500 Words From Speedy Shine

There are worse hoomans than my Smelly Old Man.  He loves me.  I know, because he says so about 723 times a day.  He gives lots of kisseses.  He lets me get up on his lap when he is trying to do his worksers and when he has to talk to other hoomans whose faces show up, but I can’t jump on them and give them kisseses. 

He’s too tired now to get crabby when I make my poopsers in The Room By The Outside.  He just picks them up when there’s enough of them for it to be worth bending over to get them.  He always uses all four of his paws when he trieses to get up.  Sometimes he has to try more than one or two times.  He falleded down the other Sunshine Time when he triededed to stand up.  I gave him kisseses and then he could do it.  Speedy Shine Kisseses have poopernatural powers.

I’ve been with him now for two Cold Times and a Warm Time.  I make more poopsers in The Room By The Outside in the Cold Times because I don’t like to be in The Outside then.  I get all shivery.  But then I jump in The Smelly Old Man’s lap, and he warms me up. 

I’ve met 9 other hoomans.  He was here for 5 of them.  Smelly Old Man gets mad at me when I jump on them, but I have to because otherwise they might not know how much I love them, and then that would be bad.  Everyone needs to know that Speedy Shine loves them.  That’s what I am here to do.  Except one time for a minute when I was having a pee-pee time and one of the other hoomans thought she could pick me up, so I tried to bite her.  I told her I was sorry later, but she wouldn’t let me give her any kisseses.  She went away after that.  Other hoomans never stay here for the long time.

When we have Sleepy Time, I get under the coverses and cuddle the Smelly Old Man.  He tells me that I’m The Best Cuddler.  Nobody else ever cuddles him, though, so how would HE know? 

Sometimes during Sleepy Time, Smelly Old Man’s chest stops moving, so I have to jump on it.  I put my whiskerses on his face, and sometimes I put myself under his paw, so he has to pet me.  When he wakeses up I give kisseses and then I go back to sleep.  He doesn’t get mad because he has Sleepy Time whenever he wants. 

My other hooman before him used to get mad at me lots and lots, especially when I would chew the floofers in the soft things, so then he took me to The Place With The Other Dogsers.  I was in a little cage.  Smelly Old Man took me out of there, and now he’s mine.  You can’t have him.

Willy Loman and Me

WILLY: Oh, yeah, my father lived many years in Alaska.  He was an adventurous man.  We’ve got quite a little streak of self reliance in our family.  I thought I’d go out with my older brother and try to locate him, and maybe settle in the North with the old man.  And I was almost decided to go, when I met a salesman in the Parker House. His name was Dave Singleman.  And he was eighty-four years old, and he’d drummed merchandise in thirty-one states.  And old Dave, he’d go up to his room, y’understand, put on his green velvet slippers — I’ll never forget — and pick up his phone and call the buyers, and without ever leaving his room, at the age of eighty-four, he made his living.  And when I saw that, I realized that selling was the greatest career a man could want.  ‘Cause what could be more satisfying than to be able to go, at the age of eighty four, into twenty or thirty different cities, and pick up a phone, and be remembered and loved and helped by so many different people? Do you know?  When he died — and by the way he died the death of a salesman, in his green velvet slippers in the smoker of the New York, New Haven and Hartford, going into Boston — when he died, hundreds of salesmen and buyers were at his funeral.  Things were sad on a lotta trains for months after that.  In those days there was personality in it, Howard.  There was respect, and comradeship, and gratitude in it.  Today, it’s all cut and dried, and there’s no chance for bringing friendship to bear — or personality.  You see what I mean?  They don’t know me any more… If I had forty dollars a week — that’s all I’d need.  Forty dollars, Howard.  Howard, the year Al Smith was nominated, your father came to me and…  I’m talking about your father!  There were promises made across this desk!  You mustn’t tell me you’ve got people to see — I put thirty-four years into this firm, Howard, and now I can’t pay my insurance!  You can’t eat the orange and throw the peel away — a man is not a piece of fruit!

Willy Loman and I have much in common.  We both spent our lives doing what we thought was the best thing a person could do.  For him, it was selling.  I was never any good at selling.  I don’t think Willy was either, but I know that about myself, and I don’t think he did.  

I spent my life teaching Elementary School because I thought it was the best thing a person could do.  It was a chance to change the world by influencing future generations.  I earned enough money to support myself in a modest fashion, and, at the height of my financial success, I owned a house.  Well done, me!  

Funny, y’know? After all the highways, and the trains, and the appointments, and the years, you end up worth more dead than alive

— Willy Loman

Funny, you know?  After all the classrooms, and the students, and the meetings, and the years, you end up worthless either dead or alive.  

Willy at least had life insurance.  I had a policy once, I think, more than 30 years ago, but I know nothing about it today.  When I die, no one gets anything.  My nephew might want the computer he built for me back.  I hope someone will wipe it entirely clean before anyone sees its contents.  On the other hand, I’ll be dead, so what of it?  I have a TV.  It might get you $20 at a generous Thrift Store.    It won’t cover the cost of getting rid of all my books, and movies, and music that no one else will want since you can get them all now on your phone and they require no physical storage space.  

After 29 years of teaching, the government for whom I taught has decided I’m not worth the money it costs to pay rent in the cheapest place in town.  Forget utilities, ignore groceries, perish the thought of even owning a car, no money for entertainment of even the cheapest variety, and to hell with the dog.  

Willy thought life was about being well-liked.  I never did.  On the other hand, for reasons passing understanding, I seem to be.  I say this because it’s only the fact that people love me that keeps me alive, both financially and psychologically.  

I’m alive because my best friend’s boyfriend is renting me his old place for half price, which is the very maximum I can afford and still make it to the end of the month.  I’m a liability to him.  He could sell this place, pay off all his bills, and have enough money in the bank to live comfortably for quite some time without ever setting foot in a workplace.  I’m screwing up his life simply by being alive.  He would never say that, because he’s a kind man, but that doesn’t change that objective fact.

And that isn’t enough to sustain me anyway.  I have another friend, who I really ought to call a Patron Saint in my Gratitudes if I can get her permission to do so, who sends me grocery money every month.  The state of Arizona believes I deserve $20 a month to buy groceries.  And then they cut it off, apparently, this month.  I didn’t even get that.  If not for my friend, I would live off nothing but ramen and pretzels. 

The generosity of my landlord and my friend still isn’t enough to sustain me.  I couldn’t pay for my phone (one of The People on The Porch tells me I could get a free phone service, but I’m too scared to try.), my cigarettes (yes, I know I shouldn’t smoke.  I’m working on that.  Life is stressful when one’s existence is a liability.  Giving up an addiction of more than 30 years is more difficult than you probably think.  It doesn’t go well for Speedy Shine when I go too long.), any of the streaming services that are much cheaper and infinitely better than cable, or the ability to do anything extra.  I bought a DVD rack a couple of months ago, and my guilt is still overwhelming.  I nearly ran out of food because I did that.  It was $50 on Offer Up.  

With Patreon and Anchor, I make enough to make it to the end of the month.  If I stopped doing my show, I would be psychologically and financially ruined.  Every time I lose a supporter, I go into a depression for at least an hour or two.  Speedy Shine has to remind me that I’m worth loving.  He gives me kisses sometimes, and he knows how to cuddle better than any living being I’ve ever encountered.  

There is always a lot of talk about who deserves what.  I hate all of it.  I spent my life doing what I thought was right, and today I have no sense of independence.  I depend on far too many people just to survive.  And the minute I say that, you can be absolutely certain that someone is saying, “Well you should have…” or “Well, you shouldn’t have…”  Those words always make me angry.  And since anger is caused by fear, I must ask what I fear.  What do those words make me fear?  They make me fear that people will suffer.  They will be homeless.  They will be hungry.  I don’t like that.  And why do they suffer?  They suffer because of Judgmental Bullshit.  

We have convinced ourselves that there is only one right way to live, and it’s ours.  Those who don’t conform to our standards deserve to suffer.  No.  They don’t.  

I don’t know why someone made the choices they did at any given moment.  Maybe I would have made a different decision.  Maybe, in those circumstances, I wouldn’t have.  There’s really no way of knowing.  As it turns out, I’m not God.  Are you?  And, if you think you are, could you please send me a little of whatever you’re smoking?  It’s obviously better than what I can get at the Dispensary.

My best friend of 13 years, who I know better than nearly anyone on the planet, frequently makes decisions that mystify me.  She dates men who don’t make her happy.  I know this because I’ve spent 13 years hearing about them.  She knows they make her unhappy, but she continues dating them for years after she knows this.  Is that the decision I would make?  No, I don’t think so.  So, shall I decide that she deserves to be unhappy, and should I therefore make no effort to help her?  No, I don’t think so.  She’s no better off for that.  I love her, so, even though she makes decisions I don’t understand, I do all I can to help her.  And she’s saved my life more than once.  

If I can’t understand her choices when I’ve known her so well and so long, how am I supposed to understand the choices of a stranger?  How does it help me to pass judgment on the homeless.  “If they didn’t want to be homeless, they should have…” Are you kidding me?  How do you know why they made the choices that inevitably wound them up in a place where they have no shelter for the night?  And who are you to pass judgment on them?  

I made a set of decisions that wound me up being entirely dependent on the kindness of strangers.  How do I know which ones were wrong?  Did I make a decision that caused me to become diabetic?  If I did, what was that decision?  How would you suggest that I go back and change it?  Q isn’t coming by this afternoon to offer me the opportunity to change a moment in my life.  And when he offered it to Captain Picard, it went very badly for Jean Luc.  Marc Antony offered me an opportunity in “Horace’s Final Five.”  You might want to listen to that to see how well that went.  (It’s Episode 50 if you’re new here.)

“Well, you should make more money off of your podcast!”  

I would love to do that, but I’m not a marketer, and I don’t want to spend any of the little time I have left in an effort to become Willy Loman.  I’m not getting on Discord and Twitch.  I don’t understand them, and I don’t have the mental capacity to learn anymore.  If someone wants to be in charge of marketing my show, I will be happy to split with them any extra money they make for me.  It turns out no one is offering to do that.  So, as Kenny Loggins is singing right now, “This is it.”  He and Michael McDonald seem much happier about that than I am.  

Willy Loman had big dreams.  All of them were failures.  I avoid big dreams.  I can fail perfectly well without them, and I would prefer to save the accompanying disappointment.  

I don’t say he’s a great man.  Willy Loman never made a lot of money.  His name was never in the paper.  He’s not the finest character that ever lived.  But he’s a human being, and a terrible thing is happening to him.  So attention must be paid.  He’s not to be allowed to fall into his grave like an old dog.  Attention, attention must be finally paid to such a person.

We live in a world controlled by money.  It works out well for some, and it’s a curse for others.  It’s not the world I want.  I work to change it, nearly every week on this show.  I don’t get anywhere.

What a proposition, ts, ts.  Terrific, terrific.  ‘Cause she’s suffered, Ben, the woman has suffered.  You understand me?  A man can’t go out the way, he came in, Ben, a man has got to add up to something.  You can’t, you can’t — You gotta consider, now.  Don’t answer so quick.  Remember, it’s a guaranteed twenty-thousand-dollar proposition.  Now look, Ben, I want you to go through the ins and outs of this thing with me.  I’ve got nobody to talk to, Ben, and the woman has suffered, you hear me? 

BEN: What’s the proposition? 

WILLY: It’s twenty thousand dollars on the barrelhead.  Guaranteed, gilt-edged, you understand?  

BEN: You don’t want to make a fool of yourself.  They might not honor the policy. 

WILLY: How can they dare refuse?  Didn’t I work like a coolie to meet every premium on the nose?  And now they don’t pay off?  Impossible! 

BEN: It’s called a cowardly thing, William. 

WILLY: Why?  Does it take more guts to stand here the rest of my life ringing up a zero?  

BEN: That’s a point, William.  And twenty thousand — that is something one can feel with the hand, it is there. 

WILLY: Oh, Ben, that’s the whole beauty of it!  I see it like a diamond, shining in the dark, hard and rough, that I can pick up and touch in my hand. Not like — like an appointment!  This would not be another damned-fool appointment, Ben, and it changes all the aspects.  Because he thinks I’m nothing, see, and so he spites me.  But the funeral… Ben, that funeral will be massive!  They’ll come from Maine, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire!  All the oldtimers with the strange license plates — that boy will be thunderstruck, Ben, because he never realized — I am known!  Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey — I am known, Ben, and he’ll see it with his eyes once and for all.  He’ll see what I am, Ben!  He’s in for a shock, that boy!

That’s what comes of deciding that money matters more than people.  I understand the choice Willy makes.  (If you’ve never read or seen Death of a Salesman, Willy kills himself after this discussion.  It’s more than 70 years old, so I’m not going to listen to whining about Spoilers.)  It’s a decision I consider every night before I go to sleep.  It’s one Speedy Shine convinces me not to make.  No one gets $20,000 if I die, but lots of people will be financially better off in many ways.  If the world really is all about money, it’s difficult to conclude anything apart from the idea that world would be better off without me.  The government even gets to save $1363 a month.  

Is it just possible that there is something that matters more than money?

LINDA: Forgive me, dear.  I can’t cry.  I don’t know what it is, I can’t cry.  I don’t understand it.  Why did you ever do that?  Help me Willy, I can’t cry.  It seems to me that you’re just on another trip.  I keep expecting you.  Willy, dear, I can’t cry.  Why did you do it?  I search and search and I search, and I can’t understand it, Willy.  I made the last payment on the house today.  Today, dear.  And there’ll be nobody home.  We’re free and clear.  We’re free.  We’re free… We’re free…

All the quotations in this episode are from Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller.

Horace’s Run For The Roses

Henderson, Nebraska
Sunday, September 28, 1969
2:03 PM

And it’s run for the roses
As fast as you can
You fate is delivered
Your moment’s at hand
It’s the chance of a lifetime
In a lifetime of chance
And it’s high time you joined
In the dance

Dan Fogelberg

Grandpa sighed, set his newspaper down, and got up slowly. It cost him some effort, and he grunted and pushed himself up using the arm of his regal chair for support. “I’m getting up,” he moaned. Having made it to his feet, he sighed deeply, looked at Horace, and gave him a warning look. “I’ll be back presently. Do not leave this room.”

“What will I do?”

“Reflect in Solitude,” muttered Grandpa, as he shuffled off to the kitchen.

“Damp it!” mumbled Horace, and then slapped his hand over his mouth. He looked around guiltily to ensure no one had heard his horrible language. Satisfied he was secure, he went to the couch where he found his old black and white, one-eyed, tattered Teddy Bear laying. He picked him up. “You know what, Teddy?”

“What?” asked Teddy. His nonexistent lips didn’t move. Horace’s did.

“Grownups are poops. They make you stay in the room. They never let you throw your Batterang. And they never even let you watch…” Horace’s eyes went to the TV. “Maybe there’s a baseball game,” he said carrying Teddy to the television.

“Or Batman,” squeaked Teddy.

“Nah,” said Horace, turning on the TV, “he’s only on Wednesdays and Thursdays.”

The black and white TV glowed just a little, and in a moment, the sound of Herb Alpert and The Tijuana Brass’s “Whipped Cream” came from it. In another moment, the picture faded in. A voice off screen said, “And now here’s the host of The Dating Game… Jim Lange!” There was applause, and then a man walked on stage. “Thank you, Johnny O,” said the man, “and welcome, ladies and gentlemen to The Dating Game. Tonight, sit back and watch while we bring you what we hope… will be the beginnings of a lifelong love affair.” He winked at Horace and Teddy. “And let’s meet the contestants now.”

It was then that Grandpa returned carrying two plates with coffee cake.

“Terminate that tripe instantly,” said Grandpa.

Horace looked up. “Huh?”

***

Wells, Maine
Friday, October 19, 1979
4:17 PM

“That Smut, Piss, and Corruption, or whatever they’re called,” said Hal.

“You mean Earth, Wind, and Fire?” Horace asked, turning the music down.

“Right… whatever you call it; it’s awful.” Hal Singleman, Horace’s father, was a tall man, but not terribly heavy. He was known for his nearly Vulcan calm and intellect. And he had no tolerance for things he thought were less than great Art.

“We’re playing it tonight at the football game. I really have to know what I’m doing.”

“There’s nothing of value to do with that.”

“Well, the fans may disagree.”

“They’re there to watch over-sized boys knock each other over. Whom do you feel the need to impress?”

Jimmy, Horace’s brown haired, bespectacled best friend laughed. “Women,” he told Hal.

“Women who are impressed by trash are not worth impressing.”

“There’s a case to be made, Professor Singleman,” said Jimmy, “that Earth, Wind, and Fire are not trash. They are, if nothing else, three of the Four Elements.”

“Right. The Four Elements turned out also to be trash. Don’t they teach about atoms in high school Science Classes anymore?”

“Yes,” Jimmy said as he pushed his glasses up his nose. “They also teach the beginnings of Science. It was a reasonable guess in the absence of any data.”

Hal was about to reply, when Horace said, “I just think September is a cool song. It was Sheldon who talked Mr. Spicer into doing it.”

“Your brother is an expert in music, but his taste in it still leaves much to be desired. And he’s your teacher, so be… you know… respectful.”

“Student teacher,” Horace corrected him. “We’ll keep it down.”

“That’s an excellent idea.”

Hal left the room, closing the door behind him.

“I know it’s ridiculous,” Horace told Jimmy, “but I really do wonder whether she’s happy. I mean, she looks that way from all I can see, but how do you know what’s really inside of someone… you know?”

“You don’t. You can only guess based on the outside. And she looks great from the outside.”

***

Henderson, Nebraska
Sunday, September 28, 1969
2:07 PM

“Turn that horrible stuff off, Horace. Your Grandfather is a Man of God.”

“Oh, it’s not horrible Mrs. Fiddle Bottom. It’s Ed’s Vacational.”

Owen handed Horace a plate, and asked, “What’s Ed’s Vacational?”

“You know,” said Horace. Mrs. Fertlebom handed him the glass of milk. “Like Sesame Street. Thank you, Mrs. Fiddle Bottom.”

“What’s Sesame Street?” asked the rapidly aging, nearly round woman.

“It’s a show with this big yellow bird, and a big hairy green monster who lives in a garbage can, and there’s this frog-”

“Right,” said Grandpa. “Garbage. Turn it off.”

“But it’s good for me. Mom says it teaches stuff.”

“Your mother never learned anything from this show,” said Owen as he eased himself slowly into his chair. Again, there was a grunting sound. “Thank you, Mrs. Fertlebom,” Grandpa said, hoping Horace would catch on.

Horace didn’t. “No, not this one. Sesame Street. Sesame Street is an Ed’s Vacational show because it teaches stuff.”

“What do you learn from frogs and birds?”

“I hope it’s not birds and bees,” said Mrs. Fertlebom. When Owen glared at her, she fell silent. She descended upon the couch.

“I can sound out hard words. There’s this man in a cartoon who sounds out words, and then something funny happens to him. One time he sat in some wet paint.”

“I can barely control my laughter at the man’s misfortune. And what do you learn from monsters? Do they teach you how to terrorize civilian populations for fun and profit?”

“No,” said Horace, shaking his head. “We haven’t learned that yet. But, Kermit the Frog and Grover, who is this funny blue monster, taught us about Near and Far the other day. Can I show you?”

Grandpa sipped his milk and then looked down at Horace. He and Horace were both afflicted with milk mustaches. “Do I have a choice?”

Horace put his weight on his hand, got up slowly, grunted, and moaned, “I’m getting up.” He then leapt instantly to his feet. Grandpa rolled his eyes. “Okay. Right now I’m near.” He suddenly ran out of the room and down the hall. “Now I’m far!”

Grandpa wondered where Horace was after a moment, and he leaned back in his chair to look down the hall. “Horace!”

In another moment, he heard Horace’s voice, singing, “Na na na na na na na na na na na na na….” and when Horace reappeared he had a blue towel tied around his neck. “Batman!” He wore a mask and a San Francisco Giants cap. He plopped in front of the TV again. “Now I’m near again.”

“You’re also weird again. Now turn that off.”

“But it’s -”

“Ed’s Vacational. I know. What do you think you’re going to learn from that show?”

“I’m going to watch two people falling in love.”

“Not unless that show goes on for 40 years, you’re not.” Grandpa finished his coffee cake.

***

Wells, Maine
Friday, October 19, 1979
7:27PM

“You really have to stop staring, Horace. You’ve been looking at her for like 40 years.”

Horace looked to his left. Gary Marx, a better drummer who was a year Horace’s junior, was glaring at him. Gary was not as tall as Horace, but he was built much more sturdily.

“What do you mean?”

“Rhiannon. You gotta quit staring at her.”

“Well, she’s sort of the conductor. I have to watch to make sure I’m playing along properly with the cheerleaders.”

“Yeah. You never look at Norm Spicer that way.” Gary stuffed some popcorn in his mouth.

Horace smiled. “Yeah. Okay.” He drank his soda.

Gary poked him. “Play!”

Evidently, there had been a touchdown. He couldn’t possibly have cared less. But there was Rhiannon, jumping up and down, and suddenly his attention was absorbed. He played in perfect rhythm with the rest of the drum section. Perhaps she would look up. Perhaps she would see him. Of course, she would have to turn around and face the stands instead of the football field. That would be years from now. He just stared in his adolescent hormone haze.

***

Henderson, Nebraska
Sunday, September 28, 1969
2:13 PM

“They’ll show you something on that show, Horace. But it won’t be love. That’s something different from what you’ll see on this show. On this show, they’ll show you lust, and you don’t want to watch that.”

“What’s lush?”

“It’s when a man and a woman want to commit the sin of adultery together because they like the way each other look.”

“What’s adultery?”

“You sure ask a lot of questions. I think you must be that question mark man.”

“No, you are! You’re the Riddler! Where’s my Batterang?”

“Turn off the TV.”

“But I wanted to see about this Love stuff.”

“Turn off the TV, and I’ll tell you about it.”

“Deal!” yelled Horace leaping to his feet. He went to Grandpa, grabbed his left hand, and shook it.

“Other hand,” said Grandpa, correcting the situation.

Horace turned off the TV. “Well…”

Owen picked up his newspaper. “Well, what?”

“How do you know when you’re in love?”

“How old are you?”

“Seven years old. Almost.”

“Then you’re not.”

“But how will I know when I am if you won’t tell me how I’ll know when I am?”

Grandpa Owen Leal set his newspaper in his lap, sighed, and then adopted his Pastor Leal voice. “Being in love means that you want to spend the rest of your life with someone doing God’s work. Sometimes it even means you want to bring children into the world with them. That’s good if you’re married. Like your mom and dad. They’re in love.”

“So, when you get married, then you fall in love?”

“Oh, I should say not. Never, ever, Horace, get married thinking you’ll fall in love after you get married. You need to be in love a long time before that.”

“Okay… so… if I want to spend my whole life with someone then I’m in love?”

Grandpa rubbed his mustache. “Well, yes, but you have to think about what that really means for a little while. It means every morning, forever and ever and ever, when you get up you’re going to be with that person, and it means they’ll be there every night when you go to bed, and for all the other times too.”

Horace rubbed his milk mustache. “Well, I want to see Mom and Dad every day for the rest of my life. Does that mean I’m in love with them?”

“Heavens no! You love them. That’s different from being in love. Being in love is, well…” He had to think a moment. “Well, if you’re lucky, God might give you one chance really to be in love. Everything else is just something that happens on the way there.”

“Yeah, but what happens?”

“Hmmm…. I guess you might begin to suspect there’s something going on when you can’t stop thinking about some girl. Although, more often than not, that’s just a case of overactive hormones. But, it is a part of it. If you think a girl is really pretty, and you think about her all the time, and if you wonder if she has enough to eat, and if she’s safe, and when nothing makes you happier than making her happy, and all of that sort of thing… well, maybe, just possibly you’re in love. But, I wouldn’t count on it.”

“Are you in love with Grandma, Grandpa?”

Owen frowned. “Do you know what a personal question is?”

“Something Mom says is rude to ask. But I didn’t ask how old you are.”

The smallest beginnings of a smile crossed Owen’s face. “Yes, I’m in love with your Grandmother.”

“Do you think she’s pretty?”

“Of course I do.”

“As pretty as the girls on the TV?”

“Did you ever see your Uncle Melvin’s cornfields?”

Horace nodded.

“They’re pretty aren’t they?”

“I like it when the wind rolls over the corns like it was this big invisible ball in this invisible pinball machine. But that’s not pretty like a girl.”

“Do you like to look at it?”

“Yes.”

“If you like to look at it, it’s pretty. I like to look at your Grandmother the same way I like to look at cornfields or an Austrian mountainside or even…” He trailed off and his eyes became slightly moist. “Have you ever been to Blue Stem Lake?”

Horace shook his head.

“When I was one and twenty….” Grandpa laughed. “Okay, two and twenty, ’tis true, ’tis true!”

“Huh?”

“It’s from a poem. When I was twenty two, I had a cabin out by Blue Stem Lake. I built it with my own two hands.”

“Is this one of those stories where you had to walk twelve miles to school, ‘cuz -”

“No!” snapped Grandpa. “I built if for your Grandmother and me. ‘Course, she never knew she’d be livin’ in it.” He smiled now. It was a genuine, sentimental smile. It seemed to fill his entire being.

“You weren’t married yet?”

“No, no. But, sometimes, she would come out in her daddy’s milk wagon. I remember how I’d hear those bells around the horse’s neck jingling and jangling in the distance, and I would jump up and tidy up the cabin.”

“You could jump up then? You didn’t have to grunt or anything?”

Owen ignored him. “Then she’d stop the wagon out in front of the cabin, and she’d take a bottle of milk out, and she’d come to my door for my weekly delivery. We’d be terribly business like, and I’d thank her for coming so far out of the way, and I’d invite her to stay a while and have some tea and rest up before her long journey home. At first, she would just blush and decline; she had to get home to her Daddy. But, after a while, she took to staying a few minutes. And then she’d stay longer, and sometimes, I even got her to take a long walk by the lake with me, and we’d just listen.”

“What would you listen to?”

“Nothing. Just all the things you can’t really hear, you know? I mean the things no one pays attention to. We’d hear the songs of the birds… the childish gurgling of the water… or maybe just our own voices, saying nothing that mattered, but fitting in very nicely with Nature’s Symphony… Your Grandmother was so beautiful…” He sighed almost rapturously. “And when she’d leave, I’d cut her a rose from the bush I grew outside my door. And she’d say, ‘thank you’ ever so politely… so sweetly… so… so sincerely.”

“Sounds like the story you told us in Sunday School last week.”

Grandpa frowned. “Which one?”

“The one about Adam and Eve.”

“I didn’t tell the story of The Garden of Eden last week.”

“No. That story about the ding-dong voice of Eve and the bird songs.”

He smiled again. “That’s ‘daylong voice of Eve,’ and it’s not a story. It’s a poem. By Robert Frost.”

“Tell it again.”

“Do you really understand that poem?”

“It’s pretty and it has neat words like that Greentree Whitileaf guy has. Dad reads him to me a lot of times.”

“All right….” And Grandpa recited.

 He would declare and could himself believe
That the birds there in all the garden round
From having heard the daylong voice of Eve
Had added to their own an oversound,
Her tone of meaning but without the words.
Admittedly an eloquence so soft
Could only have had an influence on birds
When call or laughter carried it aloft.
Be that as may be, she was in their song.
Moreover her voice upon their voices crossed
Had now persisted in the woods so long
That probably it never would be lost.
Never again would birds' song be the same.
And to do that to birds was why she came.

There was silence for a few blissful moments. And then…

“I’m in love with…”

***

Wells, Maine
Friday, October 19, 1979
8:31 PM

“… Rhiannon Stark.”

“Shut up and march,” shouted Gary as the band took the field. “2, 3, 4!”

And the drums began playing Peg Leg Cadence. The band marched, and Horace looked to the sidelines. Rhiannon wasn’t there.

“Focus!” Gary Marx would grow up to be a Marine, and a good one. He was already practicing his authoritarian tendencies and displaying his love of precision. Horace had neither of those traits. It was all he could do to keep in step with the band.

Suddenly the trumpets blared. Horace flipped the cowbell attached to his snare drum up, and his drumstick upside down. He had practiced the hell out of that. He didn’t want to screw it up.

He pivoted and began giving serious attention to the cowbell performance, playing in his head the song he had been listening to for the last week. He could distinctly hear Maurice White singing, and he could feel the music. He was one with it. He never had talent, but when the moments came, as this one just had, he could play a bit. (Play the original track again. There’s some tricky stuff going on with that cowbell!)

“Trip-el-let!” he could hear his brother yelling at him when he had walked by Horace’s room last night. And he played the triplets correctly. No one in the world knew, but Horace was beaming with pride.

When he turned again, he saw the cheerleaders returning to the field. Rhiannon was holding a fresh soda. She was looking back at the rest of her squad as she trotted to the sidelines. She set her soda down on a folding table, and Horace was forced to turn again and lost sight of her.

He marched. For the first and only time in his life, he marched perfectly. He knew she was there. He had practiced. She had been nice to him in March. She had smiled as she passed him in the hall on Wednesday. This was all he could want.

When the band finished the show, the entire stadium erupted in applause. It was, Horace was certain, because of the cowbell. In another couple of decades, Bruce Dickinson would be proud.

Horace looked over and saw Rhiannon’s eyes glowing with pride, and inside he felt a cold joy. When they started their exit cadence, he saw the football players running onto the field behind the band. Bob, the quarterback, smiled across the field at Rhiannon. Horace’s stomach dropped into his feet. He tripped over it, and Gary grabbed and steadied him.

***

Henderson, Nebraska
Sunday, September 28, 1969
2:18 PM

“I was afraid you’d say something dumb like that.”

“Well, I am!”

“Fine. Tell her. Not me.”

“Do you think I should kiss her?”

“I think you should ask her.”

“What if she says no?”

“Then you don’t kiss her.”

“But what if I want to anyway?”

“That doesn’t matter. Not in the least. And, to be honest, she should probably say no, and you probably shouldn’t ask her.”

“Why?”

“Because you’re too little for that.”

“Why do you think that? I’m old enough to be Batman. Sometimes I’m Captain Kirk, and he kisses girls, and he never asks.”

“Do you know what I think?”

“What?”

“I think I’m an old man, and I think being awake anymore is not in my best interests.”

“Why do old men get tired so soon?”

“Their bodies are probably practicing for The Big Sleep they’ve got coming up. It’s usually unexpected, but if you get to be old enough, you can be ready for departure.”

“What’s The Big Sleep?”

“Huh? Oh! It’s a movie with Humphrey Bogart. I’m going to sleep. You need to mind Mrs. Fertlebom.”

***

Wells, Maine
Friday, October 19, 1979
8:49 PM

The band was off the field, and the football players were streaming onto it. Horace looked up when he heard a scream from among the cheerleaders. He saw Bob Amity grabbing Rhiannon, turning her around, throwing his helmet to the ground, and kissing her full on the mouth. Horace stood frozen, infuriated, for just a moment, and then unsnapped his drum and let it fall to the ground.

His insides were suddenly, it felt, physically burning. His skin turned red. His vision glazed over for a bit, and Rhiannon’s image was nothing more than a glow. Horace had never felt anything like this before. It was anger. It was jealousy. It was horror. He would spend decades afterward wondering whether it had been love. He never decided. At that moment, there was only one decision he could make. Bob had to be stopped. Rhiannon had to be saved. And that’s when Gary grabbed his arm.

“What do you think you’re doing?”

“He can’t do that! He didn’t ask. She didn’t want it.”

“And what did you think you were going to do?”

Horace tried to wrest his arm from Gary’s firm grip. “Stop him!”

Gary smiled. “He’s twice your size. He’s in better physical condition. He’ll kick your pansy ass.”

“I don’t care! Let go!”

Rhiannon was backing away, trying to escape Bob’s grasp, and the football players were whooping and hollering. “Get some, Bobby, boy!” yelled the place kicker.

“Even if you could take him, the rest of the football team would kick your ass. Then I would have to go back you up, and I can’t take out more than maybe 3 of them, and then I’m getting my ass kicked, too.”

The cheerleaders rushed off their benches toward the incident, and suddenly there was a crack that shocked the entire field into silence. Rhiannon’s slap was the shot heard round the World of Wells, Maine.

Bobby stood frozen in disbelief. His left cheek was even redder than Horace’s forehead. There was a noticeable glint of a tear in his eye.

Horace’s heart grew three sizes at that moment, and he found himself hovering a solid 3 inches off the ground as a hush fell across the stadium. He felt pride. He felt ecstasy. He felt respect. He felt the Joy of 10 Horaces… plus two! He felt a Poet born in his heart. “She doth teach the torches to burn bright,” he whispered to himself.

Rhiannon maintained her fighting stance slightly sideways to Bobby, with her eyes locked on his. Her right arm was extended toward Bobby, palm up and fingers extended. After a brief awkward moment, Rhiannon slowly flexed her index and middle fingers, twice. taunting Bobby to try her again. The frank menace in her unblinking glare left little doubt of the meaning of her gesture. The air was thick with tension. For a seemingly endless moment, no one spoke or moved.

Then Bobby’s posture suddenly deflated. This was no win for him. Whatever he did or said, he knew he had already lost. Best to beat a retreat. As he broke the grip of her stare, Rhiannon made not a sound, but her eyes spoke clearly to anyone who could see them: “You will remember this if you ever think about assaulting a woman again.” She looked around the stadium at everyone watching. The edges of her lips climbed imperceptibly before she looked back at Bobby, as though to say, “No amount of popularity will ever give you the right to take dignity from a woman. Try that again and a slapped cheek will be the least of your worries.”

Rhiannon took a breath, turned, and walked silently off the field, being sure to keep her head held high. The silence was unabated. First one, then another, and in moment, all the cheerleaders followed her off the field. They were all done for tonight. The team could play without them.

“So shows a snowy dove trooping with crows, as yonder lady o’er her fellow shows,” Horace whispered.

Gary put his drum back on, motioning for the rest of the section to do the same. He shouted out, “Children of Sanchez… 1…2… 1,2,3….” And the entire section erupted with the cadence, and marched with the cheerleaders off the field.

The crowd cheered, and leapt to their feet. The band director’s son, Michael, played the Chuck Mangione melody on his trumpet. He was playing with the pride and polish of Gabriel playing his horn. He led rest of the band, following the cheerleaders off the field.

In a few moments, The Poe High School Panthers football team was standing alone between the goal and the 20 yard line. First, Rhiannon, then the cheerleaders, then, finally, the marching band crossed the opposition’s goal line and went through the metal doors that led out of the stadium. The music stopped. The football players began wandering off the field, and fans began leaving. As the last supporter left the field, the metal rang like a bell as the door fell shut.

***

Henderson, Nebraska
Sunday, September 28, 1969
2:23 PM

“All right,” said Jim Lange’s voice coming from the TV, “that’s the signal Farrah, and now you must make up your mind… will it be Bachelor Number One, Bachelor Number Two, or Bachelor Number Three?”

“It doesn’t matter who she picks,” Horace whispered to Teddy. “She always finds out later it was the wrong one.”

“Which one gets the date?” asked the TV.

“Number Two,” Farrah’s voice replied.

“Number Two, all right! Can I ask what it was that made you choose him?”

“It was the flower.”

And then a fight broke out between the three bachelors.

“That’s only ‘possed to be on Batman,” said Teddy, while Horace’s lips moved.

“Cool!”

Owen groaned, “I’m up, I’m up, I’m up,” as he woke from his doze, got out of the chair, and walked to the TV. He turned it off, while Horace groaned in disappointment. Grandpa lumbered to the couch, laid down on it, and pulled the blanket off the back of it and covered himself.

Teddy looked up at Horace. “Your Grandpa’s wise, huh?”

Horace nodded. “He’s God’s best friend.” He looked down at his bear. “But we have to be quiet. Grandpa’s going to sleep now.”

Horace watched Owen a while, and then he took Teddy, climbed on top of Grandpa, and fell asleep.

“Heavens to Betsy!” exclaimed Mrs. Fertlebom as she came back in the living room. “The Pastor sleeps.”

***

Wells, Maine
Friday, October 19, 1979
9:07 PM

“How about a bougainvillea?” Jimmy was walking around the flower bushes near the parking lot of the stadium. “It’s close.”

“No!” snapped Horace. “It has to be a rose. She chose him because of a single rose bud.”

“Who did?”

“Some girl named Farrah, on The Dating Game, the day my Grandfather died. I give her the rosebud, and I’m Bachelor Number Two.”

“Wait. Seriously?” Jimmy grabbed Horace by the arm and stopped his search. “Are you laboring under the delusion that if you give Rhiannon Stark a rosebud, she’s going to let you take her out?”

“Why not? Since that night in March, she’s smiled at me 5 times in the hall, and she said hey to me twice.”

“She called you Howard.”

“So she made a mistake. She still might like me.”

“She’s dating Bobby Amity.”

“Not after that debacle tonight, she’s not.”

Students were congregating in the parking lot, now, many of them heading toward buses. Horace spotted a cheerleader holding a bouquet of roses her boyfriend had just given her. He moved without thinking, Jimmy on his heels.

Horace suddenly stopped and turned to Jimmy. “I only have three bucks. How much have you got?”

Jimmy looked in his wallet. “I have… 6… no, 7.”

“Give it to me, quick. I’ll pay you back, I swear it!”

Jimmy frowned and handed Horace his cash. Horace continued his dash. “Hey!” The girl and her boyfriend looked over at Horace as he rushed up. “So, those are beautiful flowers. He obviously loves you. But… I really need just one of them. I have ten bucks I can give you.”

“But, then I won’t have a dozen anymore.”

The football player took the money and pulled a rose from the arrangement. “I’ll buy you another one tomorrow,” he said to the girl. He handed Horace the rose.

“What in God’s name do you think you’re going to do?” Jimmy asked as Horace started toward the cheerleaders’ buses.

“I’m giving it to Rhiannon, of course.”

Jimmy stopped him. “Okay, Horace, I really need you to listen to me. I’m not Gary. I’m not some macho wannabe Marine giving you advice. I’m your best friend for the last 5 years. That’s like a third of our lives. So, you really, really need to listen to me. Can you do that?”

Horace looked again at the bus. Rhiannon was nowhere near it yet. He sighed. “If you can make it quick.”

“Okay. What you want is to give her the rose… like on The Dating Game… Like your Grandpa gave your Grandma at Blue Stem Lake. And then, you think it’s going to work out for you. I have that right, don’t I?”

Horace nodded.

“I’m not looking to hurt you here, pal, but that is never… NEVER going to happen. You’re not in her league. You would be better off writing more letters to Valerie Bertinelli. It won’t work out for you. You’re not a hot guy like Bobby Amity. You’re not rich. You drive your father’s 1970 Dodge Dart when you drive at all. You spend most of your Saturday nights with me on the roof of the Mormon Church across the street from my house drinking Mickey’s Big Mouth. You’re not cool. You’re not good looking. You play Dungeons and Goddamn Dragons, dude. Your only distinction is being a Greatest Nothing of The Poe High School Nothings. The sooner you listen to Socrates, and know thyself, the sooner life gets easier for you. Can you see that?”

“Yeah. I know. A ship in a harbor is safe…”

Voices approached from behind them. Rhiannon walked past quickly, moving toward the buses, and Bobby Amity’s voice rose in the distance. Horace saw her, and he couldn’t hear him.

“But that is not what ships are made for,” Horace told Jimmy, and started walking toward Rhiannon.

“Ree!” shouted Bobby, and in another moment, he shot by Horace, dodging him as though Horace was an opposing player between the quarterback and the goal line.

Bobby stopped a couple of feet behind Rhiannon, who whirled on him contemptuously. He threw his hands in the air. “It’s cool. I’m cool. I’m here to apologize.”

Horace stopped where he was. A few football players gathered. The rest of the band was already on the bus. They would certainly be looking for Horace any time now.

“Go ahead,” said Rhiannon.

“Oh…” Bobby looked around. He was at a loss for words. “Um… yeah. So, look, I’m sorry, okay?”

“He’s an eloquent bastard, I’ll give him that,” whispered Jimmy.

“She’s never going to buy that,” Horace whispered back.

Jimmy looked over to Horace. “Seriously? You need to read a little research. Come down to the library and go through the microforms with me. Abused women often forgive their attackers.”

“Where the hell did you get that?”

“It was in an English paper called The Daily Mirror.”

Across the parking lot, Bobby was smiling in what he hoped was a charming way. “Huh?” He threw his arms open. Rhiannon glared.

Horace grinned. “Well, you’re full of it. We’ll settle it at The Chelsea Drugstore, Mr. Jimmy. Loser buys.”

Jimmy laughed. “My favorite flavor, Cherry Red. You know Jagger’s Chelsea Drugstore used to actually exist on King’s Road in England?”

“Where the hell did you get that?”

“At the Library. The Daily –”

“Mirror… yeah, okay.” Horace looked back to the bus.

“Come on. I said I’m sorry, right? What else do I gotta do?” Bobby grinned.

Rhiannon sighed. She looked at him a while longer, and then turned around to board the bus. “The fact that you even have to ask…” She went up the stairs, and the door shut behind her.

“There it is,” said Horace. “You’re buying.”

Jimmy shrugged. “Hmm. You may be right.” He turned around to walk away.

“I’m giving her the rose,” Horace announced, heading toward the bus.

And that was when it happened: Bobby began to sing.

“Rhiannon,” was all he sang. But it was clearly the melody of the Fleetwood Mac song. And Bobby had a surprisingly good voice for a football player.

“He’s got to be kidding, right?” Horace asked, freezing in place.

Bobby sang it again. And again. Football players gathered around him. They began singing, too.

One of the cheerleaders walking toward them from the other side of the parking lot, made a sympathetic, “Aww…” sound. Horace looked incredulously at the girls.

First Julie, the short blonde sympathy uttering girl, then Jenny, and two other girls started singing, “Rhiaaaaanon…” as they traveled like a wave toward the bus.

The parking lot was filled with the name, sung over and over, and the sound was seductive. Before he knew it, even Horace was singing along. Jimmy glared at him incredulously. He smacked Horace in the arm, and Horace looked over and stopped singing.

The singing continued. The sound was surreal, echoing almost supernaturally through the parking lot. Cars that had been on their way out, stopped, their lights shining on the bus.

And it went on. 30 seconds… 45… more than a minute. The moment was covered in unreality. It became a Siren’s Song. And it finally had its effect. The bus door burst open, and Rhiannon exploded from within it. She fell into Bobby’s arms and a flashbulb went off.

Horace swallowed hard. While the assembled crowd sighed as one, a tear formed in his left eye.

He went home that night, and pressed the rose between the pages of his father’s copy of The Poetical Works of John Greenleaf Whittier. At the bottom of the page on the left, it read:

God pity them both! and pity us all, Who vainly the dreams of youth recall;
At the top of the next page:
For of all sad words of tongue or pen, The saddest are these: “It might have been!

***

Phoenix, Arizona
July 9, 2019
2:43 AM


The writer shut down the computer, and the library was lit now only dimly by the flickering candlelight. He stood slowly. “I’m getting up,” he groaned as he used his left arm to steady himself against the arm of his secondhand office chair. He picked up his 1980 yearbook from his desk, closed it on the page with a black and white picture of Rhiannon in Bobby’s arms standing at a bus, and he took it to the bookcase. He pulled down “The Poetical Works of John Greenleaf Whittier,” and opened it. The faded, scentless rose was still there. And in the silence, he heard her voice.
“… to do that to the roses was why she came…”

Thanks to my many collaborators: Janet Simpson Shipley, Andrea Whiffin Grinstead, Mark Rozema, Ross Ross, Kim Woolbright, Warren Brown, Denise Schroeder Hayes, Theresa Marie Londono, Chuck Curry, James P. Kemp, John G. Willis, Jamie Sasse, Robin Bartley, Deanna Pine, and Mark Shipley.


Because I’ve always wondered why people say, so…
Special Thanks to people whose words I stole: Ross Ross, Jamie Sasse, Theresa Marie Londono
“Good writers borrow from other writers; great writers steal from them outright.” — Aaron Sorkin

Becoming a Cat Person

“…the person that had took a bull by the tail once had learnt sixty or seventy times as much as a person that hadn’t, and said a person that started in to carry a cat home by the tail was getting knowledge that was always going to be useful to him, and warn’t ever going to grow dim or doubtful.”

Mark Twain

I never liked cats. I found them arrogant, rude, and dangerous. The first one with whom I ever dealt scratched my hand deeply enough to draw blood. I hated him. He never said I wasn’t allowed to pick him up. I learned… the hard way.

After that experience, I gave all felines a wide berth. My parents inherited a cat from my brother. I don’t actually recall the details of the transaction, but every time I would visit, there would be Jamie, or as he was called by my father, “Stupid Cat of No Possible Value or Worth,” wandering around enslaving my parents. Up and down my father would get whenever Stupid Cat wanted to go in or out. Yes, he was an outdoor cat. Mom required Dad to stand at the door and call him every night before they went to bed. And Dad might be there for half an hour at a time before His Highness would deign to return. I wanted no part of any such ritual. I never understood why my father did, except that he loved my mother, and my mother loved everything with a heartbeat.

Cats had no time for me, and I had none for them. I refused to believe all the Cat People who told me that their cats were sweet and kind and loving. That described no cat I had ever encountered. I was too arrogant to deal with the Arrogance of Cats.

Dogs, on the other hand, I have always loved. There is nothing so wonderful as being jumped by four-legged fur when you come through the door. Her tail is wagging and she’s covering you with kisses as though you were the most important and wonderful being that cells ever combined to form. I have two ex-wives. Neither of them was ever in the league of a dog for making me feel loved. However, neither Missy nor Darilyn ever pooped on my floor, so perhaps it evens out a bit.

In July of 2017, I was in the hospital, and when I got out, I was going to have nowhere to go. My nephew had gotten me a motel room for a couple of weeks to keep me from being homeless. That ran out, though, while I was suffering from extreme Diabetic Ketoacidosis.

I had just recently begun a horrible job selling DirecTV to unsuspecting old women. I made little money, and to make any amount that would give me any chance to sustain my existence, I had to be successful at getting people to trade their little pieces of green paper for something that is mostly worthless. When I made a sale, I was both ecstatic and wracked with guilt. But it was in this horrible place that I met Hilary.

When I was in the hospital, she called me every day. I have almost no memory of that because the entire experience is a blur in my mind. I was heavily drugged, and I was almost entirely incoherent almost all the time. But, Hilary told me that when I got out of the hospital, I could stay with her, and her wife, Rebecca, and their three cats, Cynna, Buster, and Oliver until I could get back on my feet. And my dog, Melanie, whom I feared I was going to have to give away to anyone I believed would take good care of her before I dragged her into homelessness with me, would be welcomed there, too. She would have died on the streets, and my former roommates were about to be evicted from my old house, which is where Melanie had to stay while I tried to find shelter for us both. It was an offer that saved my life, and Melanie’s, and, subsequently, made me a Cat Person.

When I arrived, Rebecca showed me my bedroom, and I collapsed onto the blowup mattress and passed out. I slept for more than 30 hours. I think it was closer to two full days. And when I finally came back into the world, Oliver had to find out who I was. He kept looking at me, and I thought it was a little creepy. What the hell did he even want from me?

It was a couple of weeks before I moved in and Oliver decided I was acceptable. The cats seemed willing enough to tolerate Melanie after their initial meeting. Buster and Cynna, however, wanted nothing to do with me. See why I hate cats?

Oliver came and got in my lap for the first time almost a month to the day after I began occupying his space full time. I was surprised, but it was a nice surprise. He stayed nearly an entire minute, and he let me pet him. And you know what else? He didn’t even scratch me.

Over time, he began to visit me any time I was in the bathroom. Closing the door meant only that Oliver’s little paw would appear underneath it, letting me know he needed to come in. And, being the basically lonely guy I’ve always been, I’d let him in. It wasn’t long before Oliver was following me around, laying in my lap, and doing the things Melanie had gotten too old to do anymore. Melanie could barely make it onto her own personal couch. She couldn’t get on the bed anymore, and Oliver started visiting me there. He wouldn’t stay long, but he would swing by to check on me. When I got sick, as I did with alarming frequency, he would come and lie on my chest. I think it was his way of telling the girls something was wrong. They would look for him, find him, and see whether I was dead, dead tired, or in need of hospitalization.

Oliver stayed close to me all the time we lived in Mesa.

In July of 2018, we all moved to our nice 3 bedroom house in Phoenix. We had a backyard so Melanie could go out and relieve herself without the need for a leash and a trip up and down a set of stairs that would, given time, certainly have killed me. And it was in the new house that Buster decided to adopt me.

For reasons passing understanding, he decided my bedroom was actually his. If I laid down, Buster would join me within less than ten minutes. And he wouldn’t just sit there. He insisted that I be petting him. Having my phone in my hand was simply not allowed. That was giving my attention to something other than him. When he’s not chewing on the tube that goes from my tummy to my insulin pump, we do very well together. He’s become an expert cuddler. He lies with his back to my chest, and he purrs contentedly so long as we’re together. When I leave, he becomes visibly depressed. If I ever meet a woman like that… well… no… never mind. I would rather just have Buster. He takes up much less space on the bed.

Oliver has to be with me at the computer now. He frequently feels the need to add to whatever I’m writing, and if I stop petting him when he’s in my lap, he will hop up to the desk, stroll across the keyboard, and jump to the window above me to see what’s happening in the backyard. He’s managed to obscure 2/3 of the characters now, and I have to try to remember where they all are. I’m hoping to get a new one soon. (A keyboard, not a cat… three is plenty, I swear.)

Cynna continues to be royalty. When the girls went to Las Vegas for some sort of convention a couple of months ago, His Majesty began to take notice of my existence. He made sure I knew when he needed to be fed. And, he assured me, no matter what his Mothers had said, when he needed to be fed was simply constantly. Since their return he has visited me twice, for a total of nearly 90 seconds. I expect that in another year or two he’ll come to see me without the expectation of food. Maybe he’ll let me pet him more than twice. One can only hope.

I will always love Melanie with all my heart. The fact that she is getting too old to walk anymore scares me more than my own death. There is little to be done, but I can still give her loves and kisses while she’s lying on her couch. She simply isn’t capable of giving me all she once did. I know her love is still there. She just can’t express it physically any longer.

The cats can. They’ve taught me there are ways of expressing their love without jumping on me. I’m told that when Buster or Oliver looks me in the eye, and they close their eyes for a moment, they’re saying, “I love you.” I don’t know if that’s true. But I do know, they’ve made me love them because they simply won’t allow my heart any other choice. The cats have become a part of me. I’m a Cat Person.

The Haunting of Horace, Complete Story

The Haunting of Horace

For who knows what magic takes place in his world…”


Tony Banks

Wells, Maine

Tuesday, March 13, 1979

10:23 PM

This attic was the only place Horace could find to hide. There were so many people out there, but here, in this empty room, he was alone with the full moon whose light was slipping feebly through the tiny window.

He couldn’t imagine what he had been thinking when he’d accepted Bob’s invitation. It had been so entirely unexpected, though, there was nothing else he could do. The star quarterback of the high school football team had invited him to a party… at the home of the single most beautiful cheerleader who had ever graced the halls of Poe High School. And Horace was the head of the Poe Nothings. Horace knew himself well enough to know that Rhiannon would never actually talk to him, but there was that Glimmer of Hope. Just a little Hope can make the heart beat a bit faster. Horace enjoyed the feeling, so he accepted the invitation. And now he was in the attic, hoping he could find a way out of here.

All of these people were light years beyond his social class. None of them had ever seen an episode of Star Trek. He knew absolutely nothing about the sports that they discussed with the precision of scientists debating quantum mechanics. They were all well built, outgoing, attractive people. Horace was thin, gangly, socially inept, and unattractive in any conventional sense. He was the only virgin in the entire house. What had Bob been thinking?

He didn’t belong. He wanted to leave, but it was awfully cold in March, and it was a 17 mile walk from Wells back to Biddeford. Hiding represented his only chance to survive, and he couldn’t get away with the bathroom for more than about 5 minutes at a time. There were way too many people, drinking way too much, and they all required a restroom.

But this room looked like it was hiding, too. It wasn’t even a full-sized room. It was accessible only by a narrow, winding staircase at the last corner of a very dark hallway. As his eyes adjusted, he was able to perceive that against the wall to his right, there was an old, worm-eaten wooden table filled with what Horace decided must be an artist’s supplies. There were notched candles. There were cloves. There were strangely shaped bottles filled with various colors of oils. When he walked to it he observed seeds, matches, and a shot glass.

He turned around when he heard the door open behind him, and he moved as quietly as he could out of the light. Rhiannon backed into the room, a round candlestick in her hand. She turned and glided silently across the room, and when she crossed the moonlight, the room seemed to glow with her.

She went to the table, and lit the notched candle using the tall thin one attached to the holder. She mumbled something, but Horace couldn’t make out what it was. He could see her silhouette moving her hands up the bizarrely shaped candle, bottom to top, 9 times. He counted. She sighed confidently.

When she turned around to leave the room she saw him, and they were both startled. Horace, already in the corner, tried to back away, but just smashed his body awkwardly into the wall. She dropped her candle, and it rolled, lit, across the wooden floor toward him. He knelt, nearly falling over, and picked it up. He stood up, and found her standing directly in front of him. He handed it back to her. “I’m sorry,” he whimpered.

Rhiannon smiled compassionately at him. “Me too.” She looked briefly over her shoulder at the strange candle, and disappointment tinted her blue eyes.

Horace couldn’t look at her. He noticed his shoelaces didn’t match.

“I really am trying my best.” She looked back at Horace. “To be a decent person I mean. I know a lot of people think I’m stuck up, or whatever, but, really, I’m not.”

Horace said nothing.

“Okay?” She whispered.

He looked up. “Okay.” His stare, while entirely unintentional, was almost rude in its intensity.

There have been, throughout human history, quite a few women renowned for their beautiful hair. None of them, however, had anything on Rhiannon. Lady Godiva and Rapunzel, for example, were each known for the lengths of theirs. Rhiannon’s didn’t come close to such a ghastly stretch. It fell, seemingly effortlessly, down her neck and covered her shoulders as a quiet brown river lightly licking its banks, or a blanket under which the slender shoulders snuggled greedily.

Helen of Troy and Lucretia Borgia were sufficiently beautiful that they seemed almost to be able to cast a spell on men simply by looking at them. They were Anti-Medusas. Horace was as inspired as any Trojan.

When she saw Horace staring through his hormone haze, she smiled shyly and brushed her hair slowly back from her forehead. Then she nervously moved her fingers through it like a tide stealing sand from a moonlit beach as it slides up and down.

“I mean, do you ever ask yourself if it’s even possible to make everyone happy without hurting someone?”

“No… not until just now.”

“If you ever figure it out…” her eyes shimmered in the candlelight. They both smiled. Rhiannon, he decided, was a girl who knew how to run her fingers through her hair. They were having a moment.

The banging on the door made them both jump, but Rhiannon held firmly to her candle, and Horace slithered back into his dark corner silently.

“Rhiannon? You in there?” Horace recognized Bob’s tenor voice.

She took her hand away from her hair. “I’ll be right out.” The moment was over.

“There’s a party downstairs, and you’re being a lousy hostess.”

She smiled, almost tenderly at him, and left the room, the notched candle burning. Horace was alone in the dark.

***

Age cannot wither her, nor custom stale
Her infinite variety…”


Shakespeare

Yesterday

“She’s married?” Rhonda asked as Horace lit his little glass pipe.

He held the hit a moment, squeaking in an unflattering way, exhaled, and then looked up at Rhonda.

“What?”

“Your secret internet girlfriend. She’s married?”

“Yes, she is.”

“So, she’s cheating on her husband?”

“Certainly not. She’s entirely unaware that she is my girlfriend.”

“How stoned, exactly, are you?” Rhonda asked. She lit a cigarette. “To be your girlfriend would require that she has some part in the relationship, wouldn’t it?”

“She does. She accounts for nearly 3% of it. The other 97% exists exclusively in my mind.”

The metal screen door from the house opened, and Rita sauntered into the backyard.

While Rhonda was only in her mid twenties, Rita was in her 40s. They had been together for quite a few years before Horace had stumbled into their lives, and they had, essentially, adopted him.

When one of them was in the hospital (which happened far too frequently; all three of them had health problems. Horace was nearly deaf, Rita had chronic Lyme Disease, and Rhonda had genetic cardiac problems.), Rita and Rhonda identified each other as wives. For Horace, they were roommates.

Rhonda looked up at her instantly, and said, “Your roommate is a weird stalker dude.”

Rita sighed, and sat down in the nearest patio chair. “Where are the cigarettes?”

“I’m nothing of the sort. I shall certainly never see her again. I am, however, allowed to have whatever thoughts I choose, thank you Miss Orwell.” Horace picked up Rita’s cigarettes from the barely standing bedside table they had put on the patio to hold their accessories, and he tossed them unceremoniously to her.

“Who are you calling Miss Orwell?” asked Rhonda, flipping her dark hair off to one side.

“You’re being the Thought Police,” said Rita, opening the pack. “Let the man think what he wants.” She lit a cigarette, and then opened the book she’d brought outside with her. Her blonde hair fell in her face when she looked down at it, and she pushed it quickly out of the way.

“You want to live with a crazy man?”

“I want to read my book.”

Rhonda, unobserved, rolled her eyes at Rita and turned back to Horace. “What’s her 3%?”

“She likes my posts on Facebook sometimes. Once in a while, she even comments. She says she likes my writing.”

“So she’s messaged you? That could be construed as cheating.”

“Oh, heavens no! Nor have I ever sent her a message. That would increase our involvement, and that would ruin it. 3% gives birth to hope. 10% gives birth to hassles.”

Without looking up from her book Rita muttered, “100% give birth to children.”

“So how do you know she likes your writing?” Rhonda glanced back at Rita. Her eyes seemed to be losing focus.

He took another hit, and then, holding his breath, said, “She clicks like.”

“Lots of people like your stuff.” Rhonda seemed a little annoyed.

Horace exhaled. “Yes,” he said as he emptied the remainder of the pipe into the little red measuring cup in which he kept his supplies. He covered the carb, and blew into the pipe to remove any clogs. He began gathering bits from the bottom of the 1 ¾ cup container, and loaded them gingerly into his pipe. “I’m not, however, secretly in love with lots of people.”

“So, what’s the other 97%?” Rhonda watched Rita’s eyes begin to droop.

“The other 97% consists of messages unwritten except in my head, enjoying the intimacy of my thoughts connecting with hers, even if only for a few hundred words on my page or my blog, and vague leftover fantasies from the last time I saw her nearly 40 years ago.” He smiled nostalgically. “She was burning candles in her attic.

Rita’s head fell to her chest.

“Get her cigarette,” Rhonda said. “I don’t want her to burn herself.”

Horace reached for the cigarette dangling loosely between Rita’s fingers, and her head snapped up quickly. “I’m fine.”

Horace watched her another moment to be sure she was coherent, and then he turned back to Rhonda. “And I get to experience great joy when she says or does something nice. I don’t, if you hadn’t noticed, get a lot of joy.”

“You get to live with me. How much joy do you need?”

He picked up the clipboard, pulled the pen out from behind the clip, and began to cross out something on the printed paper. “More than that,” he said without looking up.

“I’m going to throw something at you. And it’s going to hurt.”

“I would very much prefer if you didn’t. That would decrease my joy.”

Rhonda threw nothing. “What’s her name?”

***

Said you’d give me light
But you never told me about the fire”


Stevie Nicks

Rhiannon rings like a bell in the night…”


Stevie Nicks

Biddeford, Maine

Saturday, May 7, 1983

2:43 PM

Horace had bought his mother a candle for Mother’s Day, every year for the last 14 years, but always something basic, from Wal Mart or K Mart. He was in college, now, and it was time to do better. Pier One Imports would, he was sure, have something classier.

The place smelled of strange foreign spices, and the light came from the sunroof in the middle of the ceiling. The store was an eclectic collection of items from anywhere other than Maine. There were strikingly beautiful statues, and there were cheap, tasteless trinkets. He walked through several aisles before he found the candles. He studied them, but none of them stood out. There were a few layered candles, with colors bleeding from one layer to the next, but there was nothing unique. They were all variations of each other.

“Did you figure it out?”

Horace turned around, and his eyes widened to see a singularly beautiful woman standing in front of him. “Rhiannon?” he said after the moment it took him to recognize her.

“You’re… Howard, right?”

“Horace. But close enough.”

“God, I’m sorry. It’s been a long time since last I saw you.” She looked him up and down. “You’ve changed a little.”

“I got my shoelaces to match.”

She laughed a little too hard. While Holden would have found it appalling and phony, Horace found it appealing and charming, nearly enchanting. “Were you funny in high school?”

“I thought I was. But, I’ve always been unreasonably arrogant for someone entirely lacking in social skills or physical attractiveness. So, maybe I wasn’t.”

Her laughter rang like a bell throughout the store, and Horace expected someone to come and see what was wrong. No one did. And that’s when he realized the store was, other than the two of them, empty. “Isn’t it boring to be here with no customers?”

“Sometimes it can be.”

“You should hire someone to come and talk to you when you’re bored.”

“Want a job?”

“No.” He was too frightened to give any other answer, but he was determined not to show it. “I want a unique candle. I’d love one of those weirdly shaped ones you had years ago.”

Her face darkened for a moment. “You won’t find one of those here.”

“Pier One is too commercial?”

“Well, we can’t make everyone happy, so we just avoid hurting anyone.” She smiled again. “None of these candles can be seen as offensive.”

“Or interesting.” He looked around. “Have any artistic ones?”

When he looked back, he saw her head turning as she scanned the entire store. She looked back at him, and he couldn’t help but notice the way she brushed her hair from her forehead.

“We have a carved candle that really is beautiful, but it’s incredibly expensive.” She walked toward the front of the store. Inside a glass case at the front counter sat a candle that must have weighed ten pounds. It was rich, dark green, and there was a cottage, in a forest, in a glade carved onto it with exquisite detail. He could almost see a light on in the attic.

“That’s… incredible…You could never burn that. It would almost be a crime against the Art.”

“If it has a wick, Horace, it wants to be burned.”

He couldn’t keep himself from staring, and he knew it, and he hated it about himself. She didn’t seem to mind. Her eyes were like a singer’s asking if the audience had any requests. He looked back at her like a regular patron asking the bartender for “The Usual.” And, for a moment, she slid her fingers lightly through her hair.

The door opened, causing a bell to ring, and Rhiannon looked away to see who it was.

They were two lost hippies, women who were out of their time. They wore their very long hair down, they each had a straw hat, long necklaces, and bracelets that jingled whenever they moved. They wore plain gray skirts that nearly touched the floor. “We’ve come for chairs,” announced the taller one.

“Wicker chairs,” said her companion.

Horace watched Rhiannon scamper off toward them.

An old man in a black hat moved behind the display case to which Rhiannon had led him. “May I help you?”

“I want to buy this candle,” said Horace pointing. He pulled out his very first credit card, an American Express, and couldn’t help but watch Rhiannon and the women discussing the comfort of wicker, in its natural state, as opposed to processed material.

When The Man In Black handed him the receipt and the boxed candle, Horace nodded to him and walked toward the door.

Rhiannon was behind a high backed wicker chair, and as she heard the bell ring when he opened the door, she looked around the side of it, smiled far too broadly, and waved to Horace. She was a woman who knew how to wave from behind wicker.

***

She is like a cat in the dark and then
She is the darkness”


Stevie Nicks

She comes back to tell me she’s gone
As if I didn’t know that
As if I didn’t know my own bed
As if I’d never noticed
The way she brushed her hair from her forehead”


Paul Simon

Last Night

Rhiannon was beginning to take shape in the flickering candlelight of the 3 AM darkness, as she often did while Horace was half conscious. She wasn’t the 16 year old girl with whom he had been pointlessly in love 40 years ago, but she wasn’t the woman in her current pictures, either. She was a lovely, if foggy, combination of those two memories, and he was beginning to smile without being aware of it. The cat crawled across his slowly rising and falling stomach, laid his head down on Horace’s chest, and yawned wide and long. The bell around his neck tinkled softly.

They both jumped when the banging on the door began. “What’s wrong?” He pulled his covers down. The breeze from the motion blew the candle out. Rhiannon retreated to the depths of his misted brain, and Horace rolled to his right and flipped on the bedside light.

“I need you to get Christine out of my room,” came Rita’s not entirely coherent voice.

Horace frowned. “My sister’s in your room?”

“She’s on the bed. She won’t leave.”

Mr. Brown jumped from the bed to the floor, his tail high. “I really don’t think she’s there, Rita.”

She was almost crying outside the door now. “I just told you she is. Make her go away.”

Horace sighed and got out of the bed. He pushed his feet into his slippers and walked to the door. When Horace opened it, Mr. Brown scampered out of his room and across the hall into Rhonda and Rita’s room. Rita nearly collapsed onto Horace who supported her the best he could.

He walked her back into her bedroom. Rhonda was sleeping deeply on her side of the bed. There was no one else there. Horace pointed that out to Rita.

“Where did she go?” Rita was genuinely surprised by Christine’s absence.

“I really don’t know. Maybe you could go back to bed.”

“I wanna have a cigarette.” She started down the hall toward the library, and its backdoor to the patio. Horace glanced at Rhonda, still completely oblivious, and decided to follow Rita. He found her on the best chair lighting a cigarette.

“Was she really beautiful as a little girl?” Rita asked as he stepped outside.

“My sister? Yes, I suppose she was. My parents said as much. I never found her beautiful, though.”

“She looks like she must have been a beautiful little girl. She has the prettiest hair. When she was young, I bet all the boys loved her.”

“I don’t think you’ve ever met her, Rita.”

“Duh. Just now? She kept playing with her hair. It was almost spooky. And she didn’t seem like she was where she meant to be. I think she got the wrong room.”

Horace took a cigarette from his pack. “You talked to her?” He sat down across from her.

“No. I just freaked out when she woke me up and came and got you.”

He watched her silently as she took a drag from her cigarette. In another moment, her eyes drifted shut. He got up, took the cigarette from between her fingers, set it in the ashtray, and then went to wake Rhonda. It was evidently time to change Rita’s meds again.

He locked his bedroom door.

Rhiannon didn’t return that night.

***

When I whispered I thought I could love her
She just said, ‘Baby, don’t even bother to try.’”


Seth Justman

Horace Wimp, this is your life
Go out and find yourself a wife…”


Jeff Lynne

Orono, Maine

July 10, 1986

3:27 AM

He watched the woman beside him sleeping silently, and then Horace rolled over in the bed and retrieved the remote. The TV came on louder than he had anticipated, and he looked over to her as he quickly turned it down. She was unfazed.

Jimmy Durante was singing while the credits rolled on a romantic comedy whose title Horace couldn’t quite remember. “Make someone happy, Make just one someone happy…”

He flipped the channel and a news reporter began explaining, in a far too optimistic way, a crash that had occurred on Route 1 that afternoon.

At least, thought Horace, he had lost his virginity. He wasn’t stuck with that particular badge anymore. If he ever returned to Rhiannon’s attic, he would be at least a bit closer to her category.

He was 23; she was 43. She was a divorced mother who had been far too drunk at the bar. She had sought him out. Horace never, ever asked anyone to dance. He was no good at it; it embarrassed him. He just liked the band. And tonight, they had let him sit in on drums, because everyone was a little drunk, and this particular crowd would have loved them even if they played polka tunes in Ancient Coptic. Horace wouldn’t hurt anything.

When he came off stage, the woman, a complete stranger to him, had run across the dance floor and thrown her arms around him. She hugged him embarrassingly tightly. She had insisted on dancing with him the rest of the night, and he obliged. They couldn’t really talk. The music, particularly on the dance floor, was far too loud.

There was nothing wrong with her. She was probably a very nice woman when she was sober. She wasn’t unattractive. She had just moaned too much about knowing young flesh would be good. Horace had no clue what he was doing. It just felt wrong to him.

“… and in our final story, a scandal involving local celebrity Rhiannon Stark.”

Horace’s attention went immediately to the television. He turned it up a bit.

“That’s right, Danny, she was Miss Kensington County of 1985, and now she may be disqualified because of rumours of her participation in witchcraft. There are accusations of a practice called Astral Projection…”

The woman stirred, and Horace muted the television while he gazed at Rhiannon’s face filling the screen. “So wild,” muttered Horace as he watched her standing there with her hands in her hair. As she walked from the courthouse steps, past the paparazzi, the breeze blew lightly, and it lifted from her shoulders so that it glowed with the late afternoon sun behind her. Rhiannon was a woman who knew how to ignite cold contempt in the hearts of men toward any woman who had the misfortune of not being Rhiannon.

Horace rolled over, as far from the woman as he could, and laid, shivering, in the dark.

***

She rules her life like a bird…”


Stevie Nicks

All your life you’ve never seen
A woman taken by the wind”


Stevie Nicks

Today

He was nicely, serenely stoned. Her picture was on the 21.5 inch monitor in front of him. He would have loved to see her in her yearbook pictures from high school, to help him construct The Perfect Rhiannon inside his mind, but these served as a reasonable guide. Her previous beauty had been preserved flatteringly. “Age doth not stale nor custom whither,” he muttered.

Horace smiled unconsciously, and then clicked back over to the essay he was writing. She would like this, he felt sure. It was close as he would ever come to saying he loved her. But it was more than close enough… if she ever read it.

“We’re home!” came Rhonda’s voice.

Horace looked up from the screen and watched the girls come into the library from the kitchen.

“They have me on a whole new set of painkillers,” said Rita. “I’m sorry about last night.”

“We brought you a present,” said Rhonda, handing him a donut.

“Oh, thank you!” Horace was genuinely delighted. He took the donut, and jelly dripped almost immediately onto his t shirt. He collected it onto his index finger, and licked it off. “And it’s fine. It was just a little weird.”

“She doesn’t hallucinate often,” said Rhonda. “In the five years I’ve been with her, it’s only the third time it’s happened.”

“Did you wake up in the middle of the night while you were dreaming or something?”

“No! Your sister sat down on the bed, and she asked me some bizarre question.”

Horace smiled, perhaps somewhat indulgently. “What’d she ask you?”

I don’t know. I think it was like whether you could make anyone happy without hurting everyone, or something like that. What the fuck does that even mean?”

Horace considered the question a moment. “That would be a hell of an achievement.” He smiled. “And I think you reversed it.”

“It means it was time to change your meds,” Rhonda said to Rita. She turned to Horace. “We’re going to smoke. Join us.”

“Maybe not,” muttered Horace as the girls went outside.

Rita stuck her head back in the door. “What?”

Horace stared into space a few moments. He was thinking of Rhiannon’s candles. There was something he had heard about candles once, but he couldn’t for the life of him remember what it was.

Mr. Brown strutted into the library, and looked up at Horace sitting at the desk. There was an essay being written, and Mr. Brown felt obliged to make his contribution. He jumped into Horace’s lap, and Horace reflexively started stroking his fur. He looked once into Horace’s eyes, closed his own for a moment, then opened them again. He hopped up onto the desk, strolled across the keyboard, and the screen glowed with Rhiannon’s picture again. Mr. Brown’s bell tinkled gently.

Rita started to yell at the cat, when her eyes caught the image in front of Horace. “There she is!”

“Who?” He looked from Rhiannon to Rita.

“That’s who came into my room the other night. That’s your sister, isn’t it?”

“No,” said Horace, shaking his head slowly. “It’s not.”

When the cat crossed the desk, and leapt from the mouse to the window above, her status appeared: “Do you suppose you could make everyone happy without hurting anyone?”

Mr. Brown searched the backyard for birds.

Tomorrow

Dear Horace,
Please don’t write about me anymore.”

Rhiannon


The Haunting of Horace, Part 2

Said you’d give me light
But you never told me about the fire”


Stevie Nicks

Rhiannon rings like a bell in the night…”


Stevie Nicks

Biddeford, Maine

Saturday, May 7, 1983

2:43 PM

Horace had bought his mother a candle for Mother’s Day, every year for the last 14 years, but always something basic, from Wal Mart or K Mart. He was in college, now, and it was time to do better. Pier One Imports would, he was sure, have something classier.

The place smelled of strange foreign spices, and the light came from the sunroof in the middle of the ceiling. The store was an eclectic collection of items from anywhere other than Maine. There were strikingly beautiful statues, and there were cheap, tasteless trinkets. He walked through several aisles before he found the candles. He studied them, but none of them stood out. There were a few layered candles, with colors bleeding from one layer to the next, but there was nothing unique. They were all variations of each other.

“Did you figure it out?”

Horace turned around, and his eyes widened to see a singularly beautiful woman standing in front of him. “Rhiannon?” he said after the moment it took him to recognize her.

“You’re… Howard, right?”

“Horace. But close enough.”

“God, I’m sorry. It’s been a long time since last I saw you.” She looked him up and down. “You’ve changed a little.”

“I got my shoelaces to match.”

She laughed a little too hard. While Holden would have found it appalling and phony, Horace found it appealing and charming, nearly enchanting. “Were you funny in high school?”

“I thought I was. But, I’ve always been unreasonably arrogant for someone entirely lacking in social skills or physical attractiveness. So, maybe I wasn’t.”

Her laughter rang like a bell throughout the store, and Horace expected someone to come and see what was wrong. No one did. And that’s when he realized the store was, other than the two of them, empty. “Isn’t it boring to be here with no customers?”

“Sometimes it can be.”

“You should hire someone to come and talk to you when you’re bored.”

“Want a job?”

“No.” He was too frightened to give any other answer, but he was determined not to show it. “I want a unique candle. I’d love one of those weirdly shaped ones you had years ago.”

Her face darkened for a moment. “You won’t find one of those here.”

“Pier One is too commercial?”

“Well, we can’t make everyone happy, so we just avoid hurting anyone.” She smiled again. “None of these candles can be seen as offensive.”

“Or interesting.” He looked around. “Have any artistic ones?”

When he looked back, he saw her head turning as she scanned the entire store. She looked back at him, and he couldn’t help but notice the way she brushed her hair from her forehead.

“We have a carved candle that really is beautiful, but it’s incredibly expensive.” She walked toward the front of the store. Inside a glass case at the front counter sat a candle that must have weighed ten pounds. It was rich, dark green, and there was a cottage, in a forest, in a glade carved onto it with exquisite detail. He could almost see a light on in the attic.

“That’s… incredible…You could never burn that. It would almost be a crime against the Art.”

“If it has a wick, Horace, it wants to be burned.”

He couldn’t keep himself from staring, and he knew it, and he hated it about himself. She didn’t seem to mind. Her eyes were like a singer’s asking if the audience had any requests. He looked back at her like a regular patron asking the bartender for “The Usual.” And, for a moment, she slid her fingers lightly through her hair.

The door opened, causing a bell to ring, and Rhiannon looked away to see who it was.

They were two lost hippies, women who were out out of their time. They wore their very long hair down, they each had a straw hat, long necklaces, and bracelets that jingled whenever they moved. They wore plain gray skirts that nearly touched the floor. “We’ve come for chairs,” announced the taller one.

“Wicker chairs,” said her companion.

Horace watched Rhiannon scamper off toward them.

An old man in a black hat moved behind the display case to which Rhiannon had led him. “May I help you?”

“I want to buy this candle,” said Horace pointing. He pulled out his very first credit card, an American Express, and couldn’t help but watch Rhiannon and the women discussing the comfort of wicker, in its natural state, as opposed to processed material.

When The Man In Black handed him the receipt and the boxed candle, Horace nodded to him and walked toward the door.

Rhiannon was behind a high backed wicker chair, and as she heard the bell ring when he opened the door, she looked around the side of it, smiled far too broadly, and waved to Horace. She was a woman who knew how to wave from behind wicker.

***

She is like a cat in the dark and then
She is the darkness”


Stevie Nicks

She comes back to tell me she’s gone
As if I didn’t know that
As if I didn’t know my own bed
As if I’d never noticed
The way she brushed her hair from her forehead”


Paul Simon

Last Night

Rhiannon was beginning to take shape in the flickering candlelight of the 3 AM darkness, as she often did while Horace was half conscious. She wasn’t the 16 year old girl with whom he had been pointlessly in love 40 years ago, but she wasn’t the woman in her current pictures, either. She was a lovely, if foggy, combination of those two memories, and he was beginning to smile without being aware of it. The cat crawled across his slowly rising and falling stomach, laid his head down on Horace’s chest, and yawned wide and long. The bell around his neck tinkled softly.

They both jumped when the banging on the door began. “What’s wrong?” He pulled his covers down. The breeze from the motion blew the candle out. Rhiannon retreated to the depths of his misted brain, and Horace rolled to his right and flipped on the bedside light.

“I need you to get Christine out of my room,” came Rita’s not entirely coherent voice.

Horace frowned. “My sister’s in your room?”

“She’s on the bed. She won’t leave.”

Mr. Brown jumped from the bed to the floor, his tail high. “I really don’t think she’s there, Rita.”

She was almost crying outside the door now. “I just told you she is. Make her go away.”

Horace sighed and got out of the bed. He pushed his feet into his slippers and walked to the door. When Horace opened it, Mr. Brown scampered out of his room and across the hall into Rhonda and Rita’s room. Rita nearly collapsed onto Horace who supported her the best he could.

He walked her back into her bedroom. Rhonda was sleeping deeply on her side of the bed. There was no one else there. Horace pointed that out to Rita.

“Where did she go?” Rita was genuinely surprised by Christine’s absence.

“I really don’t know. Maybe you could go back to bed.”

“I wanna have a cigarette.” She started down the hall toward the library, and its backdoor to the patio. Horace glanced at Rhonda, still completely oblivious, and decided to follow Rita. He found her on the best chair lighting a cigarette.

“Was she really beautiful as a little girl?” Rita asked as he stepped outside.

“My sister? Yes, I suppose she was. My parents said as much. I never found her beautiful, though.”

“She looks like she must have been a beautiful little girl. She has the prettiest hair. When she was young, I bet all the boys loved her.”

“I don’t think you’ve ever met her, Rita.”

“Duh. Just now? She kept playing with her hair. It was almost spooky. And she didn’t seem like she was where she meant to be. I think she got the wrong room.”

Horace took a cigarette from his pack. “You talked to her?” He sat down across from her.

“No. I just freaked out when she woke me up and came and got you.”

He watched her silently as she took a drag from her cigarette. In another moment, her eyes drifted shut. He got up, took the cigarette from between her fingers, set it in the ashtray, and then went to wake Rhonda. It was evidently time to change Rita’s meds again.

He locked his bedroom door.

Rhiannon didn’t return that night.

The Haunting of Horace Part 1

This is Part 1 of a 3-part story. Part 2 will be uploaded on April 19. Part 3 arrives April 26.

For who knows what magic takes place in his world…”


Tony Banks

Wells, Maine

Tuesday, March 13, 1979

10:23 PM

This attic was the only place Horace could find to hide. There were so many people out there, but here, in this empty room, he was alone with the full moon whose light was slipping feebly through the tiny window.

He couldn’t imagine what he had been thinking when he’d accepted Bob’s invitation. It had been so entirely unexpected, though, there was nothing else he could do. The star quarterback of the high school football team had invited him to a party… at the home of the single most beautiful cheerleader who had ever graced the halls of Poe High School. And Horace was the head of the Poe Nothings. Horace knew himself well enough to know that Rhiannon would never actually talk to him, but there was that Glimmer of Hope. Just a little Hope can make the heart beat a bit faster. Horace enjoyed the feeling, so he accepted the invitation. And now he was in the attic, hoping he could find a way out of here.

All of these people were light years beyond his social class. None of them had ever seen an episode of Star Trek. He knew absolutely nothing about the sports that they discussed with the precision of scientists debating quantum mechanics. They were all well built, outgoing, attractive people. Horace was thin, gangly, socially inept, and unattractive in any conventional sense. He was the only virgin in the entire house. What had Bob been thinking?

He didn’t belong. He wanted to leave, but it was awfully cold in March, and it was a 17 mile walk from Wells back to Biddeford. Hiding represented his only chance to survive, and he couldn’t get away with the bathroom for more than about 5 minutes at a time. There were way too many people, drinking way too much, and they all required a restroom. Every bedroom was occupied by a couple insisting on privacy.

But this room looked like it was hiding, too. It wasn’t even a full-sized room. It was accessible only by a narrow, winding staircase at the last corner of a very dark hallway. As his eyes adjusted, he was able to perceive that against the wall to his right, there was an old, worm-eaten wooden table filled with what Horace decided must be an artist’s supplies. There were notched candles. There were cloves. There were strangely shaped bottles filled with various colors of oils. When he walked to it he observed seeds, matches, and a shot glass.

He turned around when he heard the door open behind him, and he moved as quietly as he could out of the light. Rhiannon backed into the room, a round candlestick in her hand. She turned and glided silently across the room, and when she crossed the moonlight, the room seemed to glow with her.

She went to the table, and lit the notched candle using the tall thin one attached to the holder. She mumbled something, but Horace couldn’t make out what it was. He could see her silhouette moving her hands up the bizarrely shaped candle, bottom to top, 9 times. He counted. She sighed confidently.

When she turned around to leave the room she saw him, and they were both startled. Horace, already in the corner, tried to back away, but just smashed his body awkwardly into the wall. She dropped her candle, and it rolled, lit, across the wooden floor toward him. He knelt, nearly falling over, and picked it up. He stood up, and found her standing directly in front of him. He handed it back to her. “I’m sorry,” he whimpered.

Rhiannon smiled compassionately at him. “Me too.” She looked briefly over her shoulder at the strange candle, and disappointment tinted her blue eyes.

Horace couldn’t look at her. He noticed his shoelaces didn’t match.

“I really am trying my best.” She looked back at Horace. “To be a decent person I mean. I know a lot of people think I’m stuck up, or whatever, but, really, I’m not.”

Horace said nothing.

“Okay?” She whispered.

He looked up. “Okay.” His stare, while entirely unintentional, was almost rude in its intensity.

There have been, throughout human history, quite a few women renowned for their beautiful hair. None of them, however, had anything on Rhiannon. Lady Godiva and Rapunzel, for example, were each known for the lengths of theirs. Rhiannon’s didn’t come close to such a ghastly stretch. It fell, seemingly effortlessly, down her neck and covered her shoulders as a quiet brown river lightly licking its banks, or a blanket under which the slender shoulders snuggled greedily.

Helen of Troy and Lucretia Borgia were sufficiently beautiful that they seemed almost to be able to cast a spell on men simply by looking at them. They were Anti-Medusas. Horace was as inspired as any Trojan.

When she saw Horace staring through his hormone haze, she smiled shyly and brushed her hair slowly back from her forehead. Then she nervously moved her fingers through it like a tide stealing sand from a moonlit beach as it slides up and down.

“I mean, do you ever ask yourself if it’s even possible to make everyone happy without hurting someone?”

“No… not until just now.”

“If you ever figure it out…” her eyes shimmered in the candlelight. They both smiled. Rhiannon, he decided, was a girl who knew how to run her fingers through her hair. They were having a moment.

The banging on the door made them both jump, but Rhiannon held firmly to her candle, and Horace slithered back into his dark corner silently.

“Rhiannon? You in there?” Horace recognized Bob’s tenor voice.

She took her hand away from her hair. “I’ll be right out.” The moment was over.

“There’s a party downstairs, and you’re being a lousy hostess.”

She smiled, almost tenderly at him, and left the room, the notched candle burning. Horace was alone in the dark.

***

Age cannot wither her, nor custom stale
Her infinite variety…”


Shakespeare


Yesterday

“She’s married?” Rhonda asked as Horace lit his little glass pipe.

He held the hit a moment, squeaking in an unflattering way, exhaled, and then looked up at Rhonda.

“What?”

“Your secret internet girlfriend. She’s married?”

“Yes, she is.”

“So, she’s cheating on her husband?”

“Certainly not. She’s entirely unaware that she is my girlfriend.”

“How stoned, exactly, are you?” Rhonda asked. She lit a cigarette. “To be your girlfriend would require that she has some part in the relationship, wouldn’t it?”

“She does. She accounts for nearly 3% of it. The other 97% exists exclusively in my mind.”

The metal screen door from the house opened, and Rita sauntered into the backyard.

While Rhonda was only in her mid twenties, Rita was in her 40s. They had been together for quite a few years before Horace had stumbled into their lives, and they had, essentially, adopted him.

When one of them was in the hospital (which happened far too frequently; all three of them had health problems. Horace was nearly deaf, Rita had chronic Lyme Disease, and Rhonda had genetic cardiac problems.), Rita and Rhonda identified each other as wives. For Horace, they were roommates.

Rhonda looked up at her instantly, and said, “Your roommate is a weird stalker dude.”

Rita sighed, and sat down in the nearest patio chair. “Where are the cigarettes?”

“I’m nothing of the sort. I shall certainly never see her again. I am, however, allowed to have whatever thoughts I choose, thank you Miss Orwell.” Horace picked up Rita’s cigarettes from the barely standing bedside table they had put on the patio to hold their accessories, and he tossed them unceremoniously to her.

“Who are you calling Miss Orwell?” asked Rhonda, flipping her dark hair off to one side.

“You’re being the Thought Police,” said Rita, opening the pack. “Let the man think what he wants.” She lit a cigarette, and then opened the book she’d brought outside with her. Her blonde hair fell in her face when she looked down at it, and she pushed it quickly out of the way.

“You want to live with a crazy man?”

“I want to read my book.”

Rhonda, unobserved, rolled her eyes at Rita and turned back to Horace. “What’s her 3%?”

“She likes my posts on Facebook sometimes. Once in a while, she even comments. She says she likes my writing.”

“So she’s messaged you? That could be construed as cheating.”

“Oh, heavens no! Nor have I ever sent her a message. That would increase our involvement, and that would ruin it. 3% gives birth to hope. 10% gives birth to hassles.”

Without looking up from her book Rita muttered, “100% give birth to children.”

“So how do you know she likes your writing?” Rhonda glanced back at Rita. Her eyes seemed to be losing focus.

He took another hit, and then, holding his breath, said, “She clicks like.”

“Lots of people like your stuff.” Rhonda seemed a little annoyed.

Horace exhaled. “Yes,” he said as he emptied the remainder of the pipe into the little red measuring cup in which he kept his supplies. He covered the carb, and blew into the pipe to remove any clogs. He began gathering bits from the bottom of the 1 ¾ cup container, and loaded them gingerly into his pipe. “I’m not, however, secretly in love with lots of people.”

“So, what’s the other 97%?” Rhonda watched Rita’s eyes begin to droop.

“The other 97% consists of messages unwritten except in my head, enjoying the intimacy of my thoughts connecting with hers, even if only for a few hundred words on my page or my blog, and vague leftover fantasies from the last time I saw her nearly 40 years ago.” He smiled nostalgically. “She was burning candles in her attic.

Rita’s head fell to her chest.

“Get her cigarette,” Rhonda said. “I don’t want her to burn herself.”

Horace reached for the cigarette dangling loosely between Rita’s fingers, and her head snapped up quickly. “I’m fine.”

Horace watched her another moment to be sure she was coherent, and then he turned back to Rhonda. “And I get to experience great joy when she says or does something nice. I don’t, if you hadn’t noticed, get a lot of joy.”

“You get to live with me. How much joy do you need?”

He picked up the clipboard, pulled the pen out from behind the clip, and began to cross out something on the printed paper. “More than that,” he said without looking up.

“I’m going to throw something at you. And it’s going to hurt.”

“I would very much prefer if you didn’t. That would decrease my joy.”

Rhonda threw nothing. “What’s her name?”