...all the downright dangerous shenanigans
going on in the world, I create.
"Deliver us from Evil, one Beasturd at a time. Amen." |
I must thank Mr. Porretto for the opportunity to share my work with you, his trusting readers (fingers crossed that a few of you will thank him, too). I passionately favor Jeffersonian Liberty; passionately oppose Hypocrites of all colors, flavors, and shapes, regardless their field of expertise or station in life. If, through my work, I can show them-and-their-kind the Fool and/or dangerous, I will have succeeded. I know I'm not the best creative I can be, so I honestly ask for your help in getting closer to that goal. Tell me if my characters aren't likeable/believable or are just plain MEH; ditto for their quandaries or solutions to their problems. Additionally, let me know if I use too many: obvious anagrams, commas, far out foreign words, or am just too wordy, generally. (I probably won't ever give up: hyphenated-words-and-phrases, ellipses...or parentheticals. You can try.)
I write fiction for several reasons, not the least of which is to shut-the-voices-up :-). (Of course that only encourages the ones previously in the wings to step to center stage, so off we go again.) Many ideas come out of pure frustration noted above, which is primarily "political" - and fiction therefore serves as a way to vent, constructively.
I'm pretty quick to assess news and other information, so unfortunately can come across as purely "opinionated." But believe me, in the face of compelling feedback in the case of my creative work, or new facts about some real-world issue? I'll readily accept my mere-humanity (maybe get a little embarrassed) and change my method or my mind, depending.
You'll find my work quite different from the other Liberty-Literature out there. My theory is that I choose "magical realism" or "paranormal elements" because I'm a bit too timid for the times, and therefore for my own good! By weaving in such otherworldly- or fantastic- abilities, my good-guys and gals can often avoid the whole getting down & dirty & bloody & gutsy. They avoid (as do I, as their "cinematographer") all the throat-cutting, all the exploding skulls, and all those beyond messy crime-scene cleanups and explanations. (Just so you know, I'm not opposed to such doings. For instance I take pride in being in the first wave of Rob Olive/"Essential Liberty" fandom; find my Amazon review here.)
The following is my first offering at the Torch. It was written in April and first posted on my writing blog.
"Three if by fire"
Part 1 of 5 - "Don't change horses..."
Yoshi Pratt bolted out of the
nightmare and straight up in bed. The 26-year-old D.C. native’s hand flew to
his heart. He pressed mightily, as if the wildly beating thing would break free
at the next beat…or the next.
It didn’t. He threw off the now
cold clammy sheet and swung his legs over the side of the bed. He couldn’t stay
up. Still too many hours before the alarm would screech.
From the bathroom, by shear
contrast in the dark, the mussed up bed’s expanse of pale colored cotton-innards
glowed. He grabbed the top sheet; it was far from dry. He flipped on the
overhead fan. His dream, like the fan on low, was still going around and around
his mind lazily. Though Yoshi didn’t think much about politics normally, the pulse-pounding
final scenes had been nothing but.
When it came to Washington
machinations and his so-called civic-duties, he’d describe himself as frozen in
time. 26-going-on-18.
After college he’d tried living at
the ground zero of American politics. Had dreams of working at its newspaper, The
Post. That dream died, however, with multiple rejections; quickly followed by a
bailing roommate, then a near-zero bank balance. He preferred renting a stranger’s
basement than bunk for “free” with parent-babysitters in his boyhood room. Now
he lived just over the river and through a wooded part of Virginia.
Though he’d finally been hired by
a suburban newspaper, the 18-year-old in him was still angry at The Post’s
rebuff. To “punish” their stupidity he purposefully donned a political
cone-of-silence. Lifted it for one thing only: the Presidential Elections. He
went back under the cone after the inaugural parade. This time the election
“cycle” seemed to last years.
“To torture us longer,” Yoshi’d
joked.
Finally the inauguration was imminent,
set for tomorrow, April 12th instead of January something, to somehow
honor the President’s latest role model. Yoshi’d cover the Swearing-in ceremony
and then traipse along the parade route to join other “credentialed
journalists” for the latest Constitutional Amendment ceremony. In the Senate
gallery if he was lucky – more probably, standing outside, watching on the big screens,
along with the estimated one-million plus mob. He hated crowds as much as he
hated politics.
The top sheet was dry now, thanks
to the breeze from the fan, combined with wafting it two handed, like a
ribbon-dancer’s supine workout. The slender young man tucked himself under the
covers and stared at the ceiling; nightmare imagery crowded back in…
He was back at Inauguration Central,
feeling so far out of his league he might have as well been in outer space,
maybe beyond the entire Milky Way. Where the stars of his now-showing nightmare
looked to be from.
And all he could do was watch in
horror.
And of course the aliens looked
like big lizards…sometimes…when their human-projections wavered. Which was a
lot. Apparently politicians made their lizard-blood boil; affected their
telepathic powers.
For some reason all the
talking-head reporters (who always made Yoshi’s blood boil) remained motionless
and mum. That’d been the first clue none of it was real. The second was the
lanyard around his neck. Sure the photo was him, but in bold it’d said “W.P.”
As if…
Back at college in ’08 Yoshi, in
lockstep and in the typical student’s haze, lost his political-virginity to candidate
Obama. A case of politically naïve optimism. Of trusting in the promises of the
freshest-looking, or smoothest-speaking, or barrier-est breaking politico. Trusting
reporters’ glowing deconstructions and crazy leg tingles. It had helped him
decide on a journalism career. But he’d do it right. Honestly. Objectively.
Without the tingles.
At twenty-six he knew better. Now
he slogged through his days like a philosophical schizophrenic: half
blindly-believing, half cynically-skeptical.
Hope and Despair.
But tomorrow the so-called
National News’ team “needed him” thanks to some contagious upper respiratory
thing. And Yoshi’d have to slog into the City alone since only the at-home anorexic
sick chick could fit in the hybrid’s back seat…with all the gear. Have to use
the Metro, get jostled, and then, the kicker for being competent at his “real”
work: confinement on the Mall, elbow-to-elbow, in a sea of mostly unemployed
true believers. All day.
I finally get used to playing gardener and…
He wondered if his pretend-human dream-lizards
got punished for actually doing their
job?
Now, drifting, he wondered too,
if they gardened. He blinked lazily, eyes heavy.
The scene in the Senate chamber rewound.
It was just prior to all hell breaking loose. Dream-Yoshi looked around. Saw
straight through the lizards’ disguises this time. They sure look like different species of lizards. Some must eat vegetables. But even if
none do, he reasoned, maybe they’d be
a gardener’s best friend, like ladybugs…only bigger.
Actual-Yoshi wrote about Urban
Agriculture for the suburban weekly. Shorter pieces went up daily online. Growing-your-own
was bigger than ever now. The President had made an especially big deal of it during
the campaign. Urged everyone to start a “Fiscal-Victory Garden.” Penned $billions
in grants. Which created several dozen new companies (and new jobs) so the craze
kicked off in high-gear.
Back then it also meant more
“jobs” for conspiracy nuts. With new Constitutional Amendments and the man’s
subsequent run for a third term, the wackos perpetually burned the midnight
recycled-vegetable-oil.
Ever since dirty fingernails from
veggie gardening had been de rigueur,
especially for new writers who wanted to keep their first ever non-manual-labor
job. After all, if he hadn’t pitched the “write locally” angle and his
newspaper hadn’t displayed some backbone (simply followed the lead of the parent
company and re-printing their syndicated gardener) he’d still be down in the “minimum-wage
‘maleroom’.”
Instead he got a company laptop
and ample clear-space in an employee courtyard to start practicing, post haste, what he’d soon be preaching
in print.
The 26-year-old Master’s in
Journalism lucked in. Moved on up: to
an above ground sorta-near-a-window office cubicle in The Crystal City.
A voice in his dream proclaimed, “Don’t
change horses in mid-stream…” and, Poof! He was outside. Great claps of thunder
accompanied a collapsing grey stone-pier bridge. Tunnel vision assured he’d see
its slow motion fall with the terror of the pedestrians, and be unable to
escape the magnified random clip-clopping then skidding of horse-drawn
carriages over the brink.
He’d seen the catastrophe earlier
- except with modern cars that time. And he’d been in one of them, falling to
his personal watery doom.
Eyes again flew open to a
pre-dawn reality, and, again, he feared falling asleep. He should reach for his laptop. Should
find out if something had happened to
any of the canal-bridges into the City. Had they been sabotaged by terrorists?
His eyes, closing, had other plans.
That “horses” slogan goes though everybody’s bad dreams, he
thought. Burned into the voters’ minds all last summer and fall. Difference was
Yoshi’d believed the saying. Even before the ads. He was no mind-controlled
robot - as some extremists continued to claim the President’s fans were.
Yoshi’d wanted to use his
Master’s. Oh, how he wanted to make a difference in something other than
peoples’ diets! But like the ads and the voice in Yoshi’s head cautioned,
changing horses was dangerous. “Change” of the employment kind could be the
kiss of a slow death. On the streets or under
a bridge.
The campaign had created some
indelible imagery. A badly-timed change that needed no voice over. A visceral video
that of course went viral, with its river-crossing Uncle Sam figure on
horseback, trying to switch to a younger more rested mount. Only to be washed
not just down-some-stream but swirling in a riptide around D.C.’s
circumference, in its new steep walled terrorism-preventing canal that political
opponents called the King’s Moat.
Well, Sam bobbed viciously as storm
clouds gathered overhead and iconic City-monuments sped by in the background.
Finally the poor man, an icon himself, plunged head first, over the Nation’s Niagara
Falls-sized fiscal-cliff that magically appeared. His red, white & blue
patterned top hat flew off one way and he the other, white beard whipping in
the wind, before getting lost from view in the mist-covered murky waters of
Change. Then came the heroic music and with the fade-to-black the campaign’s
other tagline, “Make history…Again.”
Yoshi’s own snoring woke him up
this time, majestic strains of some movie soundtrack still echoing in his mind.
His dream-Sam had been riding a normal horse at first, but this time he survived
the Change. The white haired geezer hopped spryly onto the back of a dinosaur-like
lizard at least 20 hands high, and the creature
- like some fleshed out transformer - unfurled leathery wings (in the
nick of time, of course) to flap-flap-flap old Sammy back up and out of certain
death at the bottom of the new D.C. canal.
Is this a warning? Yoshi wondered.
He tossed and turned. He punched
his pillow. Used the remote to change the speed of the overhead fan. Faster,
slower, then off.
If it was a warning, he wanted to sleep. Was desperate to drift off. Would pay
attention to all the details this time.
“Sleep,” he told himself
silently, “Sleep. Now…” He lay unmoving. Slowed his breathing like he’d seen
yoga teachers doing. Finally he was drifting off…
End of Part 1 of 5
NOTE: some of the original formatting went a little cuckoo copying from MSWord-to-Wordpress on these links,
The "grammar and spelling nazi" in me started muttering partway through the third paragraph. He retreated to the bunker when I promised to say something...anything.
ReplyDeleteAnd now, I've said it ;)