2007
for Andrea, title inspired by Ragdoll
The summer between our junior and senior year of high school was as steamy and typical as all of the others. We had all of that long hair and it wasn’t cool to wear shorts. So we suffered mightily to maintain whatever minimal status we had in our peer group. In 1974 it wasn’t cool to dress cool, and I had just been fired for the first time.
I had been working at the Goldblatt’s located in Rockford Plaza. I had been hired in with about twenty other young men to help them redecorate the store. For about three months we moved stock back and forth so the tradesmen could hang new drywall and fixtures. The redecorating was nearly complete, and there were too many stock boys hanging around. On my last day, some clean-cut, religious young fellow ratted me out for smoking a cigarette by the trash compactor. It was an alleged fire hazard. The assistant store manager fired me as soon as our paths crossed. I don’t remember getting a chance to defend myself or lie. I was just fired.
The injustice infuriated me. This was the same store manager who tried to be so cool and impress us with his little stories. He told a group of us about a time when he and his girlfriend, who became his wife, were driving in to see a Bears game, and his girlfriend gave him a blowjob on I-90. He waved at the truckers who blew their horns as he streaked passed them with a bouffant in his lap. I thought the guy was an asshole for bragging out an intimate story about his wife to a group of teenaged morons. I hoped that I would never have to meet the poor woman who was married to such a fat, insecure, imbecile. However, I did learn something new that day. It was a new thought that I’d never considered. I wondered if I should avoid owning a car with a center counsel.
I borrowed my mother’s 1968 Chevy Caprice the day after I got fired under the pretense of job hunting. I was sort of job hunting. I drove around and looked at all of the businesses and wondered about the misery level of the people who worked in the stores and factories that supported our middling lives in our barely descript town. In between musings I appreciated my mom’s car. It was a turquoise coupe that did not have the black vinyl roof that spoiled many of the cars of that era. You could just point that car, stomp on the accelerator, and the four-barrel carburetor would juice the 327 cubic-inch engine into a growling compliance that felt powerful enough to satisfy a young man’s need for dominance. That car was at its best when Won’t Get Fooled Again came on the radio. Oh . . . and it had a bench seat—no center counsel. The black interior was as big as a third world living room.
I pulled to a halt at a stoplight at Rockford Avenue and Charles Street and some friends pulled up next to me in the right lane. Dave was driving around in his car, and Mike was along for the ride. I reached across to roll down the passenger window. “What’s up?”
Dave nodded and informed, “We’re going to get some beer and go to Mike’s basement.”
I said, “Cool. It’s a good day for avoiding the Sun.”
Dave nodded some more, “Yeah, a little music, beer, and some Oaxacan is what’s goin’ on.”
Friendly Mike leaned forward and invited, “We’re short on beer money. If you pitch in, you can come over.”
I did some quick calculating. It was too hot to hang out with the Freaks (a.k.a., latter day hippies) at the forest preserve, and being a Tuesday, there weren’t many other possibilities. So I said, “We’re gonna need a frozen pizza, or two, if we’re gonna be smokin’.”
I threw the car in park, and fished my wallet out of my back pocket. I pulled out a twenty and leaned out the passenger window to hand it to Dave. Just as Dave secured the lucre, a chorus of horns from the traffic behind us pointed out that the light had changed.
I jumped back behind the wheel as Dave slipped away and shouted, “See you there!”
Mike and Dave lived in an older neighborhood on Jackson Street. They lived just about across the street from each other and had been friends since they were first able to cross the aging concrete. The houses were mostly frame and white with mature foliage, and some houses were beginning to look like they had seen their best days. It was generally considered a lower-middle-class workingman’s neighborhood although some geriatric near-hoi-polloi denizens were hanging on until their children convinced them into a nursing home, or they broke a hip. Twenty minutes after I got there, Dave and Mike rolled up with beer and frozen pizzas.
Dave was fairly tall with near Afro-Like, dark hair and a plodding gait that reminded everyone of Mr. Natural. It seemed that Dave was always tripping and just about ready to break into a trucking walk. He had a genius level IQ and was as non-conformist as any of us hoped to be. We imagined that he would someday toil in a laboratory and make some kind of magic out of chemicals that would make him rich on royalties. He wore granny glasses, took Calculus at the junior college, and his face was a bit exaggerated. He was especially popular because his full, yet scraggily, beard made him look old enough to buy alcohol. His freaky, intimidating manner scared most clerks into serving him without question.
Mike had the shortest, most acceptable hair in our group. He was almost stocky and athletic looking, but didn’t play any organized sport in high school. His face was as friendly and balanced as the midwestern landscape and the girls in our group thought he was cute, but not quite exciting enough. He was everyone’s good friend, but nobody’s best friend. His girlfriend, Carla, seemed to treat him like a brother rather than a love interest. Although they had been dating for over a year, no one had ever seen them commit a public display of affection—not even hand holding. The most shocking thing about Mike was his plan to go into the Marine Corps when he got out of high school.
We slammed car doors and carried the goods up the driveway to the basement door of the two-story, frame dwelling. Once inside the door, it was a hard right down the basement stairs. Carla and Chrissie were sitting on the retired family sofa listening to a Joni Mitchell album. Dave opened one of the cases of beer and equipped the girls. All of us males converged in front of the semi-retired basement refrigerator to stash the beer and pizza in a cool place.
Once we all had beer, I managed to flop into an overstuffed chair that had a mushroom ottoman in front of it. I felt entitled because I had contributed so much moola to the festivities. No one objected. Mike took up station on the couch next to Carla, and Dave settled into a green and white strapped chaise lounge that belonged out in the yard. There were printed, hippie tapestries hanging over the cinder block walls and separating the party area from the mundane mechanicals that contributed so much to the livability of the house. A huge bong sat on a rectangular coffee table in front of the couch while Court and Spark wound down with Twisted. Every female who had a halter top owned Carol King’s Tapestry, and Joni Mitchell’s Blue and Court and Spark. I had a theory that the women of that time could not begin to menstruate until they owned those albums. Sure, it was good music, but it made me feel like sleeping while the complaints of failed romance and rotten men vulcanized those feminine ears. “Wake up! This is the good part!”
“’It’s too late, Baby.’”
Carla never spoke, or rarely spoke. She was an acute listener. She would look over the top of her glasses and take everything in. Sometimes she would jiggle one of her feet to help process and file the information. Chrissie had pet names for everything, and her boyfriend was at work. They were similar girls who were wearing dreamy halter tops in which their moderately sized, rather pointy breasts would dance behind. They were averaged sized with harp-like hips encased in embroidered bellbottoms with sandals on their filthy little feet. The post-hippie, emphatic nod was everywhere, and these longhaired brunettes practiced it like swans on Seconal. It was a dreamy, drowsy head bob that reeked of earnestness and an Earth-Motherly appreciation for exotic chemistry, “Far out, man.”
When Carla did speak the sound of her voice would set you back because of its strength. Maybe she saved up her strength. Maybe if she spoke all of the time she would be reduced to whispering. Mike cleaned pot on a matronly looking silver tray, and conversation sat up like shifting volleyball games. Once in a while we would all play on the same court, but it was mostly disorganized into groups and subgroups with Watergate, space, astrology, music and gossip filling our ears with pseudo-adult candy. All of the pieces of any worthwhile knowledge were known by at least one party in our party. Dave had gotten up and put Houses of the Holy on the stereo. It occurred to me that I was partying with the Led Zeppelin wing of our peer group.
We were subdivided into two groups; one group loved Led Zeppelin, and the members of the other group were fans of David Bowie and Roxy Music. We didn’t yet know that we were mutating into Heavy Metal and Glam/underground/atypical attitudes. I was in the latter group. I liked Led Zeppelin only a little. They frustrated me lyrically. Some of our other friends were harsher though. One time someone said that Led Zeppelin was stupid to which someone replied that David Bowie fans were faggots. Cooler heads intervened to pull the warring parties from each other’s throats. I felt like I had to maintain the peace on this day. Plus, I would sooner have an eye put out rather than risk being called a faggot in front of a couple of girls who I thought were cute.
The bong was passed around. We made a game out of the name of the pot we were smoking. None of us knew how to spell Oaxaca or Oaxacan, but we could cough “Wah Hah Cun” when we exhaled. True violence erupted when I took my first hit. I coughed, “Wah Hah Cun, Wah Hah Cun, Wah Hah Cun” in succession with tears rolling from my eyes. We were all laughing and sounded like Native Americans in the midst of a raspy, tuberculosis driven vision. Gradually, the word shifted to “Wah Hackin’” and finally “We’re Hackin’.”
By this time Dancing Days was playing, and we were all . . . way-stead.
I was totally into the song. That riff is played on a Fender Telecaster equipped with a tricky little device called a B-Note Bender. “Daya daya duh, daya daya duh, daya daya dayah, daya daya duh.” It still makes me swoon and feel all druggie. That device was invented so Country guitar players could mimic riffs from a pedal-steel guitar, but Jimmy Page worked an act of genius and came up with a hypnotic, trancelike riff that reeks of sinister perversion. Everything was good until Robert Plant sang about some lion at the roadside with a tadpole in a jar. What the fuck does that mean? It’s not a good image. Was the lion holding the jar in his paw? So that makes it a cartoon image! Why would anyone write a cartoon image against that evil sounding, hyper-sexed riff? Oh, please! Does it take Mick Jagger to write smut when it’s called for? Everybody was glaring at me. I had forgotten myself and began to speak out loud by accident.
Carla gave me an out, “I really love Stairway to Heaven.”
I jumped at the opportunity, “Yeah, Black Dog is great too. I still haven’t figured out how to play that riff.” Good! Now they all knew that I owned at least one Led Zeppelin record. I didn’t bother to mention the missing credits to Willie Dixon or Howlin’ Wolf on the Led Zeppelin One and Two. I was getting hungry and decided that I wanted to live long enough to eat some of the pizza I had paid for.
It was a weird thing. As soon as I thought that I was hungry, Mike said, “We brought some pizzas. Would you throw them in the oven for us all?”
Carla jumped up and headed for the fridge. When she walked back through the party area, Chrissie elevated from the couch and followed her. Every male eye was warily watching the halter tops for every nuance of breast movement until the girls climbed the basement stairs out of sight. The conversation took a decidedly male turn while the women were cooking. It wasn’t hateful, or lewd. We talked about the hopeless Cubs, cars and graduation plans. We were going to be seniors and immediately following that we would be subject to the draft and voting and serious tax paying. The buzz was wearing down.
The bong made the rounds again as the girls returned with the pizza cut up and sorted onto paper plates. They even brought us napkins. As Chrissie bent forward to hand me my plate, I was again locked in on her halter top. I simultaneously mused on the word halter, which led to thoughts of restraint and control. Then I turned toward the concept of feminism and wondered why women had lost their bras, but not their servitude. Could the next step be far off? Now that they had free moving breasts, weren’t we men supposed to begin our service to women? How long would it be until males were expected to cook the pizza? Nice erect nipples! Feminism is so cool!
We ate. Foghat jumped onto the turntable. We talked. Electric Light Orchestra took a spin. We smoked. The Allman Brothers Band beat Southern Blues around a Whipping Post. Dave and I got onto the subject of evolution.
Dave said, “Wars and famine won’t be a problem once we evolve a little more.”
I leapt at the chance to be a pain in the ass. I said, “How are we going to evolve? That happened when the population was much smaller. There’s too many people for a mutation to survive and dominate.” Dave looked at me sideways. So I pushed my luck. “What are we going to evolve anyway? Prehensile penises?” I was out on a very thin branch and started jumping up and down on it. “Okay, so somebody mutates a totally controllably-move-anywhere cock that works like a tongue.” I was in the bug-eyed, freak zone, and the scenery was becoming more bizarre. “How many generations would it take before a prehensile equipped Hitler could form up an army to wipe out the surviving erectoids?”
Dave shook off the question, “Who cares? We’ll all be stoned anyway.”
The music had stopped. There was a vacuous silence. I looked toward the other three dumbstruck faces. Shit. I did it again. I crossed the line and ran straight into traffic.
I decided to write my own epitaph. “It’ll be great though. You’ll be able to hold the bath towel while you blow dry your hair.” Laughter. Thank you very much. I elaborated. “You’ll be able to hold a hand mirror while you pull nose hairs.” They were stoned enough. They bought that one too. Mike put on Bare Trees and Chrissie decided to practice astrology.
She consulted a book in the hope of figuring out our rising signs. She was going to tell all of us what we were really like. It wasn’t a smooth process. While she was faltering, I was imagining her and I driving in the Caprice on I-90. Only, to keep things from becoming sick, I imagined us heading North toward Madison. She was scooted over close to me. She was teasing me. Then, just as she was beginning to tug my zipper, her boyfriend’s head popped over from the back seat and offered us some pork rinds.
Chrissie told each of us that we were a blank with a blank rising. Then she leafed through the book and began to give me a reading. I think she started with me because she thought I had the most dismal future, and that the subsequent readings would be rosier.
“Okay, Jeff. Virgo with Virgo rising. It looks like you are very studious and persuasive. You would do best if you became a lawyer.”
The room broke out in broad guffaws. I laughed as hard as anyone did. I said, “You should return that book and try to get a refund.”
When things subsided, Chrissie said, “I’m too fucked up to do this right now.” Then she puked all over her book, notes and lap.
Carla grabbed her by the hand and guided her to a large wastebasket before the next torrent began. She then gathered up Chrissie’s hair and held it safely out of harm’s way. Chrissie convulsed. There is nothing more stinky, or disgusting, than pieces of pizza and beer returning from a visit to the human stomach. It was making us all queasy. The weakened males climbed the stairs with a beer, or two, retrieved from the fridge, and took refuge on the driveway.
We wobbled around, talked, and behaved like the worthless, testosterone impaired wretches that we wanted to be. Not that we didn’t have some odd chunks of sympathy or empathy floating around in our craniums. Mike said, “Poor Chrissie.”
Dave ran out of beer. He took a deep breath of fresh air and ran down the stairs to retrieve one. Once he emerged, he gasped for more of the humid, mildly sweltering sticky stuff that we subsist on during the summer months. About ten minutes later, Carla and Chrissie pushed through the screen door while tripping over each other. They gathered with Chrissie leaning on Carla. Chrissie’s eyes had dear streaks of tearful mascara running down her cheeks. It looked as though Carla was going to drive her home. Chrissie was clutching a trash bag in her hand in case the heaves started up again. Just before they got to the end of the driveway, Carla’s head twisted around toward Mike and she said, “Clean up.”
We men groaned while we watched the sandal bottoms clap up against the blackened soles of the departing females.
Dave said, “They must walk on charcoal when they’re not wearing their sandals.”
We had been looking at the same thing. Mike asked, “Are you gonna help me with this?”
Dave and I both gave him strained, but affirmative nods. We all pulled our shirts up to the bridges of our noses and entered the contaminated basement.
Mike said, “Let’s get the trash can outside.”
Dave grabbed it and near ran up the stairs. He missed a step and thumped back a step, saying “Woh!” Collective relief was felt when the vomit remained in its container.
Mike lit some incense, retrieved some rags, and some spray cleaner.
I said, “I scrape up cat puke with something like a cereal box at home.”
Mike ran up the stairs and came back tearing out the waxed paper inner bag that was still half full of Lucky Charms. He handed me the box. I tore off the top flaps. Then I tore off the face of the box, and used it like a squeegee to coral the puke chunks into the remaining box. I thought about Instant Karma and how I was being paid back for having lewd thoughts about a girl who could barely tolerate my presence. I needed to lift my mood while I scraped the chunks off of the sofa, coffee table, and floor. I mulled over my recently failed relationship with Mary Jo. She was a tall blond with a wardrobe and sixteen different shades of frosted lipstick. She had a hairstyle. At first we had a mighty crush on one another, but soon we discovered we had little in common other than a bright, shiny lust that we were too terrified to consummate. After about three weeks of furtive attempts, her conventional, blond ditsyness tired of my verbose weirdness, and we parted. I was relieved. She went to the Catholic high school, and I was terrified that I would impregnate her. I longed for someone who wore patchouli, now and then, and had read a book without having her arm twisted.
I climbed the stairs and sought out the trashcan that everyone kept by their garage. Then I walked toward Dave who was spraying out the wastebasket in the middle of the back yard. I asked, “Where’d the chunks go?”
Dave lifted an eyebrow and said, “A convenient dog stopped by for a visit.”
“They like cat shit too.”
“Yeah, I don’t like it when dogs try to kiss me.”
“So. Do you put a bag over their heads?”
Then I was drenched. Try as I might, I couldn’t get the garden hose away from Dave to return the favor. Mike came outside and laughed at the scene, and it was time for me to go home. Dave gave me about eight dollars back from the twenty that I had passed to him in traffic, and Mike gave me a garbage bag to sit on while I drove the Caprice back to my house.