Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Machine guns and Inaudible Voices

There’s a lot of things that should be said, so we’re hammering six strings
            -LJG

Say hello to James. He was your local actor/musician/barista. The kind that wore a smile always a little too tight, as if there were little strings on the insides of his cheeks that he stretched taut when he brushed his teeth in the morning. He used the same tone of voice that he automatically went into when he spoke to his grandmother- that tone that went up a half-octave at least.
His shift-supervisor said he reminded people of Steve from Blues Clues. Which, of course, made James giggle inside because he was always stoned or drunk at work. “Sounds about right, what adult star of a children television program could do that noise without some mental chemistry at play?”
Starbucks would be nothing if it weren’t for that chunk of the population that thought they could be rich and famous. Their ranks were filled with aspiring this or thats.  
“Fame” was something that the Greeks made up, in their giant stadiums, where men were ripped apart in front of other men by wild creatures or other men.      
Or, they’d hold theatre festivals; tragic plays performed in sets of threes would come on, a satyr at the end each to add a bit of comedy, and viola! The reinforcement of certain ideologies would be put in place, certain ones condemned, and the good little men of the society would come home and pass on the word to their wives.
Of course, the women of the time couldn’t go. No one’s entirely certain why, but many theories have been proposed. None make a bit of goddamned sense to anyone, though, if honesty were to be questioned.
But unless people (in the time of when James worked at Starbucks and ran the gamut of fame seeking) were adequately paid attention to, they were unhappy. And so this concept of perhaps misogynistic origins came to be the only thing of value anymore.
“Thank you for choosing Starbucks on Grand Avenue, this is James, how can I help you?” – the automated response that a ding in the headset provokes, Pavlovian and all.
“Yeah, I’ll have a tall wet cap, and stir it with your dick, willya?” – James hated it when friends came by during working hours. They always came during the busiest times and they always demanded his attention. The two-minute stop-clock insisted he rush customers in and out like cattle, on the other hand.
“Fuckin’ Monica. Hey, lemme borrow yours and I can swing somethin’ for you. Mine’s still at your mom’s place.”
“I’m swingin’ up front. Make me something good, ‘kay?”
Thankfully, it was a mid-shift. James normally fucking hated the ever-living guts out of the painfully slow mid-day routines, but he was still a little bit groggy from the into-the-wee-hour band celebratory shenanigans that were obligatory after every booked “gig”, so he was actually relieved for the rare afternoon shift.
Monica was too good-looking to be “just a friend” to James. Their platonic relationship had a finite time clock that was winding down to the terminal moment where the other shoe would drop. She was a ‘fan’ of his music, which made things worse, and he had accidentally seen her naked when he walked into her apartment without introduction.
Putting together James’ love for positive attention and praise, and his love for dark-brown nipples, he knew this was a deadly mixture. A fight waiting to happen. The ‘friends-only’ conversation. The ‘you’re a great guy but…’ talk.
He’d had that talk before in high school. Not too many times to become too bitter to still seek it. He was on a constant chase for the next heartbreak. At least they made for pretty decent songs.
He put some cream base in a blender with a banana and some chai mix, loaded it with ice and hit the button that gave cacophonic noise as an annoying blessing. He never made Monica the same thing twice, which is why she loved visiting when James worked. Normally, she was far too cool to be spotted in any store that wasn’t locally owned or a small business of some sort, but her friend worked for the corporate man, and she’d give him hell and take free drinks as often as she could.
Her thrift-shop suit with giant buttons and homemade accouterments jangled with annoying tenacity and fervor, as if they themselves didn’t want to be there, like wind chimes in a train station, but less elegant. They were embarrassed of the pretentiousness on display. They hated elitism. Her clutter was humble like Monica wasn’t.
Monica was proud of her snobbish and too-cool-for-life attitude. She made fun of herself for it, stealing thunder in a way that would piss Zeus off. She was the kind of girl who called the place James worked at “Starfucks”, and smile as if it were all the funnier because of how unoriginal it was. It was “meta”, she’d say.
If you told her that was pretentious, too, she’d say that was meta as well. When you asked her when things stopped being meta, she’d come back with something like, “When they do, eh? Eh?” and rib you.
Their banter was legendary.
In a cute kind of way.
The blender shut the fuck up finally. Monica was parking and coming indoors, so she had something to say or some extra minutes to slay.
“For what is your friend that you should seek him with hours to kill? Seek him always with hours to live” James whispered under his breath while he watched Monica walk with a sway in her step towards the store.
James wrote “Freeloading Bitch” on her cup and secured the lid, snagged a straw and had it ready on the counter when she came in. This spared him the task of making it look like she was paying for her sixteen ounces of weirdness.
Of course, there is a thing called sarcasm at play heavily here. And perhaps sarcasm came from somewhere deep in the recesses of human development, wherein societies got tired of always having to ostracize that person with a jackass sense of humor. And both Monica and he had such a jackass sense of humor.
This is not to say these two human beings are life mates of the intimate sort or any such thing. This is not to say they aren’t. This is just to say that they had a jackass sense of humor.
They would have been ostracized back in those older bits of our history, before we learned sarcasm. And how sweet! At least they’d at least have the two of them to drive each other crazy, and all the other jackasses before them.
But there is something to love about certain jackass comics. A person’s sense of humor wasn’t everything, after all. But society now lets them fly their sarcastic colors, because they, too, have picked up a new genetic trait on their collective funny bones.
After adequate pestering, she left James to the rest of his tedious shift, each minute taking longer to catch up to the last. Mopping, yeehaw! Mixing random powders into various bases, woohoo! Taking verbal abuse from superiors and customers alike, huzzah! And all for the exorbitant rate of $9.11 an hour, can you beat it?
The music was so predictable, that James knew where in his shift he was based on whichever mix was playing that day.
Music and money were funny things. Both seemed to be losing value at a much higher rate then, and no one seemed to be able to stop it. Seemed like all of the nutrients were evaporating and people tricked themselves into thinking they didn’t care, because otherwise the guilt would kill them.
This is why everyone then just needed to get together and forgive each other, unconditionally, without prejudice, just to get back to square one. Then they could go on judging and ostracizing again, but from a different perspective.
It was natural, you see. They just kept doing it, and cycles are goddamned hard to break. You could almost understand it.
            But James wouldn’t stop trying to be famous. Not rich, but famous. He had long known that had be been born rich, he would have spent his life’s worth to be known. To be important. To fix things, in his own half-baked way, by trying to send more happy vibes than bad ones through whatever artistic medium the world would listen to.
That’s what hubris will do to you. That’s what ego was all about. That’s what happens when you mix philanthropy and narcissism—a barista at Starbucks. Cute, too cute to be working just above minimum wage, but not quite talented enough or lucky enough or just not in the right place or in the right time to not be working there anymore.
Sometimes you’d get your run-of-the-mill, just-out-of-college (or high school, sometimes) or middle-aged salt-of-the-earth types, but not in San Luis Obispo or the other opulent towns of the Central Coast. Beaches were a luxury, then.
What James didn’t know right then, nor could he have, was that someone was definitely trying to kill him.

--- -- --
thursday

            James used the little bit of energy he had left at the end of his shift to push open those glass double-doors and was reminded of a fable he was taught as a kid in Sunday School (he was baptized Mormon, but was now a pretty firm anti-theist and unsure of where he stood in other terms of spirituality at this point in life, although after his initial break from ‘the faith’ he was previously more staunchly atheist) – a story where Jonas got swallowed by a whale. He felt what that character must’ve in terms of relief, he thought. He smiled and rifled through his pockets for his keys.
            Approaching his car, somewhat aloof, he noticed, a little too late, that he smelled something funny. It was kerosene, a cousin of gasoline, but James couldn’t have known that, either. Before he could even make an autonomic response, someone from behind him threw a Molotov cocktail, aimed directly at the car.
            And that was the last thing James remembered that day.

--- -- --
friday

            The first thing James could see from the slits of his eyelids when his eyeballs returned to duty was Monica.
            “Saved your ass, son. You owe me somethin’ fierce, eh?”
            “What were you doing there?”
            “I was hoping you had some leftover food, the expired sandwiches and shit. Or some of those ‘for donation’ pastries”
            …sleep…

--- -- --
late afternoon, friday

            James wasn’t burned, Lady Luck on his side, he passed out immediately from a shock to his noggin. Monica didn’t get a look at the actual event taking place, but she certainly saw the inferno. Hard to miss in a town like SLO.
            And instinct kicked in. She wasn’t able to work off of thoughts alone anymore, though now and again they certainly could kick in, but not override, her new functioning mode—rescue, survival, and the ability to hang this over James’ head for however long she wanted.
            She barreled through the atmosphere- her vision now a version of infrared, thick with smoke, now pluming up into the Western sky, and some really harsh smelling chemicals. It was hot- hot as all holy-fuck, but there was no chance in any of the many versions of the supposed hell, that she was going to let up. She was saving her goddamned friend, no bones about it.
            But in retrospect, she was a little bit pissed off. She was disappointed that she couldn’t even get a good look at the bastard that did this to the guy she’s been closest to since she could remember.
            “I don’t suppose you secretly owe a crime boss any money or you’re secretly a CIA operative with a false identity or you fucked somebody’s wife, eh?” she smiled and giggled ever so faintly, really trying her damnedest to provide some kind of soothing energy, something she wasn’t quite natural with.
            “I have no fucking clue, Monna. I really don’t”.




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