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Friday, April 26, 2013

THE LIGHT BULB IN THE BALLOON


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*****

Mrs. Mad Bomber was nearing her release date and her husband, who was feeling increasingly guilty about his affair with the Upstairs Junkie’s Girlfriend, wanted to do something special for his wife’s return.

He put it to Roger like this, “If I don’t figure something out quick, she’s gonna shoot my nuts off.”

Roger wasn’t ready to test his bomb shelter just yet, so with visions of flying bullets castrating him instead of the Mad Bomber, Roger convened an emergency guys' meeting, which included himself, Jack Lishman and the Mad Bomber. I was considered management, so I wasn’t invited.

After consuming a great deal of smoke and Christian Brothers – courtesy of their host – their minds started to wander off onto unhelpful tracks, like what the hell did women want, anyway?

“I didn’t mean to fuck that chick,” the Mad Bomber said. “She kept comin’ on to me, you know?”

“Saw her knocking on your door nearly every day,” Roger agreed.

“This would be easier,” Jack observed, “if there had only been a one-time occurrence. I mean, the two of you were going at it pretty regularly, from what I could see.”

The Mad Bomber sighed. “She always got me right after I’d done my wake up,” he said. “First toot of the morning and I’m hornier than hell.”

“I can understand that,” Jack said.

“Pass the joint,” said Roger.

They kicked around more ideas, sharing the joint and the brandy until it seemed that they would fog out before a solution had been found.

But then Roger slapped his forehead and said, “Fuck, I forgot to tell you guys. I know how to put a light bulb into a balloon.”

The Mad Bomber goggled at him, then said, “No shit?”

“Hell yeah,” Roger said. “I worked on it for weeks. For a long time I kept ripping the balloon, or busting the bulb, but I finally got the hang of it.”

“Show us,” Jack urged.

Roger adjourned to his house and returned a few minutes later with some lightbulbs and a bag of balloons. Everyone watched with great anticipation as Roger sat on the floor crosslegged, then armed himself with a long honk of brandy and a hefty toke of the evil weed.

The he fished out a balloon and commenced to stretching it this way and that. He was very careful with these exercises, stretching just a little at first, then harder as the rubber loosened up. Then he blew the balloon up – almost to the bursting point. He let out the air and did it again a few more times until he was satisfied the balloon was primed.

Now it was time to insert the lightbulb. Jack and the Mad Bomber bent close, but Roger gave them a warning look. Like, please, this is a trade secret.

He turned to the side to hide what he was doing, made some twisting motions, accompanied by squeaking sounds like you get when a magician makes balloon animals for the kids, then he put the balloon to his lips and huffed and puffed.

Finally, he turned back, tied the neck of the balloon and held it up. Sure enough, the light bulb was rattling around inside.

“Fuck me,” the Mad Bomber said.

“Ditto,” agreed Jack.

The Mad Bomber’s grin faded and he frowned. “Then what?” he asked.

Roger sighed. “Beats the shit out of me,” he said. “But, I thought… you know…” and his grand idea hovered on the edge of disaster.

More smoke and spirits were consumed as the great men continued their council of war. Eventually, when all seemed lost, Jack’s face lit up with a smile.

“What if we…” and he leaned forward and explained his plan.

“Goddamn, but that’s good,” the Mad Bomber said.

“Holy shit,” said Roger.

It was the breakthrough they needed.

“Fuck,” Roger said. “And after that we could…”

Then the Mad Bomber had the most brilliant idea of all and when he told them, awe was definitely struck. More inducements were consumed in celebration, until soon the pungent smoke wafting through the open windows drew other celebrants and the party got bigger.

But before they got totally whacked out, Roger drew the Mad Bomber and Jack aside.

“We have to promise not to forget,” he told them.

And this they solemnly swore.

*     *     *

While the gang worked on the problem of doing something nice for Mrs. Mad Bomber so as to avoid getting her True Love's nuts shot off, I was trying to deal with trouble from the least expected quarter: the woman who had replaced Pepperland’s resident artist.

Our beautiful bisexual artist had moved in with her professor shortly after completing her master’s project – a life-sized lion carved out of scraps of different kinds of wood that had been glued together. It was a marvelous creation and later sold for over three thousand dollars when she had her first one-woman show in Westwood. Her professor specialized in enormous tin doghouses, which he usually painted red and sold for twenty or thirty thousand a go, so it was an affair made in pop art heaven. Although, I must say, her lion was a helluva lot cooler than his dog houses. I’ve often wondered what happened to her. Surely, lions beat doghouses any day of the week.

The tenant who followed became known to us as the “Cat Lady.” Not because of the lion – which, as I said, had been sold – and not because she looked like Batman’s slinky nemesis. (She was good to gaze upon, but she was more round than slinky.) The nickname came from the numerous cats who eventually took up residence in her apartment.

When she rented the place she’d asked about her two cats, which weren’t a problem. Within reason, Mr. Cohen allowed pets – witness my Tasha. What she didn’t tell us was that she owned a whole colony of felines, which she kept temporarily stashed with her mother. After she moved in, she slipped the kitty cats into her apartment little by little.

Eventually, the odor of too many cats and less than vigilant housekeeping alerted her neighbors: Marita on one side and Tom and Thom on the other. Now, Marita could smell dirt a mile away, but when she was ripped on bennies and beer – and in the middle of one of her cleaning jags – she just scrubbed all the harder; assuming, she said later, that the odor was left behind by her alcoholic husband during one of his rare conjugal visits. (When in his cups, he sometimes confused closets with toilets).

Stoner Tom had limited schnoz abilities due to, well, being constantly stoned. Thom Mead, on the other hand, had a perfectly good smeller and caught on right away. But he had designs on the Cat Lady’s virtue and kept his observations to himself until a poet by the name of Steve Lenzi (introduced in The Biker And The Poet) beat his time and then the green monster reared its creepy little head, turning Thom into fink.

On or about the time the sages of the Blue Meanie Apartments were concocting their scheme, Thom came knocking on my door.

When I answered he blurted, “I thought you knew what was going on around here.”

I’d been about to invite him in to share some wine and a bowl, but his tone was so challenging I changed my mind. “Apparently not,” I said. “But you’re going to enlighten me, right?”

“It’s that chick next door to me,” he said. “She’s got cats.”

I nodded. “Yeah? So?”

“No, I mean she really has cats,” he said, throwing his arms wide. “Like maybe twenty or thirty of the suckers. You can smell them in our apartment.”

“No shit,” I said, getting a little worried.

I wasn’t a lot worried, because Thom tended to be an alarmist. It went with his hypochondria. Ever since I’d known him – we met in our senior year in high school – he’d been convinced that he was going to die any minute. I told him then that eventually he’d be right, so why worry? It didn’t make him feel any better. In fact, in recent times he’d become considerably worse. After a tour of duty in Korea as an Army medic he was now afflicted with whole volumes or rare and wonderful illnesses to dread.

Thom said, “Cats carry diseases, you know. Diseases that humans can get. Especially when there are so many.” He cupped a hand over his mouth and coughed experimentally. “As a matter of fact, I think I’m coming down with something.”

Oh, oh, I thought. Lawsuit city here we come. Thom could be a tight-fisted little stinker. The kind of guy who kept his money in one of those tiny squeeze ‘em change purses, so when you were both buying a couple of beers, or whatever, he’d be fumbling with that squeeze ‘em thing for two small forevers, which meant that ninety nine times out of a hundred his buddies got stuck with the whole bill. No big deal. What’s a couple of beers? But when it gets to be every time it becomes sort of tiresome, you know?

Anyway, Thom was always looking for ways to skin a flint so I knew I had to do some serious bud nipping just as fast as I could.

“You didn’t just find this out, did you,” I said, making it a statement, not a question.

Thom looked shocked – Shocked! “What are you implying?”

“Everybody knows you’re hot for that chick,” I said. “You’ve been knocking on her door practically every night. With twenty or thirty cats, you must have noticed something was up when she was making excuses about washing her hair and shit.”

“Okay, okay, don’t get nit picky, Al,” Thom said. “I’m just being a good tenant, you know? Reporting a problem that I recently became aware of. But now you’ve got to do something, right? I mean, so many cats in one apartment isn’t healthy.”

I sighed. This was Thom’s not-so-subtle way of letting me know that he could call the Los Angeles Health Department. As a newsman he could go straight to the top to make his complaint.

“Don’t worry, Thom,” I said. “I’ll take care of it.”

Immediately his attitude changed and he was back to being an old high school chum again. He looked over my shoulder to see if he could spot Carol, who had also been a classmate. I shifted, blocking his view.

“See you later, Thom,” I said. “I’ve got the early shift at the paper tomorrow.” And I firmly, but politely, shut the door.

Carol saw my gloomy look when I returned to the couch. “What’s wrong?” she asked.

“Apparently we have a cat lady,” I said.

“A what?”

“Thom says the new chick has twenty or thirty cats,” I explained.

“That explains Steven’s new poem,” she said. “It’s called, ‘Le Chats.’”

“Is it any good?” I asked.

Carol shrugged and said, “Who knows? It’s in French.”

*     *     *

While Thom was fretting about cat piss, the sages of the Blue Meanie Apartments had sobered up enough to complete their preparations.

Mr. Mad Bomber drove out to pick his wife up at the gates of the Sybil Brand Institute For Felonious Women. Their reunion, I was told, was joyous. Mr. Mad Bomber promised his true love a magnificent evening as he drove her home.

As for me and mine, we were contemplating a different sort of night.

“The Graduate” and “Patton” were playing as a double bill at the Venice Fox Theater and Carol and I had arranged for Marita to baby sit Jason for us. It had been many years since the Venice Fox had anything to do with 20th Century Fox studios. It was an independent theater at the bottom of the film food chain and much prized by all of us Venice rats because the bookings were eclectic, to say the least; the tickets were cheap – 50 cents for a double bill, plus cartoons and coming attractions – and the counter food included cool things like freshly made sandwiches on home-baked bread, organic veggies and carafes of plonk (red or white) for a buck. 

They also had a glassed-in area for parents to sit with children and what sounds strange as all hell now, but was considered a luxury then, was that smoking was allowed in that room. People used to take their toddlers to the movies just so they could light up. On that night, however, Jason had the sniffles and we didn’t want to expose him to the night air – never mind the tobacco-filled room. Boy, talk about things Dr. Spock never warned us about.

Just as we were about to head off to the movies, Roger suddenly appeared, knocking on the car window. When I rolled it down, he shoved a joint in my mouth, then started chanting like a carnival barker, “Come one, come all, see the Eight Wonder of the World. It walks, it talks, it crawls on its belly like a reptile.”

Carol pressed fingers to her temples. “Please, Roger,” she said. “I’m already getting a headache.” I handed her the joint. “Thank you,” she said, taking it and proceeding to reduce it – and her headache - to ashes.

“You don’t want to miss this, Al,” Roger said, pulling another chubby from his shirt pocket. “We’ve been working on it for days. It’s a big welcome home party for the Mad Bomber’s wife.”

“I don’t know...” Carol said, clearly meaning no way in Hades.

She liked Mrs. Mad Bomber enough – I never told her about the offered rent for sex incident – but she was adamant about staying clear of their apartment.

“If I get blown up,” she’d said in the past, “Jason won’t have a mother.”

I couldn’t argue with her there and I was about to give Roger the brush off, when he leaned into the car and said in a whisper that hinted of deep dark secrets, suitable for the hushed halls of ancient Aztec temples: “I figured out how to put a light in a balloon, Al.”

“No shit,” I said.

Roger gave a very wise nod and I realized that he was stoned to the gills, but holding up quite well.

“No shit,” he said. “Come on. You fucking gotta see.”

“What’s Roger talking about?” Carol said, getting instantly stoned off her toke. “Some kind of balloon?”

“A light bulb in a balloon,” Roger corrected.

Carol thought about this for a toke and a half. As she passed the joint she asked me, “Do you think he could really do that?”

Roger snorted. “We did fuckin’ better,” he said. “Come and see.”

He opened the door and with that we exited, leaving the Venice Fox double bill behind for another evening to troop down the alley where we were met by a whole contingent of Blue Meanie Apartment partiers.

As near as I can recall from the fog of years and narcotics, there was the Guest Of Honor, Mrs. Mad Bomber – shyly hanging back with her beaming hubby, Mr. Mad Bomber; Roger’s girlfriend, Nancy; Stoner Tom and his latest girlfriend, a largish, very cool chick, whose name I don’t recall, but she was a dynamite reporter for the Daily Breeze, the first woman police reporter in that part of LA; Jay Thompkins and a date; Kerry Fahey and his latest girlfriend; and last, but not least, Jack Lishman and a tall, slender girl he’d been dating of late. The lovely Jan was also there, but flying solo having just discovered that her boyfriend was not only a married man, but a married man who would not leave his wife.

As we approached, Jack came leaping out of the crowd, grinning like a madman. “Onward,” he cried. “Onward and upward.”

We all cheered and headed down Washington toward the beach.

Mr. and Mrs. Mad Bomber led the parade, cuddling each other and giggling like school children. Clearly, they were delighted to be together again. The Mad Bomber had a large object – square in appearance – draped over his shoulder. It was covered with a poncho liner, so we couldn’t see what it was. However, he did carry it in the crook of one finger, so I knew it wasn’t very heavy. 

Jack had a rolled-up paper bag under his arm, while Roger was temporarily empty-handed. When we passed Shanahan’s, however, he dashed inside just before it closed and grabbed a jug of Red Mountain and some rolling papers, which he passed to Jay, who was an expert at what he called “twisting a fattie.”

We paused at the Grand Canal bridge to drink wine, smoke dope and ponder the lights rippling on the water. A kid paddled a surfboard under the bridge, shouting “peace” to us and down the street the jukebox at the Greek bar and grill was playing Otis Redding’s “Dock Of The Bay.”

A mellow, magical mood descended upon the bridge and for some reason Jack decided to lecture us about how the canals also provided Venice with electricity. Although his explanation didn’t make any sense to me the next day, at the time it was supremely profound. Witness the lights shining in the eyes of Jack’s adoring girlfriend. Or was she just whacked out of her skull?

We continued, passing the Greek’s place and hooking it across the sands to the rickety Venice Pier. As usual, there were fishermen gathered at the rails -  during the summer it was a prime place to catch halibut. South of us, a few boats were making their way into the Marina Channel and to the north we could see the blackened remains of POP pier, lit up by the not so distant Santa Monica Pier.

Pacific Ocean Park was an old amusement park built out over the water that had more downs than ups over the years. Long ago Lawrence Welk had broadcast his radio show from the main building on the pier. Years later, the Jane Fonda movie – “They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?” was filmed there. During my senior year in high school – at Mira Costa in Manhattan Beach – we used to flock to POP for the one dollar admission price. But after changing hands one time too many, it had burned down. Arson was suspected.

In fact, the prime suspect was among our group - the Mad Bomber, himself. We all looked at him as we filed along the Venice Pier boardwalk, unconsciously taking in the ruins of POP and the Mad Bomber’s long stride as he headed toward the end of the pier.

The rumor in Pepperland was that the Mad Bomber had burned down POP. A few said he did for the money – the bankrupt owners had crossed his palms with silver. Most said he did it out of hippie civic duty – a kind of early “Monkey Wrench Gang” intervention on an offense against nature. I never thought the rumor was true, but if it had been true, I guarantee you that the Mad Bomber would have done it for altruistic motives. Money just wasn’t his bag, you know?

Now, to understand what happened next, you have to put your mind back to the summer of 1971. The baby boom generation was at its youthful height. If you were my age, wherever you looked there were hordes of other young people with similar ideas, clothes and music. Surfing was a big deal and during the day, the waters off the California coast were as crowded with boards and kids as any freeway was jammed with cars at rush hour.

When we set foot on the Venice Pier it was a balmy summer night and hundreds upon hundreds of kids were sprawled out on the beach, eating, drinking, making love and smoking a shit pot load of dope. The air on the pier was so thick with the lovely smell of marijuana that it wasn’t necessary to roll a joint. You just took a deep honk of the sea breezes, Venice style.

The three wise men of the Blue Meanie Apartments went into action. Roger got busy stuffing a light bulb into a balloon, while Jack reeled out thin strands of wire, which he attached to some batteries, then to the lightbulb. The Mad Bomber peeled the poncho from his burden, revealing a magnificent kite. They huddled over the contraption, doing this and that – all of which they hid from us.

Finally, it was time. They stepped back, holding the kite up high. Amazingly, the lightbulb was glowing inside the balloon. We were all very impressed. But the show was far from over.

Since Jack was the fleetest of foot, he was given the honor of launching the kite. He took off down the boardwalk and when Roger and the Mad Bomber thought he’d gotten up enough speed they threw the kite into the air. It soared into the night sky, the glowing balloon bobbing up and down. Then the breeze caught the kite, lifting it higher. Jack unreeled string as fast as he could, until the amazing contraption floated just off shore.

First one beach goer, then another, spotted the balloon.

The crowd gasped in amazement and a ghostly “Ohhhhh,” floated across the beach.

Jack manipulated the string and the kite flew down toward the booming seas, then at last moment he sent the kite aloft again.

“Ahhhh,” went the crowd.

He did that for awhile, the balloon swirling up high, then diving down, only to recover at the last minute.

Then the Mad Bomber shouted, “Hit it!” And Jack hit it, flipping a little switch.

Immediately there was a spectacular explosion and the balloon and kite shattered into fiery bits of light so bright that when they were gone you could still see them flashing in your mind.

“Ohhhh,” said the crowd. “Ahhhh.”

And Mrs. Mad Bomber turned to her husband, tears streaming down her face. “That’s the nicest get out of jail present I ever fucking had,” she said, throwing her arms around him.

It was an amazing evening. Made even better the next day when I got to work and the police reporter called in to say that people had swamped the Venice cop shop switchboard the night before with reports of UFO sightings just off the Venice Pier.

NEXT: WILD THINGS

*****
NEW:
GET YOUR STEN ON WITH
THE EMPIRE DAY 2013 
COMMEMORATIVE EDITION

Click here for the Paperback
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*****
FREEDOM BIRD: THE SUMMER OF LOVE

During the Vietnam war, GIs who managed to survive their tour of duty were flown home in chartered airliners, which they called “Freedom Birds.” This is the story of three young men – from  wildly different backgrounds – who meet on such a plane and make a pact to spend three days together in San Francisco. Their goal: to spend every cent of  their mustering out money in a party of  a lifetime. And they’ll get more than they bargained for: because when they land, it is July 1967 – in a time that would come to be known as “The Summer Of Love.” A place and time where each young man will have to confront the ghosts who followed them home from the jungles of Vietnam and contemplate a future none of them had imagined. 




*****
ALL THREE STEN OMNIBUS EDITIONS NOW ON TAP


The entire 8-novel landmark science fiction series is now being presented in three three giant omnibus editions from Orbit Books.  The First - BATTLECRY - features the first three books in the series: Sten #1; Sten #2 -The Wolf Worlds; and Sten #3, The Court Of A Thousand Suns. Next: JUGGERNAUT, which features Sten #4, Fleet Of The Damned; Sten #5, Revenge Of The Damned; and Sten #6, The Return Of The Emperor. Finally, there's DEATHMATCH, which contains Sten #6, Vortex; and Sten #7, End Of Empire. Click on the highlighted titles to buy the books. Plus, if you are a resident of The United Kingdom, you can download Kindle versions of the Omnibus editions. Which is one clot of a deal!

Here's the Kindle link for BATTLECRY
Here's the Kindle link for JUGGERNAUT
Here's the Kindle link for DEATHMATCH

*****
HERE ARE ALL EIGHT AMERICAN EDITIONS OF STEN 



YOU CAN BUY THE TRADE PAPERBACKS, E-BOOKS AND AUDIO BOOKS BY CLICKING ON THE STEN PAGE!


*****
THE STEN COOKBOOK & KILGOUR JOKEBOOK



Two new companion editions to the international best-selling Sten series. In the first, learn the Emperor's most closely held  cooking secrets. In the other, Sten unleashes his shaggy-dog joke cracking sidekick, Alex Kilgour. Both available as trade paperbacks or in all major e-book flavors. Click here to tickle your funny bone or sizzle your palate.  

*****


IT'S A BOOK!
THE COMPLETE HOLLYWOOD MISADVENTURES! 






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*****
TALES OF THE BLUE MEANIE
Venice Boardwalk Circa 1969
In the depths of the Sixties and The Days Of Rage, a young newsman, accompanied by his pregnant wife and orphaned teenage brother, creates a Paradise of sorts in a sprawling Venice Beach community of apartments, populated by students, artists, budding scientists and engineers lifeguards, poets, bikers with  a few junkies thrown in for good measure. The inhabitants come to call the place “Pepperland,” after the Beatles movie, “Yellow Submarine.” Threatening this paradise is  "The Blue Meanie,"  a crazy giant of a man so frightening that he eventually even scares himself. Here's where to buy the book. 
*****


STEN #1 NOW IN SPANISH! 











Diaspar Magazine - the best SF magazine in South America - is publishing the first novel in the Sten series in four 
episodes. Part One and Part Two appeared in back-to-back issues. And now Part Three has hit the virtual book stands.  Stay tuned, for the grand conclusion. Meanwhile, here are the links to the first three parts. Remember, it's free!





Friday, April 19, 2013

THE BIKER AND THE POET


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*****

By Big Daddy Roth

Steve Lenzi crept into our lives via an old school bus we bought from the president of a small but notorious motorcycle gang which shall remain unnamed for purposes of ass whumping avoidance. They were no relation to the Right Wing Bikers down the street, who had no club name as far as I know.

By “we,” I mean that I went into the deal with Jay of Old Weird Harold fame. Although he was originally a friend of Jack’s, we’d become pals many months before while he was still in the Navy. I met him when he was home on leave. When he was due to return to duty Carol and I threw him a little pre-birthday party and gave him a whole box of books I’d scored at a used book store. Among them was Dalton Trumbo’s classic anti-war novel, “Johnny Got His Gun,” which Jay said made a huge impression on him. (The book's author was Dalton Trumbo, one of the Hollywood Blacklisted Ten and the father of my very good friend and fellow screenwriter, the late Chris Trumbo. The elder Trumbo wrote the screenplay for Spartacus and Papillon, among many others.) 

As it happened, Jay loaned the book to an airline stewardess when he was flying back to Vietnam. He wrote his name and mom’s address in the book and urged her to lend it to as many people as she liked, but he did want it back. A year or so later “Johnny Got His Gun” showed up in the mail. Inside were more than a hundred names of sailors and soldiers who had read the book. Cool story, huh?

Anyway, after Jay and the U.S. Navy parted company he’d immediately gotten his old civilian job back as a salesman at a large camera store that catered to pros and wealthy amateurs. Jay was a consummate salesman and soon he had the commissions rolling in. On the other hand, he hadn’t been back long enough to establish any credit so the deal with the bus was this: I’d float a note at my newspaper credit union for $1,500 and Jay and I would split the monthly payments.

I’d first spotted the school bus tooling along Ocean Avenue and it was love at first sight - like Mr. Toad in “The Wind In The Willows” when he spied his very first automobile. It was a big red and silver bus – circa 1949 -  with a Dodge flathead engine and a “For Sale” sign in its window, along with a phone number. I trotted beside the bus while memorizing the number. Soon as I got home I called and set up an appointment to see the bus. I took Jay and Jack with me.

It just got better after that. The bus had been partly converted into a camper, with a couple of pull out beds and a little kitchen with a two-burner range, a stainless steel sink and mini-fridge. Jay and Jack assured me it was in decent mechanical shape and well worth the $1,500 Carl - the biker chieftain - was asking.

Carl said he had to sell it because he’d just moved into a house on the Venice Canals and there was no place to park a vehicle of that size. “Mother fuckin’ cops are out to fuckin’ get me,” is how he put it. “They’ll tow the mother fucker every chance they get.”

As the manager of a whole block of apartments, plus a luxury building Mr. Cohen had just bought in the “Little Marina,” I had no worries about parking.

Visions of adventures up the coast of California to the redwoods, or south to the wilds of Baja, California, filled my head. Jay and I agreed on the spot that we just had to have this bus. As I said, I planned to finance it through the newspaper credit union, which tickled me to no end. The directors of that right wing media bastion would’ve had kittens if they’d known that I’d bought a hippie bus with the money, so I put down “baby furniture,” in the space that inquired: “Purpose of loan.”

Even so it took a couple of weeks to get approval and when I went to trade the cash for the pink slip and keys, I was presented with a crisis of conscience from a most unlikely source. Carl was visibly nervous and more than a little embarrassed when he greeted me at the door of his house, which sat on the corner of Del Avenue, the main entrance to the canals.

A little backstory is in order here. When I showed up at Carl’s place I knew that the police had recently found an unidentified body floating in the water a few doors down. The John Doe’s cause of death was listed as a broken neck, which may or may not have been accidental. The cops believed, but could not prove, that Carl and his pals were responsible. However, the word on the street was that Carl was entirely innocent in a guilty sort of way.

What happened is that he rose one morning from his biker chieftain bed and went outside to drink coffee and enjoy the new day. Instead, he found the body sprawled across his front stoop. Believing it had been left there by a rival gang to embarrass him, Carl casually kicked the corpse into the water and went to breakfast.

As you can imagine, with visions of corpses on doorsteps in my head, I was a little nervous when I went to see Carl to finalize the deal. But the moment he saw me, Carl became agitated and acted downright guilty.

“We gotta mother fuckin’ talk, Al,” he said, taking me by the elbow and steering me outside and away from the motley crowd of beer-guzzling bikers. “Somethin’s come fuckin’ up.”

In all the time that I knew Carl I never heard him compose a sentence that didn’t include some derivation of mother fucker, or fucker. When he really got wound up there would be multiple occurrences. After awhile, you stopped noticing.

Carl led me to the dirt lot where he had the bus temporarily stashed. I was figuring that he’d cracked it up during the time it took for me to float the loan. Which meant I’d have to eat the interest the Credit Union interest charged, even if I gave them back their money, because there was no way I’d be able to make Biker Carl pony up the difference. Besides the loss of money, the fallout would include getting a ration of “told you so’s” from Carol who’d counseled that it was a lousy idea to do business with outlaw bikers. Okay, she was right, but if you had seen that red and silver bus when you were my age, I bet you would have bought it too.

Anyway, as we approached the bus I checked for signs of damage. To my relief I saw not one dent or ding. I did notice, however, a dark-haired guy sitting in the little dining area behind the driver’s seat, his nose buried in a book.

“Who’s that?” I asked.

Carl sighed and said, “He’s what I wanted to fuckin’ talk about.”

He called out, “Hey, Steve, open fuckin’ up.” The guy looked up, gave Carl a crooked grin and slid the window down. “This fucker is Al,” Carl said. “Al, this mother fucker is Steve.”

Steve and I nodded at each other, he looking at me curiously, me looking at him – well, I don’t know how I was looking at him. I hadn’t the faintest idea what the hell was up. But I noticed that he dressed more like a college professor than a vagrant. His hair was just a little long, he had a neatly trimmed mustache and he wore a corduroy sports coat, with leather patches covering the elbows.

“Toss us a couple of fuckin’ beers, will ya, Steve?” Carl said.

Steve fetched beers from the fridge beneath the sink and handed them out. We opened ours, he opened his.

Carl said, “Steve, here, is the best mother fuckin’ poet I ever fuckin’ met.”

I’m fairly sure Carl didn’t possess a Masters Of Fine Arts degree from an Ivy-League college, but who was I to cast doubts on his literary opinions?

“That’s what I wanted to fuckin’ talk to you about, Al,” Carl continued, strolling away from the bus and out of earshot of Steve. “But before I do I want you to swear on the fuckin’ life of your fuckin’ mother that you won’t repeat a mother fuckin’ word of what I’m about to fuckin’ say.”

Since my mother was already dead, it was an easy vow to make. “Sure, Carl,” I said. “I swear.”

“On your fuckin’ mother’s life,” he said.

“On my mother’s life,” I agreed.

Carl took a deep breath, then a long drink of beer. To me, it looked like he was gathering courage, which was kind of amazing when you consider that he was the leader of what was – pound for pound – the toughest outlaw bike gang in Los Angeles and maybe even in all of Southern California.

“It’s like fuckin’ this,” Carl said. He paused, glanced around, then said real quick like: “I fuckin’ write poetry.”

“Say what?” I said, not certain I’d heard him correctly. “Poetry?”

“Not so fuckin’ loud,” he said, looking to see if anyone had heard. “This is like, a mother fuckin’ secret, Al.”

“Sure it is,” I said. I paused, avoiding his eyes and trying desperately not to laugh. Finally, I said, “So, uh… the… uh… others don’t know, right?”

“Fuckin’ fuck, they don’t fuckin’ know,” Carl said. “I mean, you can’t fuckin’ be the mother fuckin’ president of a mother fuckin’ outlaw bike gang and write fuckin’ poetry, can you?”

“I suppose not,” I said.

“Fuckin’ A, you fuckin’ suppose not,” Carl agreed. “So, like for a fuck of a fuckin’ bunch of time now, I’ve been, like writin’ shit in secret. And it’s fuckin’ like, you know, causin’ me whadayacallit – to have some mother fuckin’ inner conflicts.”

“I can only imagine,” I said, barely keeping myself from choking on repressed laughter. An outlaw biker with inner conflicts? Where had he even heard the phrase?

I learned soon enough. “My fuckin’ shrink says I gotta fuckin’ deal with it,” he went on, “or I’m gonna, you know, like flip my mother fuckin’ lid.” He gingerly touched his protruding belly with thick fingers. “I think I’m getting’ a mother fuckin’ ulcer from all the fuckin’ stress, man.”

Now I was truly amazed. Bikers have shrinks? And suffer from stress-caused ulcers? Well, so it seemed. Especially poetry writing bikers who have inner conflicts.

“He says I gotta start makin’ some mother fuckin’ choices” Carl said. “My fuckin’ poetry, or my mother fuckin’ brothers.”

Shit, oh dear. This was, indeed, a conflict. Bikers did not use the word “brother” casually. The gang was their whole life, their family, their closest friends, their identity  - their whole reason for being.

But one thing – among many – still wasn’t clear. “How does Steve fit into all this?” I asked.

“Well, it’s like fuckin’ this, Al,” Carl said. “I fuckin’ went to check out this mother fuckin’ poetry group over in mother fuckin’ Santa Monica. Bunch of fuckin’ assholes, you ask me. I hear a bunch of the mother fuckers read their fuckin’ poetry and it was all, like fuckin’ shit. The meaning of this, that and the other mother fuckin’ thing. 

"Then Steve gets up to read and blows everybody’s mother fuckin’ doors off with his shit. I mean, he’s a real mother fuckin’ poet. The assholes couldn’t talk, they were so fuckin’ amazed. But when they finally fuckin’ do, they fuckin’ ignore him, like he’d never said a fuckin’ word. Instead, they into this bullshit fuckin’ conversation – if you can mother fuckin’ dignify the shit by callin’ it fuckin’ that – about, and I mother fuckin’ quote, ‘the place of the apostrophe in modern poetry,’ and I fuckin’ end fuckin’ quote. 

"But Steve didn’t let them fuckin’ get away it. He gets up and fuckin’ lays into those mother fuckers like you wouldn’t fuckin’ believe. Tellin’ them what kind of fuckin’ phonies they are. Couple of the assholes tried to gang up on his ass, but I banged some mother fuckin’ heads together and me and Steve had to fuckin’ split because they called the fuckin’ pigs, man. Pussy mother fuckers.”

He paused and gradually the indignity of the scene drained from him and he started laughing. “You should of fuckin’ been there, Al,” he said. “It was mother fuckin’ wonderful.”

Things were slowly starting to dawn. “So, Steve, is like your new poetry buddy,” I said.

“Fuckin’ A,” Carl said. “He’s been lookin’ my shit over, tellin’ me what he fuckin’ thinks.”

“What’s his opinion so far?”

Carl shrugged. “He said most of it fuckin’ stinks, but a couple, you know, show fuckin’ promise.”

I was amazed at Steve’s boldness. I wouldn’t have told Carl to his face that his poetry stunk, even if it did. But apparently, this was exactly the kind of honest advice Carl was after. Advice he could get nowhere else.

“Let me guess,” I said. “Steve’s got no place to stay. And you couldn’t let him crash at your pad for obvious reasons. So you let him crash on the bus.” I took a deep breath. “My bus.”

Carl grimaced. “He’s the real mother fuckin’ deal, Al,” he said. “A real mother fuckin’ poet. He was like teachin’ English at some private high school back in mother fuckin’ New York. But the rich little mother fuckers got on his nerves, you know. Us fuckin’ poets are real like fuckin’ sensitive to our mother fuckin’ surroundings, you know? So he quit and fuckin’ jumped on the fuckin’ road. Checkin’ things out and writin’ fuckin’ poetry. He just hit mother fuckin’ LA and he’s got no place to crash until he gets a mother fuckin’ job. So, I let him crash on the fuckin’ bus.”

“And you want me to continue the arrangement,” I guessed.

“It’d be real mother fuckin’ white of you if you did, Al,” he said. “I mean, I’d owe you big mother fuckin’ time, you know?”

I considered this. Being owed big time by an outlaw biker has its strong points. Only problem being was that I didn’t know this Steve guy from Adam. He could be a mass murderer for all I knew.

“Let’s go talk to him,” I finally said. “See if we get along.”

Delighted, Carl slapped me on the back, nearly knocking me over. “You’ll love the mother fucker, Al,” he said. “You wait and fuckin’ see.”

We returned to the bus and this time Steve and I shook hands, before more beers were passed around. I glanced at the book lying on the table.

“What’re you reading?” I asked.

“A little poetry by an insurance agent,” he said, his lips twitching just slightly.

“No shit,” Carl said. “Insurance agents can fuckin’ write poetry?” His eyebrows climbed over his forehead in amazement.

“They can if their name is Wallace Stevens,” I said with a slight lip twitch of my own.

“He any fuckin’ good?” Carl asked.

“I liked ‘The Man With The Blue Guitar,” I said.

“’…Things as they are/ Are changed by the Blue Guitar,’” Steve recited.

“Fuckin’ A,” Carl said, liking what he heard and surprising the hell out of me. “I gotta read up on this Wallace Stevens mother fucker.”

“Carl mentioned that you were looking for work,” I said. “Any luck so far?”

Steve shrugged. “I’m supposed to start tomorrow morning doing surveys at the Santa Monica Mall,” he said. “It’s a minimum wage thing, plus a small commission for anyone I can coax into the office to fill out a longer questionnaire.”

I frowned. “Can you get by on that?”

Steve laughed. “I’ve learned to get along on a lot less than that since I left New York,” he said. “I’ve worked in orchards picking fruit, dug ditches, cleaned highways, passed out flyers and ran a hot dog cart in New Orleans.”

He smiled at the memory. “That was my favorite. I rented a room overlooking the French Quarter. Sold hot dogs during the day and listened to free music at night while I wrote.”

I liked that answer. “How long do you think you’ll need to crash on the bus?” I asked.

Steve gave me a long look, sizing me up. Which seemed odd at the time, considering that I was the one doing the favor.

Finally, he said, “A few weeks, if that’s okay with you.”

“That’ll be fine,” I replied.

Carl beamed and slapped me on the shoulder, nearly bowling me over. “Fuckin’ A,” he said.

NEXT: THE LIGHT BULB IN THE BALLOON

*****
NEW:
GET YOUR STEN ON WITH
THE EMPIRE DAY 2013 
COMMEMORATIVE EDITION

Click here for the Paperback
Click here for the Kindle version

*****
FREEDOM BIRD: THE SUMMER OF LOVE

During the Vietnam war, GIs who managed to survive their tour of duty were flown home in chartered airliners, which they called “Freedom Birds.” This is the story of three young men – from  wildly different backgrounds – who meet on such a plane and make a pact to spend three days together in San Francisco. Their goal: to spend every cent of  their mustering out money in a party of  a lifetime. And they’ll get more than they bargained for: because when they land, it is July 1967 – in a time that would come to be known as “The Summer Of Love.” A place and time where each young man will have to confront the ghosts who followed them home from the jungles of Vietnam and contemplate a future none of them had imagined. 




*****
ALL THREE STEN OMNIBUS EDITIONS NOW ON TAP


The entire 8-novel landmark science fiction series is now being presented in three three giant omnibus editions from Orbit Books.  The First - BATTLECRY - features the first three books in the series: Sten #1; Sten #2 -The Wolf Worlds; and Sten #3, The Court Of A Thousand Suns. Next: JUGGERNAUT, which features Sten #4, Fleet Of The Damned; Sten #5, Revenge Of The Damned; and Sten #6, The Return Of The Emperor. Finally, there's DEATHMATCH, which contains Sten #6, Vortex; and Sten #7, End Of Empire. Click on the highlighted titles to buy the books. Plus, if you are a resident of The United Kingdom, you can download Kindle versions of the Omnibus editions. Which is one clot of a deal!

Here's the Kindle link for BATTLECRY
Here's the Kindle link for JUGGERNAUT
Here's the Kindle link for DEATHMATCH

*****
HERE ARE ALL EIGHT AMERICAN EDITIONS OF STEN 



YOU CAN BUY THE TRADE PAPERBACKS, E-BOOKS AND AUDIO BOOKS BY CLICKING ON THE STEN PAGE!


*****
THE STEN COOKBOOK & KILGOUR JOKEBOOK



Two new companion editions to the international best-selling Sten series. In the first, learn the Emperor's most closely held  cooking secrets. In the other, Sten unleashes his shaggy-dog joke cracking sidekick, Alex Kilgour. Both available as trade paperbacks or in all major e-book flavors. Click here to tickle your funny bone or sizzle your palate.  

*****


IT'S A BOOK!
THE COMPLETE HOLLYWOOD MISADVENTURES! 






HERE'S WHERE YOU BUY IT

*****
TALES OF THE BLUE MEANIE
Venice Boardwalk Circa 1969
In the depths of the Sixties and The Days Of Rage, a young newsman, accompanied by his pregnant wife and orphaned teenage brother, creates a Paradise of sorts in a sprawling Venice Beach community of apartments, populated by students, artists, budding scientists and engineers lifeguards, poets, bikers with  a few junkies thrown in for good measure. The inhabitants come to call the place “Pepperland,” after the Beatles movie, “Yellow Submarine.” Threatening this paradise is  "The Blue Meanie,"  a crazy giant of a man so frightening that he eventually even scares himself. Here's where to buy the book. 
*****


STEN #1 NOW IN SPANISH! 











Diaspar Magazine - the best SF magazine in South America - is publishing the first novel in the Sten series in four 
episodes. Part One and Part Two appeared in back-to-back issues. And now Part Three has hit the virtual book stands.  Stay tuned, for the grand conclusion. Meanwhile, here are the links to the first three parts. Remember, it's free!