6/3/21

Whisper-RING

                                                                       



A whirlwind of seeds and dust in the backyard rustle out a voice in the dark, whispering, 


you may be taller, but you'll never be as great as me— Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, because you’re an alcoholic and I'm not. 


Henry gets out of bed, puts on his bathrobe, opens the patio door, whispering back at the whisperer standing in the middle of the jungled backyard, 


what does size have to do with it?


Not much, Toulouse-Lautrec was 4 foot 9. The point is he’s greater than you because you have a drinking problem. Henry whispers back,


Is this a joke? 


Dick Byrd, known as Tarzan in the neighborhood, has climbed the fence into the Lucowski's yard. 


Dick was like, Nelly, the bipolar swimmer in John Cheevers's short story The Swimmer, a habitual suburban fence hopper.


Tarzan's standing in the moonless backyard whispering nonsense and Henry tells him,


Dick the cops are on the way, I reported a prowler in the neighborhood, asshole.


You're shitin me, boss. I couldn’t sleep so I jumped the fence to see what you're doing.


Frankly, I was in the middle of a homosexual dream. Tarzan who's surprised admits,


now, you're scaring me.  


Dick, I was in someone's arms, I don’t know him. All I know is that he will take care of me. He will pay the bills, the taxes, balance the checkbook. Tarzan asks, 


Were you lovers? 


I wouldn’t go that far, it was a more a half lucid, fading, androgynous dream of fucking, lasting seconds in real-time. 


It begins to rain heavy, Tarzan says,


so much for fuck dreams. I’m gonna hop the fence and bone Jane in the kitchen, we do it in different rooms, it's bringing back the vim in our relationship.


Forget it pal, never happen, you're a lousy lover.


Henry turns away from Dick the whisperer, walking through the patio door, silently going back to bed. Lucia, his Cuban wife is talking in her sleep. 


The rain falls even heavier, she calls out a man’s name three times, 


Pedro, Pedro, Pedro,


he wonders who Peter is? 


Lucia begins crying, the loudness of the rain wakes her. 


You were crying, 


yes, I had a nightmare, 


Lucia turns away from him and goes back to sleep.


Between five and six in the morning, a few birds are singing and it’s still dark. Henry lays on his back with a sleeping mask on looking like Zorro, he sleeps two more hours, waking at seven, fearful and feeling unprepared for the day.


By 11 AM he's in the kitchen, biting into assorted donuts and sweet rolls, throwing them back into the box—distracted, thinking, trying, to put the bits and pieces of last night's homoerotic dream in place.


Sipping coffee he looks over the Miami Herald, reading in the folio it's July 1984 in South Florida. He remembers they're out of everything at home and need to go to Winn-Dixie.


After showering, Henry and Lucia drip dry, torpidly cooling their bodies. 


There’s a clean pile of summer clothes on the bed. They choose tank tops and shorts, they're close to the same size and they wear each other's close, medium-large. 


Accessorizing, they don contoured straw cowboy hats, the brims shaped like scalene triangles— the hats help rein in their waist-length hair. 


Henry and Lucia are phobic— they're tonsurephobic. What are the chances of a couple of tonsurephopics finding each other and spending their lives together? 


On the front porch, they slip into rubber flip-flops. Most South Floridians dress casually like— Hawaiians, Saint Lucians, Jamaicans, Bahamians, Tahitians, the tropical climate demands it. 


Henry makes a b-line to the bungalows’ two-car wooden garage, inside opening the drivers' side of his 73 Chevy Malibu wagon, getting in, switching the ignition on, and listening to the V8 engine rumble.


He reverses onto the chipped rock driveway, stopping— Lucia opens the middle door of the wagon, so the Chihuahuas, Che, and Mia can jump in. 


Then, going to the passenger door and getting in, sitting next to Henry, close, so their bodies touch and she can put her arms around him. Henry hugs her saying,


ain't love grand?


On the way to Winn-Dixie, he drives the long way around the island to the mall, on scenic Highway 1.


It’s a fast-moving summer day in Key West. The speed boats, sailing catamarans, sports fishing boats, and mega yachts from Miami, Louisana, and the Caribbean Islands berth at conch Harbor, or A & B Marina for supplies— bait, booze, fuel, ice. The vessels are packed with good ole boys and rich folks doing what they do at sea — fishing, and getting loaded. 


As the station wagon moves down Highway 1, the Chis stand with their forelegs braced on the half-open windows with their little heads outside taking in the breeze. 


Lucia waves a handheld Japanese fan briskly, the Chevy wagons' air conditioner is on the fritz, she's hot and says, 


the traffic's awful, it's tourist season, the island is overcrowded. I’m going to Saint Thomas, or Nassau next summer. Henry has a plan to escape the summer crowds,  


we'll hide out till winter— in our bungalow and at Dog Beach. We'll have meals delivered, booze and ganja. We'll declare war on the jungle in the backyard, hacking it to fleck with machetes. We'll turn the earth with our hands like Mandarin peasants, plant a garden— pot, rosemary,  rows of Anthuriums, and tulips. We can share the housework— you can teach drama at Key West Community College, you were a movie star in Havana. Lucia laughs out loud, playing the monkey,


SeƱor monkey lips, hooh, hooh...hooh, hooh.


He wheels the station wagon into the parking lot of  

Sunshine Mall, parking in the back of the lot, backing into a spot, facing the two-story peach colossus, the department store that looks like a mausoleum— The Sears & Roebuck Building. Henry comments, 


art deco at its best, they don’t make 'em like that anymore. She says, 


yeah, it pulls at you to go inside and shop, where’s Winn

Dixie? 


On the opposite side, we'll walk through Sears to get there. 


Inside Winn Dixie, the love couple walks the well-stocked aisles discriminately placing this and that in their cart. Ketchup, mustard, mayonnaise, Himalayan salt, olive oil, dried rosemary. Lucia says, 


I know we’re going to forget something, you should have typed a shopping list, you spend most of your life in front of a typewriter. 


I memorized the list. 


We didn't do a list, pendejo.


Nevermind.


At the meat counter they order the butcher around, they're particular about the look of the meat— weary of butchers spritzing decomposing beef with dioxide to color it rosy-red. 


The butcher's a proud member of Amalgamated Meat Cutters Union #307A poor slob who looks like every butcher in the world with a thick neck, pale skin, and dark lines around his eyes. 


Worst of all, the carnivore is unhealthy because he eats meat every day, frying steaks in the afternoon with his pal the produce manager on the deli grill.


Indifferently, the couple chooses a number of prime cuts, moving on and pushing their packed cart to the check-out lane. 


The cashier's a high school girl, seventeen maybe, the job bores her. Her hair's frosted and the special offer concealer on her face is drying and cracking.


She ignores Henry and Lucia, working the cash register tactically but removed from the moment. 


Two hundred dollars worth of groceries, Henry hands sweet sixteen his American Express card saying, 


that'll do for few days.


The Lolita in thick makeup is thinking to herself that the couple are old people. She's a self-assured queen bee who'll be seventeen forever.


Lucia pushes the grocery cart outside to the sidewalk. Henry walks through Sears into the parking lot to get the station wagon.


Driving around the mall, he parks on the Winn-Dixies sidewalk and gets out of the car. They load the groceries in the boot of the wagon as the Chis bark at passing strangers, pawing the car windows, 


yap, yap...yap, yap. 


He drives the wagon straight, then turning, reaching the exit of The Sears & Roebuck Mall, choosing a direct route home to Pearl Street.


At the bungalow, he parks in the cut-rock driveway. Lucia steps out of the car, opening the middle door, letting the Chis out to play in the yard. Then the couple schleps bag after bag of groceries through the front door, placing them on a counter near the kitchen sink. 


Lucia puts the ice cream in the freezer first, followed by ground meat, pork ribs, sliced french fries, fresh-caught grouper, and a couple of whole chickens, deftly balancing the bagged goods into the available freezer space.


At 7 PM, Henry orders take away from Tongue Thai'd— pha Thai, sweet and sour chicken, sum tom, and barbecued curried pork sticks. Then mixing some drinks.


In the living room, Lucia switches on their Hatari fan, arranging it to blow on her body. She sits on the sofa with her legs open, enjoying the gust from the fan on her thick bush.


Lucia hangs her hat in the here and now, she and Henry are hedonists who can feel every grain of sand when they walk on the beach.


He carries a pitcher of Dewar's Double Aged whiskey mixed with frozen peach-ade, pouring drinks into tumblers on the coffee table, sitting with Lucia on the sofa— they suck down the top line booze.


The lovers watch Stanley Kubrick's film, Dr. Strangelove, which was supposed to be a drama until Peter Sellers hijacked it, adlibbing during takes, creating comic mayhem, losing himself throughout filming because Kubrick pressured him to play three roles— the mild-mannered US president, Merkin Muffley, and the creepy ex-Nazi scientist, Strangelove.


The doorbell rings, Lucia gets up, going to the front door, and opening it. An attractive middle-aged Thai woman asks, 


Lucowski? 


si, how much? 


Twenty-four sixty-six.


Lucia hands her a twenty and a ten, the lady says thank you in Thai, 


kop coon kap, 


Stashing the cash in her pocket, she turns, walking down the porch steps into the yard where the Chis nip at her heels as she walks and tries to brush them away with her feet. 


There's a 60s Daihatsu parked on Peach Street, she, opens the door, gets in, driving a short distance to Tongue Thai'd.


Henry sets up a collapsable card table in the living room, placing paper pails of Thai food, a bottle of Dewars, peach-aide, highball glasses, an ice bucket, bowls, and chopsticks on it.


Eating bits of Thai food off of chopsticks, they watch Dr. Strangelove. The film fills them with disbelieve and awe. She giggles somewhat nervously wondering,


Is this a true story darling? El Generales Americanos have blood flowing out of their eyes. They're going to blow Cuba out of the sea someday, no one is safe in the world.


Forget it, Dr. Strangelove's fiction— a crazed film about crazed people, with crazed actors directed by a crazed man. 


All the world's a stage, and all the men and women merely players, who have their exits and their entrances  one man in his time plays many parts, WHISPERING to anyone who will listen.  


                                                                         

William Shakespeare 







5/23/21

Polaroid Portraits

 




Henry hated time. The hours crawling by when Lucia's away shopping, the eternity it took for a Bach symphony to end. The foreverness of waiting for a hurricane to make landfall, the turbulent seconds it takes to move on, and the days of rain it leaves behind.


Time can be a Shelby GT500 racing a 930 Porsche Turbo on Highway 1 through Big Sur, or a toddler crawling on the living room carpet to his mother.   


Time waits for no one and it won’t wait for me— a lyric from Time is On My Side penned by Jerry Ragovoy, loaned to the Rolling Stones for an unknown sum.


The summer is over, the harvest is in, and we are not saved— Jeremiah 8:20


Jeremiah's Old Testament proverb references the coming famine when the wheat, fig, grape, and olive harvest was shredded to nothing by a swarm of locusts in 600 BC.


For some, the proverbs of the Old and New Testaments have passed the test of times— oddly, biblical scripture is poetic, debatable.


Nineteen centuries later, in a schoolroom at a Buddhist temple, near the top of Doi Suthep in Thailand, a novitiate asks his teacher.

 

your highship, how can I influence people? 


Butterfly, talk about, sex, LaLiga, TV, avoid telling the truth.


The master talks in circles to confuse his devotees, stupefying them— like the Zen monk in Alan Watt's The Wisdom of Confusion.


1984— a year when computers are as slow as molasses. Cell phones are bulky and rare. Stable operating systems are few, and the worldwide web is one year old. 1984 will be the last year cocaine is more popular than computers. 


It’s 11 AM in Key West. Henry and Lucia are sucking down mugs of fresh Wisconsin apple cider mixed with Sierra Nevada Pale Ale and alternately swallowing eel sushi. He makes a promise. 


I'm gonna blow a wad all over your face in the hot tub tonight. She's somewhat impressed, pulling his chain,    


big man, mister pornstar, you’re kinky Henry.


Darling, do you worry about sitting in a hot tub that could be teeming with viruses?— hot tub lung, hot tub rash, Legionella, urinary tract infections. 


The Legionella? It’s a Gringo disease? 


In 1976 partying Gringos Legionnaires were victimized by a newborn fungal ill wind passing through the ventilator system of the ballroom at the St. Regis Hotel in Philadelphia. The deceased, survivors of World War Two and the Korean conflict, are sadly beaten down by a mere microbe.


It’s noon Saturday, July 1984. July is the hottest month of the year. Henry and Lucia have showered three times to cool down. She suggests, 


Darling, let’s go to the Martin Luther King Jr. swimming pool.


Why not? It’s a pseudo-safe seawater pool, hopefully, the salt kills the viruses and neutralizes the urine.


Henry, I know you pee in the MLK Jr. pool.


And, you don’t?


no, it’s not lady-like, women have particular standards, we’re not dogs like men.


Honey, is the air conditioner plugged in? 


She walks to the air conditioner, it sits snug, wedged between the window and its lower frame, she plugs it in. He says,  


Let’s light one, stay home and listen to music. I don't wanna go to the Martin Luther King Jr. pool. No reflection on Martin, but there's no privacy because locals go there to eyeball.


He turns on his antique Grundig radio to Miami 101, All the Time Jazz, Miles Davis' brilliant rendition of the Concerto de Aranuez from the Sketches of Spain album is playing.


Feeling baked, the love couple nurses the same joint. Lucia brings up an infamous trick from her past, Fidel Castro, 


I'd go to his Havana house in the evenings, we'd listen to records and drink Chivas Regal. Sometimes, I'd smoke a Cohiba cigar, one of Fidel's that was hand-rolled for him, he'd keep them in humidors. 


Fidel loved the Concerto de Aranuez, he had many different versions on LP, including Mile's Davis's Sketches of Spain.


He and Gabriel Garcia Marquez have been best friends for years. Marquez would bring his beautiful wife, Mercedes, to Fidel's house. The two men would talk about jazz and Latin American literature late into the night. They were both the best at what they did. One night I said to Fidel,


mi amor, your passion for the Concerto de Aranuez reflects your deepest feelings. I can feel it. Fidel smiles and says  to me, 


In my position, it's impossible to wear one's heart on one's sleeve. When I listen to this sad concerto, I remember the El Movimiento 26 de Julio, and the soldiers of the revolution who fought and bled by my side. Henry asks her, 


Do you still love Fidel? 


He's arrogant to a fault, a wild lover hung like a burro. He’d rub cocaĆ­na on his pollo to stay hard. He had so many women, thousands, both wives were showpieces and puppets. I don’t think he knew how to love, how can you order an execution one minute and love the next? 


Lucia, let’s get naked and rub-a-dub-dub in the hot tub. 


Before they can turn on the hot tub the doorbell rings, Henry walks to the living room, opening the front door, seeing a Black man standing outside with a white cane in his hand and a large leather case slung over his shoulder. 


He’s a heavy-set man dressed neatly in khaki pants, a short sleave-blue shirt, black wingtips, Ray-Bans, and his hair is cut tight. He says, 


My name is Andy Higgins, I’m a blind man, a door-to-door salesman, and a photographer. 

 

Come in, Andy. 


Henry takes the blind man's hand, leading him to the kitchen table, getting him seated, bringing him a coffee. Andy uses a teaspoon to pour and blend three spoonfuls of sugar in his cup. Saying, 


you would think I'm sweet enough already, all this sugar. Henry, would you say, a gorgeous Black woman has much more going for her than an average-looking White guy? As you know, nothing concerning Black and White folks is written in stone. 


When the Lord deals you a poker hand you’re stuck with it no matter what color you are. So luck is more important than color. 


You got that right Andy, where do you stay? 


Right now I have a room in Little Miami. This morning, I got up at 5 AM to catch the Greyhound bus, grabbing a quick cup of coffee at the Key West station, then taking a taxi here. When I finish I'll go to the next neighborhood, focusing on Key West for a while. There are better ways to make a living, but I get by. 


More coffee Andy? 


How about a drink, Henry? Can you mix me a Seagrams and 7? Let’s move to the living room, I'll follow you at arm's length.


Andy's a controlling person, he has to be, being blind. 


Henry leads him to the living room to a stuffed chair, the blind man smiles as he sits in the chair.


Lucia's been in the shadows listening. She walks to the living room in a sexy kimono and hands Andy his drink. He says,


you must be the lady of the house. I can smell the perspiration between your legs, what's your name? 


I'm Lucia, so you like smelling my body, well, I guess I can't stop you. 


She walks to the stereo, cranking it up, putting on George Shearing's album, Unattainable Heights. Then moving to the sofa to sit next to Henry who comments,


George Shearing, he's blind you know, how in the hell can he play without seeing the keys? Andy says,


we blind folks have to develop a special talent, mine is photography, or we'll end up on a street corner with a tin cup, or stringing brooms in a factory. 


Andy reaches into the pocket of his polyester shirt, pulling out a joint saying, 


Do you people imbibe? 


oh yeah, 


This is very special, Thai Stick, it’ll knock you down. Henry quips,


we’re braced on the sofa, thank you. He sounds square. 


The partiers smoke grass, enjoying the high life. Andy says, 


Let's get to work. Henry grab my Polaroid camera and the tripod. Set the kit up facing the sofa, like you're going to shoot a portrait. 


He secures the camera to the tripod, looks through the lens, frames the shot, going back to the sofa, sitting next to Lucia. 


He's wearing shorts, a Grateful Dead T-shirt, and his long hair is down. Lucia takes off her dress, she's wearing a one-piece swimsuit underneath. Henry wonders,


what’s with the fifties swimsuit?


Does it make a difference?


I guess not. 


Andy stands, walking with his arms extended a few steps towards the camera, walking into it, knocking the tripod forward then catching it with one hand. Ready to work he clicks a neat packet of film into the Polaroid.


How’d you’d catch the falling tripod?


Everything's feel for a blind man. OK, here we go, I’m going to say, get ready, count to five, and shoot, how bout some cheesy smiles folks? 


Henry and Lucia don't pose, they ignore Andy, making out, playing scissors, rock, and paper, even wrestling on the sofa. She takes her old-fashioned swimsuit off, throwing it anywhere, it lands on the TV, covering the screen. Andy says, 


Lucia, I know you took off your dress. 


Keep your nose to the grind, nosey.


Funny girl, OK, I think we have enough shots, I’m going to immortalize your portraits in plastic. 


He walks back to the stuffed chair, sitting down reaching into his camera case, pulling out a new photo book. In twenty minutes Andy's putting the finishing touches on the portrait book. There are six pages, front and back, with Polaroid portraits set in the photo-sized plastic windows. He says, 


Who wants a sneak peek? 


Lucia gets up from the sofa, walks to him, taking the photo book, going back and sitting again.


Henry has been mixing drinks in the kitchen, he returns carrying a tray.


He hands Andy a Seagrams and 7. 


At the sofa, the couple pages through the polaroid portraits, laughing insanely.


They love the photos, the spontaneous portraits are full of movement, reminding the couple of photographers Robert Frank and Diane Arbus. Andy says, 


Well— you all know how much Polaroid film costs, how about a hundred dollars for the whole nine yards?


Henry stands, reaches into his pocket, walks to Andy, handing him a hundred-dollar bill, the blind man says, 


I hope this is a hundred not a five. Can you call me a cab? 


Henry laughs saying, 


Trust in the Lord, Ray Charles. 


I'll be trustin in the Lord alright, Henry, gotta go, don't wanna miss the bus.


Lucia leads him by the hand to the front door, down the porch steps to the sidewalk, where they stop. He faces her saying, 


My cab will be here soon, I'll be back next year. She says, 


how do I smell, sexy? Andy laughs.


Andy Higgins, without a doubt, the greatest blind photographer in the world.