Random Houses & Vintage Apartments

The 526: Publishing Division

Sunday, October 09, 2005

First of many...i hope

So, i felt that i needed to add to this brillant idea for a blog. This is the story i am currently working on for workshop so any suggestion would be helpful. I also hope to have quite a bit of new poetry pretty quick as there is a poetic series i have been wanting to write for the last two years. Enjoy!

Lies that the Bad Guys Tell
By Sarah Peterson

I looked up at the sound of footsteps slapping the pavement – running fast. Across the street, a figure rounded the corner and disappeared. From a streetlight, that for an instant illuminated the figure’s silhouette – darker black against the backdrop of evening – I could tell that the man wore an open trench coat. The flaps had billowed out due to the speed of the figure’s retreat. I had stopped walking. What an odd outfit to go jogging in. Then, a woman’s scream redirected my attention.

Sitting in the pool of light spilling out from The Gap’s display window was a woman who appeared to be huddle in on herself, grasping her knees to her chest. She had hair that was long and hanging limp in front of her face. It was well past midnight, so the light from the store was misleading. No one was inside who could help the woman. I crossed the deserted street at a jog, and knelt down beside her.

She looked up as I reached her and I knew what had happened. Her hair was tangled, with bits of leaf sticking out here and there. It hung in long wet tendrils – soaked both in sweat and muddy water. It had rained earlier and there were puddles everywhere. There was a line of red dripping from the corner of her mouth and the shadow of a bruise forming around her right eye. She was crying. I pulled out a white handkerchief from my pant pocket and dabbed at her tears. I then handed it to her, and she wiped her nose. She tried to return it, but I shook my head, closing her fingers around the cloth. She tried to smile, grateful for my assistance, but instead hid her face in her hands.

“It wasn’t your fault.” I spoke gently but firm.

Her blouse had been ripped open, her skirt hiked up, exposing smooth skin that glistened with sweat. The streetlamp gave her a ghostly coloring. She was afraid. Her black bra strained with every breath, and her body trembled as she sobbed. Her skin prickled as she shivered. I took of my suit coat and held it out for her. She quickly inserted her arms and pulled it closed.

“Thank you.” Her words were barely audible, but I could tell she appreciated the gesture.
“Where do you live?” I took her under the arm and helped her up.
“My shoes.” She gasped, bent down and picked up a red pump. The heel dangled from the end. I retrieved her other shoe, which had been kicked off during the attack, from on top of the sewer grate. I turned it upside down and watched as the dark water spilled from it.

“I guess I’ll just have to carry you.”

She looked at me. Her bottom lip still trembled, but her tears had stopped. “It’s far.”

“It’s all right.”
“You’re pants are dirty.”

I looked down. Sure enough, there were two dark smudges over each knee where I had knelt on the sidewalk. However, my black, button-down dress shirt and satin black tie were only a bit ruffled. They were the expensive pieces of the outfit – Armani. The pants were from Target. If you look good on top, no one ever got down to the pants.

I shrugged. “My name’s Robert.”
“I’m Cynthia.”

I came up behind her, and with a hand supporting her back and one behind her knees I lifted her up in front of me. She gazed into my face for a long moment, then, seeming to make up her mind about something, rested her head on my shoulder. I set out, walking slowly down the street towards the water. My footsteps echoed off the brick of the skyscrapers. It was almost romantic in a way, carrying a beautiful woman home late at night. It felt like a honeymoon. I looked up at the sky, searching for the stars that would make the scene perfect. Whether it was the smog or the light pollution, I didn’t know, but not a single star could be seen. I sighed.

“What’s wrong?” Cynthia lifted her face towards mine. Her eyes twinkled in the light of the lamp we we’re passing under. They were green. They looked as if they carried a secret.

“Nothing.” I smiled at her. She smiled back, then closed her eyes and again rested her head against me. It’s a good thing she was so light. It would have been quite embarrassing to have to back out on my promise of carrying her home. I always seemed to do that – acting before thinking. Luckily this time I would get away with it.

We continued on in silence for a little while. Cynthia shifted in my arms.

“Robert…or is it Bob?” she asked.
“No, it’s Robert.”
“So…where are you from? What do you do? Why’d…” She stopped. She drew in a long, shaky breath, exhaled slowly and continued. “Why’d you stop to help me?”

“It was the right thing to do. No one should have to be alone after such an attack.”
“Did you see what happened?” Her voice wavered, and as I looked down, I saw that she was wringing the handkerchief.

“No.”
“Then, how…?”
“I saw the state you were in and assumed…I’m sorry I didn’t come by sooner.”
“It’s all right. I was asking for it, being out so late all alone. I got what was coming to me.” Her tears returned, and she buried her face in my shirt. I looked away.

“Don’t say that. It wasn’t your fault. Don’t ever think that.” It was hard to speak, my jaw clenched so I wouldn’t yell. I hated that attitude though; that for some reason it was the victim’s fault, not the criminal. It was a free country, and if someone wanted to go walking around at night, then they should’ve be able to without fear of attack.

“Don’t be mad at me,” she said. I didn’t say anything. She sighed. “What am I saying? You have every right to be mad. I’m sure you have family waiting for you, and here I am keeping you from them.”

“I’m not mad. My wife will understand, and the kids are already asleep. Besides, our housekeeper always stays until I come home, so that Franny doesn’t get lonely. Franny’s a wonderful woman. She always says she would do anything to keep me with her.”
I stopped. I didn’t want to say too much.

“Is she beautiful?” Cynthia asked.
“Yes.”
“Do you love her?”
I didn’t answer right away. I had to think. “Yes,” I whispered. “Very much.”
“Then why do you take off your wedding ring when you go out?”

I stopped walking and looked down at the woman in my arms. She met and held my gaze. Something passed between us. Maybe it was the secret in her eyes, maybe something else, but as my body reacted to the feel of hers, I understood. I took a deep breath, looked away down the street and started walking again.

“A man has to take care of himself sometimes.”
“I understand.”

We went the last block to her apartment in silence. I stopped in front of a red brick building that was covered in windows and black metal balconies. I slowly unhooked my arm from beneath her, and let her feet down onto the ground. She stood in front of me, looking at me through her lashes. She then leaned in slowly and kissed me on the mouth. I didn’t return the kiss, but I also didn’t pull away. She stepped back.

“Do you want to come up?” She was wringing the handkerchief again.
“I shouldn’t.”
“I know.”
I then followed her up the steps to the door, and watched as she dug a key out of a cracked, orange flowerpot.
“He stole my purse,” she said.
“I figured.”

She opened the door and led me inside. We climbed up to the third floor, and entered the first room on the left. I listened as she closed and locked the door behind us. She went to the closet and hung up my suit coat.

“So it doesn’t get wrinkled,” she said.
There was a long trench coat hanging in the closet. “Do you have a boyfriend?”
“He’s gone for the weekend.” She smiled. “Let me just change, and I’ll be right out.” She disappeared around the corner, and as I step further into the room, I saw the hallway she had gone down.

The apartment was sparse and small. A lamp without a shade sat on the floor in the far corner, illuminating the rest of the room. A flower print couch sat against one wall and a sink, stove and refrigerator sat against the other. Directly across from the door was a large window overlooking the fire escapes of the building behind. The floor was rough wood, but the paint on the walls seemed new, free of peeling or cracks. A single coffee cup sat on the counter next to the sink.

“Robert, come here.” Cynthia’s voice was lilting, but it carried easily into the front room. “Second door on the right.”

I stood up, tucked in my shirt, and straightened my tie. I started down the dark hallway, but stopped before I reached the second door. I knew exactly what I was doing, so why were my palms suddenly icy? Why was the bitter taste of adrenaline present at the back of my tongue? I had let her disarm me, but that couldn’t be helped now. I didn’t want it to be helped.
I took a deep breath and let it out slowly, counting backwards from ten. Franny would disapprove, but she would understand. I loosened my tie and undid the first two buttons on my shirt. I entered.

The room was small, only just large enough to hold a full size bed with dark blue satin sheets and a wooden nightstand. The lamp on the stand – the only source of light in the room – shone brightly on two glasses of red wine, and cast a dark shadow over half of Cynthia’s face. She was lounging in the middle of the bed, wearing only black lace lingerie. I couldn’t help but admire the garments that left so little to the imagination.

“Are you okay with this?” I asked. I was leaning on the doorframe. “I mean, after all that’s happened tonight…”

She patted the bed next to her. “Come, have some wine with me.” She looked away. “I want to forget.”

I watched her gazing out the window. Her profile was angelic – lashes long and full, nose small and rounded, chin not jutting out, neck long and delicate. She was a beautiful work of art. I bent down and pulled of my shoes.

She looked over as my weight dented the mattress, and held out a glass of wine. I took it and drained the contents in one gulp. I couldn’t help but notice that Cynthia returned her glass to the table without tasting the wine. It didn’t matter. Her hands moved skillfully over my body, undoing my belt and zipper, rifling through my pockets. She removed the wallet from my back pocket, but then her lips when on mine and I was helpless. I paralysis froze me to the bed, the weight of her body pinning me beneath it. I was no longer in control. I had only time for a passing instant of terror before the world dissolved into an unnatural sleep.

* * *

“So what happened?” My partner’s voice was gruff from years of smoking, but Franny managed to keep her words gentle.

“Wine was drugged.” I tried to sit up, but my head felt like it was trying to split down the middle. I closed my eyes and let myself sink back onto the bed.

“I figured that, the wine’s always drugged. Why’d you drink it?” Even through closed eyes I knew Franny was standing over me with arms crossed. Her brown hair with golden highlights framing her face was tucked behind her ears, but falling loose on the right side. Her left eyebrow was arched and there was the hint of a smirk on her lips. She was the most beautiful woman I had ever known, even when she was mad.

“I thought it was clean. ‘Sides, I didn’t wanta tip her off. Can you please close the shades?” It was amazing that such a small window could let in so much light. The room seemed to be on fire – the sunlight flooding in, determined to prove it was morning.

“One of these days you’re not going to wake up.” Franny pulled the shades, dousing the room in shadows.

“Thanks for that happy thought.”
“Just saying.”

The pain in my head had deadened into a pulsing ache, and I pulled myself up against the headboard.

“We got ‘em, by the way.” Franny sat on the edge of the bed and handed me a Starbucks coffee. The bitter smell made my stomach churn, but I knew I needed the caffeine. “They were in the process of stripping your valuables. Funny though, didn’t look like they were going to take the wedding band.”

“They never do.”

“So who was your wife this time? Royalty maybe?” Franny chuckled. She was playing with the little gold ring, trying it on, moving it from finger to finger. I knew I was about to lie. I always lied when she asked this question.

“I don’t remember, Sally, Susan, Cynthia…something like that.”
“You have kids?”
“Yeah, two.”
“You ever think about actually having a family?”
“No.”

Franny looked over at me. She always seemed surprised, or maybe a little sad, by the quickness of my answer. Sighing, she handed me the ring. “Guess we should get going. You want me to take you home?”

“No I’m…” I stood up and felt like I had stepped onto a carousel. I caught myself on the wall. “Actually…”

“Not a problem.” She headed out of the room and disappeared around the corner. I had lied to her again. I always meant to tell her, but I never did. She always asked, and I never told her that she was always the woman I was married to. Hers was the name I always gave when the thieves asked me about my wife. Why could I tell them, but not her? It wasn’t a lie. The feelings were very real, and yet the only time I could say I loved her was when I was telling a lie to someone else.

“Hey, you coming?” Franny had noticed I wasn’t following her. I couldn’t say anything. I didn’t want to lie to her again, but I was more afraid of telling the truth.

She popped her head in just as I managed to unglue myself from the wall.
“You okay, Frank?”
“Yeah, let’s go.”

I followed her out of the apartment building and out into the new day. The street glistened, the morning light reflecting off the scattered puddles, and everything looked bright, washed cleaned by the night rain.

Monday, October 03, 2005

The Mongoose

So this is a story I wrote a couple of years ago. It's pretty silly, and I didn't actually re-read the thing before I put it up here, so I'm sure there's plenty of long convoluted sentences (this was what I once considered my trademark before I started to realize it was just bad writing). Read if you like. I really just thought that since I started this thing, I may as well toss forth the first entry. And so...


THE MONGOOSE

By Kate Hutchens

“Well, you have to wonder why Bruce has that car of his and all those fancy gadgets. He’s got to have his issues, too, baby,” Alison’s voice came over the phone lines and into Mickey’s office. He assumed from the way her voice was fading in and out and the thwacking in the background that she was clamping the receiver between her shoulder and her jaw, chopping some ingredient for the meal she would have ready for him when he got home. The last dinner they had eaten apart had been before they had been married seven months earlier. The last time they had had sex had been their wedding night.

“Yeah, well…so I’ll probably be home in about an hour. I actually talked to ole’ Batty earlier, and he said he’d have tonight covered.” He lied again, pretending both that he had any business to be covered, and that he had even spoken to Bruce “Batman” Wayne since the wedding. In the last half-year, he had been professionally as he had been sexually – impotent. Mickey silently felt himself start to choke up, but composed himself. “I’ll bring home a nice bottle of wine – red or white?”

“Red, we’re having meatloaf. I read in a magazine somewhere that red meat is supposed to help bolster…things…”

Mickey let his forehead fall onto his desk. “Red it is.”

“Bye, hon.”

Mickey hung up the phone without saying goodbye. He had to just keep telling himself that superheroes don’t cry, superheroes don’t cry…

And Mickey Motterson was a superhero, technically. He had an official certificate emblazoned with the seal of the esteemed Mayor Linseed of Gotham City hanging in a frame over his desk, and a red phone, too. He had been The Mongoose. About three years ago, when he had had the monopoly on saving innocent Gothamites, there had been two more red phones in his secret lair, The Thicket, and a super secretary to answer them. But when Batman moved in on the town, everything changed. Mickey’s cut of the villainy dwindled as the Bat Signal became the beacon of choice. Bruce offered to take him on as a sidekick, but Mickey had his pride and he was determined to stay afloat on his own. Eventually, Mayor Linseed asked if Mickey would consider retiring as an official protector of the city. Having more than one superhero just was not necessary anymore, nor was it conducive to the kind of political atmosphere the mayor felt would be right for Gotham City.

Forced to take a hiatus, Mickey decided it would be the opportune time to settle down and marry his long-time love, a school teacher named Alison Sage. He tried to relax while on their lavish, two-week tropical honeymoon, funded by Alison’s inherited stock dividends, but when they came home and he found there had been no disasters or people in distress awaiting his assistance, he was quick to become bored and frustrated.

Since municipal work was no longer his jurisdiction, Mickey decided to begin anew and move into the private sector, retiring his sleek, beady-eyed costume for a suit and tie. He had never been anything but a superhero before, so his small-time, civilian vigilante service, Bargain Justice, was a venture attempted on a bank loan with no marketing skills or entrepreneurial know-how, whatsoever. The Thicket had been supported entirely by public funds, and there were only two things left that had not been repossessed with which he could furnish the small office he rented in a downtown Wayne Enterprises-owned building: his hero certificate, and his red phone. Having put an advertisement in the yellow pages under “Legal Services,” he went to work every day and sat at his desk, waiting with rapidly-waning patience for someone to need his help, waiting for the phone to ring. It did once – but only once – each day, when Alison called him from home after school. Every day Mickey lied to her and told her about how busy he’d been, and how he and “ole’ Batty” talked about such-and-such – you know, shop talk. The only thing with which he even virtually interacted throughout the day besides her was a hand-held electronic poker game.

This afternoon, on the phone, Mickey could have predicted the bit about the wine. For the past five weeks or so, Alison had dropped a hint or two a day of something she had read in a magazine or seen on a TV show discussing sexual dysfunction, but this had not started until almost four months after the first evidence that Mickey had a problem. Some time after the wedding (two months and thirty-seven dry runs later, to be exact), the attempts had ceased, and they had started just going to sleep at night. It also stopped coming up in conversation, or even when it did, Mickey just changed the subject.

As he drove home, he thought about this and hated himself for dreading the evening almost more than he had dreaded going to work that morning. Tonight was the anniversary of their first date – Alison liked to commemorate their relationship multiple times a year for multiple reasons – and he could not stop thinking of how unspectacular it was probably going to be.

He pulled into the driveway and sat in the car, staring at his hands on the steering wheel for almost two full minutes before remembering about the wine. Again, he almost cried – little things set him off these days – but then decided that he still had time to run to the store before Alison noticed he was late.

When he walked into the kitchen fifteen minutes later with the bottle of Yellowtail Merlot, he had expected to see Alison wearing her apron, pulling the meatloaf out of the oven. She was, in fact, wearing the apron…but that was all she was wearing, and the meatloaf was already served onto two plates. There were candles on the table, and soft rock murmured in from the living room.

“Well, hello there, Mr. Motterson.” Her voice was unexpectedly low, deliberately sexy. She raised one eyebrow mischievously and lifted her feet up, crossing her ankles and resting them on the corner of the table.

“Uhh…h-hi!” he stammered, almost missing the counter as he set down the bottle. He stopped and stared at his wife who sat across the table from him, smiling back. He pulled his chair out to join her, but she stood and strode toward him. He glanced at the meatloaf on the table.

“It’ll keep for a little while…and there’s more in the fridge, if it doesn’t,” she reassured him as she lightly touched his purple tie, then wrapped her hand around it and reeled him in to her. His mind went blank of everything except how gorgeous she was, and how her sudden boldness and surprise tactics were totally a turn…a flag went up in the back of his occupied mind, and one cohesive thought was conceived - he was, in fact, turned on right now. His mind shut off and instincts took over. He let her pull him along as she went hand over hand up his tie until their noses were touching.

“C’mere, my sexy hero man…”

And with that his mind flicked right back on to form one more cohesive thought, this one a memory of the phone call and the lie, and all the phone calls and lies. Instincts receded, and, for all his good intentions, he was now entirely turned off. Alison had sensed his momentary excitement and pushed into the kiss a little more, but Mickey backed out of it. She turned away, shaking her head slightly and giving a sarcastic sort of chuckle. Mickey was again surprised, now by this, her first real blatant display of frustration.

“What? What is it? What? I don’t get it, Mickey” she almost shouted, exasperated. “I know something was happening just then, so I’ll say that at least my all-out seduction was met with some response, but then…what went wrong? Mickey, I just don’t know what you want me to do.” She slumped into down in the chair behind the pile of cooling meatloaf, keeping her miffed and baffled eyes trained on him.

Mickey relegated his own gaze to the floor. “I…I don’t know…it’s not – ”

“It’s not you, it’s me, I know, I know.”

“It’s my problem, not yours.” He moved over to her and put his hand on her shoulder. She moved slightly, as if she had meant to shrug him off and then thought better of it.

“See, that’s the thing. It’s my problem, too.”

“But it’s not something that you’re doing wrong. It’s not really a problem that can be solved by your doing something. It’s really kinda my deal, you know?”

“Well, I don’t see you doing much, either. If there’s nothing that I can do, what do you think can be done?” He heard perfectly the words she hadn’t said, and knew her accusation was justified beyond what she intended. “Hon…Mickey…I think maybe if you would talk to somebody about this…like a professional, or maybe a group…?”

The feeling he had had earlier at his desk and in the car started to come back to him, and he was precariously perched on the verge of letting it all out. He prepared to tell her the truth, tell her that he was pretty sure what the problem was, and that it probably had something to do with what she didn’t know about the last five months…

“Look, this is kinda a private thing,” he began benignly, but, growing more defensive, snapped, “and I think we should just handle this on our own. I’ll take care of it, ok?” The harshness of his own words caught him off guard, but after he heard them and thought of all of the cop-outs they offered, he decided to sell it. “I mean, I’m supposed go to some whine-session and bitch about my defunct love life? I can’t get it up, help me, save me!” As he spat out this last part, he saw the look in his wife’s eyes, and he wasn’t sure if she wanted to apologize to him or if she was sorry for herself now that she had brought it up, but he went for the exposed nerve. “I’m the one that’s out there saving other people every day. Now I’ve got one little physical issue, and I need to go to somebody else for help? I’m fucking superhuman!”

“Well, you haven’t been quite so super for me, lately, have you?” Her mouth slammed shut, as if she too had been taken aback by her own churlishness, but then her jaw settled, having seemingly resolved that she was only being fair, given the immaturity of the whole argument.

“Hah! Oh, that’s real cute. Really fuckin’ funny.” Mickey left the kitchen and the house. He got into his car, wrenched the key in the ignition, and backed out onto the suburban street without looking. He drove north, towards downtown.

While he drove, he wondered how that had just happened. Why didn’t he just tell the truth? What the hell was wrong with him? He’d had a chance to rectify things a little bit, maybe improve them, but now everything was just worse. He could only assume that Alison had said something very accurate when on his way out he’d heard her telling his back something about the difference between super powers and being an adult. Mickey needed a drink.

He parallel-parked in front of a bar he’d never seen on a street he wasn’t sure he’d ever driven. Just as he shut his door, a black, stretch limousine pulled up next to him and a window in the back rolled down. Bruce Wayne’s face pulled to a stop perfectly lined up with Mickey’s bellybutton.
“Mickey ‘the Mongoose’ Motterson, I’ll be damned!” Bruce was wearing a tuxedo and holding a glass of champagne, obviously on his way to or from a function of sorts. He appeared to be a bit tipsy. “I would’ve figured you’d left town, the way you’ve been eluding me. How’ve you been? How’s Alison? It’s been, what, five years?”

Mickey feigned friendliness. “Yeah, I’d say around there. But hey, I’ve gotta go meet some–

“Hear there isn’t a whole lot of action in the private sector, huh?” Vicky, Bruce’s on and off girlfriend, giggled from somewhere within the vehicle’s vast interior.

“I do okay. To be honest…” Mickey took a moment’s pause at this word and thought it the theme of the evening. “I’m pretty comfortable in the lower-pressure stuff. And I get to wear street clothes all the time.”

The inebriated Batman gave a sort of guffaw. “Yeah, well, the biz isn’t for everyone.” Then, in a loud drunken whisper, he said “I’ve gotta say, the whole rounded-ears, beady-eyes mask thing – not so formidable. More cute really. Villains sometimes wanted to pet you before they ran away, hah!”

“Brucey,” Vicky playfully reprimanded his rude joke.

“Huh,” Mickey laugh-shrugged. “Well…”

“Yeah,” said Bruce, “we best be on our way, right babe? Alright, catch you later, Mongoose!” The giant car was already pulling away as he finished his sentence. The window rolled up, and Mickey was left on the street with an urge to break something very large and expensive…and owned by Wayne Enterprises.

He couldn’t go in the bar, so he got back into the driver’s seat and stared at his hands again, thinking. He pushed the cigarette lighter. It was broken, and he knew he would not get hot, if he could even get it out again. He just wanted to push buttons. He washed the windshield. He popped the trunk, and then got an idea as he remembered what he had just unlocked.

He got out and walked to the back of the car. He lifted the trunk lid, which looked a little lighter blue than the rest of the body in this light, and looked at what he had hidden there, laid out and expectant: the Mongoose Suit.

He longed to put it on in a hurry, racing to get to the scene of whatever crime or calamity required his attention. The onyx-black, Lexan® plastic eyes embedded in the mask that would cover Mickey’s real ones like sunglasses glittered mischievously in the orange light of the streetlamps.

He thought about what would happen if something went catastrophically wrong in the city that night. “Brucey” was schnockered, so he probably wouldn’t get anywhere in time to do much of anything. For instance…should the good-sized apartment building across the street from his car happen to go up in flames from something like a match dropped with horrible carelessness into a spilled gallon of turpentine on the wooden back deck, the first person on the scene would indubitably be The Mongoose. It’d be easy, and he’d be a hero again. He’d be the hero, again…

He caught himself in his absurdity and slammed the trunk door. He got into the car once more and turned the ignition. Three seconds of sounds like a rhinoceros’s vibrato and he let go. He turned it again, this time with nothing at all.

“Damnit!” he growled and hit the steering wheel with both palms. For all his super quickness and strength, he knew nothing of the inner workings of an automobile, or how to reconcile them when they fell out of sync.

He left the car for the third time, slamming the door and kicking the tire. He looked up and down the street for the sign of a gas station or mechanic before he noticed for the first time the downtrodden neighborhood into which he had driven himself. He considered going into the bar and calling Alison to pick him up, but after their last interaction, he cringed at the thought of having to ring her up and ask her to come get him at this dirty bar on a street of which he did not know the name because he had no super powers in the category of Buick repair.

He looked right towards the lights of the shopping district, and then left towards the river. He decided that the fishy smell was exactly what he needed to complete the ambience of self-contempt, turned left, and walked down the spider-vein cracked sidewalk. There was a fog over the river, and the bridge was shrouded in an eerie haze like a giant bolt of tulle had been wrapped around it. As Mickey approached, there appeared to be the figure of a person standing on the cement ledge on the side of the bridge, and his first thought was that, if it was anything like the one on his side of town, a person would have to be suicidal to be hanging out up there.

He stopped moving, and even though nobody would have seen him, he scrounged inside himself for all the politeness and decency he could muster to keep himself from smiling at the thought that someone, right here, right now, needed saving, and that he, by no fault of his own, was the only one there to come to the rescue. In that moment of pause, he decided it was absolutely necessary retrieve the outfit from the back of his car. He sensed some faulty reasoning in his own rationalization that he was, after all, super fast, and the person had been there for a few seconds already, so was obviously not in an exceptional hurry to jump.

In the ten seconds Mickey took to dart the sixty yards back to his car, pull on the disguise (so the rescuee would be sure to know who his rescuer was), and get back to the bridge, he fantasized about the gratitude he was about to receive and that he had craved for so long.

“Oh thank you, thank you so much,” the person would say after Mickey had taken his hand and reminded him of all the things for which life was worth living. The person would embrace Mickey, clinging to the bulk of strength and integrity clad in the flouroelastomer rubber, muscle-covered likeness of the “Snake Hunter” and, weeping tears of joy and relief, say, “I don’t know what I was thinking. You saved my life, Mr. Mysterious Rodent-esque Superhero! Who are…wait, I know who you are!” And the person would smile in delighted disbelief. “You’re The Mongoose! Hey everybody, The Mongoose is back!”

“The Mongoose?!” a reporter would shout as he ran onto the scene, snapping pictures. A cheering crowd would gather, and all the citizenry would be ecstatic to read in the papers the next morning about the return of their favorite superhero. Mayor Linseed would officially proclaim that The Mongoose was to be reinstated as Gotham’s Guardian, and that he was officially “cooler than Batman.”

All this played out in Mickey’s head as he raced back to the bridge. When he had gotten closer, he saw that yes, indeed, it was a person standing on the ledge, looking down at the cold, watery death he did not know was to be imminently thwarted. Mickey halted approximately ten feet from the figure, posed – one fist on his hip, the other hand raised like he was trying to stop traffic – and shouted in his most authoritative but benevolent voice, “WAIT, good citizen! Don’t do it! There is so much to live for! Don’t jump!”

“Whatha hell…” A very disheveled, very drunken man finished peeing off the bridge and turned to face Mickey. “W’tha fuck’s wrong witchu, buddy? Whaddayou, some kinda sicko, dressin up like a rat? Whaddaya think, you’re some kinda giant ninjer rat, ersomethin?” The man half fell, half jumped down from the ledge and stumbled for a couple of steps.

Mickey was unable to move from what he realized was a pose that surely made him look like twice the unwanted intruder he would have been in the “rat” suit alone.

“Jus’ go mind yo’ own fuckin’ business, ya sicko rat freak!” This was the last thing the man yelled as he continued to stagger down the street, though Mickey could hear him still grumbling a good distance away, and the loud words seemed to echo off the millions of water droplets still hanging in the air.

Mickey sat right there in the street. He forgot his stupid rule, and cried. He sobbed. He pulled off his mask and threw it down on the ground like a child removing his clothes in a tantrum. He heard a car coming, grabbed the mask, and jumped up onto the sidewalk. He realized as it passed on the other side of the street that it would not have hit him anyway.

He plodded back towards his car, and then past it towards the busier streets. He came to the one which led to his office building and was able to orient himself. He plodded towards home. He wore the rubber suit and carried the mask with its black plastic eyes the whole seven miles, not making eye contact with what he was sure were the hundreds of people who were staring at him and whispering or giggling because they had forgotten who he was, or why he might wear such a ridiculous outfit.

When he reached their front door, he knocked. Alison opened it and said nothing as Mickey did not meet her worried eyes with his bleary ones. He plodded into their living room and sat slowly on the couch, examining the mask in his hands. Alison sat next to him, but not too close. After a moment, she put her hand on his arm. He wanted to pull it away, but could only stare. The stare moved up dilatorily, his eyes observing the tension in her whole body, from her fingers up to where they stopped on her lips. He leveled with her now very anxious gaze. He opened his mouth to tell her everything she did not know…but kissed her instead.

They made love on the couch like it was their first time – clumsily (amplified by the cumbersome rubber body suit), and too passionately – but it satisfied. Alison caressed the back of Mickey’s neck as he lay on top of her and cried quietly until they both fell asleep without noticing.

Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Welcome to RHVA Publishing!!

Hey all!

I thought the template was appropriately pretentious, but if anybody has a beef with that it can be negotiated.

This is a space for sharing creative pieces, hopefully in a workshop-type way, though it needn't be so formal, I'm sure. I plan to post stuff here, because I value all of your opinions as creative persons and enjoyers of words and wit and stories. It'd be awesome if other people want to post here, too, because A.) I'd look much less silly, and B.) it'd be far more fun. So, there it is - enjoy this space as you see fit.

-Kate