January 30, 2013

Short Story: A Little Bit Frightening


A Little Bit Frightening

“Ha!  Everybody was Kung Fu fighting,” shouted Spinner from his backyard to no one in particular.  He made another kick in the air, Kung Fu style, toppling three more bad guys to the brown lawn with his powerful air kick.  He stood alone in his barren backyard, the hot August sun retreating finally behind the neighbor’s sagging roof. Moe-the-Dog was his only observer.  Lined up in front of the redwood fence that separated homes and lives were ten or fifteen of his enemies watching in fear as he destroyed them one by one with the bare soles of his feet and the sides of his well trained hands. 
“Ha! I’m fast as lightning.  Ho!”  He leaned into a kick and another human domino fell.  He stood back in awe and surveyed the pile of bodies surrounding him in the backyard, unaware of the oppressive evening heat or the beads of adolescent sweat that had formed on his upper lip. 
From the corner of his eye reality appeared.  “Peter, do you want a peanut butter sandwich?” his mother called from the open sliding glass door.
He worried for a moment what she would say when she noticed his foes lying all around him, but his fear was extinguished by her loud voice calling him again.
“Peter, why don’t you answer when I call you?” 
He glanced from side to side at the evidence strewn around the yard. 
“What, Peter? I can’t understand you.” 
He called Moe-the-Dog over and asked him if he wanted a peanut butter sandwich.  Moe said yes and Spinner nodded to his mom in the affirmative.  She turned to go back in the house, the sound of exasperation emanating from somewhere deep in her throat.
A peanut butter sandwich that summer was just that, a peanut butter sandwich.  Spinner on occasion found grape jelly in the refrigerator and would put some on his dry sandwich to make it sweet and appealing, but it was near the end of the month and his mom was stretching the food money to make it to September.  School would start then and Spinner would benefit from the subsidized school lunch program for poor kids. Until then, it was dry peanut butter sandwiches for lunch and dinner, with little else in between.


While Peter ate his sandwich at the kitchen table his mother stared glumly out the window above the sink, dreading the night that lay ahead of her at the cannery.  Her back ached just thinking about it—eight hours hunched over the conveyer belt, scanning a never-ending sea of red tomatoes for the dregs of the harvest; plucking away the damaged tomatoes and the rocks, and the occasional field mouse that got caught up in the tomato harvester.  She’d stand on that hard cement floor for hours on end until at last the sun came up and she could go home, remove her red-stained clothes, and attempt to shower away the smell of harvested tomatoes from her body. Sometime later she’d collapse into her husbandless bed and, if lucky, sleep until two or three in the afternoon when she’d have to get up to fix Peter a meal before returning to the cannery for another grueling eight-hour shift.
           
At twenty-eight, she had sacrificed nearly half her life for Peter and she knew there were no prospects for change. But that’s what life turns into for girls who get pregnant at sixteen and don’t know who the father is.  One moment of passion and the sanguine life of a teenager turns into one of regret and disappointment, and dreams fade as a baby grows.  And the baby inside her becomes Peter, a boy with her eyes and nose and chin, and the rest from someone else who participated in the conception but not in the raising of his child.
She longed for that other life, a life she might have had—and might yet have—but for the unlucky meeting of her egg and someone else’s sperm.  But now, after twelve years, loving Peter had become a burdensome chore that belied maternal instincts. 
She took one more sip of her cold coffee and dumped what was left in the brown-stained sink.  She looked out the window at the darkening sky, looking past her own reflection to the pair of half-full garbage cans beside the wooden gate with a broken latch that hung horizontal to the ground. The gate had been broken for months now, and there was no one to help her fix it. 
“What time is your game tomorrow?” she asked him, without much thought. He held up five fingers, his response appearing in the window beside her own reflected face.  The faint image in the glass made her think Peter was a ghost, a vision.  For a moment she wished it so.
She filled the sink with scalding water and dish detergent. Steam rose and swirled around her face and began to accumulate on the window, distorting Peter’s reflection as well as her own, and beside them the garbage cans and gate with its broken latch. As she rinsed the peanut butter knife she allowed her thoughts to wander, to blot out the image of the twelve-year-old boy beside her in the window.  She’d had bad thoughts like this before. It wasn’t the first time she’d wished him out of her life, but her thoughts had never gone this far and they made her stomach turn, same as when she found a shredded mouse on the cannery conveyer belt.  Fear rose from her stomach and stuck in her throat, which tightened and grew hard. The window became a blur through her tears and steam.  Their two reflected faces stared back at her and grew murkier until the steaming water began to bead and run down the window into the sill. She took a deep breath and exhaled, picked up a kitchen towel and wiped the window clean of the beaded water and their reflections.
From outside she could hear the revving of a car’s engine followed by the screech of rubber tires on the hot, dry pavement.  After a year and a half she’d grown accustomed to the sound of their seventeen-year-old neighbor storming out of the house after fighting with his drunken father.  Despite its familiarity, the noise frightened her, more so because she knew it meant the boy had been beaten again. The noise had startled her from thoughts unthinkable and for that she was grateful, but she felt ill again and light headed, and this time her knees started to buckle. Suddenly she felt Peter’s arms were around her waist, pulling her up until her hands found the edge of the counter.
“What’s wrong Mom?” he asked.
She tried to remember the last time she’d heard him speak to her. 
“Why are you crying, Mom?  Did I do something wrong?”
His concern brought another welling of emotion and she lost her balance again, Peter’s arms gripping her tighter. In his boy’s arms she became a weightless mass, too heavy for him to hold up.  She collapsed into his body, forcing them both to the ground. Peter took the brunt of the fall, protecting her, his arm cradling the back of her neck.


When she opened her eyes she was on the floor, Peter’s voice distant, barely audible. “Mom, are you all right?  Are you all right?”
The refrigerator fan blew hot air along the floor through its plastic, dust-covered grill.
“Mom, Mom,” he pleaded, “I’m sorry for making you cry, I’ll get better, I promise.”
She remembered why she was on the floor and felt herself trembling. “Peter, Peter, I’m fine, I’m fine.  I think I need to eat something.  I’ll be okay in a few minutes.”
He helped her to the kitchen table, his eyes darting to the crumbs left by his peanut butter sandwich. He wiped them away and looked at her, his young face filled with adult concern.
She sat on the plastic-covered chair and tried to discern which one it was, the chair with the broken backrest or the other one with the uneven legs.  When the chair rocked from corner to corner she knew intuitively that the backrest was safe to lean on. 
Peter sat in the chair next to her and held her arm.  She stroked the back of his head, brushing his long blond hair from his collar, and revealing a mix of sweat and dirt on the back of his neck.  In summer, dust moved from the plowed fields to the necks of Central Valley kids, leaving a distinctive brown ring just above the backs of their collars.  She wondered how long it had been since his last bath.
“Peter, I want you to go to your room for awhile so I can get some rest before I have to leave for work.  Can you do that for me now?” 
He wiped his eyes and got up, and as he started to walk away his hand slid across the back of her neck. She shuddered at the feeling of his hand on her skin, and another flood of guilt rose from her stomach.  She watched him leave the kitchen and walk toward the hallway. A moment later his bedroom door clicked shut and she was alone again.
She remained at the table and sobbed quietly, her chin resting in the palms of her hands, her fingers cupping her face. Her mind raced with simultaneous thoughts of disgust and opportunity; she wondered if she could trust herself anymore, and if she could actually do something evil to Peter. She felt dazed and drugged, almost trance-like as she dreamed of a life without her son. 

She awoke a moment later to muffled shouts from down the hallway and she lifted her head to listen.  It was Peter singing and shouting again and stomping his feet on the bedroom floor:

"Everybody was Kung Fu fighting,
 those cats were fast as lightning,
…it was a little bit frightening"

She buried her face in her hands and tears rolled down her arms to her elbows that dug into the table.


January 12, 2013

NFL Playoff Predictions - Week Aye, Aye


It was a rough week for one of my New Year’s resolutions.  I resolved to correctly predict 75% of my NFL playoff picks, and although I may still reach that goal by the time the Super Bowl MVP praises Jesus, my start in the playoffs was a rougher one than starting my ’67 VW Beetle on a cold, frosty morning. 

But all is not lost.  I’m still doing fine on my other New Year’s resolution, which is to only eat chicken injected with antibiotics.  All those chickens and eggs hatched without the benefit of antibiotics is a scary thing.  Free range chickens in Petaluma are wandering all over Sonoma County, having God only knows how much unprotected pecks in the back alleys of Windsor and Glen Ellen.  No sir.  Not for me.  I want my free-range chickens fully loaded with antibiotics.  

I may still salvage my New Year’s resolution:  If I can go 4 for 4 this weekend I’ll be at 60% for the playoffs, so here goes.

This round of the NFL playoffs is my favorite week of the season.  Eight quality teams remain in the hunt for the right to move onto the Conference Championship game, which ensures there will be a full weekend of football to watch and enjoy.  And I like all of the teams (with the exception of Baltimore, due to personal feelings I have about a certain linebacker getting away with murder), so while I have a strong affection for the hometown 49ers, I am pleased to see this group of teams remaining in the playoffs. 

Baltimore Ravens at Denver Broncos

I’ve watched maybe 6 NFL games this season and none included the Denver Broncos.  But having watched Payton Manning for many years, I can just about predict what will happen.  There will be lots of sets and movement, and Manning will be barking orders at the line of scrimmage like a Third Reich commander at a Paris bistro during occupation.  “Nein, Nein, ich wunsche den vintage Champagne!”  And the tight end will shift from one side of the line to the other side.  And then Commander Payton will shout “Ya vol, mien fraulein, mehr caviar auf meinem schnitzel.”  And his running back will go in motion and take a swing pass down the right side for a 35-yard gain.  I doubt the Ravens defensive players are bilingual so they will be a little more confused by Manning than usual.   

Nevertheless, the Ravens bring an experienced, mature defense to Denver, but the thin air of Colorado will leave them as breathless as the Marlboro Man.  Manning has seen the Ravens a time or two (his lifetime record vs., Ravens: 9-2), and the Broncos have one of the better coaches in the league in John Fox.  A road game in the playoffs is tough to win (as I should have given more consideration last weekend) and the Denver Broncos have a tradition of winning playoff games at home – they’re home playoff record is 13 wins and only 3 losses since 1977.

The Ravens have the ability to make big plays on offense, with Ray Rice and Anquan Boldin providing a strong running and receiving punch.  But you know my thoughts on Joe Flacco.  The bigger the game the more his negatives show up.  Last week he was only 12 for 23, but he did complete a few great passes to Boldin (or maybe Boldin made great catches) and he didn’t throw an interception.  So it was a mixed performance from Flacco, which supports my premise that his play in big games is just good enough to lose.  But thanks to his team’s defense and some fine efforts by Rice and Boldin, the Ravens stymied the Colts and moved on in the playoffs. 

This week the Broncos 5th ranked defense will be a tougher test for Flacco and the Raven’s offense.  I expect Denver to bring all the weapons at their disposal to stomp out the Raven’s big playmakers, resulting in a one-sided victory by the Broncos.  Look for Payton Manning to tell the CBS field reporter after the game:  “Ya vol, Denver’s score will go high!  (you have to admit, there is a slight resemblance between Herr Pitt and Herr Payton)

Baltimore Ravens                    17
Denver Broncos                      31


Green Bay at San Francisco

Oh boy, there is a lot going on here.  But let’s cut to the real issue.  Will Jim Harbaugh’s bold choice to replace Alex Smith with Colin Kaepernick mid season payoff for the 49ers?  Or, will the decision back fire and hang over Harbaugh’s head in the off-season like a cartoon speech cloud?  That’s the real story for this game.   

The 49ers have a superior defense to the Packer’s offense.  The 49ers have a superior offense to the Packer’s defense.  The 49ers have a better special teams unit, on the whole, than the Packers (Kicker David Aching notwithstanding). 

On the other hand, the Green Bay Packers have arguably the best quarterback in football, and he usually plays big in big games.  But not always.  The 49ers defense, with two weeks to prepare for this game, will bring a lot of new looks and schemes for Green Bay to react to.  While Aaron Rodgers is All-Pro and Allstate, he better double check where Patrick Willis and Navarro Bowman are lining up or he will be discounted by the 49ers.

So the advantage on paper goes to the 49ers, but the questions remain about Kaepernick.
Will he rise to the occasion and play like a veteran?  Or, will be make the same mistakes Andrew Luck made against the Ravens, with enough bad passes, interceptions and fumbles to cost his team valuable field position and not reach the end zone?   

No one knows for sure what Kaepernick will do.  But there is one thing we know happens in the playoffs – whatever your strengths or weaknesses are, they will be magnified during the course of an NFL playoff game. 

Now some of you are physically attracted to Kaepernick’s type of play – it results in your testosterone or hormone levels rising, as the case may be; he makes you flush and causes unauthorized movements of appendages.    But I don’t like it when the quarterback is running around like a halfback, especially when there is an All-Pro halfback to hand the ball to.  It’s unbecoming.  It’s un-Montana like.  If the 49ers abandon a balanced offensive attack, on purpose or because the game dictates it, the Green Bay Packers might just find a way to win this game.  

So here is my take on the Kaepernick question:  Whether Kaepernick plays like a veteran or not depends on one thing - how effective Frank Gore is rushing the football.  If the 49ers give Gore the ball at least 18 times and he gains at least 112 yards, the 49ers will win the game.  But if they abandon Gore and turn to Kaepernick to carry the team, it just might be a long day for the 49ers.

I’m still going with the home team, but Frank Gore and the offensive line will be the determining positive factor in this game.  Watch Gore’s stats in the first and second quarter and you’ll know the probable outcome of the game at halftime.  To basterdize a bumper sticker from the religious right:

No Gore, No Victory. 
Know Gore, Know Victory.

Green Bay Packers                 22
San Francisco 49ers                24


Seattle Seahawks at Atlanta Falcons

Atlanta’s playoff record the last few years has been abysmal, and just like last year, they enter the 2013 playoffs feeling confident after an outstanding regular season.  But the Seahawks are playing with confidence and swagger too.   So, will Atlanta’s Matt Ryan’s 0-3 playoff record be 1-3 or 0-4 after this game?   Or, will Russell Wilson and the Seahawks continue their winning streak?

Before we answer those questions, let’s first thank God, Jehovah, The Prophet, Yahweh, He went That-a-Way and the Lord that the Atlanta Falcons are not called the Atlanta Indians, Tomahawks, Cherokee, Inuit or any other Native American tribe.  If I had to listen to the tomahawk chant for four quarters a la the Atlanta Braves and Florida State Seminoles, I would give myself a scalping.  For me it would be a hairless scalping, but I assure you it would be just as painful.  Thankfully we can watch the Falcons in relative peace and quiet, with the possible exception of having to listen to and watch the 300 pound guy sitting in the last row with no teeth waving the Confederate flag and mispronouncing the word “Falcons.”  Try this:  remove your teeth, lower your IQ 80 points, drink a pint of moonshine and yell  “Falcons” at the top of your lungs, and then tell me what word came out of your mouth.  I have a feeling your family and guests won’t be amused, so be careful. 

Despite my allegiance to the 49ers, I really like the Seattle Seahawks.  They are a tough, physical team and they have one of the best coaching staffs in the game.  And, you have to like the story of a rookie quarterback taking his team deep into the playoffs.  But the Seahawks face a tough road battle this week.  The Atlanta Falcons have the best record in the NFC, and their home stadium is a pretty noisy and raucous place.  They won’t make Russell Wilson feel at home, that’s for sure, but he is a pretty cool character and the Falcon’s and their fans won’t intimidate him or his teammates.

I like the Seattle Seahawks to win this game.  The psychology of Matt Ryan’s 0-3 playoff record will be more of a distraction than a motivator for the Falcon’s quarterback.  If Seattle’s defense is aggressive and disruptive early, Ryan’s mindset will turn dark, and by halftime he’ll be focusing less on the Seahawks and more on the Monday headline of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.  What will the headline be:  “Ryan Still Trying’” or “Matt is Flat”?

Take your pick.

Seattle Seahawks:        28
Atlanta Falcons:          24

Houston Texans at New England Patriots

There is usually one easy pick each weekend of the NFL playoffs, and this is it.  The Houston Texans took a severe beating in New England on December 10, and I assure you, they haven’t forgotten about it.  But the Texans don’t have the firepower to take revenge, and the Patriots are too good of a team to allow it to happen anyway, especially at home, outdoors in cold weather. 

The Texans are not a great team yet.  They are a lot like the Vikings or the Bengals.  Good enough to make the playoffs, but not great enough to beat an elite team like the Patriots.       

Houston Texans:                     17
New England Patriots:            38

So look for Seattle at San Francisco and New England at Denver for the Conference championship games.  I’ll be serving chicken if anyone is interested.

Until next weekend,

Spencer