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Thursday, September 29, 2011

Furlough Film #4 The Man Who Wasn't There


The Man Who Wasn't There
(Every furlough day Dublin and Robert Fong get together to view a film and have a discussion about it. The following is a transcript of that discussion. SPOILERS abound.)

R: This is by the Cohen's? I've never seen it.
D: I have. I don't remember it though.
R: And Billy Bob's in it? I f__king love Billy Bob. Bad Santa?!
D: This is a lot different from Bad Santa.
R: Roll it!

(They watch the movie)

R: What the hell was that?
D: It was great.
R: It made no sense! What was the point? And what was with all the shots of the hair?
D: I loved it. I forgot how good this one was.
R: Good? Burn After Reading smoked this shit.
D: No way.
R: Oh Brother Where Art Thou smoked this shit.
D: Well, that's a classic. But this is up there with Oh Brother.
R: Are you f__king kidding me? You just like it because it's a noire or whatever. Even though it's not. It's just a rambling piece of shit.
D: I'll give you ten reasons why this movie is great.
R: Fine. Do it.
D: 10 reasons why it's one of the Cohen's best.
R: What the f__k? No way. Go.
D: Ah, 1) it's funny. It's funny as hell, in that super peculiar Cohen way. 2) Billy Bob is so understated.
R: Not like Bad Santa.
D: Exactly. The opposite of Bad Santa. 3) the scene where Billy Bob says "This hair. I'm gonna mix it with the dirt in the back." Hilarious. 4) The part in the car where Frances McDormand says "I hate whops" for no apparent reason. 5) the scene where the dry cleaning salesman makes a move on the Billy Bob character 6) the scene where-
R: You can't just name off scenes. That's f__king stupid.
D: A movie is combination of scenes. What the do you want?
R: This movie was boring. Super slow. The only parts I perked up on were when Scarlet Johanasen came out and talked in that sexy ass voice of hers.
D: Really?
R: I thought it was tight when James Gandolfini held Billy Bob up the the glass by his neck and the glass started to crack. That was a cool idea.
D: You can't deny the movie looked good though.
R: Black and white? You know a movie always wins points with me when it's black and white.
D: I remember you're post on Raging Bull (http://dublinsworld.blogspot.com/2010/08/you-fk-my-wife.html)
R: Exactly. But Raging Bull is a f__king classic. This wasn't nothing but a wasted two hours. And what's with the name? The Man that Wasn't There? What does that even mean?
D: He was invisible. No one saw him or noticed him or anything. He was doing all this foul shit and nobody took the time to notice because he just wasn't there. He just blended into the background.
R: Hmmmmm.
D: You know what, give it some time. I saw it years ago and I don't think I really liked it then either. But I really enjoyed it this time.
R: Hmmm.
D: You can pick the next one alright?
R: Damn right.

Taken from a transcription by Peggy Menchstone on 09/26/11

Part 3: PB James and The Man at the Top


Part 3
It takes them four hours to reach the outer rim of Yosemite Valley. Sam talks most of the time and PB sits and listens. The passenger seat in Sam's VW Bug is uncomfortable, and PB keeps shifting around, trying to adjust. They drive through the town of Chinese Camp and Sam described her childhood and her brother's extraordinary intellect.
"He was programming computers when we were just kids. When Dolly the sheep was cloned in the nineties he became fascinated with the concept of recreating DNA and cloning life. It was all he could think about and all he would talk about. He had no friends really. He wouldn't eat sometimes; he would just sit in his room and literally just....think, scribbling in his notebook. It worried my parents and they tried to have him talk to counselors and try to become more involved with people and just get of his own head but what can you do? He stayed obsessed all through school and graduated at the top of his class. He started working at Genentron right after. They had been following his progress in school and hired him right out."
The notebook is gnawing away at PB and he can no longer stay quiet.
"Sam, I found a notebook in the house. It was obvious it was private but I read it anyway. It was your brother's journal."
He's glad to get it out but her silence is causing him considerable discomfort.
"I'm sorry," he continues "I'm just a naturally curious person I guess. I know you letting me stay there didn't mean I could just go through your brother's stuff but I was bored-"
"What did it say?" she demands impatiently.
"After he quit Genentron some foreign guys picked him up-"
"He quit Genentron?"
"That's what the journal said."
PB repeats everything he can remember from the journal and Sam's face becomes increasingly still and tight.
"Do you have any idea who this man at the top might be?" he asks.
She shakes her head and without looking at him and says: "I wish you had mentioned the journal earlier."
"I'm sorry."
"When he said he was going to Yosemite for some time off I was really happy. He was going to get away, be in nature. He never does that. Now I'm thinking he's involved in something weird. I wish you had told me."
"I really am sorry Sam. I was going to tell you, I just-"
PB doesn't know what to say beyond that and there is very little conversation as they drive the 140 into Curry Village. Sam pulls the car up to the reservation cabin and PB goes in alone.
"Abe Siegel," he says to the woman behind the desk.
"I have his name on a cabin but the reservation was canceled as of yesterday."
"He left?"
"Yes sir, that's what I'm telling you."
"Do you know where?"
"Home?"
The woman's face is sunburned and irritated and PB can tell she doesn't like him. He forces himself to smile at her. There's a ranger sitting in a chair to the far right of the counter and PB has the distinct impression that the ranger is trying to look like he's not listening to them.
"Thanks for your help."
He turns to leave and she calls him back.
"I do remember him, I was here when he canceled the rest of the week," she explains "He asked how to get to Tuolumne Meadows and I gave him a map."
PB gets a copy of the same map and makes his way out the door. He can feel the ranger in the chair's eyes follow him.

"Abe Siegel," PB says to the ranger at the Tuolumne reservation cabin.
“Siegel. Okay, here we go. G-11. I have Siegel at G-11."
PB and Sam drive up into the camp ground, passed the A and B sections. Families with oversized campers set up their tiki torches and pack buns and frankfurters into their metal Bear boxes. Asian and European tourists wander the campground and take pictures by the river and sneak picks of the American's gaudy RV's. The rocky road snakes up through the parked cars and smoking fires to the G section.
Sam and PB pull up to campsite G11 and park next to a green Subaru. There's a small two man tent set up, other than that the site is empty.
"Abe! Abe, where are you?!"
Sam stands with her hands on her hips, looking intently into the trees, waiting for a response. There are two old men sitting at the table one camp over. PB nods at them and they stare back at him, blank. Sam unzips the tent flap and goes inside. PB unlatches the bear box and finds a few cans of beans lined up with a six pack of beer.
"PB! Come here quick!"
Sam's voice is almost a shriek. PB can taste dread in his throat as bends down through the tent flap. He finds Sam sitting on sleeping bag perfectly still, her face as white as a sheet. He follows her eyes down to a paper envelope lying on the tent's floor. He picks it up and spreads it open. A severed human finger sits in the envelope, the flesh already turning green, and the blood black and dry around the cut point.

To be continued in Part 4

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Part 2: PB James and The Man at the Top


Part 2
From the notebook of Abe Siegel:

February 14th
"My work at Genenatron has been rewarding in itself, there is no doubt of that. I have found all of my colleagues over the last few years enjoyable and stimulating to me in our collaborations. Yet lately I have found my mind wandering. We are all so limited in our imaginations and a collective like Genenatron as a company is even more cut off and walled in in its thoughts of the future and what is possible.
I have been assigned to the feline project for three months now. It is a matter of days before I crack the point in the DNA code that will allow us to cut out the gene that causes the feline's skin to secrete the oils that cause humans to have allergic reactions. I am very close and my collegues in the lab rally around me. I am not enthused."

February 20th
"There was a party thrown in the cafeteria today. If all goes to plan with the FDA then the first non allergy causing cat will be bred in New Zealand next year. Everyone is ecstatic. If they are so happy for such a limited break through then I can only imagine how they will react when real progress is made."

March 6th
"My request has finally been answered and I started today in Lab Room C14F. What has been called "The Rabbit" project by the staff has been in the process of being conceived and completed in that lab for the last five years. I feel that this will not only be my chance to show the company what I can do with a wider access to resources but I will also have the opportunity and freedom to play out some of my own theories and ideas. I am giddy with delight."

May 7th
"With total commitment I have run myself into the ground and turned myself half mad with exhaustion and lack of sleep. But progress is undeniable. With my assistance "The Rabbit Project" has gone farther in two months than it has gone in the last two years. Someone mentioned that we are over a year ahead of schedule. Tomorrow we assemble the machine. The following day we put the rabbit inside."

May 19th
"In my heart I always knew this would be possible but I never thought things would move so rapidly. One week after scanning the rabbit in the machine (the scan took less than two minutes) we have fully active cells in the bio-chamber. They are expanding and building upon themselves at an alarming rate. What I hypothesized in my calculations and what I don't think my colleagues realize is that these are the same cells! And I mean the same."

June 23
"The staff has named our creation Larry 2. I was too busy to realize the original Rabbit was named Larry. Larry 2 is already eating grass that they feed it and hops around the environment at the size of an adult rabbit. The amazing thing the handlers noticed is that Larry 2 seems to recognize and warm to the exact same people that the original liked as well. I heard this and could barely conceal my excitement. Everything seems to have gone exactly as I hypothesized. In order to have an additional hard copy of my formulas both mechanical and biologically I have copied all 37 of the formulas out in the following pages of this journal."

PB flips ahead but there are no formulas. Many pages seem to have been ripped out. The journal continues with another entry.

July 6th
"Over the holiday I was able to visit the office and e-mail the brain pattern scans from Larry 2 down to San Diego where Dr. Everson and his colleagues will be able to compare them with the original's brain pattern and give me a clear reading to be analyzed. I won't be able to sleep for the next week."

July 10th
"I sit here at the desk and compare the brain scans and they are identical. While the brain of any animal is still largely indecipherable the comparisons between Larry and Larry 2 are as clear as day. Same cracks, same crevices. I believe, and Dr. Everson confirms this with some reservations in his e-mail, that what I am looking at is the same brain. Same development, same thoughts, same memories."

July 19th
"The unthinkable has happened. I came into work and found my computer had been hacked. I don't know how and I don't know by who but all of my files that I have collected regarding my theories on DNA cloning have been opened and corrupted with a virus that now makes them unreadable, and and in some cases, such that they won't even open. Who would do such a thing? Genenatron? But what would be the purpose? The company has nothing to gain. Or maybe they are trying test me. Either way I have decided to resign tomorrow."

August 2nd
"I was walking from the grocery store today when a large SUV of a make I couldn't recognize pulled up next to me in the parking lot and a man with some sort of thick accent asked me to get in. I complied because I knew this must have a connection to my computer being hacked. When I got into the car I found more large men with thick foreign accents and a camera built into the ceiling that stared down on me. I was given a phone and voice spoke to me explaining that he was aware of my genius and what I had accomplished and that it was time for me to come on a board so that I could "save the company". I asked if he was affiliated with Genentron but he ignored me and explained that I would be summoned soon to join someone else and begin work. Without him saying it out right I got the distinct impression that if I didn't comply with what the voice said there would be dire consequences.
The foreign men let me out of the car and I returned home and am now writing this. What does it all mean? Who is this voice? Who is this man at the top? I am intrigued and also strangely frightened."

The journal stops there, the remainder of the pages ripped out. PB hears the phone ringing downstairs. He hesitates but it continues to ring urgently. He scrambles down to the first floor and finds a phone next to the TV.
"Hello?"
"PB, has my brother returned?"
He recognizes Sam's voice.
"No he hasn't. Was he supposed to?"
He wants to tell her of the journal but hesitates, ashamed to have ben reading her brother's papers.
"I'm coming over," she says.
A half hour later she is at the door and PB wonders aloud what is going on.
"Abe was supposed to call me, " she explains in a voice awash with worry "He always checks in. It's a way to keep people like him grounded. You can't just let him disappear somewhere and go off in his own thoughts."
"You think somethings wrong?" PB asks.
"Yes! We need to go to Yosemite and make sure he's okay. Can you get packed right away?" she asks, her mind some where else.
"I'm packed now," PB explains and motions towards the clothes he's wearing.

To be continued in Part 3.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Part 1: PB James and The Man at the Top


Part 1
It's his first day out of the hospital, two months after a cult of Satan worshipers conjured up a demon that blew up his apartment, and PB James finds himself standing alone on the street with just the clothes on his back, a $27,000 medical bill, and no where to go. He walks aimlessly, trying to prioritize his worries so his thoughts will settle. He steps into a cafe and uses what is left on one of his credit cards to get a cup of a coffee and some time on the Internet. He sends out e-mails to everyone he knows and leaves messages on Facebook explaining he needs a place to stay for an unspecified amount of time. He hangs around the cafe until almost closing, waiting for a reply.
The only person that offers to put him up is a friend from high-school, Barney Dorset, better known as Barn Door. Some would call Barn Door a bum but he prefers to refer to himself as an "artist". He lives in a warehouse space in San Francisco with several other "artists". Barn Door writes in the e-mail that there is an old ripped out seat from a Chevy truck in the corner with PB's name all over it.
PB takes a train under the Bay to the warehouse. He receives a warm greeting and drinks beer with Barn Door until the sun starts to come up. They mix in medication that PB had left over from his hospital stay and they talk and giggle before passing out a little after dawn.
Barn Door gives PB coffee and granola early the next day and then takes a moment to explain that he and the four room-mates are nearly four months behind on their rent. They have agreed that the best plan of action is to throw a party that night in the warehouse to try to raise money. If they don't get around $7,400 they will have to be out by Friday.
A few hours later the party is in full swing and PB knows he's going to have to search out another place to stay. Only five people have shown up and he knows for a fact that none of them have paid to get in since they all are friends with at least one of Barn Door's room-mates. The room-mates have scraped their last $350 together to buy alcohol and everyone congregates around the bar that's set up. Barn Door's spirits are high, he chats with everyone and let's out long prolonged streams of throaty laughter in two minute intervals.
A girl with thick rimmed glasses greets him and introduces Barn Door to a friend she has brought along. Barn Door in turn introduces them both to PB and mentions some of his friend's most recent adventures. The girl with the glasses and Barn Door then drop into a long discussion about Burning Man and their mutual relations. PB and the friend stand to the side, silent and awkward.
The friend's name is Samantha and she has blond hair that looks like it may have been curly once and will revert back if not properly controlled. The lighting in the warehouse is dim but it is apparent to PB that she is pretty.
"So your house blew up? Is that what Barney said?" she asks.
PB tells her the story of his encounter with Lord Zaldig and his followers. She listens closely and doesn't seem to think he's crazy like the police and arson investigators that have interviewed him over and over in the past months. She offers some background on similar groups from her study of the occult in college and things she's picked up from pieces she's read here and there.
He gets her another drink and their conversation shifts off to other places. A DJ begins to blast music through the empty warehouse and they climb a ladder to the roof and continue to talk over looking the City, the bridge and lights of downtown to their right, the twinkling hills to their left.
Hours fall away comfortably and PB knows he shouldn't be enjoying himself as much as he is.
"So where will you go after this?" Sam asks.
"I have no idea. I don't have much family left. There's an Aunt in Maine but I've never met her."
Sam looks at him closely and then glances over the roof tops and out into the Mission district.
"I have a place you can stay?" she says and PB feels his heart pop two beats out of time.
"You do?"
"My brother's place in San Rafael. He's on vacation for a few weeks. You can stay there at least until he gets back."
PB feels a slight disappointment but grateful never the less. Sam gives him the information and her number and they give their good bye's, no hug or hand shakes, just a wave.
The next morning PB says his farewell to a hung over Barn Door before catching a bus over the Golden Gate Bridge and into San Rafael. He gets off at a gas station and hoofs it up a street called West which twists and turns for two miles until he reaches the address at the top. He is astonished to find himself in front of a large multi storied mansion. He finds a key in the birdbath like Sam had explained and let's himself in through the heavy front door made of redwood.
The house is sparsely furnished like the occupant hasn't fully moved in. There are two chairs and a TV in the main living room who's dark wooden flooring seems to stretch to the length of a football field. Everything in the kitchen is brand new and top of the line. There are four bedrooms upstairs and all are empty except one which holds a mattress, a desk, and a small bookshelf. PB lies down on the mattress and falls asleep.

He awakes the next day hungry and depressed. He goes downstairs and finds the freezer full of TV dinners. He heats two up and eats them both. He stands out on the porch and looks out over the town of San Rafael. He goes back in and watches TV but that reminds him of the hospital and depresses him more. He switches it off and lies on the wood floor, staring at the ceiling.
The sun starts to go down and he goes back up stairs. He fingers through the books on the shelf in the bedroom but they are all medical journals and thick texts with names like "The Infinite Connection of Genetic Reconciliation" and "DNA: Tracing Man Kind". He continues to pick through until he happens upon a green notebook shoved in deep between two encyclopedias. He yanks it out and finds it worn, with it's corners bent and turning to felt. He flips it open to the first page and finds the name Abraham J. Siegel written cleanly and concisely in the exact middle of the page. He flips it and finds the following written in thick block letters:

"WARNING: anyone that comes across this text should know that by reading beyond this page you could very well be putting not only your own life in danger bur also the lives of your loved ones and others around you. This is a warning."

PB pauses briefly and then turns to the next page.

To be continued in Part 2 of PB James and The Man at the Top.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Part 1: The Temptation of Marsha Bates


Part 1
It’s not just his face that I hate. It’s also his hands. The way they clutch the digital recorder. I hate the way he has his legs crossed as he speaks. I hate his blazer that doesn’t quite fit right. I hate the stubble that surrounds his face, and his voice, Lord, his voice. It goes up in pitch when he asks a question and it comes down when he explains something. Every phrase becomes a lecture and every question becomes condescending like he’s trying to coax a child to ride a bike.
“Do you ever feel that the conservative media treat you differently than they treat the male candidates?” he asks and I have to force myself to stop from grimacing.
“Not as much as the liberal media,” I reply and he smiles back, the ball returned to his court quickly.
“Please explain,” he says. He leans back in the chair. He waits for me to take the sword and cut my own head off.
“I don’t think the liberal media sees me as a serious candidate. I mean, it’s a little insulting. The conservative media (I put up quotes on either side of my head so he can see my views on that. I wish there was a video crew to catch it) at least accepts me as a viable candidate. Most of the media doesn’t even acknowledge me unless it’s to make a joke. The president himself hasn’t even replied to the questions and proposals I’ve raised-”
“It’s a little early yet, don’t you think?” he interjects and I want to slap him.
“He’s replied to Bob Ackley. He spent half of his last speech taking swipes at Bob’s job plan. I also think the plan has flaws but he hasn’t taken the time to confront any of my campaign’s proposals.”
“And you think it’s because the President doesn’t take you seriously?”
“I think it’s because I’m a woman,” I reply.
He sits up in his chair. He needs to pay more attention now. I can tell he’s realized this thing isn’t going the way he had hoped.
“You blew in with the Liberty Party express-”
“I had been around for years before the Liberty Party came together. They embraced me,” I say, cutting him off and making him look up from his tablet.
“Sure, they embraced you. Where do you think your ideologies and the Liberty Party's ideologies cross and where do they differ?”
This is the second time in the ten minutes that have passed since the interview started that he has brought up the Party. Clay has been very clear that we are walking a tight rope. All polls still show that a majority of voters find the Party extreme and off putting. I’m to keep the party happy and not deny their support but also step out on my own. I have the words ready but I space them out so they sound spontaneous and off the cuff.
“The beautiful thing about the Liberty Party is that it encompasses so many people. There is no clear connection in ideology except that myself and the people in the party want to get America going in the right direction again.”
“Why do you think they embraced you so closely though? I mean, during the last congressional election you were literally dubbed the “Liberty Party Candidate.”
This little jerk. This little freaking worm. He must really think I’m stupid.
“The media coined that. Not me and not my campaign. Now why do I think so many Liberty Party members are among my supporters? I think it’s because they were looking for someone new, someone fresh, an outsider.”
Clay would be proud of me.
“There’s also the theory that because of the large number of Bob Courtier followers involved in the Liberty Party they have now gravitated towards you.”
I don’t reply, I let him sit there. He watches me and I watch him. The little worm.
“What is the question?” I ask sweetly.
“Sorry, I don’t think there was one,” he replies and opens his mouth into a big toothy grin. Freak you. He looks at his tablet and back at me.
“You did study on James Ryan University in its early years correct? You did study under Bob Courtier there?”
“Yes. Bob was a dear friend.”
“Okay, now just before his death Bob Courtier published the book “From the Mountain Top” in which he described his theories about the government’s control of the population through brainwashing and psychotropic drugs-”
“That was after my time in the university-”
“-and he also went on in the later chapters about how “true” Christians should arm themselves, use violence against abortion clinics, and use violence against the government itself, should it stand in the way of “imposing Christian Law”. These laws were to include the stoning of adulterers, burning of homosexuals and satanic books, the destruction of-”
“This interview is over,” I say and uncross my legs. I smooth out my skirt and prepare to stand up. He looks up from his tablet, feigning shock.
“What do you mean?” he asks stupidly.
“I mean this interview is over. I don’t like the tone of your questioning and I don’t appreciate you bringing up issues that I have addressed over and over again.”
I stand up and he goes bug eyed and innocent.
“I’m sorry but when have you addressed these issues? You have acknowledged Bob Couriter many times as having an influence on your thinking but when have you ever talked about his ideas or his influence on fringe groups?”
I stand very straight and bring my voice down to the low calming tone that Clay calls my mothering voice.
“I told you, this interview is over.”
We both are still, looking at each other. He seems to think if he can just make the moment uncomfortable enough I will break down and give him a quote. The little worm bastard.
He sighs and hits stop on the digital recorder. I look in the mirror on the wall behind him and admire the make up Doris did. The strong flesh tone she used on my nose and cheeks brings the green of my eyes out. They’re striking, like they have always been. It’s a waste though, the worm’s magazine didn’t even send a photographer with him.
“I got to ask you though,” he says as he puts the tablet into it’s case. I bring both green eyes down on him cold “I mean, do you really believe all this stuff? Do you really think all that or is it just a platform to run on?”
He’s really going for it. He must think he’ll never have another chance with me again so he’s just throwing it out there, regardless, like a kamikaze. The gall. He’s not even worth opening my mouth for. I smile and he’s lucky. I want to scratch his eyes out.


“Alright, so we never should have agreed to actually have a sit down with these people. But it was over a month ago! I doubted they would even send someone. Then they send this kid and I think, okay, well this could be good. It could be bad but it could be good. It really could be good. I mean Corner Stone readers are between nineteen and thirty five. That’s prime Marsha. Prime!”
Clay Logan is apologizing in his way which means he isn’t really apologizing, he’s just talking. He’s flapping his gums until I get tired and forgive him.
“It’s a really trashy magazine Mrs. Bates. I lot of sex and stuff like that. It’s a music magazine. Who cares?”
Pam is trying to cheer me up but it’s just annoying. I should have never let her start throwing her opinion out. Now she thinks she can speak up when ever she wants and it’s getting on my nerves. She’s an assistant. I should have never let her speak in the first place. Jesus, give me the strength.
“I should have known what they would pull this Marsha,” Clay continues “I should have known. They pull this stuff all the time, trying to trick people into saying something they’ll regret.”
“I didn’t say anything I regret,” I say sharply “I had to keep my mouth shut as that kid went on and on about Bob like he was some kind of lunatic. It made me sick. Bob Courtier was a righteous man, he saved a lot of people’s lives, not to mention their souls. And I had to sit there and nod while he made Bob out to be some sort of terrorist. How do you think that makes me feel Clay?”
“I know Marsha. That magazine is trash and their writers are trash. But they are major. They are mainstream. And if we’re going to be taken seriously on this big stage we’re going to have to sit down with these people. I just won’t leave you alone like that again. I promise.”
I turn my head and look out the window of the car and I can hear Clay sigh in frustration.
“Look, the President was in there two months ago. A cover story. If he’s talking to these people then you need to talk to these people too. That’s the way it is.”
He falls back into his seat and I know he’s right. There was some satisfaction in walking out in the middle of the interview but that is wearing off quickly.
“Are we headed to the rally?” I ask.
“Not right away. We’re gonna stop by your new campaign headquarters first,” Clay replies.
I roll the window down slightly and let the interview, along with my anger and irritation, fly out into the wind and onto the passing highway.


It’s not dumpy exactly, just plain, and emptier than I had expected. They have the posters up along the side wall, the one where I’m standing on “main street”, the barber shop and drug store behind me. The sun is caught by the steeple of the church in the background. The church was photo shopped in later and I’m still amazed by how convincing it is.
There are six desks set up with telephones and sticky pads along the middle of the room and a large conference table by itself to the right. I walk passed Clay and open the door to the private office. It’s tiny, with a desk and a single ugly light beaming down from the ceiling. This office is the most depressing part of the place and this is where I will spend most of my time. I can already tell the nasty ceiling light is going to make my skin look green and sickly.
I close the door and turn back towards the Clay and the new interns, trying to hide my disgust with a smile.
“Marsha, these are the young women I mentioned in the car. They are joining the campaign as of today,” he says and presents the girls to me with an extended arm their way.
He hadn’t mentioned anything of the kind but I offer each girl my hand in greeting and gratitude. Dana Ellis, a skinny dark haired college student, takes my hand first. She’s pretty and grasps it cordially. The next one is blond, Whitney Kellog, barely eighteen and probably from some farm outside the city. She’s overweight and holds my hand in the sweaty flap of her own. She’s slightly cross eyed and I wonder who picks these people. Do they even look at their pictures?
The last one is chubby as well, but cute, with curly brown hair that falls along her mannish shoulders. Clay says her name is Sandra Bean. I see a large crucifix hanging from Sandra’s neck and I nod approvingly.
“Just as you have said God urged you to run I feel that God has asked me to come on board and help you with the campaign,” Sandra says.
I smile and try my best to beam at her. I will keep my eye on Sandra. She has ambition and I will need to keep tabs to see if she has just enough to help in an effective manner or maybe a bit too much to be part of the staff.


They have a large stage set up in Moose Park for the rally and I’m surprised to see that there is a video screen outfitted behind it as well. The screen is clear and bright, like the ones they use at rock concerts. I’m overjoyed. There have been rumors that the owner of a large media conglomerate has begun to funnel money into the Party. Clay has mentioned that once he has unearthed who it is and if it’s true I must get in front of this person and have them begin to put all resources towards our own campaign. I await that day and hope God will let me shine at my brightest when the moment counts.
One of my fellow Republican candidates is on stage now, George Patterson from Minnesota. He is the only other official candidate that is scheduled to speak today. He is going on in on in that bland weightless voice of his, dropping undefinable numbers about jobs that no one cares about. I look at his face on the screen and I almost feel bad for him. Like always his eyes look half closed, his words even putting the speaker himself to sleep. His top lip is curled up in a sneering unattractive way. Does he ever watch footage of himself? It’s horrible and he will be out of the race in a matter of weeks.
“Marsha. Hey Marsha!”
A woman in her sixties has noticed me from the crowd. She has a friend with her and they are both waving excitedly over the metal barrier that separates the audience from the back stage area. The woman’s eyes are wide and bright and her sweatshirt has a cartoon of the president behind bars on the front.
“When are you going on!” the woman asks.
“About ten minutes. How are you girls doing?” I call sweetly.
“This guy is killing us Marsha. When are you going to get up there and get this party going?” the woman demands.
“Just a few minutes. Now, Representative Patterson has some great ideas about jobs ladies. Things that go along with the values we care about.”
Since poor George Patterson doesn’t have a chance in God’s green Earth I feel I can scold with good humor and be gracious.
“Oh come on! This old stick in the mud? You get on up there and give the people what they want.”
They both clap for me I and beam back at them but don’t come close enough to shake their hands. I retreat behind the stage where Pam hands me a cup of water and I drink it as Patterson finishes up his remarks. Possibly fifty out of the nearly one thousand people in the park clap.
A talk radio host who’s name I can’t remember comes up after Patterson to introduce me. He starts hinting at who’s next and the crowd begins to cheer right away. He works them into a lather by bringing up the President. He calls the President by his full name including the man’s middle name which has a distinctly foreign sound to it. The crowd boo’s the President. Some hold up signs. Some go red in the face and yell out threats, their rage swelled and ready for me. I feel a pat on the back and find Clay grinning at me with a thumbs up.
I take the stage and the crowd goes into a frenzy, pointing and taking pictures and screaming their lungs out. At the podium, I look back at the giant screen with my face enlarged across it. I’m disappointed to see the back of my head so I turn towards the crowd and wait for them to quiet down.
I begin and drop right into my rhythm. I thank the Liberty Party for having me and Representative Patterson to speak at their special event. Thank you to all my supporters. I remember when America was like this. I remember when America was like that. Now it’s like this. Why? Because of this President and his administration.
I hit all the points: socialist, rumored Muslim, soft on terrorism, soft on jobs, soft on crime, soft on everything, but I do it in the way that only I can. I don’t just stand there behind the microphone and say he’s a secretly practicing Muslim, I bring up Ronald Reagan and his good points and then I bring up that at that time the President was probably visiting his extended family in Morocco. That’s enough. The faces I look out at aren’t dignified or sharp or even very intelligent but they get it. They know what I mean. This man I’m talking about, the one that is leading this beautiful country that God has blessed, is the other.
They call out for me, the cry for me, they scream for me. A chant of “Marsha! Marsha!” starts in the back and then spreads through the whole park, shaking the leaves and scaring the birds from the trees. I feel it inside me and it is beyond adrenalin or nervousness or anything else. It is raw power and I feel it pulse through me, my whole body alive. This is my natural state. This is who I am.


Our staff and some of the staff from the rally go out for tacos at a place downtown not far from the park. I can feel the power wearing off and I’m coming down. Everyone is talking about rumors they have heard about some of the other candidates and it tires me. One of the Iowa Liberty Party staffers starts talking about overcoming his addictions to drugs and alcohol through the Lord and I begin to have difficulty keeping my eyes open. Clay needs to stick around to talk scheduling with some of the other staff so he has Sandra the intern drive me back in her car. She talks on and on about her worries about socialism and the implementation of Islam in America and I nod encouragement until we get to the motel and I’m able to exit the car in relief.
I unlock the door to the room and step inside, slipping off my heels quietly. I can see Don sleeping in the bed, his shock of silver hair peering out just above the blanket. I go into the bathroom to remove my makeup and take a moment to look at the face in the mirror. It is still beautiful. It still is a face you can remember but I can see the age and it’s not helping the beauty, it’s pulling it down and stretching it out.
I think back to when everything was smooth and pulled taut and I met Don Bates at Christian Future University. He played football and I was on the debate team. I’ve read about “sparks” and heard people talk about it on TV but I don’t think I’ve ever felt anything like it. Don was the top of his class, everyone enjoyed him, he was popular and I was too. We were the two stars at the school and it just made sense. We were married the summer before I started at James Ryan University.
I wanted a baby. Don told me he had experience from a wild year as a sophomore but I was the one who always initiated. He would try to follow my lead but it seemed forced and I was ashamed, thinking my impulses and desire were from a lack of faith. We tried for the first four years but the Lord never blessed us. We took a series of foster children and raised them in our home, encouraging their faith in God and educating them at home while I continued at Family First. When I made my first run for the county school board we found other homes for them.
Don set up his Christian therapy practice ten years ago in Wisconsin and has been dedicated to it ever since. I am always on his mind and receive his affection but I am not his focus. He dedicates himself full time to the young men and their families that find themselves in the tragic grasp of homosexuality. He has saved souls and carries that weight with him everywhere. I do not resent it, he is not my focus either. Everything I have goes towards the campaign and bringing a change to America.
I put on my night clothes and slip into the bed next to Don. He sleeps soundly and I reflect on the day. There were moments of frustration but over all it was blessed and I feel the campaign picking up speed and energy. I can hear the voice of the crowd from Moose Park and part of me wants to wake Don up so I can be held and bring the last twenty four hours to close. I need something to release the last of the power that still lingers inside of me.
I rest one arm over his torso and touch his neck with the other hand. He brushes my fingers away, stirring, irritated. I roll my body away and grip the pillow. I let him sleep.



The list of names and numbers sit in front of me on the desk and the phone sits to the right of it. Speaking on the phone is not one of my fortes. At times I dread it. With Clay outside organizing the troops I have a chance to simply put it off and sip my tea. The act of begging people for money is wearing me down. I feel that if things continue on the path that is forming ahead of us, there will be no reason for me to beg any longer, God will provide the means.
“Why aren’t you on the phone?”
Clay has stuck in his head and caught me in my own thoughts.
“I’m taking a break. For freaks sake,” I protest bitterly.
“Fine. The food's here anyway. I guess you can come out.”
He smiles at me and I make him wait before returning the grin. He is my protector and my tormentor. He is my servant and my slave master. Others that get close to the campaign find Clay Logan a nuisance, suspiciously soft spoken about his true beliefs, a possible non-believer, never saying Jesus’s name aloud and sometimes crass in his ways. I trust Clay because I understand him. He believes in politics. He is loyal to a winner and he believes in me.
The headquarters is packed and bustleing with activity at nine in the morning. There is a whole gang of volunteers on phones and another group gearing up to do street work being organized by the interns. I pick up a donut from the box and bite into it, conscious of some of the volunteers spotting me in person for the first time and trying to act like they don’t see me. I chew the donut and look around, keeping my face open and inviting. I am different from other politicians. I share your beliefs.
“Mrs. Bates, this is the new intern I mentioned. He flew himself over here from California and arrived last night,” Clay says and I turn around.
The new intern is tall but compact, like an athlete, and he reminds me some what of Don when he was young. He looks about twenty four, twenty five, but when he reaches out to shake my hand he has an air about him that seems older.
“Flew himself? Youre a pilot?” I ask. I know it’s silly but some part of me wants this young man to know that I do have a sense of humor and am not uptight or too serious to make a stupid joke.
“Not exactly,” the intern says and a blush mixes with his smile. He is so young.
“He paid for it himself Mrs. Bates,” Clay says, exacerbated by the foolishness of it all. I can tell Clay needs sleep.
“Will Cedar,” the intern says and we end our hand shake.
“Nice to meet you Will,” I reply and let him have the whole smile and the full beam of the eyes.
“America’s freedom is what she hates! Do not vote for Marsha Bates! America’s freedom is what she hates! Do not vote for Marsha Bates!”
Everyone in the room is startled and looks over at the group of twenty or so people that have gathered outside the head quarters door. They are yelling in unison. A few of them carry signs demanding their right to kill babies. One has a sign with my picture on it crossed out. The volunteers making phone calls give uneasy looks to each other, not sure what to do. Clay and I make eye contact and his look of suprise dissolves to a grin. He yanks his phone from his blazer pocket.
“I’m going to call the cops,” he announces and then gets closer to me to speak in confidence “Believe it or not this is a good sign.”
I do believe him. I can feel the power inside me.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

The Best Rapper Ever


The Best Rapper Ever: Another Discussion between Dublin & DJ Undacut

U: Why you calling this "Another Discussion"?
D: We're having a discussion.
U: We never had one though.
D: We're having one now. Who's the best rapper ever?
U: Probably Lil Weezy.
D: Really?
U: He's the hottest right now.
D: That's not what I asked.
U: Okay, so the best. In all time?
D: Yes.
U: Probably Nas.
D: Hmmm. He's great. The best though?
U: Who do you think?
D: Well, I'm thinking Ice Cube maybe.
U: You're just being sentimental because you grew up bumping that shit. Cube fell off man. His got super wack in his later career.
D: I hope you're not saying that because of the movies. "Are We Home Yet?" Whatever it's called.
U: I'm not an idiot. I'm talking about the music man. If we were counting the movies then you would be a straight sucker for even saying his name.
D: Nas is inconsistent too. He did pretty bad stuff there for a minute. He was Nas The Ultimate Consumer Rapper for a couple albums.
U: Plus Cube is a biter. You know that right? (Dublin shakes his head) He stole that hook from Cypress Hill, that's common knowledge.
D: What hook?
U: I forget. But people also say he went down to the Good Life and stole styles from them too.
D: What are you talking about?
U: I'm talking about Da Lynch Mob. Remember the album "Gorillas in the Mist"?
D: Sure. I remember that whole "boom, ping, ping" song.
U: Exactly. Who does that whole "boom, ping, ping" thing sound like?
D: Who does it sound like?
U: Who from that whole Good Life, LA Underground scene does that sound like? (Dublin shrugs his shoulders) Volume 10! That Lynch Mob shit sounds just like Volume 10!
D: And you're saying that's because Ice Cube went down to the Good Life and stole Volume 10's rap style?
U: Hell yeah. I can prove it. Did you ever have Hip-Hopera(a great album Volume 10 put out)?
D: It had Pistol Grip Pump right?
U: Yeah. Remember the line Volume 10 does? "I hang with my dogs, f__k a gorilla." That line is about Ice Cube and Da Lynch Mob.
D: Oh come on.
U: I'm dead serious. This shit is real man. I'm not an idiot.
D: Regardless, you bring up The Good Life and I have to say that I'm changing my vote for the Best Rapper Ever to Myka 9.
U: He's too crazy for me. I mean, his delivery it just super nuts.
D: It's not just his delivery that makes him the best. He's a great writer too. I was listening to his album It's All Love/American Nightmare a week or something ago and that is a great record. It's all stream of consciousness underworld shit. It reminds me of reading a James Ellroy book or something.
U:I've gotten nerdy with some of this stuff but you just went beyond nerd into ultra geek super mode. F'real.
D: Well, I'm sticking with Myka 9. He's the best.
U: You know, this whole thing is stupid. You can't say who's the best. I said Nas today but tomorrow I might say Pharaoh Monch.
D: He's great too.
U: See! You can't just say who's the best. The next day I might say Treach. You say Myka 9, what about Acey Alone?
D: Right.
U: I might even say Dublin one day.
D: Sure. Thanks.
U: Then I'll bump the Black Album and I'll say Jay-Z
D: You don't need to. Doesn't Jay-Z say he's the best in every single song anyway?
U: I guess he thinks if he says it enough people will start to agree with him.
D: He is good.
U: But not the best. Me and you can at least agree on that right?
D: Sure.

Taken from a transcription by Peggy Menchstone on 09/4/11

Monday, September 12, 2011

Part 9: PB James and The Noxious Neighbors


The Noxious Neighbors Part 9
At first he thinks it’s the exhaustion causing him to hallucinate. The room is getting darker and darker. A vague blackness is building towards the center and the threads of the carpet are standing up on end. He blinks and there are two bright spots that are growing and glow amongst the dark abyss like red hot coals suspended in air. He doesn't recognize that they are eyes until he realizes they are looking at him.
The darkness falls and forms around the eyes and while the chant hums through the door the shadow begins to take form. A head takes shape behind the eyes and a body below it. PB sees the form of a man with two bright red eyes that stare unconscious from the center of the room. PB sees the man coming alive as the eyes spark awake: it scans the room and PB can feel it looking at him.
He knows there is no reason to try to find a weapon, this thing is not of this earth and it is quite possible there is no defense. He steps back towards the door. The shadow is between him and the window. It is at least eight feel tall, its head cramped up against the ceiling. Its eyes burn and PB feels a terror like he had never felt before.
The mouth opens below the eyes and the shadow screams. It's the scream PB heard the first night he moved in. The shadow shakes its head violently like a bull about to charge. It is backing up against the far wall and PB steps back as well, closer to the door. He can hear Lord Zaldig's voice in the hall, crying out over the rest, the words ugly and breathless.
The shadow screams again and brings its head down. Loose papers from some of PB’s boxes fly around the room and circle the shadow. The eyes are getting brighter and the whole body of the apparition seems to expand and deflate like its breathing.
“Call it off Zaldig!” PB cries through the door.
“Never! You will pay for your resistance and your meddlesome tom foolery!”
The shadow is gathered on the far side of the room, its form complete and defined in front of the plaster wall. PB steps back a few more steps and has nowhere go, his back is to the door. The shadow retracts inward, like it’s taking a deep breath. PB reaches back and slowly unlocks the door. He keeps his hand on the knob and the shadow’s eyes burn blood red. It lunges forward at the same time PB hurls the door open and the world is drowned by a flash and a deafening scream.


He awakes and chokes on the smoke. Both he and the door were blown out of the way into the kitchen. The door lies on top of him, half of it singed. He pushes it off and crawls under the smoke to the main room.
The whole apartment is engulfed in fire. The orange and yellow flames eat hungrily at the walls and carpet and along the edge of the ceiling. What used to be the hall between the two apartments is now a horrifying inferno and there are no signs of any of the cloaked followers of Zaldig or the shadow itself.
PB is choking and all he can do is jump up in desperation and run blindly for the window. The smoke pumps into his eyes and throat and the tongue of the flames licks at his face and arms. He crashes head on through the window and for a moment there is peace as he falls through the open air of the late summer evening.
He lands on the cement below awkwardly and his right leg goes crunch. He rolls along the cement and howls in pain as the glass from the window rains down around him. The left side of his face feels like it’s on fire. All he sees is red as he reaches down and feels where the tibia bone in his leg has punctured through the skin.
The fire is devouring the whole building. He drags himself away as the staff from the Peruvian restaurant stream out into the parking lot along with a crowd of patrons who stare on in terror as the last of the roof implodes and the flame engulfs the entire building. PB goes in and out of consciousness as fire trucks appear and there is water and flashing light everywhere. Police are motioning for the crowd to move back as passer by’s and neighbors join the throng.
Nobody seems to notice PB lying there. The fire men run by lugging hoses and oxygen tanks and paramedics look after a woman who is having a panic attack. The little dog she was walking watches the proceedings calmly. PB just lies there by himself until Officer Timmons and Officer Schelznek are standing over him.
“How are you doing there guy?” Schelznek asks and PB’s not sure if he’s alive or dead or dreaming.
“There’s people in there,” he manages to cough out and points up to the inferno.
“Not that we hear. We heard from the fire guys that they got everybody out of the restaurant,” Timmons assures him.
“Not the restaurant. Upstairs!”
“Don’t you live up there?”
“Yes, but I_”
“Take it easy guy, your probably just in shock,” Timmons pauses and studies the crumbled figure on the ground below him “Man, how did you even get down here?”
“I jumped.”
“I don’t think you’re going to be able to move back in,” Schelznek informs him.
They all look over as the far wall of the building collapse sending a fire ball up into the sky and over the heads of the watching crowd.
“Yeah, I don’t think this place is gonna work out.”
“Just take me to this hospital,” PB mutters
“Oh man, look at his leg! Brent, look at his leg! Man, that is horrible. That is really bad.”
Timmons is pointing with one hand and tapping his partner on the shoulder with the other. Schelznek takes out a smart phone and snaps a photo of the exposed bone.
They finally put PB on a stretcher and load him into an ambulance. He’s sharing it with the old woman who had the panic attack. She’s medicated and sleeping soundly in the stretcher next to him. They pump PB’s vein with something to dull the pain as well and he begins to fade out. He is finally going to sleep. He is finally getting to rest.
“The guy with the leg laceration is out,” the paramedic in the back yells up to the two in front.
“Okay. Keep him on the whole way and make sure the lady’s heart rate is steady until we get to Brookside. Also I think that we should a keep an eye out for- HEY!”
The ambulance halts suddenly and the paramedic in the back is jolted into one of the supply panels.
“What the hell?” he growls.
“Sorry Lance. Some bald asshole walked out in front of us. Creepy looking jerk too. Has an ugly handle bar mustache.”
The ambulance pulls away and continues towards the hospital. The bald man makes his way across the street and disappears into the bushes on the other side.

THE END

Be sure to catch the next adventure in “PB James and The Man at the Top”. Starting on September 19th here on Dublin’s World.

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Furlough Film #2: The Killer Inside Me


(Every furlough day Dublin and Robert Fong get together to view a film and have a discussion about it. The following is a transcript of that discussion. SPOILERS abound.)


D: The Killer Inside Me? That’s great. I read the book.
R: Good for you.
D: It’s by Jim Thompson. He wrote the books The Grifters and The Getaway too. Have you read any of his stuff?
R: You know I don’t like that s__t.
D: What? Crime novels?
R: Books. Magazines. That kind of s__t.

(They watch the film)

D: Huh, kind of a strange ending. I don’t remember the book ending like that.
R: That was some ill s__t. I was f__king tense the whole time.
D: That’s how I remember the book being. Very tense. It’s like a Crime and Punishment from the 1950’s.
R: When did the book come out?
D: In the 50’s. Like I said.
R: That s__t came out in the 50’s? Damn. It was kind of gnarly when he beat up Jessica Alba.
D: Man, she sucks by the way. Don’t you think?
R: She’s f__king hot.
D: Sure. But I’m talking about the acting. She really isn’t good.
R: She’s just as good as the main dude. You know, Ben Affleck’s little brother.
D: Casey Affleck. No, I think he was much better than her. He’s a good actor.
R: Dude, his voice. It always sounds like he’s going through puberty. It’s cracking and high all the time.
D: That can be annoying. But he’s good, he makes it work. To be honest, when I saw he was playing the Killer I was kind of surprised. I didn’t see it. At least I didn’t picture the character that way when I read the book.
R: How did you picture him?
(Dublin thinks)
D: Rick Perry. That’s how I pictured him. Just like Rick Perry.

R:What’s up with Kate Hudson? Is she getting fat or what?
D: I’m not sure if she’s gained weight but she seemed kind of stiff and not very good.
R: I agree with you there.
D: The whole movie she seemed preoccupied or something.
R: Maybe she was tripping about how much weight she’s gained.
D: The rest of the cast was really good. All the supporting cast. I like that guy Simon Baker.
R: Yeah, he was in a Zombie movie I think.

R:
You know this movie was pretty controversial when it came out?
D: Because of the violence?
R: Yeah, especially towards women.
D: That’s true. There are two long scenes of him beating women aren’t there? Pretty horrible.
R: They premiered it at Sundance and somebody told the director—Hold up I got the quote right here. They turned around and said to the director: "I don't understand how Sundance could book this movie! How dare you? How dare Sundance?”
D: Wow. I can see people tripping out about those scenes.
R: And what was up with it? When he capped dudes it was no big deal. They barely showed it. And then when he kills a woman it’s with his bare hands and goes on and on.
D: You know, that’s kind of why I was impressed with the movie.
R: You’re a sick f__k.
D: Seriously. The book disturbs the hell out of you not just because of the violence he inflicts on these two women but because of the trust. You know what I mean?
R: Naw.
D: These women trust Ford. They think he loves them. In a sick way he does love the Jessica Alba character. But then he’s suddenly killing them and they’re finding out what he really is ands that’s what’s f__ked up. He’s a psychopath.
R: That’s true. When was the book written?
D: 1952.
R: 60 years old and the s__t is still disturbing. Jim Thompson is off the hook.

September 7th 2011

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Part 8: PB James and The Noxious Neighbors


The Noxious Neighbors Part 8
PB can see right down the barrel of the shotgun. He can see the darkness in the tunnel and waits for the fire to flash out and bite him. Someone gets out of the passenger seat of the Lexus but PB doesn’t look over. All he can do is stare down into the darkness.
“Why you asking about a girl?”
PB looks over at the man who has left the car and is speaking to him. The man has a thick neck and tattoos along the collar of his t-shirt.
“What do you mean?”
“Why you asking about a girl man?”
When the man with the thick neck repeats the question the rest of the passengers exit the car including the one with the shotgun, a skinny little guy with a dark soul patch that sits flat below his mouth. PB looks at the skinny man’s eyes and then back into the barrel and into the darkness.
“I was just trying to figure out what is happening,” PB says absently and the thick necked one drags a large revolver from the waistline of his pants and points it directly at PB’s head.
“You are stupid,” the thick neck says “And so dead.”
“Stop!”
The waitress from the restaurant has joined them in the parking lot and as she approaches them the heels of her shoes make sharp cracks against the pavement and the men look at each other uncomfortably. She speaks to the thick necked one in Spanish and he lowers the gun. She walks passed him and stands directly in front of PB, her big brown eyes probing into his face.
“Who are these guys?” PB asks.
“Do you know Lupe?” she says, slapping his question away.
“Who’s Lupe?”
“Our cousin from El Salvador. She was attacked last night and taken up into the hills.”
“Do you know where she is?”
The skinny man with the soul patch pulls back the pump on his shotgun.
“Why you want to know? Who are you?” the girl demands.
PB tells them everything. He describes the light and the sounds that came from behind his neighbor’s door. He tells them of following his neighbor up into the hills and of the people in cloaks that murdered a goat in front of him. He talks about Lupe and how he fought the people with cloaks using a large tree branch before he and Lupe escaped and Lupe disappeared.
“She’s not in no danger,” the girl says “She’s already on a plane back home. She got in a car that was running and came back to my house and I helped her ditch the car this morning.”
“That was my car,” PB points out.
“That piece of shit?” one of the men says and flexes his chin in the direction of PB’s old Honda.
“These people, these freaks, they grabbed Lupe off the street and put her in a van,” the girl explains “They said they would kill her to raise a demon.”
One of the men laughs but PB keeps his composure and nods wearily.
“They’re a bunch of dungeon and dragon nerds but they mean business. They tried to kill me today,” he mutters.
“Lupe heard them keep saying that they needed the blood of a fertile woman to raise the demon,” the girl say and the wonder and fear mingle together in her voice.
Her brother and his friends chuckle and light up various cigarettes and sticks of rolled up marijuana.
“We’re going to find these fools and smoke they ass,” her brother growls.
The men get in the car and drive off with a screech, bass and smoke drifting off in their wake. PB unlocks the door to his own car and gets in.
“You saved my cousin’s life,” the girl says to him through the window.
“No problem,” PB replies and pulls out of the parking lot.
He heads down San Pablo towards home. All he wants is to get some sleep. He has been in a never ending nightmare and his entire body can feel the toll. His ribs are bruised from being punched. His back is sore from falling off a subway platform. He wants to close his eyes and forget the last twenty four hours.
He pulls up into the parking lot behind his apartment. He knows he won’t be able to sleep with Owen across the hall. He’ll grab a few things and get a motel and bring Ellie if she’s willing to go. He approaches the building and can see the light still on in his window. He trudges up the stairs and doesn’t take his eyes off the neighbor’s door as he unlocks his own and slips inside the apartment.
The boxes still sit on the carpet with the mattress pushed off to the side. Everything is very still.
“Ellie?”
The door across the hall swings open and PB turns to see her standing in her own apartment, posted like a statue down the hall. Her face isn’t blank anymore, there’s a strange tightness around her eyes and mouth but it’s hard to make out in the semi darkness.
“Come here,” she says.
“Is everything alright?” PB asks and steps through the threshold.
“Come here,” she repeats in her flat empty voice.
PB takes a few steps in, slowly, cautiously. Ellie doesn’t move, she just stands there, and as he gets closer PB can see the tightness in her face is clearly fear.
He stops short before the bedroom door to his left and a shadow flashes across the wall as the blade of the Great Shadow sword swings down through the door way. PB falls back, the blade barely missing his face. Jerry the long hair steps into the hall, his crimson cloak billowing out behind him. He lifts the sword to take a second blow. PB is sprawled out on the floor and he pushes himself back, sliding along the rug.
The blade comes down beside him, dust and carpet flying up into the dim light. The narrow hall of the apartment is full of cloaks now, Jerry in front with the sword, the rest of them bringing up the rear. Ellie is obscured by crimson.
“Destroy him!” a voice cries out and PB knows it is Lord Zaldig.
Jerry has brought the heavy sword back up to his shoulder to strike again. PB can see that the long hair is out of balance. PB lunges forward, throwing himself into Jerry’s gut.
One cloak crashes into another cloak and they’re all falling back. The hall is a crimson wave and PB is riding on top. He swats and slaps at Jerry and then staggers up, back pedaling out of the apartment. The whole group is cursing and struggling to get up, their heavy cloaks slowing them down to slow motion. PB is already in through his own door and has it locked before they gain their footing.
He scans the empty studio for a weapon of some kind. It’s just boxes and cheap carpet, nothing to swing. Someone is throwing themselves against the door, the hinges stretching. He goes to the window and looks down. It’s not that far but it’s too far. He’ll survive, sure, but something is going to break and when it does, what then?
“Mr. James?”
There is no more commotion behind the door. It is eerily quiet and still.
“Mr. James? Are you there?”
It’s Zaldig’s voice, that deep obsidian voice that enunciates each word with a slithering of the tongue.
“Mr. James, I know you are there.”
How does Zaldig know his name? What does the bald bastard want?
“We do not need to break this door down Mr. James. There is no need. You will come to us.”
PB spots the empty bottle of tequila sitting on the carpet. He plucks it up by the end and turns towards the door.
“How’s that Zaldig?!” he says.
“The great shadow will bring you to us.”
A low hum begins to come from behind the door and PB takes a few steps back. The hum grows and then nine voices are speaking a grotesque and unintelligible language and the volume is slowly rising until it sounds like they are in the room, chanting the words.
The lights in the apartment dim as the volume of the chant increases and PB feels the hairs on the back of his neck stand on end.

Continued in Part 9