Jewish family that I stayed with for a week and had a great big honking meal with—said that there was a train that went from Murfreesboro up to Nashville and that I could make life easier on myself if I went that way, so—”
“Okay, take a breath,” I said. The kid was panting and apparently finding it very hard to get all of his ideas out at once. “Tell you what Cloyd, you can stick with me as I make my way around Middle Tennessee. As part of my goal, I just happen to have to make it up to Nashville—mostly because this pig is going to be campaigning there. Then again, there are a few girls I haven’t seen in a while and, God willing, they’re still in Nashville.” I took another swig from the rapidly-emptying bottle. “Whaddya say?”
“Well gosh,” he said, “that’s about the nicest thing a person’s offered and it sure would be nice to have someone to pal around with now that I tossed Apple away after he made me leave the Silvers.” I considered the possibility that Cloyd was completely insane, but then again, here I was with a liquor store in my car and going on my way to ruin the campaign of a gubernatorial candidate, so did I really have any room to talk?
“Glad to hear it, Cloyd. We shall be a great team. One for the ages. One day, I might let you drink some of the pharaoh beer. But not today. Today,” I said, screwing the lid back onto the Jack, “that’s all for my inaugural journey.” I took another pharaoh beer from the pack and popped the cap. “How bout some tunes, Cloyd?”
“Sure! Whatever you say, mister—say, what’s your name?”
“Yudavitch. Omar Yudavitch.” I liked Cloyd, but my mom always told me never to give your name to a hitchhiker, and we must always listen to our mothers.
“Omar Yudavitch. Okay. Whatever you say Omar Yudavitch.”
“Just Omar.”
“Wow, that makes it a lot easier.”
I turned on the radio, and one of the stations was playing “Looking Out My Back Door” by CCR. “Ah,” I said, “great tune. Great. Tune.”
“I’ve heard this before,” said Cloyd. “Dale was playing it when he almost ran me over with his truck.”
I took the opportunity presented by the ensuing lull in conversation—Cloyd howled along with the lyrics as best as he could—to think about exactly what I would be doing to this schmuck who had the audacity to pretend that he was a God-fearing individual with the People first in mind. I’d never been one for political protests. As a rule, I found that any time a large group of people marched in unison chanting things, my mind went to Nuremburg or Soviet military parades—not the Civil Rights marches. Up until the past couple of years, I had believed that politics should be discussed in groups of three or four over coffee or beer; but after seeing what havoc could be wrought by those in power, I decided that acts of gleeful prankage were the only things that could turn the tide of rising idiocy in this country.
As the next Creedence song came on—“Fortunate Son,” appropriately enough—I thought about this guy’s track record. He was a vocal member of a fundamentalist Baptist church based out of Memphis and had been sighted at a rally held by the church at which the leader of the church stated that AIDS was the scourge of God upon those who were not clean in His sight. (I thought about how fucked up our country was that hearing something like that come out of the mouth of a clergyman wasn’t that shocking.) He owned a construction company that routinely hired illegal immigrants (this coming from the man whose platform was based on punishing those employers who hired illegal aliens) and intimidated—and, on one occasion, badly injured—union workers. He presented himself as a good head of a moral family; I knew—in the Biblical sense—both of his daughters when they went through Cumberland Rift University on their way to Knoxville. (I wasn’t alone. They had quite the night of debauchery in Eldritch.)
In short, everything this man said about his life was grade-A, USDA choice bullshit. And me, I hated bullshitters. The only people who deserved to bullshit, in my opinion, were journalists—and that was only if they had a good reason to.
“So Mr. Yudavitch,” said Cloyd, “where’s Murfreesboro?”
Suddenly, I realized that the trip would be even harder than I thought.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

The Prologue to The Drunkard's Tale


A couple of days later, we all met in The Sub-Pope’s Flock to attempt to start off where we were before The Interloper’s tale of nationalism and racism. It was a Monday around two o’clock, and the only one of us who had had a seminar was The Writer. As such, most of us were in the pub for a while before he arrived with the most exasperated look I believe I had ever seen on a man’s face. He walked to the bar, leaned forward on it, and said, “Whiskey. I don’t care what kind, I just need a whiskey to restore my faith in humanity.” He got a Jameson and sat down at our table.
“What’s wrong?” asked The Traveler.
The Writer knocked back his whiskey and said, “The professor actually asked what a story is.”
The Stalker jotted something down in a brown leather-bound notebook. The Traveler cocked an eyebrow. The Student did the same. The Drunkard tilted his head to the side. “What?” he asked.
The Writer leaned forward on the table, took off his brown flatcap and wriggled out of his corduroy jacket. “I’ll tell you what she said. This is verbatim, mind you, ‘If I were to ask you what a story is, what would you say?’ So, this being a Master’s class, I answered that it is a tool to change the world, that the word ‘story’ is indeed a condescending term that should only be applied to filth like Anne Rice and Dean Koontz; I was about to go on further with this train of thought, for the moment had taken me to heights in which I had not dwelled since my time of being an editor, but she cut me short.
“‘Yes,’ she said, ‘that’s all well and good, but what is a story?’ I blinked. I answered the question, or so I thought. But no, she then proceeded to define plot, character, and action. Gentlemen,” said the Writer, “I am in Creative Writing 101. And that is why I was in desperate need of whiskey.”
We nodded, unspoken went the sentiment that truly, his life was in shambles.
“I’ve got a journalism class tomorrow,” said The Drunkard. “I wonder if they’ll ask us what an editorial is.”
“More likely,” said The Traveler, “they’ll ask you, flask in hand, how to stave off the impending demise of the newspaper industry. How was London?”
“Oh,” said The Stalker, slurping his cider again, “I’m sure they found some, ah, oddities that one would not find in any guidebook. Broccoli soup, for example?”
The Drunkard leapt up from his chair, pointed at The Stalker, and shouted, “You stop whatever the fuck it is you’re doing, kid. You hear me? I don’t know how the fuck you keep finding out what’s going on in—”
“I have my ways.”
The Drunkard sat back down, pale.
The Student cleared his throat. “Um, I’m sure you’ll find out one way or another fairly soon. So,” he said, putting his hands on the table, “shall we continue in our contest, or leave it festering in the shadow of The Interloper?”
“Rightly said,” said The Traveler. “Drunkard, I believe it was your turn to tell us a story.”
The Drunkard, though, did not hear The Traveler. He was still pale, locked in a death stare with The Stalker’s black [contact-covered] eyes. The Writer poked him in the shoulder, causing The Drunkard to react by reflex and shove The Writer out of his chair. The poke did the job, though, as The Drunkard shook his head and said, “What? My story time?”
“Yep,” said the Traveler.
“Okay. Well, as you may know, I was once a reporter for the liberal arts college known as Cumberland Rift University. My being the only person on the staff with even a hint of talent, I was given certain privileges that, to be completely honest, they shouldn’t have given me.”
“Freedom of speech, for example,” said The Writer.
I snickered, low enough so that he could not hear me: the worst thing in the world is letting a jerk know that they can get away with being funny.
The Drunkard, for his part, pushed The Writer off of his chair again.
“Anyway,” he continued, “as I mentioned the other day, towards the end of election season and the beginning of the year, Cumberland Rift University’s newspaper, The Independent Times of the Nation—we called it ITN for short—sent me to cover the Republican candidate for governor. They also gave me an allowance of two thousand—”
“You said one thousand,” said The Writer.
“Are you fucking serious?” asked The Drunkard.
The Writer took a small black notebook from the inside of his jacket, licked his thumb, and flipped through some pages. “Yep, ‘they gave me one thousand dollars.’”
A small vein throbbed in The Drunkard’s forehead.
“What?” asked The Writer. “I just want you to be as accurate as possible. Don’t want to lose points because someone’s being pedantic, do you?”
The vein throbbed harder. In fact, it was on the verge of bursting out of his forehead.
“Let it go,” I said.
“Right,” The Drunkard responded.

Our Trip to London, Part the Fourth


The British Museum, if you have not had the good fortune to have been there, is a gloriously gigantic stone building filled nearly to the brim with stolen goods from the British Empire. Of course, they’re not really stolen; they’re just artifacts that happened to have come into the possession of certain influential individuals and then wound up in a giant stone building in London. Stolen would imply some sort of cultural ownership, and that would be frankly absurd. All of that said, there is something amazing about being able to wander in and out of the same building which possesses the Rosetta Stone and, essentially right next door, entire walls from ancient Assyrian temples. Then, there are the revolving exhibitions, usually of artifacts on loan from private collectors or foreign governments. Then, of course, there are the special exhibitions that cost money to see. I did not go to a special exhibition, nor did my companions. On the matter, The Student said, “Rarity of objects be damned! I’m not paying my money to see some hunks of rock.”
At any rate, this dogu thing The Student was talking about was one of the free revolving exhibits on loan, I believe, from the Japanese government. According to The Student, the dogu were the earliest artifacts of Japanese society that showed a tendency towards abstraction of humanity’s perception of the world. I, however, took a different view of the figures when we saw them: They were prototypes of Pokémon. I did not tell The Student this, for fear that he would have then forced me to go into a cultural sensitivity training session.
When we walked into the British Museum, into its black-tiled foyer right after walking in the mammoth front doors, I found myself looking into the Great Hall with a dropped-open mouth. The Student may have found himself in an almost religious awe while being at The Globe, and I finally understood it. On each wing in front of me were bits and pieces of history—and the interesting kind that you can look at and see chisel marks from sculptors, or brush strokes from potters, not the boring critical and analytical stuff we encounter in history classes. “Guh,” I said.
The Student shrugged, “Yeah, I guess it’s awe-worthy in a sense.”
“In a sense?!” I shouted. A security guard looked in my direction, shrugged and returned to reading a newspaper.
“Yeah. I mean, really, this is all bits of rock. Stolen rock. Memories of the brutality of Empire.”
“But—” I said. “But—Mummies! The Rosetta Stone! Cleo-fucking-patra! There’s Rome in here, Student! Can’t you under—”
“Hold your horses, hopalong,” said The Drunkard. “The Student’s right, it’s no big deal.”
“Student,” I said, “this is my Globe. Drunkard, we’ll take you to a distillery, and then maybe you’ll understand what The Student and I have experienced today.”
 “Once," The Drunkard responded, "I was lost in the Jack Daniels distillery. Not that much fun, really. They keep the whiskey under pretty secure conditions. As for history—which you clearly love—well, I prefer the here and now, thank you very much.”
I stammered for a few moments and my companions walked on. I followed suit, and we made our way up the staircase in the middle of the Great Hall, reaching eye level with some of the top figures on a couple of totems from the Pacific Northwest that had been plopped down into the Hall, and walked into the entrance to the Egyptian collection. Right in front of me was a mummified body of a prince. Or maybe a king. Someone important. I walked up to the glass and didn’t notice that my friends had walked on.
“Hey,” said The Drunkard, who had returned to fetch me, “come on.”
“But, the mummies.”
“They won’t be moving. The Student’s dog-men things are in the room across the hall.”
We weaved our way through gaggles of children on field trips. (“You little bastards,” I thought, “you get to go to the British Museum on a field trip. I went to the Grand Old Opry.”) I said, “You’re not as apathetic as you may try to act, Drunkard. How can you not care about these things around us? This is the story of humanity. In the mummies, we see the importance of death and the afterlife, the eternal question that has terrified humanity for eons, that—”
“Yeah,” he said, “I know. And you’re right, it is a pretty cool feeling being right in the midst of all of this. But you, man, you are really into it, aren’t you?”
“I don’t know how you can’t feel just as floored as I am. Are we that jaded as a culture to not be awestruck in thought about seeing three thousand year-old artifacts two feet in front of us? In fact, look:” I brushed my fingertips on a statue of a black cat; the plaque said that the cat had been found in a gravesite and was an indication that the individual buried within was a devotee of Bast. “I just touched a dead person’s statue.”
A passing security guard said, “Please don’t touch the artifacts, sir.”
“Ah, sorry.”
“Hmm,” remarked The Drunkard, “we might be that jaded, true. However, what are your feelings on paintings?”
“Unless they’re surrealist, then they're overvalued, ground-up plants smeared over canvas and gawked at by easily-duped people with too much free time.”
The Drunkard nodded and smiled. “That’s what I thought. Everyone’s got their own little thing that leaves them ‘floored,’ as you put it. Mine just happens to be the overvalued, ground-up plants. I suspect that if we go to the National Gallery, you’ll have a peek at what I look like when I get really excited about something. Now,” he said, holding open a door, “I believe this is the room in which The Student’s dog-men reside.”
We walked into a black room. The walls were covered with white pencil drawings. The Student sat on a bench in the middle of the room with his head buried in his hands. His shoulders quaked a little bit and I think I heard a couple of sniffles. The Drunkard walked up to the first drawing he came to and said, “Dear sweet God.”
I walked to where he was and saw an illustration of a man being disemboweled on a rock. The black and white of the picture rendered it palatable; I’m fairly certain that if the black splotches had shown up on the page with all of their red bloody glory, then I would have found myself in the same position as The Student. The entrails flopped out like snakes, and a group of men stood around the rock in togas, looking on in studious amazement.
“What in the fuck is wrong with this country?” asked The Drunkard.
I went to the next picture, which detailed Death standing over a group of medical students as they performed an autopsy in a crowded auditorium room. I caught sight of one of the students pulling out a rib and moved on. The next one was titled “Torture Devices and Their Uses,” and I decided to skip the rest. I joined The Student on the bench and said, “You okay, buddy?”
He looked up. His eyes were bloodshot. “I just wanted to see the dogu, not this torture porn.”
I nodded. I went up to the security guard standing watch in the corner and asked where we could find the special exhibition. He gave me the directions—incredibly complex ones, at that, and I returned to The Student. We collected The Drunkard, who was still starting in awe at the disembowelment picture, and made our way to the dogu exhibition.
Once there, The Student was back to his normal self and went along the walls studying the various statues and statuettes. They ranged from fertility dolls to depictions of the elderly with canes. Though my initial thought of them being proto-Pokémon flitted across my mind form time to time, I had to admit that it was amazing to see these ancient figurines in such good condition—one placard said that the earliest of the dogu figures was from around 3,000 B.C. One that caught my attention—from the later period of the dogu collection—was a figure that looked like it was dancing like a performer in a rap video. “No,” said The Student, “the placard says that it is most likely positioned in a sort of war dance and could have been made for a child.”
“But,” I said, “it could also be backing that shit up.”
At this point, The Student walked away from me.
After a while, we had our fill of the exhibit and walked out of the museum to find that dusk had fallen and the temperature dropped what felt like fifteen degrees. We had dinner at a cheap buffet near the Museum and debated whether or not we should stay in town for a couple of pints. We eventually arrived at the conclusion that it would be best if we made our return to Canterbury. As it turned out, The Student was in dire straits with finances: While the rest of us went with a bank that had a logical approach to international transactions (namely, settling everything electronically and in the matter of a few days), The Student’s bank decided that depositing money would be best done if an institution took a month to clear a check.
“I admit,” said The Student, when we were all on the train, “I should have gone with a bank that wasn’t named You’re A Schmuck If You Bank With Us, but I thought they were being ironic.”
And so, we made our way back to Charing Cross and boarded the next train back to Canterbury (this time, without making any puns).

Monday, November 9, 2009

Our Trip to London, Part the Third


After a twenty-minute Underground ride, we reached the tube stop that The Traveler recommended. Exiting the station, we walked north for one block and, suddenly, found ourselves swept up in a sea of Lubavitchers. Black hats topped black beards which in turn topped black suits, all accented by a Yiddish-English accent. Shops were designated in English and Hebrew, the Hebrew for 'kosher' appeared on the right side of every building. For three men used to the WASPy South, it was overwhelming. The last time I had been in an area like this was in Crown Heights in Brooklyn, and the highlight of that trip was being told that maybe I should think about moving closer to a synagogue.
“Wow,” said The Student. “This place sure is Jewish.”
“Damn straight,” said The Drunkard. He took a deep breath. “Smell that, boys? That’s challah in the air.” Without further prompting, The Drunkard strode into the crowd, tossing out “Shalom” and “Yom tov” at random. The man was the happiest I’ve seen him, and it seemed like the very confused faces looking at the swaggering American didn’t faze him in the least. I’ve always understood that Chasids should be approached on their own terms, and swaggering into the mass, bare-headed (wearing my flat cap, I was the only one who could have fulfilled even one clothing commandment) and asking where to get some corned beef wasn’t the best way to go about introducing oneself.
The Student and I jogged to keep up with The Drunkard. “Hey buddy,” I said, “you might want to calm it down.”
“Screw that,” said The Drunkard. “These are our people! You two want to get some Manischewitz with our meal?”
“I don’t think they have Manischewitz over here.”
“Course they do. What self-respecting liquor store wouldn’t have Maniscewitz? Here,” he said, coming to an abrupt halt in front of a glass-fronted store with the words “Gould’s Bakery” on the front. “We’re going to eat here.” He pushed open one of the doors and walked inside.
The interior of the bakery was almost dead quiet. There was a group of older men--liver spots marking their faces, wearing leather jackets--taking up a table in the corner, all hunched over hunks of bread and gigantic bowls of soup. In another corner, there were three old women whispering to each other. The building was dimly lit, and the glass front didn’t do much to brighten up the inside atmosphere—especially considering a mass of dark clouds had appeared over the course of our underground journey. The Drunkard nearly bounced up the four steps to the counter and said, “My dear woman, I shall have your finest sandwich,” to the middle-aged dark-haired woman behind the counter.
The woman squinted and, in a strong Moroccan accent, said, “What?”
“Er,” said The Drunkard. “Sandwich.”
“We don’t have sandwich,” she said, making no motion towards any sort of food.
“Ah,” remarked The Drunkard. “Um. Do you have a menu?”
The woman pointed her thumb behind her towards a blackboard, on which the words ‘Soup’ and ‘Bagel’ were written in shaky handwriting.
The Drunkard looked at the blackboard and weighed his options with a strong stroke of his chin. “I’ll have a bagel.”
The woman took a step to her right and took out a circular hunk of bread, then she put it on the counter, tapped a few buttons on the register and said, “Two pounds for bagel.”
The Drunkard took two pounds out of his pocket and put them on the counter. “Do I get cream cheese?”
“What?” asked the woman.
“Do—” The Drunkard looked at the bagel. “Ah, it’s not cut in half. Never mind.” He nodded and walked to a table, put the bagel on a napkin, sat down, and stared at it.
The Student walked up to the counter. “What sort of soup do you have?”
“Broccoli.”
“Don’t order it,” I whispered, leaning in close.
“I’m sure there’s something other than broccoli in the soup,” he said out of the corner of his mouth. “That sounds delicious. I’ll have the broccoli soup and a cup of coffee.”
“What?”
The Student cleared his throat. “Broccoli soup and a cup of coffee.”
The woman scratched her head. “What kind?”
“Um.”
The woman sighed. “Espresso, or coffee?”
“Coffee.”
“What kind?”
“Black coffee.”
The woman shook her head. “What?
“Jesus Christ!” shouted The Student. “What is this, Abbot and Costello? Black filtered coffee and a broccoli soup!”
“Hey!” shouted one of the men in the corner. “Do not yell at Sasha!”
“Sorry,” said The Student.
The woman frantically hit some keys on the register, poured some coffee out of a pot into a stained mug, and said, “Six pounds, fifty. Get a roll.”
“What sort of roll?”
“Take a roll, please.”
“Yes,” said The Student, a vein popping out in his forehead. “What sort of roll would you recommend?”
The woman rubbed her head. “Please, take roll.”
“Fine,” said The Student. He put his money on the counter, took the coffee, took a roll from the baked goods display behind him, and joined The Drunkard at the table.
Sasha turned to me. “Well?”
“Black filtered coffee, please.”
The woman cursed in Yiddish (unlike French, Yiddish is a language in which everything sounds like a curse), got me a coffee and said, “Just go sit. No money from you.”
We sat in abject silence at the table. The Drunkard poked the hard, stale bagel in front of him and The Student tore his roll into three parts, passing one to each of us. Occasionally, a word or two of Russian would drift our way, but other than that, all we heard was traffic noise leaking in from the outside. The Student and I sipped our coffees, and, about ten minutes later, an old woman with an unlit cigarette dangling out of her mouth brought over a white bowl half the size of The Student’s head and put it on the table in front of him. “Broccoli soup,” she said, walking away.
I took a look inside the bowl. It looked as if someone had put a pack of broccoli into a food processor, tossed it into a bowl of water, and boiled the lot. “It’s green,” I said.
“Very,” said The Student.
The Drunkard grunted and went back to poking his bagel.
The Student took a sip and said, “Yup, just broccoli.”
“Any good?” I asked.
“It’s just broccoli in water.
“You could send it back.”
The Student and I looked around the dining area. The Russians were staring at us and one of the old women had fallen asleep on the table. “Hmm,” said The Student. “No, I think it would be best if we just left.”
“You paid like four pounds for that soup,” I said.
“Friend,” responded The Student, “there are things more important than money. Things like enjoying a soup that has something other than broccoli and water in it. Things like not getting lynched by a group of Russians for insulting the owner, for whom they all seem to have a boner.”
I studied the Russians. Indeed, they had all returned to leering at the woman they called Sasha. “Student,” I said, “you may be right.”
“Drunkard,” said The Student. “Shall we make our exit?”
The Drunkard dropped the bagel onto the floor. It broke cleanly into five even pieces. “Yes. Yes we shall.”
“Hold on for a second, though,” I said, glancing towards the counter. Sasha was glaring in our direction and the old woman with the cigarette spoke rapid-fire in something that sounded like Arabic.
“Why?”
I pointed at the counter. “They’re watching us.”
“So what?” asked The Drunkard. “They make an ordering experience Hell for customers, then it stands to reason that those customers should leave.”
“I agree with The Drunkard,” said The Student. “It’s not like we’re hurting them by leaving. We’ve already paid for our meal. I—” The Student paused and looked out of the window for a moment. “Do you suppose that’s why they had us pay before getting our food?”
The Drunkard crushed a bagel slice under his foot. “Doesn’t matter. I’m leaving. You guys can sit here and discuss the ethics of the situation.” He stood, put on his jacket and walked out of the door.
The Student followed suit. I looked towards the counter and saw Sasha looking after them with a triumphant grin. Now I was certain, we had trod on grounds we should not have. One of the Russian men turned to me and said, “Hey gay boy, aren’t you going to follow your lovers?”
I felt a change coming on. “What the fuck you saying,” I asked, jumping up from the chair and upending the Student’s cup of coffee in the process. “You saying I like to fuck guys in the ass? That what you’re saying? You saying that, you better just say ‘you fuck other men’ cause I don’t like to play games.” I advanced on the now-quaking fifty-year-old paunched Russian. “Last fucker played games with me got a God-damned golf club to the eye, but seeing as how I ain’t got a golf club with me—” I picked up the bowl of soup and upended it over his head.
The man shouted in pain. Turns out the soup was still hot. Really hot, judging from the steam coming from his head. “No! The soup! It is terrible!”
“Now look who’s insulting Sasha!” I shouted. I turned towards the counter. “Fuck you and the horse you rode in on, lady!” At that point, I left the Bakery, caught up with my friends, and said, “We need to duck into a pub forthwith. I can already hear the sirens and the Russians are probably upset that I poured soup on one of their friends.”
The Student skidded to a stop. “You what?”
I took my hat in hand, scratched my head. “Well, I—you remember the chavs on the first day we got here?”
“Oh, no. Those guys were, like, fifty years old, man.”
“I know. That is why, without further ado,” a police siren sounded off in the distance, “we should make our way—forthwith, as I say—to the nearest pub and wait until the patrols have passed.”
“Sounds good to me, I could use a drink and some pub grub,” said The Drunkard. “Man, you got more chutzpah in you than I thought you did, you know that? First trip to London and you get the cops called on us.”
I popped the collars on my pea coat. “Yes, well, they were very unfriendly in there.”
We came upon a pub called The Lions Gate. Had we taken the time to look in, we would have seen that there was something deeply wrong with the establishment, but, in the predicament we had, there was no time to reconnoiter. “Here,” I said. We entered.
It was nearly silent inside the pub. The only sound was a clock ticking. There were five people in the pub, some sitting at tables, a couple at the bar. They sat in utter silence, not even making eye contact with each other. Their glasses were half-filled with Guinness, the foam marking the liquid’s decent towards the bottom of the glasses. Lighting was virtually nonexistent; there was only a single lamp in the whole of the room, and that was in the middle, towards the ceiling. Instead of an aesthetically pleasing shape, the room was long and thin, with the bar towards the right when one entered.
The door slammed shut behind The Student. Two patrons looked up at him. “Sorry,” he muttered. They looked down at their glasses. He poked my shoulder and whispered, “You sure know how to pick em, don’t you.”
I gulped and walked towards the bar. The woman behind it stood up. You could almost hear her bones creaking to get to where they needed to be. “Yeah?” she asked in a clearly Irish accent.
“Er,” I said. An old man wearing a tattered suit walked out from the kitchen clutching a glass of lager and muttering to himself. He jostled me as he passed. “I’ll have a Guinness,” I said.
My friends ordered the same, and the barmaid started to pour our drinks. I turned around to see what sort of décor would belong in such a place, and the first thing I saw was a medium-sized portrait, about eleven inches tall and five inches wide, with a white background and a pair of red eyes in the center. That was all. Next to it was a portrait of the same size of an aquiline nose. On the other side was a mouth, grinning, with sharp canines protruding from the top. Three thuds on the counter. I turned around and the barmaid asked for our money. We paid and went to a table towards the end of the bar.
We sat and were drowned in the silence of the place. I looked across from me, on the other wall, and saw the clock. It had a white face with a section for the date. At that point, I noticed that something was wrong. The clock ticked every five seconds and the date read “16 APR, 1943.” I nodded. Clearly, time worked differently in here.
“Dear sweet God,” said The Drunkard. He sat across from me and his face paled in an instant. His gaze was directed to a picture positioned above my head. I craned my neck around and saw what made him blanche.
It was a portrait about two feet wide by ten inches tall. A man stood in what could have been either a library or a study. There were crammed bookshelves and, behind him, a large wooden desk. On top of the desk, there was a lit candle placed inside of a human skull. The man was dressed in the classical English hunting gear—with one exception. Where there would have been a black cap, his head was bare. His arms raised up a golden top hat, and his face was contorted in an expression of maniacal laughter. To the other side of the portrait, a man wearing a blue uniform that I could only equate to a bell-hop’s was in the process of braining a butler with a nine-iron. I looked underneath the portrait towards the brass plaque into which the title had been etched. It read: “Vengeance Is Mine.”
I now looked at the opposite wall and saw a nearly identical portrait, only with the bell-hop in the hunter’s place. I stood, looked at the title. This one was called “Vengeance Is His.” Next to that was yet another nearly identical portrait, except with the butler braining the hunter. This one was called, simply, “Demise.”
I returned to my seat and said, in a voice so low I’m positive it was barely vocalized, “Okay gents, we will finish our drinks in a leisurely manner and then, quietly, leave and never speak of this place again.”
The Drunkard leaned forward. “There is,” he whispered, “an advertisement that reads ‘Don’t let the Jews Take Your Money—Invest in Irish Banks!’”
I checked behind me. Sure enough, there was. The picture was a stereotype Jew that, I think, was widely used in Nazi propaganda. “Still,” I said, “let’s not draw attention to ourselves. I’m sure no one in this pub advocates braining anyone with a golf club or anti-Semitism. The owner might, but probably not the patrons.”
The old jostling man then sidled to our table and sat down at the vacant seat next to The Drunkard. “’Ey lads, you look like you’re new here.”
“Shit,” I thought. Out loud, I said, “Oh, just exploring off the beaten path. Going from one small pub to the next in a never-ending quest to fi—”
“You like them paintings?” the man asked, pointing at the “Vengeance” series.
“Yes, they’re quite lovely. On par with the Masters, don’t you think, Student?”
The Student nodded rapidly. “Yes. I do.”
“I painted them.”
The Drunkard shot me a look that could only be described as, I told you so. We are in a den of murderous anti-Semites and now we shall die by golf club.
“Only took me ten hours, like,” the man said. He took a sip from his not-bubbling lager. “Wonders you can make when you’re on the crack, yeah?”
I nodded. The Student nodded. The Drunkard nodded.
“See,” the man continued, slipping more and more into a mode of speech laden with lisps and stutters such that I could not replicate them on page without seeming insensitive, “I was inspired, like, by my old man—he did that advert with the Jew sniffing Irish pounds right there—and when he buggered me in the midst of a Jameson-fueled binge.” He drank of his lager. “Got his comeuppance he did. My brother and I brained the bastard, like, and took his prized fecking top-hat. Bastard won it from a fancy dress party, like. I’m the hunter. Fecking hunted him down to the death we did.”
“And what’s going on in ‘Demise?’” I asked, earning another look from The Drunkard. Now, I’ll admit, it was strange to ask this obviously mad person what their meaning in their work was, but I was compelled.
The man craned his neck. “Ah, that one.” He returned his gaze to me. His eyes were milky and bloodshot. “Well, I’m almost certain that, one day, he’ll return and brain both my brother and me. Only proper to do that to someone who killed you.”
The Drunkard and The Student drained their glasses in one gulp. The Drunkard shot me a look and kicked my leg. I shook my head. He took my glass, drank the rest and said, “Boy, I sure do love talking art with interesting folk like yourself, Mr.—”
“Moriarty.”
“Right,” said The Drunkard, breaking into a sweat. “Well, Mr. Moriarty, we’ve got to be on our way. Off to go kick the shit out of some Jews up the street, and we can’t be la—”
“You know, you look a bit like a Jew yourself, boy,” said Moriarty.
“Gotta go!” At this point, I was back in my senses, and the three of us ran out of the pub for dear life.
When we finally made it to the tube stop, The Drunkard punched me in the mouth. “Don’t fucking ever,” he said, “make another suggestion again. Do you hear me?” He grabbed me by my lapels. “Huh?”
I nodded, clutching my mouth with my hand. There wasn’t any blood, but there was, of course, pain.
“Look,” said The Student, “let’s just leave it behind us. We didn’t get arrested by the cops for The Narrator’s soup attack, and the Irish Nazi didn’t kill us. All in all, not being arrested and not being killed makes for a pretty good day, I’d have to say.”
The Drunkard grumbled at The Student and turned to me, “Sorry.”
“It’s all right,” I said. “Didn’t lose any teeth.”
The Student clapped his hands. “So. What next?”
“As far away from the pub as we can get,” I said.
“I know,” said The Student. “The British Museum!”
“Yeah,” said The Drunkard, “that’s about the opposite of what we just went through.”
“Excellent!” said The Student, clapping his hands (he was apparently in a clapping mood), “I hear they have an exhibition about the dogu of ancient Japan!” The Student then bolted into the station.
The Drunkard and I shrugged and followed.


Thursday, November 5, 2009

Our Trip to London, Part the Second


The trains in this part of the country—the Southeast, that is—were quite different than the way I had imagined trains to look. When I thought of a train, it was, admittedly, an outdated idea that popped into my head. Great iron snakes with a slanted bit up front with the extended part to crash through cattle on the tracks (or whatever), and a red car at the back. Possibly some hobos infesting the freight parts in the middle. However, the trains in the Southeast were none of these. For the most part, they were quiet steel-plastic things running on electricity. They had none of the nineteenth century aesthetics and were made so that a conductor could ride in both the front and the rear. (Now, Dear Reader, I of course know full well that this is the way freight trains in the U.S. are constructed, but, as I mentioned earlier, give me an absurd explanation over the truth any day of the week.)
All of that, of course, is generally true of the trains. Our first train ride in England, however, was to be nerve-wracking. We had bought tickets for a direct line to Charing Cross in London, and, further, were told that it was the quickest route from Canterbury to London. Just looking at the train, we would not have been able to tell that riding in the carriage would be enough to make a boat on a storm-ridden sea look positively grounded by comparison. Our train—dubbed the Safety Train by The Drunkard—rattled and rolled harder than a modern train should have any right to. I was quite sure that, at some point, the train would fly right off the tracks and none of us would be getting our degrees after all.
Myself, I have never been subject to motion sickness, but The Student was ill four times over the hour-and-a-half journey (the trip was no shorter than had we not taken a Safety Train). The Drunkard calmed his stomach down—paradoxically—by drinking the entire journey. What was more perplexing, The Drunkard was the fittest of us once we got off the train.
I wish I could give a description of the gorgeous agrarian countryside of Kent as we saw it that fine day, but after The Student threw up on the window, my view was ruined. I do, however, remember seeing my first glimpse of the Thames and feeling a bit of a thrill pass through me. It would be no understatement to say that the first time I saw a James Bond movie, I wanted to go to this very country, and to see this very river in person. There are times when words fail us, when we are forced to simply make a comment about our surroundings in lieu of a wider statement about the world. “The River Thames,” I said, falling prey to one of the Universe’s traps.
The Drunkard—who had somehow fallen asleep in the midst of the vomit-odor drifting off the window and the chav in the seat behind us ranting about how he was going to put his dog, Knife, in a fight against another dog, also named Knife—jolted awake, looked out a window, saw the river, and said, “Yup. Bet it wouldn’t set on fire, though.”
I turned to The Drunkard. “Why would you want a river to set on fire?”
The Drunkard shrugged. “Lived in Ohio for a while. After reading about the Cuyahoga being set on fire—and making the creek outside my house catch flame—I just kind of take it as a given that a river should be able to be set on fire.”
“Are you mad?” I asked, not for the first time.
“Completely,” he responded, taking his flask out, tipping it, and, for the first time, not getting anything out of the bottom. “Ah hell, I forgot to fill it.”
The Student wiped clean some of the window—since it was his vomit covering the window, I imagine that he wasn’t fazed by having to do this—and stared. “I’m going to have to go to The Globe.”
“Shakespeare’s home,” I said.
“I wouldn’t count you as a Shakespeare fan,” said The Drunkard.
The Student turned. “I’m sorry? Why?”
“You seemed to be one of those postmodern existentialist types.”
“Like your flatmates?” I asked.
“My flatmates aren’t human; they’re French.”
The Student cleared his throat. “I believe that the only people who would not appreciate Shakespeare are engineers—for they have a natural repulsion to reading or literature of any kind—and pretentious assholes who, in fact, have no soul.”
“The Writer,” said The Drunkard.
“I wasn’t going to mention him, but yes,” said The Student.
“Tell me,” I said, “exactly why you just don’t beat him up.”
“Ah,” said The Drunkard, “I’m just giving him shit. I’m sure The Writer’s got some redeeming qualities.”
“They’re just hard to find!”
“Fist pound!”
The Drunkard and The Student bumped fists.
The train shuddered to a halt, brakes squealing, and the announcement to disembark the train at Charing Cross came across the loudspeaker. The doors opened and we, along with the rest of the people on the train, filed out.
“What do you think a Charing is?” Asked The Drunkard. “And why should it be Cross?”
“I’m not sure,” said The Student, weaving in and out of the crowd and making his way through the gates. I must say, keeping up with him was a challenge, and it was almost as if he had spent his entire life making his way through the masses in public transit. “But considering the size of this building, I would not want to anger Charing any more than it already is.”
“Fuckin Hell,” said a passing Brit, “you people are prats.”
We looked at each other. “Puns are a no, then,” I said.
“Unless we want to get two dogs named Knife sicced on us,” said the Drunkard.
“Oi,” said the chav from before. “What’s that you said about Knife?”
“Ah hell,” said The Drunkard.
“Oi!” said the chav again. “Ricky, they’s talking about Knife!”
We turned and saw, approaching from behind us, another chav holding two French Mastiffs that looked entirely too friendly to be called Knife—one of them licked a five year old for fully two minutes before its owner could drag him away—walked up and said something that, to my untrained ears and through his gold-covered mouth, was entirely incomprehensible.
“You wanna have a go at Knife, then?” asked the chav.
Knife, one of them that is, a black French Mastiff sat down at my feet, looked up at me, and then laid down and went to sleep. “I think he’s comfortable where he is, so I won’t bother him.”
The chav curled his hand into a fist and was about to strike the dog when a black umbrella struck him on the crown of his head, sending him to the ground, wincing in pain.
“I’d rather you didn’t strike the defenseless animal, young man,” said the owner of the umbrella, a man in a black suit, bowler cap, and the shiniest shoes I’ve ever seen. He reached into his pocket, took out a doggie treat, and gave it to the newly awakened dog. Knife licked his hand for about a minute.
The second chav spoke again in his incomprehensible manner, and the man blinked before smacking him on the top of his head with his umbrella. The second Knife actually, and I wish I were making this up, for it is quite improbable, bit off his own leash, walked over, and sat down at the man’s feet. The first Knife did the same, then returned to sleeping upon my feet. After this, the second chav let loose a string of what I can only assume were obscenities directed to the dogs and stormed out of the rail station.
The first chav was still playing opossum on the ground.
“Right,” said the man. “My name is Roger,” he doffed his cap.
“I’m The Narrator,” I said.
“The Drunkard,” The Drunkard said.
“The Student,” The Student said.
“I…” Roger scratched his chin. “Odd names, those.”
We collectively shrugged.
“You’re Americans, I take it.”
“Yessir,” The Drunkard said.
“If you don’t mind me asking, for whom did you vote in the last election?”
We turned to each other, remembering The Traveler’s Tale, and for a moment, I was concerned.
“Oh, Hell,” said The Drunkard. “We’re in England, not Texas. I’m pretty confident in saying we all voted for Obama.”
“Ah, the good kind, then.” He bent down, patted the two dogs on their heads, and replaced Knife II’s leash with one he had in his pocket. “So where are you off to?”
“We were thinking about going to the Globe first. Do you know the way?”
“It so happens that I have business in that area. I’ll show you how to get there, just follow me.”
And so we followed Roger down the Embankment walk. I walked alongside him and Knife, and my two companions traded off playing with Knife II as we made our way towards the Globe. “What do you do, Roger?”
“Oh, I work for the RSPCA. You know what that is, yes?”
“Sort of like the ASPCA, but British.”
“Spot on, spot on. Yes, I’m a legal councilor. I used to be in criminal defense, but the ethical constraints got to be too much for me to handle. Dogs, you see,” he said, bending down and scratching Knife behind the ear, “and animals in general, are much more honest than humans are. Nicer to us than they have any right to be, if you want my honest opinion.”
At this point, we came to the Millennium Bridge. It is a structure that looks as if it has no right to stand for more than five minutes in even a slight breeze. Even though it is quite clearly made of steel—or some sturdy sort of metal—the bridge doesn’t have the sort of supports one is used to seeing when looking at a bridge. Instead of thick columns supported by arches and steel cables and the like, the pedestrian bridge is supported by a few steel constructs that look like wishbones and, of course, steel cables. Though I’m sure there are those people reading this who would say, “You fool, that is a completely feasible design” (and it obviously is, as the bridge is in constant use), this does not allay the fact that, when I first set food upon the bridge, I saw myself being hurled over by a gust of wind into the gaping maws of the shark-infested River Thames.
Crossing the bridge, I was very careful about how I placed my feet, how fast I moved, where moisture was on the bridge in relation to my feet, the amount of friction my shoes could provide, and all sorts of things. Everyone else, though, being normal, healthy individuals, went on as normal. Knife and Knife II, in fact, tripped up The Student by crossing their leashes in front of them. I screamed in fright, everyone else laughed. Clearly, they could not hallucinate the fifty-foot-long sharks in the water below.
After crossing the bridge, we found ourselves essentially right next door from The Globe. Roger led us the rest of the way, short distance though it was, and doffed his cap. “Hope you enjoy the country, lads. It’s a pretty nice place once you get past the assholes.”
The Student and The Drunkard were too distracted to respond. In the presence of dogs, the two tended to lose all perspective as to where they were and virtually leapt onto the animals with squeals of delight. Right now, all I could understand of them—between mock growls—was The Student repeating the phrase, “Who’s a little Puppy Puppenstein?”
“Roger,” I said, “thanks for your help.”
“No problem, my friend.” He turned to my friends and said, “Sorry to break up your fun, but I have to get these two to the shelter.”
“Woah, shelter?” asked The Drunkard.
“Yes. Don’t worry, I reckon that I’ll be taking care of them. I had a pair of Mastiffs just like these two, and they recently died. Lovely dogs, so I will fill out the paperwork and bring them back.”
“Ah,” said The Drunkard, “right.”
Roger said goodbye again and walked down a street.
The Drunkard watched him and the two dogs amble away and sighed.
“Don’t tell me you were thinking about taking them back to the Uni.”
He turned to me with the beginnings of tears in his eyes. “No,” he sniffed. “It’s just that I miss my dog and—” He cleared his throat. “Fuck no. Don’t want dog hair getting everywhere.”

It being the tail end of September, there weren’t any plays going on in The Globe, so The Drunkard’s and mine was, for the moment, purely aesthetic. The Student, on the other hand, poured over the building like a diamond dealer inspecting new merchandise. He went around the circumference of the building, looked at nearly every brick he could, tapped the wood beams he could reach, and then made his way into the gift shop. “Want to follow him?” I asked.
“Nah,” came the answer.
We leaned up against the wall separating the walking path from the decline into the river. There were quite a few people walking around, most of them tourists like ourselves—judging from the cameras hanging from their necks—but there was the occasional person eating a quick sandwich on their lunch break. A few city workers on ladders hung strings of lights on the trees placed around the area. A stiff breeze passed by, carrying on it the smell of cooking meat from a nearby restaurant.
“Feels like lunchtime,” said The Drunkard.
I nodded. “What should we do? Want to grab a few sandwiches and be on our way?”
“You kidding me? Here we are, first time in London, and you want to grab a premade, crappy sandwich from some convenience store.” The Drunkard barked a quick laugh. “Pah.”
“Well okay then, what were you thinking?” I asked, nodding towards the restaurant. “Bangers and mash? Fish and chips?”
“No and no.” The Drunkard dug his hands deep into his pea coat. “We go to a nice, kosher deli.”
I looked around me. A cascade of German flew at me from a herd of middle-aged people led by a pair of tired looking Englishmen. A French couple sauntered by, wrapped up in each other and speaking sweet nothings in low tones. (I assume that it was sweet nothings they were trading; they very well could have been insulting each other in the foulest language ever conceived by man, but their being French automatically made it romantic.) The sound of shutter clicks preceded four Japanese couples dressed in huge beige coats and gardening hats. Everything seemed distinctly European, and just about as far from the atmosphere in which one expects to find a kosher deli.
“What?” I asked. “Like a New York deli? Surely you jest.”
“Nope, and don’t call me Shirley.”
I fought the urge to punch The Drunkard in the mouth.
“I know where to go,” said The Drunkard. “The Traveler told me about the Jewish part of London before we left. Where there are Jews, there are delis. Rule of the universe, my friend.”
I thought about pointing out that we were no longer in the universe, that we were in England, but I’m not quite sure that my companion would have understood me. (There are times when I do not understand myself.) At any rate, The Student stepped out of the gift shop clutching a bag to his chest. “Hi,” he said. His eyes were dilated and he wore a gigantic grin on his face.
“What you got there?” asked the Drunkard.
“Oh, this?” The Student looked around him and blinked a few times. His gaze returned to us. “It was beautiful in there. Imagine what the inside must look like if there… my God,” he said, coming to a full stop. “I have to sit down.” He did so on the pavement. “I have never seen so many pictures of Shakespeare in one place. The Bard, gents! The Bard!”
The Drunkard picked up the bag and looked inside. “Good Lord,” he remarked. “You bought the entire library of plays, didn’t you?”
“Don’t be foolish,” said The Student. “Just the First Folio and six others.”
“Looks like seven.”
“Six, seven, what’s the difference?”
“Well then,” I said. “You feeling up for a good kosher deli sandwich?”
“I’d be up for eating bark, at this point.”
“Well, hopefully it won’t come to that point,” I said.

Monday, November 2, 2009

Our Trip to London, Part the First


The next day, The Drunkard and I decided that it would be as good a time as any to go to London. Unlike many people we had met, the two of us had no assignments to complete before our seminars and, to sweeten the deal, our seminars were not held until the following Thursday. So, the next morning around ten, we met outside The Pavilion and started walking towards one of the train stations in town. On the way, we ran across The Student, huddled behind a bush outside the main café on campus.
The Drunkard motioned for me to stop, crept up behind The Student, and crouched down. “Piss off another boyfriend?”
The Student leapt up and let out a squeal sort of like one which a trod-upon hamster would emit. He turned, saw The Drunkard, and said, “Ah, you. Well, if you must know, yes.”
“Misdirecting your mojo, my friend.”
“Thanks for telling me,” The Student said, peering over the bush. “Good, he’s gone. Hell of a big Scotsman, this time. I’m thinking about just giving up hope. I was on the verge of being in five fights in rapid succession last night.”
“Never fear, my modern-day D’Artagnan,” The Drunkard said, standing up and slapping The Student on the back, “one day the law of averages shall work in your favor.”
“Thank you, that is immensely comforting,” The Student said, shooting a glance towards the Registry building.
“Say,” I said, “The Drunkard and I are making our way to London for the day. Going to go for a nice meander and see if we can get some challah. How about you come along? It would certainly beat hiding in bushes all day and jumping from tight spot to tight spot.”
The Student nodded and said, “I don’t see why not. The only thing I had planned today was an extended walk around town, and I’ve already done that three or four times this week.”
“Besides,” said The Drunkard, “now you can hit on taken girls in another city!”
“I’d quote Job,” said The Student with a voice that only the sufferer could manage, “but I’d be worried that God might take that as a challenge.”

Canterbury had—and, barring a catastrophic implosion of the rail system in the United Kingdom, I would imagine still has—two train stations: Canterbury East, and Canterbury West. One, the East station, was across from the bus station, next to a snooker club (snooker is a game similar to billiards, but different enough to be completely confusing), and seemingly infested with chavs—the individuals who summoned a then-unknown Brooklyn aspect of my personality that was, apparently terrifying. The other, altogether much nicer on account of its proximity to a farmers’ market (it is a well known fact that people who go to farmers’ markets are completely and utterly harmless), was closer to the University and, it being early in the morning, we decided to go to the West station.
So, we paid for our tickets (“Extortionate,” said The Student; “Ri-fuckin-diculous. Next time I’m walking,” said The Drunkard) and waited for our train on the second platform. It was a crisp day, but sunny. If I had to guess, I would have said that it was around sixty degrees outside—quite different from the weather in Nashville, where it was probably still eighty degrees despite autumn’s presence. We checked the arrival time, noticed that the train still had five minutes until it arrived, and I began to hum. On a personal note, I’ve always hated waiting for transportation to come. Even something like an elevator—I couldn’t stand it. How are you supposed to come up with conversation that will last for a couple minutes and then stop? It is really—
“So,” said The Drunkard to The Student, thankfully cutting short my train of thought, “what was this one like?”
The Student, I noticed, had a face he made when he had to ask someone to repeat themselves. He was the only person I’ve ever met who had anything like it. Raised eyebrows, a self-conscious grin, and a very sudden politeness (not that The Student wasn’t the most polite out of our group, he was; it was more that the politeness spiked to twice the normal levels of politeness). “Sorry?” he asked, making the face.
The Drunkard quickly checked his watch and took a drink from a flask. “The girl,” he said, with a wince from whatever it was that he just finished. “What was she like—and, next, what was the boyfriend like?”
“Well,” said The Student, digging his hands into his blazer pockets, “the boyfriend’s an easy question. Body build something like Fabio with the temperament of Mr. Hyde. Thankfully, he wasn’t altogether smart, as I managed to hide from him behind a bush. The girl, though. Ah,” he remarked, glancing down the train tracks with a bizarre smile on his face.
A few moments passed until The Drunkard gently coughed into his hand.
The Student snapped back to reality. “Ah, right. Well, she was Belgian. Beautiful, beautiful girl. Pale skin. You might call it an alabaster hue.”
“Alabaster?” asked The Drunkard. “You hanging around The Writer?”
The Student blushed. “No, I do have some taste in friendships, thank you. It’s just… the language. Er, the emotion. Got swept away. Don’t you get that feeling?”
The Drunkard took another swig from the flask. “What feeling?”
“You know, like you’ve been thwacked outside the head with something. You see stars, but none of the pain you get when you’ve actually been thwacked outside the head. Extreme happiness, I’d call it. Closest to nirvana you could get on Earth. I don’t know, Drunkard, I just start talking like I’m some damned Romantic poet; strange thing is, I hate reading those besotted opium addicts more than most other sort of literature. You don’t ever feel like that?”
The Drunkard stared at The Student for about a half a minute, grunted, took another swig from his flask, and said, “I’m going to have a quick piss. Hold the train if it comes.” He went inside to use the toilets.
The Student turned to me. “I think I hit a cord in our inebriated friend.”
I nodded. “That would make sense. There are a few things which drive a man to drink as much as he does and rejected love is definitely one of them--though, truth be told, I'd bet that he's suffering from all three of them.” I looked up at the screen. The train was delayed a further five minutes. “Belgian, eh?”
The Student shrugged. “Doesn’t really matter, does it? Borders are artificial constructs, and language is a temporary hindrance.”
“Religion?”
The Student snorted. “The last time I was in synagogue was—oh shit, Yom Kippur was yesterday, wasn’t it?”
I checked my calendar on my phone. “Ah,” I said, “sure was.”
“Sure was what?” asked The Drunkard, returning from his restroom excursion.
“Yesterday,” said The Student, “was Yom Kippur.”
The Drunkard shrugged. “Last year, instead of fasting, I ate bacon and sausages on a hike. Doesn’t really matter. Superstition’s superstition regardless of what name it goes under.”
Normally, I would agree with him. However, growing up in the tradition like I did, I was slightly surprised by what he said. Even the Jews-turned-atheists I knew fasted out of habit on Yom Kippur; it was just ingrained in our personalities. That’s not to say that The Drunkard wasn’t making sense—because he was—it was just… well, it’s Yom Kippur!
“Anyway,” said The Student, “religion isn’t a big deal. I’ve been shot down over much more inane things than religion. And, honestly, except on Sunday, who gives a damn?”
“And Wednesday,” said The Drunkard.
“Right.”
“Friday for the Muslims,” I said.
“Wednesday and Friday, right.”
“Oh, fuck, Friday night through Saturday night,” said The Drunkard.
“And the Sabbath, that goes without saying.”
“And then Lent,” I said. “Lent’s a pretty big deal for the Christians.”
“Okay.”
“Easter,” said The Drunkard.
“Christmas,” I said.
“Ramadan.”
“Advent.”
“Then you got all those saints’ days sprinkled around the calendar for the Catholics.”
“Oy,” I said, “there’s a lot of them.”
Thankfully, the train arrived at this moment and spared The Student from further listing of reasons why religion would matter to some people on, it turned out, an increasingly larger portion of the calendar.