"This is a very good read!! A murdered singer wakes up in a 12 year old kid and starts typing a diary about his life all the while his wife is on trial for his murder. It's well written and funny! Recommended!!"
CHAPTER ONE
Some folks believe that when you die you go to Heaven. I write that with a capital “H” in case it really does exist, and in case there’s a chance in Hell I’ll ever get to go there. Not real sure why I capitalize “Hell.” Maybe for the same reason I capitalize “Oklahoma.”
Anyway. Heaven. These folks believe you go to this place which is joyous and infinite and without any of our earth-bound trials and tribulations and those distractions which might lead one down the path to Hell. Which is why, once you get to Heaven, you’re for all intents and purposes stuck there. You’ll see all of those loved ones who meet the criteria of having gone before you and having led similarly righteous lives. I think of some of my loved ones who have passed before me and are probably in Heaven and, while I still love ‘em, bless their hearts, the idea of spending eternity with ‘em sounds a lot more like the definition of Hell. More often than not it was a struggle to just get through Thanksgiving dinner, which, as I recall, only seemed to last an eternity. But I digress.
Apparently one of the main requirements for going to this swell place, Heaven, is that you have to believe you’re going there. You don’t just live a righteous life and wind up there surprised, thinking, well I guess this sure beats the Hell out of nothing! And if I’ve understood what I’ve read and been told, believing you’re going there sometimes trumps actually living a righteous life, and there’s a little loophole whereby you can sin like a motherfucker (even using words like “motherfucker”), torture bunnies, drink, gamble, have sex with hookers, make fun of nuns, maybe even send some righteous folks to Heaven, and, if you ask for forgiveness, you still got your ticket. Seems to me this would kind of give an unfair advantage to those dying long, slow deaths, and leave those who get shot in the head or hit by a train or a falling meteor sucking everlasting hind teat, as it were.
Trust me. I know the taste of hind teat.
Another existential conundrum posed by all this eternity stuff is that no matter how good a life you lead, how much you abide by all the rules that’ll get you to Heaven, there’s a better-than-even chance you’ll have been abiding by the wrong set of rules. While it’s generally agreed the world over by those who believe in God that there’s just one of Him, there seems to be some severe and rather violent disagreement as to just exactly which team He’s coachin’.
For instance, if He’s coachin’ a baseball team, you can be the best, most righteous damned soccer player in the world, but in that moment when you free up your death bed, you’re gonna be in for a rude awakening, or lack thereof. I cannot conceive of a situation more maddening than to know you had spent your entire life forsaking cussin’ and bunnie-torturin’ and drinkin’ and gamblin’ – not to mention hooker-fuckin’ and nun-ridiculin’ - only to find out you coulda gone to town on that shit for all the good it did ya. Now that would be an eternal aggravation! I think that if Vegas set odds on all this, you’d have a better chance of winnin’ sinnin’.
Which kinda sounds like a country song, don’t it?
On the other hand, there are those who believe that death is an abyss, the Big Nothing, that we make our own Heavens or Hells right here on Earth during whatever amount of time we have allotted. Which is, at the very least, a more convenient way to look at it.
There are even those who believe that life is but a dream, and death is an awakening from that dream. Not sure I even understand that, because it seems it would mean that everybody would be havin’ the same dream, and I’ve always kinda liked to keep my dreams to myself.
Besides, what would be the difference between a dream perceived by everyone as reality and true objective reality (if such a thing exists)? I’ll leave that to the philosophers. They’ve got more inclination to ponder such things, although it seems like I may have infinitely more time.
CHAPTER TWO
Wilson, Tennessee is a small town of about fourteen thousand located in the Cumberland Valley about a half-hour’s drive east of Nashville. The seat of Wilson County, it has all the charms of a small Southern town – friendly folk, a town square, a single movie theater (although a full two generations have no memory of it having a single screen), and gossip that flies as care-free as the Confederate Flag that waved over the courthouse until almost 1970. While political pressure from Nashville (the threat of withholding money!) brought the flag down, gossip remains unencumbered.
Northerners like to imply it’s a Southern thing, but gossip’s been around almost as long as people. If they hadn’t been alone on the planet, surely rumors would’ve flown about a certain couple having pre-marital sex in a certain garden.
Egyptians gossiped with hieroglyphics, American Indians with smoke signals, frontiersmen with Pony Express riders. One of the driving forces behind many technological advances – if you really study it - has been not only to more-effectively facilitate the slaughter of our fellow man, but also to facilitate the infliction of more subtle (and far more entertaining) injuries.
During the late winter and early spring of 2009 in Wilson, Tennessee, rumor had it that Willard Blevins – “you know, Mack’s boy” – was possessed by a devil in his laptop.
Nobody blamed Mack and Elenore for giving the twelve-year-old a gizmo that came pre-loaded with – in addition to all its other apps – a freakin’ entity. They were from a different time, a generation that considered programming the VCR and getting the coffee-maker to brew before you woke up to be all the technical know-how required of someone without a college degree. And there were no degrees in the Blevins family - and none were expected – most likely because the family tree wasn’t exactly overrun with branches. Mack’s father was Elenore’s mother’s cousin, Elenore’s sister’s husband was Mack’s uncle’s cousin’s boy…it didn’t make for a high prospect of a bio-chemist in the family’s future, but it sure made it easy to find an organ donor. Which was infinitely more practical.
His father got Willard the laptop mainly for its video games, because, as Mack put it, “the little shit’s always wantin’ to change the goddamned channel from NASCAR.” His son’s aversion to stock-car racing prompted Mack to wonder on occasion if perhaps the boy wasn’t his, but he’d done the bone-dance with Elenore plenty of times, and couldn’t for the life of him imagine anyone else wanting to go through that.
It took Willard some time to figure out how to work his new toy. At first, all he could do with it was play Dungeon Hunter, which Mack was relieved to discover at least involved killing. The boy had always been something of a loner – his weight problem attracted derision from his classmates and eliminated most sports as an activity option – and his parents were both happy to see him while away his free hours doing something he seemed to enjoy more than sitting on the couch, bitching about what was on TV. They often heard him in his room, shouting gleefully at the death of another enemy combatant in the sacred land of Gothicus, and, while they couldn’t really comprehend his reports of progress - using words like “Warlord” and “Astromancer” – if it relieved them from seemingly incessant interruptions of watching cars driving around in a circle, they were all for it.
About a month earlier, the joyful sounds of villain-killing exaltation had suddenly ceased. After a few hours of silence from the boy’s room, Mack told Elenore he was afraid their son might be burned out.
“Goddamnit,” he growled. “He’s gonna be back in here bitchin’ about what’s on TV.”
Elenore concurred, in the way she’d concurred for years. She silently nodded her head, her eyes glued to the flat-screen. Occasionally she grunted, but mainly reserved such outbursts for family crises.
Mack had hoisted himself out of his comfy recliner. It was pretty much the only exercise he got these days, ever since he’d lost a big toe in a drunken bowling accident and got a hefty settlement check. He waddled down the hall to Willard’s closed bedroom door, and was about to walk in when he thought he heard a faint but only vaguely familiar sound from inside the boy’s room. It was not dissimilar to the sound made by squirrels in the attic, but obviously that wasn’t it. A few moments later it dawned on him.
He walked back into the living room, a strange expression on his face.
“Elenore.”
Though the tone of his voice didn’t seem particularly urgent, there was something about it that had pulled his wife’s eyes from the TV screen.
“Huh?”
Mack paused a moment, almost as if he couldn’t actually commit to words the thought in his head, yet neither could he hold it back.
“I think Willard’s in there goddamned typing.”
Elenore’s jaw had dropped and rested on her Titanic-sized bosom.
“Shut the front door.”
This was not only as close as Elenore ever came to swearing, it was also one of her rare complete sentences.
“I shit you not. Can’t think of what else it might be.”
Elenore’s curiosity, usually a slumbering, dim-witted beast, overcame her aversion to getting off the couch for but going to the bathroom, refilling her iced tea, or popping a snack into the microwave. She gripped the padded arm-rest and lumbered to her feet.
Mack was almost as mystified by this as he was by the goings-on in their son’s room.
“Dang, Elenore, it ain’t even a commercial.”
If looks could slap, Mack would’ve been smacked.
Without waiting for further reply, Mack turned and walked down the hall, Elenore just behind. The couple paused – as side-by-side as logistically possible with two such bodies in the narrow hallway - just outside the closed bedroom door, listening. Unfortunately, the labored breathing of not one but two fat people drowned out whatever faint sounds may have been emanating from the room.
“Shhh!” Mack whispered.
“’Shhh’ what?”
“Stop breathin’!”
Elenore back-handed his shoulder, the sound absorbed by Mack’s circus-tent-sized flannel shirt.
“You stop breathin’.”
With the dual behemoths momentarily completely silent, the only sounds in the house were the faint whirring of the ceiling fan in the living room, barely audible over the TV’s inanity.
And the distinctive clickety-clickety-clack of the laptop’s keyboard from behind Willard’s closed door.
Mack and Elenore exhaled simultaneously, looking at one another wide-eyed, Elenore surprised, Mack with an “I told you so” expression.
“Shut the front door,” Elenore whispered.
“You think he’s doing homework?” Mack whispered back.
It’s not an easy thing to whisper a responsive grunt, but that’s what Elenore did.
Without awaiting further response or encouragement, Mack quickly turned the knob and opened Willard’s door.
“Shut the front door,” Elenore said for a third time, and Mack would have thought her incessant yacking nearly intolerable if his attention hadn’t been elsewhere.
Willard sat on his twin-sized unmade bed, his pudgy legs stretched out and crossed at the ankles. His back rested against the headboard, his computer opened on his lap as his fingers raced across the keyboard, his eyes staring through his dirty-blond stringy bangs at either the opposite wall or nothing at all.
Mack and Elenore took all this in in exactly the amount of time it took for the sound waves from the opening of the door (and Elenore’s “Shut the front door”) to reach their son’s dirty ears, for his gaze quickly turned their direction. He slammed his laptop shut.
“I can’t believe I fucking lost my fucking capo again,” he said.
CHAPTER THREE
Love is only overrated by those who are not in it. Love is a timeless, ageless thing, overwhelming the senses identically at fifty as at fifteen, a meeting of the heart and mind that is not replicated by any other experience – physical, emotional, instinctual, biological. Love is all these things, and the only singularly human phenomenon that absolutely requires reciprocation in order to function at that level which defines it, which makes it the most desirable and aspired-to state of our all-too-short and unhappy existence. Left unrequited, love is a cancer that cannot be cut out, an insidious state of mental and physical anguish curable only by the passage of enough time necessary to return its victim to a state of deluding themselves that it’s overrated.
So how does one separate true romantic love from raw animal passion? Elementary, my dear – one doesn’t. The latter can thrive without the former, but not vice-versa. At least not until love ages, the maturing of a fine wine, becoming a wiser and stronger and more comfortable love, perhaps to compensate for the weakening of physical desire.
But in the beginning, love needs fucking. And a lot of it.
Angel and I fed our love like a starving puppy, at the very least daily, sometimes hourly, sometimes with scraps under the kitchen table. Not sure what that means exactly, but we did once make love on the kitchen floor, and wound up under the table. The same one she’d drunk me under on more than one occasion.
From the night we met - at a bar in Nashville where me and my band “The Cowtippers” were playing a gig – I thought her name rather ironic, as she introduced herself to me by showing me the tattoo on her tit, and proceeded from there to introduce me to carnal pleasures that would make Lucifer say, “That’s nasty,” and spank his monkey.
I was forty-two, and had been writing and playing songs for over half my life. In that entire time, I’d never got laid as a direct result of playing, which – regardless of what any lying-ass musician says – was one of the reasons I’d picked up the guitar in the first place.
After nearly two decades since my initial foray to Music City, I’d got sick to death of the place. The final straw had been (along with a major heartbreak) a big-ass billboard – right outside the window of the Music Row sandwich joint I’d been busting my hiney in for nearly ten years - of the latest country sensation, a teeny-bopper named Billy Gilman, who to me epitomized everything that was wrong with the biz. I’d always thought country music was supposed to be about the lives and trials and tribulations of the common man, performed and often written by artists who you could believe had actually lived and trialed and tribulated. This little Billy Gilman dipstick couldn’t write his name in the dirt with a stick if you spotted him the “B,” and his greatest tribulation had been his terror over the strange fuzz growing on his peanut-sized marbles.
So I’d said “Fuck it” and moved to Austin, Texas (my second journey to the “Live Music Capital of the World). Less than a year-and-a-half later, I’d got signed to a label out of New York City. Guess where they moved me? Yep. Fuckin’ Nashville. May the circle-jerk be unbroken.
I wasn’t bitching too much. It was far better to live in Nashville as a guy with a record deal than it was as a guy looking for a record deal. The Prez of the label, Phil, thought I was talented as all get-out, and told anybody who’d listen that I was “a gem.” Even nicer than the accolades were the checks he’d send me on those occasions when my day gig didn’t quite cover my basic requirements. You know, rent and utilities and bars and beer and cigs and the whatnot. Which was not infrequently. If you’ve got something to fall back on, you’ll always fall back.
While the first CD had been pretty much ignored (except for some minor airplay which I’ll tell you about later), the second one - with some major players on it - had come out and got pretty good press. One national publication said that I “combined laugh-out-loud lyrics with solid rhythm guitar and vocals,” and that I painted “a vivid portrait of the dangers of love and relationships.” I’d thought I was writing about being a musician for half my life and still not getting laid. I might’ve mentioned that.
The press had led to more substantial airplay, which had led to some pretty cool gigs, which had led to Angel. I’d long ago stopped anticipating anything from playing shows apart from a good beer buzz and about an hour of feeling like the brightest light in the room. It’s always amazed me how shy I can be for most of my existence, but how all those deep-seeded insecurities can melt away with a few beers and my music and applause.
And, until Angel, it had amazed me that that shit had never got me laid. I might’ve mentioned that.
She’d been sitting at a table near the stage with two of her friends. There wasn’t one among ‘em I would’ve kicked out of bed for eating crackers, but she had an aura about her, a spark, a light.
And a helluva set of tits, which she’d flashed at me between our first and second encore. On her left breast was a tattoo that said, simply, MY FIRST TATTOO. In fancy lettering like that. Of course I damned near shit myself right on stage (which would’ve made me feel like somewhat less than the brightest light in the room). Not so much because this beautiful woman had shown me her beautiful melons (which affected me in a completely different way), but because I’d only seen a tat like that one other place: on me. It’d been quite the conversation-piece since that Halloween night I’d had a few too many after work at the sammich shop and staggered down the street to the “Tattoo Parlor of the Stars”. The guy who did it thought it so damned funny he put it up on their website, and Phil at the label thought it so typical me that it became the back of my second CD.
So, needless to say, I figured this gal’s titty tat was either a freakish coincidence or an indicator that I had found a really big fan. I was hoping it was the latter, reasoning that if a woman would put a fella’s kinda-trademark on her skin permanently, she might allow that same fella’s doo-hickey in her giddy-up at least temporarily. I also thought “Let Me Put My Doo-Hickey in Your Giddy-up” might make a cute country song.
After the set, as the rest of the band began tearing down the equipment, I ‘d walked to the bar for a much-needed beer, only to find that she’d already ordered one for me. I thanked her. She held out a long smooth hand at the end of a long smooth arm and introduced herself.
“Hi Jared. I’m Angel.”
(Don’t guess I’ve mentioned this, by the by, but that’s my name. Jared Whaley. Pleased to meet ya, reader.)
I shook her hand and felt a little electrical thrill run up my arm, then zap me in the heart and groin.
“How old were you before your parents realized they’d named you wrong?” I asked.
She’d laughed, all perfect lips and perfect teeth and perfect mouth. Perfect. Hey, she’d already shown me her tits and bought me a beer. Now she was laughing at my first joke. You’ll excuse me if I found her flawless.
She was about five-ten, an inch taller than me, but it seemed even more than that because she had good posture, whereas I was a life-long slouch. She had long dark hair and a model’s long legs and slim hips and a porn star’s fantabulous ta-tas. I guessed her to be about twenty-two, and hoped she wasn’t much younger than that. I’ve always had a firm rule to not lust after women too close to my oldest daughter’s age, which was twenty at the time. But if Angel had told me she was only nineteen, it probably wouldn’t have mattered. Passion sucks at math.
“Well, Angel, you’ve got to tell me about that tattoo.”
She giggled and took a drink of beer, her hand wrapped sensuously around the bottle, bringing it provocatively to her mouth, her full red lips teasing the opening, seeming to draw the cool liquid to them rather than relying on the natural law of gravity. Hey, if I was that beer, I’d’ve wanted to be in her mouth too. Even if I wasn’t that beer, actually. Which, obviously, I wasn’t. But I digress.
“I got it right after I bought your CD, which was right after it came out,” she said, setting that lucky-ass bottle back on the bar. “Would you sign it?”
It was my turn to take a drink. Not that we were necessarily taking turns.
“Your CD or your tit?”
She laughed again, and that’s when our eyes really met - beyond the glancing perfunctory dance which is a part of the male-female ritual – and I realized that the deep-blue depths of those wonderful orbs were every bit as enticing as her other perhaps more spank-worthy assets. Her gaze was unflinching, magnetic, and gave my own usually-halting stare the gumption to be googly. She seemed to sense this, and a smile played at the corners of her luscious lips, which I only caught peripherally, stuck as I was in those unwavering windows to her soul.
“I just happen to have both with me,” she said, her happy hormone-hyping hypnotics broken by the magical mirth of the moment. Geez Louise, I literally love alliteration.
We both laughed, me as much in a “funny ha-ha” as a “funny fucking-awesome” kinda way. Although she was funny ha-ha too.
“Well,” I said, after the moment passed and we resumed our eye-fucking. “The guys’ll be irate if I don’t do a little manual labor.”
I’d already noticed a few silent baleful stares between my fellow pickers-and-grinners as they unplugged and wrapped cords and hauled out amps and instruments. They usually only joked about it, but there had always been a slight underlying tension over how little heavy lifting I did, both before and after a gig. Hey, I was the front man. It was kinda my job to socialize. Great work if you can get it.
“Won’t take me long. Then I’ll get my sharpie,” I said, before almost literally dragging my happy ass from her desirable fantasy-inspiring realm for a brief sojourn to the real world.
I felt her eyes on me as I made my way to the stage, unplugged my guitar and put it in the case. As I started wrapping my cord, I didn’t realize I had just taken the first step in a not-nearly- long-enough journey that would take me from the pinnacles of both physical and emotional bliss to the fire-and-brimstone-laden depths of despair and back again…and again…and again…not finally culminating till death did us part.
I wasn’t thinking about any of that at the time. I was looking around the stage, starting to get a little pissed, wondering where I’d put the little springy contraption that a mediocre guitar player such as myself clamps onto the strings in order to change keys without actually having to play different chords.
“Goddamn it,” I said, as much to myself as to my band-mates. “I can’t believe I fucking lost my fucking capo again.”
Some folks believe that when you die you go to Heaven. I write that with a capital “H” in case it really does exist, and in case there’s a chance in Hell I’ll ever get to go there. Not real sure why I capitalize “Hell.” Maybe for the same reason I capitalize “Oklahoma.”
Anyway. Heaven. These folks believe you go to this place which is joyous and infinite and without any of our earth-bound trials and tribulations and those distractions which might lead one down the path to Hell. Which is why, once you get to Heaven, you’re for all intents and purposes stuck there. You’ll see all of those loved ones who meet the criteria of having gone before you and having led similarly righteous lives. I think of some of my loved ones who have passed before me and are probably in Heaven and, while I still love ‘em, bless their hearts, the idea of spending eternity with ‘em sounds a lot more like the definition of Hell. More often than not it was a struggle to just get through Thanksgiving dinner, which, as I recall, only seemed to last an eternity. But I digress.
Apparently one of the main requirements for going to this swell place, Heaven, is that you have to believe you’re going there. You don’t just live a righteous life and wind up there surprised, thinking, well I guess this sure beats the Hell out of nothing! And if I’ve understood what I’ve read and been told, believing you’re going there sometimes trumps actually living a righteous life, and there’s a little loophole whereby you can sin like a motherfucker (even using words like “motherfucker”), torture bunnies, drink, gamble, have sex with hookers, make fun of nuns, maybe even send some righteous folks to Heaven, and, if you ask for forgiveness, you still got your ticket. Seems to me this would kind of give an unfair advantage to those dying long, slow deaths, and leave those who get shot in the head or hit by a train or a falling meteor sucking everlasting hind teat, as it were.
Trust me. I know the taste of hind teat.
Another existential conundrum posed by all this eternity stuff is that no matter how good a life you lead, how much you abide by all the rules that’ll get you to Heaven, there’s a better-than-even chance you’ll have been abiding by the wrong set of rules. While it’s generally agreed the world over by those who believe in God that there’s just one of Him, there seems to be some severe and rather violent disagreement as to just exactly which team He’s coachin’.
For instance, if He’s coachin’ a baseball team, you can be the best, most righteous damned soccer player in the world, but in that moment when you free up your death bed, you’re gonna be in for a rude awakening, or lack thereof. I cannot conceive of a situation more maddening than to know you had spent your entire life forsaking cussin’ and bunnie-torturin’ and drinkin’ and gamblin’ – not to mention hooker-fuckin’ and nun-ridiculin’ - only to find out you coulda gone to town on that shit for all the good it did ya. Now that would be an eternal aggravation! I think that if Vegas set odds on all this, you’d have a better chance of winnin’ sinnin’.
Which kinda sounds like a country song, don’t it?
On the other hand, there are those who believe that death is an abyss, the Big Nothing, that we make our own Heavens or Hells right here on Earth during whatever amount of time we have allotted. Which is, at the very least, a more convenient way to look at it.
There are even those who believe that life is but a dream, and death is an awakening from that dream. Not sure I even understand that, because it seems it would mean that everybody would be havin’ the same dream, and I’ve always kinda liked to keep my dreams to myself.
Besides, what would be the difference between a dream perceived by everyone as reality and true objective reality (if such a thing exists)? I’ll leave that to the philosophers. They’ve got more inclination to ponder such things, although it seems like I may have infinitely more time.
CHAPTER TWO
Wilson, Tennessee is a small town of about fourteen thousand located in the Cumberland Valley about a half-hour’s drive east of Nashville. The seat of Wilson County, it has all the charms of a small Southern town – friendly folk, a town square, a single movie theater (although a full two generations have no memory of it having a single screen), and gossip that flies as care-free as the Confederate Flag that waved over the courthouse until almost 1970. While political pressure from Nashville (the threat of withholding money!) brought the flag down, gossip remains unencumbered.
Northerners like to imply it’s a Southern thing, but gossip’s been around almost as long as people. If they hadn’t been alone on the planet, surely rumors would’ve flown about a certain couple having pre-marital sex in a certain garden.
Egyptians gossiped with hieroglyphics, American Indians with smoke signals, frontiersmen with Pony Express riders. One of the driving forces behind many technological advances – if you really study it - has been not only to more-effectively facilitate the slaughter of our fellow man, but also to facilitate the infliction of more subtle (and far more entertaining) injuries.
During the late winter and early spring of 2009 in Wilson, Tennessee, rumor had it that Willard Blevins – “you know, Mack’s boy” – was possessed by a devil in his laptop.
Nobody blamed Mack and Elenore for giving the twelve-year-old a gizmo that came pre-loaded with – in addition to all its other apps – a freakin’ entity. They were from a different time, a generation that considered programming the VCR and getting the coffee-maker to brew before you woke up to be all the technical know-how required of someone without a college degree. And there were no degrees in the Blevins family - and none were expected – most likely because the family tree wasn’t exactly overrun with branches. Mack’s father was Elenore’s mother’s cousin, Elenore’s sister’s husband was Mack’s uncle’s cousin’s boy…it didn’t make for a high prospect of a bio-chemist in the family’s future, but it sure made it easy to find an organ donor. Which was infinitely more practical.
His father got Willard the laptop mainly for its video games, because, as Mack put it, “the little shit’s always wantin’ to change the goddamned channel from NASCAR.” His son’s aversion to stock-car racing prompted Mack to wonder on occasion if perhaps the boy wasn’t his, but he’d done the bone-dance with Elenore plenty of times, and couldn’t for the life of him imagine anyone else wanting to go through that.
It took Willard some time to figure out how to work his new toy. At first, all he could do with it was play Dungeon Hunter, which Mack was relieved to discover at least involved killing. The boy had always been something of a loner – his weight problem attracted derision from his classmates and eliminated most sports as an activity option – and his parents were both happy to see him while away his free hours doing something he seemed to enjoy more than sitting on the couch, bitching about what was on TV. They often heard him in his room, shouting gleefully at the death of another enemy combatant in the sacred land of Gothicus, and, while they couldn’t really comprehend his reports of progress - using words like “Warlord” and “Astromancer” – if it relieved them from seemingly incessant interruptions of watching cars driving around in a circle, they were all for it.
About a month earlier, the joyful sounds of villain-killing exaltation had suddenly ceased. After a few hours of silence from the boy’s room, Mack told Elenore he was afraid their son might be burned out.
“Goddamnit,” he growled. “He’s gonna be back in here bitchin’ about what’s on TV.”
Elenore concurred, in the way she’d concurred for years. She silently nodded her head, her eyes glued to the flat-screen. Occasionally she grunted, but mainly reserved such outbursts for family crises.
Mack had hoisted himself out of his comfy recliner. It was pretty much the only exercise he got these days, ever since he’d lost a big toe in a drunken bowling accident and got a hefty settlement check. He waddled down the hall to Willard’s closed bedroom door, and was about to walk in when he thought he heard a faint but only vaguely familiar sound from inside the boy’s room. It was not dissimilar to the sound made by squirrels in the attic, but obviously that wasn’t it. A few moments later it dawned on him.
He walked back into the living room, a strange expression on his face.
“Elenore.”
Though the tone of his voice didn’t seem particularly urgent, there was something about it that had pulled his wife’s eyes from the TV screen.
“Huh?”
Mack paused a moment, almost as if he couldn’t actually commit to words the thought in his head, yet neither could he hold it back.
“I think Willard’s in there goddamned typing.”
Elenore’s jaw had dropped and rested on her Titanic-sized bosom.
“Shut the front door.”
This was not only as close as Elenore ever came to swearing, it was also one of her rare complete sentences.
“I shit you not. Can’t think of what else it might be.”
Elenore’s curiosity, usually a slumbering, dim-witted beast, overcame her aversion to getting off the couch for but going to the bathroom, refilling her iced tea, or popping a snack into the microwave. She gripped the padded arm-rest and lumbered to her feet.
Mack was almost as mystified by this as he was by the goings-on in their son’s room.
“Dang, Elenore, it ain’t even a commercial.”
If looks could slap, Mack would’ve been smacked.
Without waiting for further reply, Mack turned and walked down the hall, Elenore just behind. The couple paused – as side-by-side as logistically possible with two such bodies in the narrow hallway - just outside the closed bedroom door, listening. Unfortunately, the labored breathing of not one but two fat people drowned out whatever faint sounds may have been emanating from the room.
“Shhh!” Mack whispered.
“’Shhh’ what?”
“Stop breathin’!”
Elenore back-handed his shoulder, the sound absorbed by Mack’s circus-tent-sized flannel shirt.
“You stop breathin’.”
With the dual behemoths momentarily completely silent, the only sounds in the house were the faint whirring of the ceiling fan in the living room, barely audible over the TV’s inanity.
And the distinctive clickety-clickety-clack of the laptop’s keyboard from behind Willard’s closed door.
Mack and Elenore exhaled simultaneously, looking at one another wide-eyed, Elenore surprised, Mack with an “I told you so” expression.
“Shut the front door,” Elenore whispered.
“You think he’s doing homework?” Mack whispered back.
It’s not an easy thing to whisper a responsive grunt, but that’s what Elenore did.
Without awaiting further response or encouragement, Mack quickly turned the knob and opened Willard’s door.
“Shut the front door,” Elenore said for a third time, and Mack would have thought her incessant yacking nearly intolerable if his attention hadn’t been elsewhere.
Willard sat on his twin-sized unmade bed, his pudgy legs stretched out and crossed at the ankles. His back rested against the headboard, his computer opened on his lap as his fingers raced across the keyboard, his eyes staring through his dirty-blond stringy bangs at either the opposite wall or nothing at all.
Mack and Elenore took all this in in exactly the amount of time it took for the sound waves from the opening of the door (and Elenore’s “Shut the front door”) to reach their son’s dirty ears, for his gaze quickly turned their direction. He slammed his laptop shut.
“I can’t believe I fucking lost my fucking capo again,” he said.
CHAPTER THREE
Love is only overrated by those who are not in it. Love is a timeless, ageless thing, overwhelming the senses identically at fifty as at fifteen, a meeting of the heart and mind that is not replicated by any other experience – physical, emotional, instinctual, biological. Love is all these things, and the only singularly human phenomenon that absolutely requires reciprocation in order to function at that level which defines it, which makes it the most desirable and aspired-to state of our all-too-short and unhappy existence. Left unrequited, love is a cancer that cannot be cut out, an insidious state of mental and physical anguish curable only by the passage of enough time necessary to return its victim to a state of deluding themselves that it’s overrated.
So how does one separate true romantic love from raw animal passion? Elementary, my dear – one doesn’t. The latter can thrive without the former, but not vice-versa. At least not until love ages, the maturing of a fine wine, becoming a wiser and stronger and more comfortable love, perhaps to compensate for the weakening of physical desire.
But in the beginning, love needs fucking. And a lot of it.
Angel and I fed our love like a starving puppy, at the very least daily, sometimes hourly, sometimes with scraps under the kitchen table. Not sure what that means exactly, but we did once make love on the kitchen floor, and wound up under the table. The same one she’d drunk me under on more than one occasion.
From the night we met - at a bar in Nashville where me and my band “The Cowtippers” were playing a gig – I thought her name rather ironic, as she introduced herself to me by showing me the tattoo on her tit, and proceeded from there to introduce me to carnal pleasures that would make Lucifer say, “That’s nasty,” and spank his monkey.
I was forty-two, and had been writing and playing songs for over half my life. In that entire time, I’d never got laid as a direct result of playing, which – regardless of what any lying-ass musician says – was one of the reasons I’d picked up the guitar in the first place.
After nearly two decades since my initial foray to Music City, I’d got sick to death of the place. The final straw had been (along with a major heartbreak) a big-ass billboard – right outside the window of the Music Row sandwich joint I’d been busting my hiney in for nearly ten years - of the latest country sensation, a teeny-bopper named Billy Gilman, who to me epitomized everything that was wrong with the biz. I’d always thought country music was supposed to be about the lives and trials and tribulations of the common man, performed and often written by artists who you could believe had actually lived and trialed and tribulated. This little Billy Gilman dipstick couldn’t write his name in the dirt with a stick if you spotted him the “B,” and his greatest tribulation had been his terror over the strange fuzz growing on his peanut-sized marbles.
So I’d said “Fuck it” and moved to Austin, Texas (my second journey to the “Live Music Capital of the World). Less than a year-and-a-half later, I’d got signed to a label out of New York City. Guess where they moved me? Yep. Fuckin’ Nashville. May the circle-jerk be unbroken.
I wasn’t bitching too much. It was far better to live in Nashville as a guy with a record deal than it was as a guy looking for a record deal. The Prez of the label, Phil, thought I was talented as all get-out, and told anybody who’d listen that I was “a gem.” Even nicer than the accolades were the checks he’d send me on those occasions when my day gig didn’t quite cover my basic requirements. You know, rent and utilities and bars and beer and cigs and the whatnot. Which was not infrequently. If you’ve got something to fall back on, you’ll always fall back.
While the first CD had been pretty much ignored (except for some minor airplay which I’ll tell you about later), the second one - with some major players on it - had come out and got pretty good press. One national publication said that I “combined laugh-out-loud lyrics with solid rhythm guitar and vocals,” and that I painted “a vivid portrait of the dangers of love and relationships.” I’d thought I was writing about being a musician for half my life and still not getting laid. I might’ve mentioned that.
The press had led to more substantial airplay, which had led to some pretty cool gigs, which had led to Angel. I’d long ago stopped anticipating anything from playing shows apart from a good beer buzz and about an hour of feeling like the brightest light in the room. It’s always amazed me how shy I can be for most of my existence, but how all those deep-seeded insecurities can melt away with a few beers and my music and applause.
And, until Angel, it had amazed me that that shit had never got me laid. I might’ve mentioned that.
She’d been sitting at a table near the stage with two of her friends. There wasn’t one among ‘em I would’ve kicked out of bed for eating crackers, but she had an aura about her, a spark, a light.
And a helluva set of tits, which she’d flashed at me between our first and second encore. On her left breast was a tattoo that said, simply, MY FIRST TATTOO. In fancy lettering like that. Of course I damned near shit myself right on stage (which would’ve made me feel like somewhat less than the brightest light in the room). Not so much because this beautiful woman had shown me her beautiful melons (which affected me in a completely different way), but because I’d only seen a tat like that one other place: on me. It’d been quite the conversation-piece since that Halloween night I’d had a few too many after work at the sammich shop and staggered down the street to the “Tattoo Parlor of the Stars”. The guy who did it thought it so damned funny he put it up on their website, and Phil at the label thought it so typical me that it became the back of my second CD.
So, needless to say, I figured this gal’s titty tat was either a freakish coincidence or an indicator that I had found a really big fan. I was hoping it was the latter, reasoning that if a woman would put a fella’s kinda-trademark on her skin permanently, she might allow that same fella’s doo-hickey in her giddy-up at least temporarily. I also thought “Let Me Put My Doo-Hickey in Your Giddy-up” might make a cute country song.
After the set, as the rest of the band began tearing down the equipment, I ‘d walked to the bar for a much-needed beer, only to find that she’d already ordered one for me. I thanked her. She held out a long smooth hand at the end of a long smooth arm and introduced herself.
“Hi Jared. I’m Angel.”
(Don’t guess I’ve mentioned this, by the by, but that’s my name. Jared Whaley. Pleased to meet ya, reader.)
I shook her hand and felt a little electrical thrill run up my arm, then zap me in the heart and groin.
“How old were you before your parents realized they’d named you wrong?” I asked.
She’d laughed, all perfect lips and perfect teeth and perfect mouth. Perfect. Hey, she’d already shown me her tits and bought me a beer. Now she was laughing at my first joke. You’ll excuse me if I found her flawless.
She was about five-ten, an inch taller than me, but it seemed even more than that because she had good posture, whereas I was a life-long slouch. She had long dark hair and a model’s long legs and slim hips and a porn star’s fantabulous ta-tas. I guessed her to be about twenty-two, and hoped she wasn’t much younger than that. I’ve always had a firm rule to not lust after women too close to my oldest daughter’s age, which was twenty at the time. But if Angel had told me she was only nineteen, it probably wouldn’t have mattered. Passion sucks at math.
“Well, Angel, you’ve got to tell me about that tattoo.”
She giggled and took a drink of beer, her hand wrapped sensuously around the bottle, bringing it provocatively to her mouth, her full red lips teasing the opening, seeming to draw the cool liquid to them rather than relying on the natural law of gravity. Hey, if I was that beer, I’d’ve wanted to be in her mouth too. Even if I wasn’t that beer, actually. Which, obviously, I wasn’t. But I digress.
“I got it right after I bought your CD, which was right after it came out,” she said, setting that lucky-ass bottle back on the bar. “Would you sign it?”
It was my turn to take a drink. Not that we were necessarily taking turns.
“Your CD or your tit?”
She laughed again, and that’s when our eyes really met - beyond the glancing perfunctory dance which is a part of the male-female ritual – and I realized that the deep-blue depths of those wonderful orbs were every bit as enticing as her other perhaps more spank-worthy assets. Her gaze was unflinching, magnetic, and gave my own usually-halting stare the gumption to be googly. She seemed to sense this, and a smile played at the corners of her luscious lips, which I only caught peripherally, stuck as I was in those unwavering windows to her soul.
“I just happen to have both with me,” she said, her happy hormone-hyping hypnotics broken by the magical mirth of the moment. Geez Louise, I literally love alliteration.
We both laughed, me as much in a “funny ha-ha” as a “funny fucking-awesome” kinda way. Although she was funny ha-ha too.
“Well,” I said, after the moment passed and we resumed our eye-fucking. “The guys’ll be irate if I don’t do a little manual labor.”
I’d already noticed a few silent baleful stares between my fellow pickers-and-grinners as they unplugged and wrapped cords and hauled out amps and instruments. They usually only joked about it, but there had always been a slight underlying tension over how little heavy lifting I did, both before and after a gig. Hey, I was the front man. It was kinda my job to socialize. Great work if you can get it.
“Won’t take me long. Then I’ll get my sharpie,” I said, before almost literally dragging my happy ass from her desirable fantasy-inspiring realm for a brief sojourn to the real world.
I felt her eyes on me as I made my way to the stage, unplugged my guitar and put it in the case. As I started wrapping my cord, I didn’t realize I had just taken the first step in a not-nearly- long-enough journey that would take me from the pinnacles of both physical and emotional bliss to the fire-and-brimstone-laden depths of despair and back again…and again…and again…not finally culminating till death did us part.
I wasn’t thinking about any of that at the time. I was looking around the stage, starting to get a little pissed, wondering where I’d put the little springy contraption that a mediocre guitar player such as myself clamps onto the strings in order to change keys without actually having to play different chords.
“Goddamn it,” I said, as much to myself as to my band-mates. “I can’t believe I fucking lost my fucking capo again.”