Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Just for Kicks

I'm feeling cheeky, so I'm going to give you the first half of the sixth chapter.

CHAPTER 6—TWO TO TANGO

Butter High spread out on a hill overlooking the town of Butter. It was, in fact, at the peak of the legendary Butter family hill. On the crisp, clear, chilly nights of fall it shone like a beacon, the football field lit up like Christmas, the cheers of the large crowds and the ring of the announcer’s voice wafting down to the streets of Butter. On holidays, the kids of Butter filled the streets with parade floats, the clang of cymbals, the march of feet, the painted faces and fancy dresses of pageant. At 7:30 on weekday mornings and at 2:15 on weekday afternoons, traffic clogged the veins of Butter hill, creeping up and down, honey on a tablespoon.
The buildings of the High were clean and extensive, the grounds green and manicured, the computer labs impressive. The morning and afternoon announcements were made enthusiastically, the principal attended events with a smirk of pride. There were students on grounds from 5:00 AM to 10:00 PM for every type of white-collar sport and club you could imagine. School pennants, award trophies, painted banners, club fliers, lined all the neatly swept and amply sunlit hallways.
It was a suburb of Detroit, out on the fringes of urbanity where other suburbs touched the borders over lakes and around rivers, each cracking jokes about the other’s inhabitants driving tractors to school and cow tipping (which no one really did). For those families to whom Butter Country Club wasn’t enough of a social life, they could wander across these borders for various doses of reality in other more urbane suburbs and towns. If they were especially brave, they could even step into Detroit itself, into Greektown, into Motown, slip into the slums, the grit, the under-belly of American society along the alleys (with their doors locked and windows up, instructed not to look anyone in the eye), in the theaters and stadiums with the scalpers and hookers outside, their panties considered outer-wear below their skirts.
Like movie characters who spend their youth maturely longing to get out of it, to escape their suffocating or dysfunctional family, or their backwater town, the misfits of Butter High  hunched their shoulders against each other in the school hall corners, lined the chain-link fences around the perimeter in a cloud of smoke. They bummed fags, wore black, bought skateboards to grind the stoops of local shops. This was their rebellion; their waiting for adulthood like waiting for a jail break. But as anything glamorized, in reality they appeared as anything but movie characters. They were an anomaly to soccer moms, who spent lifetimes clawing for and hanging to their gold necklaces with one charm for each baby, their knockoff purses, their cruises to Mexico.
These kids rebelled for rebellions sake, jumped on various bandwagons to swim out of the main stream. Most of their causes grew out of their own selfishness, their own desire for uniqueness, and ultimately: fame. But these were the darkest corners of their motives. Many of them were also altruistic,  lonely, sea-legged for the wide-open, foreign shores, different views of the same moon, and curious. Anything but mediocrity. Let’s allow our hero and heroine (and other characters like them) all of the above in varying degrees.
Mikhail, his nature being as it was, quickly fell into line with Gabbie’s cause: the homeless. He accompanied Gabbie to her outings, assisted her with her projects, without conflict of heart. He made friends with those around her: the ladies at the community center, the classmates she gravitated to and orbited around, the yearbook and newspaper professors, Melodie, Belle, Stellar, Adam.
They exchanged phone calls, walked in each other’s front doors with only a brief knock and a “Hello!?”, rode with each other every day to and from school. Gabbie helped write Mikhail’s papers, he tirelessly explained her math lessons to her. Gabbie left Coke bottles of wildflowers for Mikhail by his mailbox, he fried her eggs when she got in late from the soup kitchen. They became a way of life for each other, a habit, a special friend. They slowly unfurled their secrets, went beyond awkward silences, their roots mingling deep within the earth.
Mikhail became surer and surer of the lack of erotic interest from Gabbie. But he secretly loved her, more and more with each day, as is the habit of heroes of the ilk of Mikhail: sensitive, deep, surrounded by powerful women, and melted by his lack of self-confidence.

Mikhail wandered into Purple Monkey’s, an independently owned record store on the main stretch of Butter. Purple Monkey’s housed a wide (and tightly packed) selection of new, underground material and dusty, old faves. It was equipped with three racks of great t-shirts (Johnny Cash and Bob Marley) and a display case of un-sellables: original Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, The Ramones. Over these Mikhail had drooled (on multiple occasions, with and without accomplices) from behind the counter.
Mikhail buried his hands in the front pockets of his jean jacket, adjusted his eyes to the dark, den-ness of the store. The light that escaped in through the glass doors accented a wall of flying dust with gold sunlight and then spilled on the first display. Everything else was dim, smelled of attics and old trunks and abused carpet. In a weak attempt to unify the smell, a stick of incense trailed its tendril of smoke, suffocating the store in sandalwood. A man stood behind the glass counter (covered with stickers and taped-on fliers and paper fragments: “My Other Ride is Your Mom” and “Goonies Never Say Die!”), arms shooting down straight in front of him and his palms pressed against the streaked top. He turned toward Mikhail as the door bell dinged and clattered against the glass. Then looked uninterested; adjusted his focus outside.
Mikhail dodged into the back of the shop, started leafing through thousands of filed vinyl albums, then slunk his way to the CD section. There was a proto-punk band, one of the forefathers of all later punk bands. Mikhail wanted their debut album, and he wanted it bad. He had mentioned it in passing to both his mother and Gabbie when his birthday approached, but they both later complained that the album was nowhere to be found. He figured that they hadn’t wandered in here.
After a thorough search in even the sections that were very unlikely, even outrageous, for the album to be filed in, he resolved himself to the CD. Still nothing. So Mikhail wandered back out of the shop, grabbed a couple fliers from the table by the door, squinted in the sun. There in his hands: ads for the upcoming rock shows, punk shows, ska shows, and a flier for Purple Monkey’s. Near the bottom of the Purple Monkey’s flier: “We will order any album or CD for you, if we can find it, no matter how obscure.”
That was it then. All Mikhail had to do was turn around, walk right up to the counter through the wall of golden dust particles and sandalwood smoke, and ask George or Joe or Mike or whomever to look for that album. He knew that they would probably be able to find it for him. But here’s the thing: Mikhail stood there, stared down at the ad, shrugged his shoulders, and stuffed the fliers in his satchel. Then he walked down the road, mounted his bike, pedaled away toward Gabbie’s.
A ritual had begun. Mikhail repeated it maybe once a week, often more. He wandered into Purple Monkey’s, leafed through the obvious sections, then the un-obvious ones, in search of the holy grail of Mikhail’s current album collection. He eventually gave up and pedaled home smelling of patchouli, mildew, lavender char.
After a few weeks, George or Joe or Mike or whomever—whose name actually was George—started keeping his eyes on Mikhail, afraid he was one of the kids lifting records from the store. George would hover near Mikhail during Mikhail’s ritual, pretending to dust the shelves (an obvious cover and a laughing matter), to re-organize the alphabetical order, to check inventory of necessary albums. When George was convinced Mikhail was a harmless kid, George still continued his farce, peeking over Mikhail’s shoulder to see where he was looking, what he was picking up. It became a game for George, and he would say to his friends later, “I think it’s the Pink Floyd The Wall,” and the next day, “No, no, no. I was way off. It’s the early The Clash single. I just know it.” And if George didn’t have what he guessed Mikhail was looking for, George ordered it and stocked it; watched to see if the fish bit. George would even play the album in question afternoon after afternoon until Mikhail wandered in, watching the expression on Mikhail’s face as he entered.
This became such a sport for George that it didn’t really matter if he made a sale, as long as he guessed it right. Mikhail noticed George hanging around, figured he was creepy or lonely, and resented his shoulder being looked over. The one thing Mikhail never did: say a word in Purple Monkey’s.
Eight months into the silent dance of Mikhail and George, Gabbie, Mikhail and Melodie were walking downtown Butter, looking for a place to eat, a used book for Gabbie, and a place to loiter. Melodie turned as they passed Purple Monkey’s, pressed her nose to the window. “Hey, Let’s go in here!”
“No…” Mikhail stuttered.
“Yeah. It looks cool. C’mon.” She opened the door with a loud tinkling and clanging of bell on glass. “Gabbie?”
“Sure. C’mon Mikhail.”
The store transformed. Smoke was waved away by long, thin arms, the dimness was scattered by lighted eyes and flashes of skin, the still of Purple Monkey’s went hiding: Gabbie and Melodie chatted, cursed, yelled, laughed as they made their way from the front of the store slowly to the back.
Mikhail scooted away, made his way back to his usual section, dodging George’s look of lust and disbelief. (George stayed firmly planted behind the counter this crazy afternoon.) Mikhail began leafing through the records, looking for the usual.
“What’re you looking for?” Gabbie’s head appeared over his shoulder, her chin resting on his collar bone.
“A record. It’s called The Stooges, by The Stooges. But they don’t have it. I already looked.”
“Oh.” She reached out her arm around Mikhail to flip through herself, then stepped beside him.
“What’re you looking for?” he asked.
“Nothing particular. You know, just lookin’. This place is pretty cool, huh?” She pulled a few records at random to examine. “Anything you recommend?”
“Ummm. Give me a minute.” Mikhail bit his lip and scooted to the back of the shop, his eyes narrowed over the stacks. Gabbie wandered the shop, making offhanded remarks to Melodie over The Beastie Boys.
Melodie purchased a t-shirt while Gabbie fidgeted by the counter, leafing through the fliers scattered about. Then Melodie exited to the ice cream shop, yelled that she would meet Gabbie and Mikhail there when they were done.
“Find anything for me yet?” Gabbie popped into Mikhail’s personal space again, barely touching his left thigh with her right hip.
“Yeah, I think I did.” Mikhail weighed a record each in his two hands, then slid one back where it went in the stacks. “Here!” He turned and handed her a record.
“The Beatles. Abbey Road. You think I’ll like it?” She took it in her hands, held it against her waist.
“Yup. But that’s only the beginning.”
“Okay, deal. But I have something for you too.” She handed him a flier and pointed to the bottom. “Here. It says that you can order any album that our man George can find.”
“Who’s George?” Mikhail furrowed his brow down at the paper.
“Guy behind the counter. Just talked to him. Let’s go order your CD or whatever.”
And they did, just like that: approached the counter, made their request to George, filled out a form, and got a “great album!” from George. Mikhail stopped in daily, afterwards, to see if it had been found, then if it had been shipped, then if it had been received. When it was in his hands, he thanked George and disappeared from Purple Monkey’s for two weeks before returning to browse the shop with Gabbie. George’s game was over.

Some Updates

-I sold an article to Taylor Alumni Magazine last year, which they specifically wanted for the launch of their online version, but they have still yet to launch it, so the article sits in oblivion. They may yet use it online or in print but I'm thinking the news is getting old. Poo.

-Still looking for an agent. Plenty of rejections, and many letters still out there waiting for a response. Meanwhile, I have decided to drastically revise the book, anyhow, by adding a plot line.

-Still working on my second novel, which I think is really good so far. But who has time?

-Editing a short story and a hand full of poems to send out to magazines.

-DRUMROLL... Am returning to freelance editing/proof reading in a part-time capacity. Likewise, will be soliciting magazines for articles. Gotta' make a buck somehow.