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Play It Again: part 3: Regicide, and the Birth of Beerfinger

9/26/2014

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Gentleman Dan the Fairing Man showed up to all underground challenges throughout the Chicago area.  He was known as the person most likely to keep things fair, thus his nickname.  So it was that when word went round a drink-fight would be ensuing, Gentleman Dan donned his top hat, and proceeded to the location of this alcoholic pugilism post-haste!  Not only did he wish to enjoy the spectacle, but he knew such contests always required a mediator, someone to act with impartiality.  Said referee often finding himself in the good graces of all involved, whether that meant the company of amorous ladies, free drugs, or money.  

Gentleman Dan waved his hat to get the crowd’s attention.  The steady chatter settled to a low murmur.  The two opponents accompanied by their compatriots met in the middle of the bar as Gentleman Dan climbed up top.  

The Gentleman produced a coin from his waistcoat pocket.  Pointing to Malcolm Brennan he said, “Call it.”

Brennan spat out, “Tails.”

The coin flickered as it spun in the air.  Gentleman Dan caught it, held it a moment for dramatic effect then declared Malcolm winner of the coin toss.  Half of the crowd erupted with glee while the other half booed.  Larry, though, waved the whole matter off.  He hadn’t won the first time around, didn’t expect to on this occasion, and that was good.  It meant he had a solid idea where things were headed, a chance to move strategically.

Gentleman Dan asked Malcolm for his preference.  The king’s neck fat rippled joyfully as he announced, “Burnout.”

The whole room cheered.  Jeanie X. grabbed a fire extinguisher, demanding to know what was burning.  George C. explained the mistake to her, and she thanked him for being neon penguin shoelaces.  Sophie D. rubbed Larry’s shoulders whispering to him, “You got this, you got this…”  Marcy sat in a corner alone, watching it all from a distance.  She winked at him.  It was all he needed.

“Let’s get as think as you drunk I am!” Larry shouted.

Gentleman Dan waited a moment to let the mob roar before gesturing for a bit of silence.  When the cacophony died down he announced the rules:

“Ladies and gents, tonight’s pub crawl brawl is a burnout.  For those of you tragically unfamiliar with such things, the burnout is a slow and steady battle.  It starts out meek, builds to nightmare without warning, and by the end leaves the loser crying in a puddle of his or her own sick.  

“Both opponents will be required in the beginning to go through a one, two gauntlet, pint and a shot for a half hour.  There is a minimum of at least two before time is up.  That means at least two pints and two shots boys, and as soon as you finish one drink you must start another, finishing it before the time limit.”

Someone shouted from the peanut gallery, “Sounds weak!”

Gentleman Dan held up his hands, “Indeed it is, sir, but that’s just for starters.  Don’t you know my friend as the night goes on the time limit gets shorter and shorter, the drinks harder and harder?  By round fifteen we’ll have these boys slugging rocks glasses full of vodka with Malort chasers, only five minutes to hammer the lot.”  

A cheer arose from all assembled.  Marcy blew Larry a kiss.  Some sad eyed Puerto Rican girl kissed Malcolm on the cheek.  The king grabbed her ass, hard enough it seemed to leave bruises in addition to his greasy palm print.  She did her best to look pleased.  

“In addition,” Gentleman Dan continued, “Each fighter will be allowed one gagger for the whole bout.”

As the Fairing Man elaborated on gaggers Larry kept his head in the game.  The point of the gagger was to make the other fighter puke, sort of a knockout punch as it were.  Last time Larry used his gagger at the wrong location.  It didn’t pack enough punch for the knockout.  Worse still it backfired, stirring up his stomach causing him to pop during drink-punches of brandy and root beer Schnapps.  Larry lost the drink-fight, but worse than that was the aftermath.

“Are you ready?!”  Gentleman Dan bellowed.

“Back out now little man,” Malcolm said.

Larry smiled, “Bartender!  First round’s on me.”

The bartender served up overflowing pints of lager.  Both men went with whiskey shots to start.  Gentleman Dan eyed a pocket watch to get the half hour right down to the second.  He counted off – “5, 4, 3…” – the crowd joined him – “2, 1!  DRINK-FIGHT!”

Larry tossed his shot into the pint and slammed it all in eleven seconds.  Malcolm took his time.  Although the crowd cheered for Larry’s epic start, he knew well enough not to keep to such a pace.  But this was all part of the strategy.  He wanted the king to think he would be an easy defeat.  By the end of the first half hour Larry had put away five pints and shots to Malcolm’s three.  

“Aaaand time!” Gentleman Dan returned to the top of the bar, “All right boys.  Good show, good show,” – the room applauded the contenders – “Now let’s see where we’re off to next.”

He took off his top hat, tossed in a few slips of paper, and had a lovely lady take one at random.  She held it up for him to read.  The Fairing Man announced the fight would continue at Rose’s, a short two block walk.  The crowd poured out of the Lighthouse in a hurry.

At Roses’s Gentleman Dan wrapped an arm around the wide inviting curve of Sophie D.’s hip as he spoke:

“Round two is another half hour, but it is a pure booze battle.  No shots, however, you have a half hour to put down at least three Scotch rocks.”

Malcolm frowned, “I thought this was going to be a fight.”

‘Just like last time,’ Larry thought.  However, on this occasion he wouldn’t rise to the bait.  Last time he let loose with his gagger, the Burnt Mexican Chicken – tequila, whiskey, and the hot sauce.  For his plan to work, he needed to wait for the Oasis to get the hottest hot sauce possible.

Larry said, “You talk a big game king, but so far” – he slugged down the two Scotch rocks the bartender had already set for the two opponents – “I ain’t seen a lot to worry about.”

The crowd roared with approval.  The king frowned, but he knew not to let the mob get away from him.  He ordered a pint glass, filled half way with Scotch, nothing younger than 12 years old.  He killed the drink in a steady series of swallows.  Settling the empty aside, a touch of drool rolling down his chin, Malcolm leaned closer to Larry:

“I will break you little tramp.”

George C. shouted from the jukebox, “It is indeed on!”  

As if on cue, the box blasted out chest rattling bass.  The whole room erupted in delight.  Marcy removed herself from the edges of the onlookers.  Snaking her way through the crowd she came up beside Larry.  She kissed him on the cheek.

Whispering in his ear she said, “You’ve got him worried, but don’t be stupid.  Slow down a bit.”

Larry nodded, “I hear you.” – he placed a hand on her cheek and smiled – “But now that I’ve got you back there’s nothing I can’t do.”

Marcy looked puzzled, “What do you mean back?”

“Nothing,” he shook his head and let loose a fierce yawp.  

#

Four hours later the mob stumbled into the Oasis.  After Rose’s Larry paced himself, and stuck to the minimum for the rest of the night:  vodka martinis, Rob Roys, Irish funerals, rum and cokes, pilsner pints, lemon drops, tequila, brandy, schnapps, various bombs, and something from a milk jug that tasted like candy but burned like fire.  Along the way King Malcolm tried going for the knockout with a Nazis Suicide.  The shot felt like a snake spinning inside his stomach for a moment before Larry managed to take hold of his guts.

At last they came to the Oasis, a dive bar like no other.  It was rumored the psyche wards from nearby hospitals let out their less violent patients, and sent them to self-medicate at the bar.  To a certain degree this was true, but only insofar as hospitals let their less violent patients leave the psyche wards at night to self-medicate at local bars.  The fact they all tended to congregate at the Oasis was merely a coincidence.  

Before Gentleman Dan announced anything Larry announced, “Gagger.”

“You can’t call for that now,” Malcolm croaked.  He wiped his streaming forehead with a handful of dollars.

“Hell I can’t,” Larry said.

Gentleman Dan the Fairing Man shrugged, “There are no rules which say he can’t.”

Malcolm extended the sweaty wad, “There are now.”

Gentleman Dan shook his head, “That’s not how I do things.  He wants a gagger, he gets a gagger.”

The king frowned, “Very well.  What’s your gagger boy?”

Larry smiled, “Burnt Mexican Chicken.”

George C. clapped his hands together, “Oh snap!”

Sophie D. shook her head, “Fucking lunatic.”

Jeanie X. drew cannibalistic flowers attacking a garden on the window with her lipstick. 

Marcy grabbed Larry by the shirt front and kissed him hard on the mouth before throwing her head back and shouting, “I love my mad man!”

The crowd murmured, uncertain about what was coming. 

Larry stepped towards the bar.  Each foot went in its own direction, and he fell to the floor.  He popped up as the bartender started peering over the side.

Grinding his teeth Larry said, “I did that to prove a point.”

The bartender cocked an eyebrow, “Fair enough.  What’s this Mex-i-can Chicken?”

Larry said, “Funny you should ask.  Three layers.  Tequila, whiskey, and the hottest hot sauce you got.”

Those familiar with the Oasis realized the gambit.  A slow murmur passed through the crowd as the information was relayed.  One of the regulars at the Oasis sometimes ate at the bar.  On such occasions he brought with him a bottle of Saint Satan’s Liquid Ghost Pepper.  The hottest hot sauce in the bar…

The grizzled old woman handed over her bottle of hot sauce with a smile.  She even said she looked forward to watching them go mad from the heat.  Larry waved, thanking her.  

While the bartender prepared the Mexican chickens a few drops of hot sauce fell on the bar.  The wood burned sending up wisps of smoke in the shape of screaming ghosts.  Malcolm shuddered at the sight.  Betting started up among the spectators.  It seemed the moment of truth was at hand.

Larry smiled.  Last time he went for the gagger at Rose’s where the hottest sauce on hand was Tabasco.  All the shot did was unsettle his stomach.  This second chance gave him the opportunity to do things right.  However, he wasn’t sure if he could handle a Mexican Chicken this late in the game.

He waited for Malcolm to down his shot first.  The king made a show of being brave, but his eyes gave him away.  Even before he swallowed it was clear the shot had done the trick.  Larry sucked down his own, and braced for impact.

Malcolm convulsed.  His body jiggled after each tremor.  Sweat rolled into his eyes.  It felt as hot as the liquid Ghost Pepper.  There was no resisting it.  Swearing, he shouldered his way through the crowd out into the street.  The big man fell to his knees and filled the gutter.

Inside the Oasis the crowd roared.  The king was no more.  Gentleman Dan grabbed Larry by the wrist.

Raising the hand of the champion he called out, “We have a winner.”

‘Indeed,’ Larry thought, ‘And if I can change this, I can make everything right.’

No loss lingering in the back of his mind Larry wouldn’t be on edge on the next few days, wouldn’t be irritable to the point Marcy took a gig in Milwaukee just to get away from him for the weekend.  She wouldn’t be at an after party… having too much fun.  He could fix things, save her life this time.

#

Hey, hey, hello.  Will Snyder here.  I was there the night the king died, and it was great.  Seriously that ended up fucking killing him.  He went home that night and died.  Some say he died of shame.  I don’t really care how.  He was a shameless bastard you ask me.  But, yeah, I was there with my buddies Max, Pete, and Amy.  Of course, Amy wasn’t Amy at the time, she was Nick, but that’s a whole other story.  

At one point the guy from LSDelight and Company slammed a forty.  He out chugged the King, then he stuck his middle finger into the bottle.  Holding it up in the King’s face that dude said, “Sit and spin on my might beer-finger.” 

Funny what can change ya life.  Hearing that was like having lightning hit my brain.  I mean, I dunno, in that moment I had a vision of where my life was headed, and where it could be headed; keeping a cubicle warm or getting plowed on a Tuesday to prove a point.  So the next day I quit my job.  Friends and I started Beerfinger, the rest is going to be history. 

This is the first song we ever wrote.  Is always a crowd pleaser when we got a crowd (speaking of which we’ll be playing this weekend at Hamburger Larry’s open mic night.  We’ll also have copies of our EP for sale, Uncle Bumble’s Mumble Juice).  This is PUB CRAWL BRAWL… enjoy.

 

Pub Crawl Brawl

By Beerfinger

Amy Vance:  drums

Max Strict:  Guitars

Will Snyder:  Bass, vocals.

Lyrics by Beerfinger


COMING SOON!

PART 4:  THE SONG TEASED AT THE END OF LAST TIME…

…and yes it was finished before the deadline for this week’s post.  Otherwise, this would be a huge dick move… a cheap ploy to slack off next week and simply post an already completed piece... Why you gotta be so suspicious?  BEERFINGER!

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Play It Again: part 2:  Reunion, Pub Crawl

9/20/2014

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Peeling his eyes open Larry stared at the ceiling.  A slice pizza hung there like a greasy sword of Damocles.  Sitting up he glanced around.  The room was familiar, his once upon a time.  A pleasant dream, this couldn't be anything else.  Marcy shifted, placing a hand on his chest.  He felt her skin, and started to hope -- his skull seemed to fracture.  Or rather, all of his senses returned alerting him to the full on hangover punishing him for having enjoyed himself.  It felt like hundreds of tiny people dancing on his brain with spiked shoes.But he stayed in bed.

Larry leaned over and whispered, "Marcy?"

She stirred.

He touched her face, "Marcy?"

She flopped a hand into his face.  Pushing him back she groaned, "Too early."

He kissed her on the forehead.  Marcy grunted and flipped over, curling herself into a tight ball.  Larry smiled what felt like his first genuine grin in years.  She was real.  This was all real.  Then the tiny people in his skull entered the industrial era, and began a mechanized assault, using double ended jackhammers to simultaneously attack his brain and punch a hole through his temples.  

Stumbling his way to the kitchen he tripped over a body splayed out on the floor.  Scanning the small apartment he recognized several figures draped over furniture like Dali's clocks.  He looked at the body on the floor, Loco Ludo.  That meant it was sometime in September or October.  Loco Ludo only ever drifted into Chicago around the Fall.  It was close to the end.

At the kitchen sink Larry filled a tall glass.  He drained it in a few seconds, and repeated this process until he no longer felt the desire to chug.  Soon enough the water cooled his enflamed brain.  Around about a liter of H20 later he felt fine.

Chuckling to himself Larry went to the bathroom.  He took a nearly two minute piss then looked at himself in the mirror.  He was himself, yet not entirely.  His eyes, though bloodshot, no longer resembled a dog begging to be euthanized; his stomach didn't hang over his pants like a sack of mud; he saw a wolf unchained.

Stepping out of the bathroom someone punched Larry in the balls.

"That's what you get for taking so long," George C. said.

"Sonuvabitch," Larry groaned, doubled over in pain.

George C. pushed him out of the way announcing, "I gotta poop." -- once inside George started singing, "Gonna take a big ol' shit, and Ima not gonna flush..."

Larry shuddered, shivering off the pain.  Others around the apartment began to stir.  Sophie D. sat up on the couch, said something that might've been a swear -- "barglecunt" -- then dashed to the kitchen sink to throw up.  Loco Ludo got up off the floor, and left through the fire escape without saying a word.  Jeanie X. slapped herself in the face until she woke up enough to raid the fridge.  She then set about making breakfast for everyone.  This mostly involved reheating any leftovers from last night.  

George C. exited the bathroom with an odd expression on his face.  He patted Larry on the shoulder, "It was so black I think I shit out a goth kid.  Success!"

The drummer sauntered off to find a beer.  It didn't take long for the other band members to join him.  A part of Larry thought, 'That is just reckless behavior.'  This thought was soon accompanied by the notion, 'It sure is, and yes you should do the same.'

Jeanie X. blew her nose into a napkin.  Seeing it covered in grey and red she tossed the mess at Sophie D.  The bassist slapped it out of the air.

"Ewwww," Sophie said, "What were you doing last night?"

Jeanie shrugged, "I dunno.  Felt great though.  Right to the end I mean.  Then the room was all like a kaleidoscope, and I saw Elvis beating up Reagan."

George C. carefully considered this vision before biting into a cold slice of pizza covered in bacon bits.  Larry went to the fridge and pulled out a beer.  

Sophie asked, "Getting ready Larry?"

Larry furrowed his brow, "For what?"

She shook her head, "For tonight."

Still unsure Larry said, "What's tonight?"

George remarked, "Dude, usually you remember shit afterwards.  You're getting old."

"I guess I've just had a lot on my mind lately," Larry said.  

Sophie said, "You're drink-fighting tonight."

Larry snapped his fingers, "That's what day it is."

Jeanie climbed up to sit on the countertop, "You're taking on Malcolm Brennan."

Larry nodded, "That's right.  The King."

George cast a dismissive wave, "King my ass.  Condescending asshole is what he is.  He once saw me nose blasting, said cocaine is no good for children, and had his goons take it from me.  Then they went out to the bar and just gave it away like they were being generous.  Too bad it was just coke.  Couldn't do much harm."

"Not judging by that mess," Sophie said pointing at the grey, red napkin on the floor.

"That wasn't coke, I swear to god," Jeanie said, "At least not only cocaine.  There was definitely something else in there.  Like pineal gland or orphan tears."

"You all talk too loud," Marcy growled.  Everyone stopped what they were doing to shout hello, good afternoon at the top of their lungs.  Marcy smirked and gave them the finger.  Shuffling across the room in a t-shirt four sizes too big for her, Marcy muttered, "You kids enjoy ya eating.  Ima shower."

She stepped into the bathroom closing the door behind her.  The hiss of water soon followed.  After a moment the door cracked open.  Marcy stuck her head.  Pointing at Larry she said, "You.  Come here."

As Larry headed over Sophie began making classic porn bass notes with her mouth.  Inside the bathroom Marcy grabbed him by the shirt front and kissed him hard.  He could taste last night still on her tongue, from the rusty twang of beer to cigarettes and scotch.  And he loved it all.

#

Malcolm Brennan considered himself a king.  The man was larger than life in more ways than one.  From his size 51 waist to his ability and desire to make buffets regret any all-you-can-eat mentality, Malcolm Brennan believed in excess.  He once bet he could eat a horse.  He won.

Larry didn't care for royalty.  He belonged to a ragtag group of underground gypsies more admired for their tenaciousness than success.  They were known as the Roger's Park Rogues formerly The Lincoln Square Squatters formerly the Humboldt Park Hobos, and briefly the Bucktown Bum Smugglers, but more often than that long winded title, they were simply LSDelight and Company.  

One night Larry watched Malcolm playing aristocrat in a small dive.  The king flashed wads of cash which he threw at the waitress instead of handing to her.  He bought rounds of drinks, but only for specific customers, making a point to announce his arbitrary reasons for excluding others from the King's Round -- "He's too ugly to have this pretty a woman.  I am balancing the universe to make things fair again."  Whenever someone put a song on the jukebox he didn't like Malcolm unplugged the machine.  

The exact particulars of how the initial challenge went down will forever be a part of underground folklore.  Perhaps it's even better if the real details go unknown.  After all, the legend claims that Larry poured an ashtray into a shot of whiskey, downed the contents, and puked on Malcolm to shut him up.  The truth is Larry went outside to smoke a cigarette.  He saw the king puking on his own shoes.  A group of Malcolm's friends came outside, and the king immediately claimed:

"This cunt puked on me like the lil bitch that he is."

Larry tried to calmly explain, "I came out here, and found him like this.  It ain't my fault he can't hold his liquor."

"I can hold more than you boy."

Things soon devolved from there into a gathering of Chicago's finest misfits to witness the ensuing drink-fight.  Standing outside the Lighthouse Larry looked at the friends he'd lost ten years ago.  They reminded him of punk rock pirates. 

Marcy said, "It's not too late.  I'll flash a little boob, lure his highness out back, and bam! we give him a boot party."

"That's why I wore these."  Sophie D. lifted up her one foot in a combat boot and brought it down hard. 

Staring into the sky Jeanie said, "There's a teddy bear somewhere not getting hugged."

George wrapped an arm around her shoulders, "You really need to lay off the hallucinogens." 

Jeanie said, "You're right Pink Whale." 

Larry turned to face his compatriots, "You guys are the best, and I know I'm going to win." -- adding in the back of his mind, 'This time.'

COMING SOON!

PART 3:  REGICIDE, AND THE BIRTH OF BEERFINGER

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Play It Again part 1:  The Vodka Wormhole

9/11/2014

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Larry shook the glass of ice water.  Stirring the drink with his finger, he thought about vodka rocks burning cold, a trace of the good old days.  Sighing, he sipped the water.  

He thought about Marcy.  The devil tattoo winking on her shoulder; buttoned leather vest tight enough to be a corset, and nothing underneath; ripped jeans offering enticing peeks of her legs; ruby lips blessing a glass of tequila with a kiss as she swallowed a double without flinching.  Thinking about Marcy, Larry glanced over at his wife, Ann, and shuddered.  

Pushing himself off the couch Larry shuffled to the kitchen.  Ann muttered something about a television show.  Larry grunted, letting Ann assume he’d said something she wanted to hear.  In the kitchen he poured out the water, and saved the ice.

Larry said, “I’m going to run to the store.  Need anything?”

“No.”

“All right then.  Back soon.”

He placed the glass in the freezer.  Marcy always kept a set of shot glasses in her freezer.  She liked frost, even went so far as to own a set designed to produce images as they froze – deer heads made of thin ice.

In the car Larry turned on the radio.  Two weeks ago a frightening incident occurred.  Larry found himself willfully turning the volume down; somehow without warning the concept of too loud had crept into his mind.  On the road to the grocery store, he tuned in a rock station and did his best to resist that blasphemy.

There used to be a time the parties didn’t stop until the cops came.  Once upon a time, in a life that seemed long, long ago, Larry knocked a man out for turning the stereo off.  Granted, the stereo belonged to that man, not to mention the fact he and Marcy had broken into that man’s house; however, never interrupt a smile.  Marcy used to talk about getting that phrase tattooed, though she never did settle on where.

Pam Dauber waved to Larry in the parking lot.  He made a similar gesture without feeling.

“How’s the Mrs.?” Pam shouted for everyone to hear.  Larry considered giving her the finger.  Instead he hollered back:

“Good.”

Larry walked away which didn’t stop Pam from continuing to yell, “You tell her I said hey gurl.”

Larry nodded then considered shooting himself.  It didn’t really seem like it would solve anything, so he set the idea aside.  Maybe some other time it would make better sense.  Right now he longed for a different shot.

He marched straight to the liquor aisle, found a small bottle of vodka, and went home.  Ann still sat on the couch doing her best to bond with it.  Larry announced he was going into the basement to work on a few things.  Ann acknowledged him without taking her eyes off the television.  Collecting his chilly glass from the freezer, Larry headed downstairs.

The first shot almost made him throw up.  It’d been a long time since he’d downed three fingers in one gulp.  But after a few gags Larry got a hold of himself.  Settling into a more sensible pace, he sipped the refilled glass as he searched for a box.

It took a half hour to find the cardboard cube in question.  Larry reloaded another shot.  This one went down smoother.  Kneeling down he opened the box:  a tattered pirate flag, skull and crossbones grinning with devilish glee; stacks of photos featuring forgotten friends alongside a kid he barely recognized as himself; a few sheets of paper covered in chicken scratch that still smelled faintly of tequila – Marcy.  

The papers might not’ve made much sense to most people.  Clipped phrases seemingly strung together at random, some portions underlined, a few doubly marked in yellow highlighter, the general sense of someone emptying their head onto a page.  Inky babbling stitched together into something remotely coherent by cherry picking what made sense and redacting what didn’t.  But it was the notes in the margins – wicked but won’t fit the riff, save for later, you can do better than this you cunt – that really made Larry smile.

Once upon a time he knew a girl named Marcy V.  She played in a band called We Eat Children that later changed their name to The Rapist Therapist before finally settling on LSDelight.  Marcy played guitar and sang, while her friend Sophie D. kept her company on bass, Jeanie X. followed on guitar, and George C. hammered the drums.  They looked like acid freak hobos led by a gypsy queen.  LSDelight played in and around Chicago for five years, mostly blowing out speakers in dive bars, but those were good times.

Larry met Marcy at an LSDelight show in Bridgeport.  He’d gone out to meet a friend for drinks, neither one of them aware the band would be playing; neither of them aware of the band.

After the show Marcy came straight over to the two and said, “You didn’t look like you were enjoying yourselves.”

Larry said, “We were trying to talk, and you guys are really loud.”

“Loud and no good, or just loud?” Marcy asked.  Something about the way she held her beer bottle made Larry nervous.

Larry said, “Just loud.  If it was no good we’d’ve left.”

“Cool.”  

He offered to buy her a drink.  

She looked him over and said, “You’ll do.”

The next morning he woke up in her apartment not sure if he’d been smooth, lucky, or some combination of the two.  However, he decided not to question good fortune and simply rode the wave.  Four years passed in an alcohol fueled cacophony, probably the best four of his life.  She opened him up to chaos.  

At the bottom of the box he found a CD with a kiss in purple lipstick on it.  Beneath that he unearthed a cocktail napkin covered in writing more akin to cuneiform than modern English.  Still, Larry knew well enough to discern the poem.

He reloaded his glass.  After digging out a pair of headphones, the kind large enough to entirely cover his ears, he put the CD in the stereo.  Headphones in place Larry took a seat, sipped his drink, and pressed play.

Marcy never got around to recording a vocal track, but she’d sent him the instruments to see what he thought.  She died before it arrived, partying in Milwaukee after a performance.  As such he’d never listened to the song.  Instead he packed her away in a box that went from closet to closet to basement for six years until a stray thought accompanied a sudden desperate lust for vodka at eleven in the afternoon.  Larry turned his back on chaos when it swallowed his love.  He settled for the quiet life with a woman who would never die having too much fun – mescal, pills, and hill billy highrises. 

Larry let the song play until the bottle was empty.  He passed out, and woke up ten years earlier in bed with Marcy V. 

Fire and Ice

by LSDelight

Guitars:  Jeanie X.

Bass:  Sophie D.

Drums:  George C.

Lyrics and Guitars:  Marcy V.

 

You can be the king

wear the crown

Or be the jester,

Prancing clown

But at the end of the day

You’re going down

            On me… on me

Men or mice,

I never play nice.

Queen of fire and ice.

 

I’ll be your

3 penny whore,

But I can be

So much more,

Just be you sure

You can endure

            Me… endure me.

Men or mice,

I never play nice.

Queen of fire and ice.

 

Maker of the wreck

Where angels fear to tread

Best with a stacked deck

Burying poles

To drain souls

Taunt with what you want

            Me… want me.

Men or mice,

I never play nice.

Queen of fire and ice.

 

COMING SOON! 

PLAY IT AGAIN part. 2:  Reunion Pub Crawl





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Welcome Home, Said the Sin Eaters

9/6/2014

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Then there was the time Liam Hood came home.  The whole town set to task cleaning up every alley and avenue as well as decorating Main Street like for a national holiday.  Anyone under a certain age didn’t really understand the excitement.  No wonder considering Liam spent the last two decades in Balmoral Penitentiary.  Also, despite the mouth watering anticipation, most parents kept their mouths shut; they wouldn’t want to tell their children about all those murders. Some say there’s still a blood stain on the Miller’s back porch, kept as a reminder. 

Not since Mark Pegg came back from Afghanistan, Purple Heart on his chest, did the town rejoice so much.  Abigail Frost went to the trouble of making her famous treat, an apple caramel paste folks scoop out with graham crackers, a delight that could inspire an anorexic to gluttony.   She didn’t do as much for Mark, though that’s no surprise.  Liam Hood, well, some men are a pleasure.  

At the trial, Liam said Victoria Brennan deserved to have her eye gouged out with a broken beer bottle because he wouldn’t have done it otherwise.

The mayor herself commissioned a mural of Liam painted on the side of the city hall, something tastefully sedate, more of a portrait than a biography.  After all, it’s not like anyone would ever forget the details of that hellish evening 22 years ago.  A picture of Hitler is terrible enough without the Holocaust as a background – the former implies the latter.  

It’s been ten years since David Cohen gave his children poison then popped open the top of his head with shotgun.  His note explained it all well enough:  We can’t live in a world that produces the likes of Liam.  Some would argue that’s a fair point, though David shouldn’t’ve assumed his kids felt the same; what daddy can’t handle isn’t necessarily an inherited weakness.  That said, David was forced to drink his own blood till he vomited.  Such things can have a warping effect on the mind.

Oh, no dreary bus rides home for Liam.  Malcolm Prince washed and waxed his brand new BMW then picked up the guest of honor himself.  He escorted the recently released Newbury Butcher with a smile.  Granted, Liam needed a needle in the neck – stiff dose of tranquilizer – before he “agreed” to the ride, but the fact is he soon found himself among a host of familiar faces.  

Everyone agreed it’d been far too long since the town took one of their own.  It’s always best to go local rather than importing.  That way folks have a good solid idea what’s what.  Urban legends could be all hype, nothing substantial to them, and truth be told, not every place has the same definition of sin.  There’s no reason to believe people like Liam aren’t welcome in some dark corner of the globe, grim as that may be.  So it was nice to finally be able to set the table with a prize pig, as it were, from the local stock. 

Peter Wright dug the official chair out of the basement.  His family’s been keeping the traditional tools since Newbury was founded back in 1804.  Although, in recent years using the official seat seemed like a waste of effort, no need to get fancy for low grade sinners.  So, for the most part, the chair at least has been collecting dust.  Hearing about Liam's return, Peter took a day to polish the chair up nice.  The crows carved into the seat’s back positively came to life.  More than a few supposed they saw the birds turn their heads to eye Liam as he was strapped into the chair.

The police arrested Hood in the midst of a travesty so hideous it caused one deputy to start laughing maniacally and shoot everyone he saw including himself.  Liam obviously survived, though a bullet to the stomach is no small worry.  At his trial he confessed to everything, explaining himself by saying:

“I expect I’ll be tasty.  Choke on me.”

Fortunately, no one outside of Newbury made sense of that.  But 22 years in jail took the edge off his bravado.  When it came time to make us choke on him, Liam tried to run away.  Yet, at the end of the day he sat in the throne.

Everyone took a slice.  Many went back for seconds.  A few even went for thirds, though they did their best to be discrete, despite the fact no one could blame them.  A meal like Liam is a rare treat.  

The children hesitated.  Even with their parents coaxing, “It’s alright honey.  Go right ahead.  And don’t worry about the way he screams.” – it isn’t easy introducing kids to certain foods.  But once they tasted.  Oh lord, it’s like bacon wrapped dates, sweet mint jalapeno jam, or blue cheese olives; a one of a kind deliciousness too few have the palate for anymore.

Yes, there was an initial horror and repulsion at the acts Liam committed.  No decent person could think kindly of a man who beat a woman to death with her own baby.  However, afterwards, mouths did start to water.  The local police had a terrible time preventing a ravenous lynch mob.

Still, reason eventually set in, and everyone agreed it would be best not to draw attention.  Let due process run its course; Liam Hood would fade from the public spotlight.  Then we could get on with the feasting, no worries as to misperceptions.  

The wide world tends to get things wrong.  We don’t eat the person.  We eat their sin.  There’s a difference.

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    J. Rohr enjoys making orphans feel at home in ovens and fashioning historical re-enactments out of dead pets collected from neighbors’ backyards.

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