When
Béla told me he couldn't come to concert, I was disappointed.
"It's
my mother's birthday, and I simply forgot. She's turning eighty."
"Sure,
but we're talking about Stinkpit and the Hacks
here."
"I
know that, but she's my mother, my one-and-only, and I really can't go running
off to the Stalopetia Stadium instead."
"Well,
fine, be that way. I'll get over it."
"There's
plenty of other concerts."
"They're
not Stinkpit."
"I
get that, but still, I can't make it. You'll have to find someone else."
I
couldn't think of a replacement. "You got anyone in mind?"
"I
can't think of anyone except Jayne. What about Jayne?"
"I
barely know Jayne."
"I
think she's artistic enough to appreciate Stinkpit."
Well,
sir, I hung up the phone. I'd purchased five tickets six months before,
thinking it'd be easy to find people who'd want to go drink in the richness of Stinkpit and the Hacks, but in fact it had turned out to be
not so easy. I didn't want just anyone to go with me, after all, so it took me
some time to come up with a list of invitees. In any case, it had been prettyweird that the people at the Stalopetia
wouldn't sell me four tickets, or six tickets. I guess they wanted to be
difficult, art for art's sake and all that.
Well,
so, Jayne. Meanwhile, I'd lined up Sean and Marilyn and Tony. I didn't know if
any of them had ever met Jayne. Jayne I'd myself only met three times, twice at
house parties and once at a bar party. I suppose we got along, but still, this
was a precious ticket. Stinkpit was rumoured to be
thinking about retiring and get back to his first passion, painting still lifes, for a couple years, so who knew when his last
concert would be? And his back-up band wasn't getting any younger either. I
figured the youngest of the Hacks was pushing at least sixty-five, just a dozen
years above me.
I
didn't want a ticket to go to waste, understand, so I called Béla back.
"I've
thought it over, and I guess Jayne is my best choice."
"You
won't regret it."
"What
do you mean?"
"I
mean, she's very musically literate, and she probably sees something
interesting in Stinkpit and the Hacks."
"Really?"
"Yes,
she plays the digglephone."
"Oh
yeah?"
"She's
got a degree in music theory and everything."
"I
don't think I've ever met a digglephone player
before."
"It's
not an easy instrument to master."
"So I've heard. Okay, I'll do it. What's her number?"
"82-72-0041."
I
wrote it down on a handy scrap nearby. "Okay, great. Give your mother my
best."
"I
will."
I
hung up and quickly dialed 82-72-0041. Ring ring.
"Hello?"
"Jayne?"
"Yes,
who is this?"
"It's
Marty. We met a couple-three times, mostly through Béla."
"Béla
Bartok?"
"Yeah,
that's the guy. So, we met a few times, and Béla turned me down to go see a
concert, his mother's birthday, and he thought you'd be interested, so I want
to know if you'd replace him, in a way."
"In
a way."
"Yes,
I got an extra fifth ticket."
"Why
do you have five tickets?"
"I
don't know, the concert organizer is selling them in fives."
"So,
what's the act?"
"I'm
not acting."
"I
mean, who's performing?"
"It's
Stinkpit and the Hacks."
"Oh,
wow, they're so sublime."
"You
know a bunch about music, right?"
"Yeah,
I suppose I do. Amateur mostly."
"The
digglephone, Béla told me."
"Yes,
that's right."
"So,
you'd like to go?"
"I
suppose I should. I wouldn't want to miss it. One of the Hacks manages to
sometimes get a few bars out of a digglephone, but
that's kind of the weakest part of the act."
I
laughed along with her. "Just a gimmick."
She
laughed along with me. "So, when and where?"
I
told her the date of the show, which was only a couple weeks away.
"Sure,
I can make it. This is very special. You know, it could be one of their last
performances."
"That
seems to be the case, yeah."
"And
what's the venue, where should we meet up?"
"They're
playing at the Stalopetia."
"That's
kind of far! How can we get there?"
It
was then that I realized I'd been relying on Béla to drive us all there. None
of the four of us--Sean and Marilyn and Tony and me--had any handy means of
transportation. I told Jayne: "Uh, I don't know. Béla was going to drive,
but now he's out of the picture."
"Oh,
golly. Well, I think I can scrounge up an auto."
"Really?"
"Yeah,
from my parents. They let me use theirs on special occasions, and this is one
of them. I'll check and get back to you."
"Don't
apply too much pressure! There's sure to be some other way, like a bus charter
to the concert and back."
"That
sounds like a drag. I hope I can get the auto. I'll call them now."
"Okay,
great. So, call me back when it's convenient."
We
both hung up then.
I
tried to picture Jayne, but it was difficult. Did she had
brown hair, and was it a bit long in the back? How tall? A little shorter than
me, but not by too much. Eye colour was what it was, but I had no idea what it
was. It was funny at the time that I never quite notice things that other
people would have noticed. I'd be a terrible witness to a crime--but when could
that happen? I was so rarely hanging around in criminal circles, or in police
circles, for that matter, so my powers of observation were extremely weak.
However, I could recall that I thought she was sweet and nice, and someone I
could spend more time with. To be around her. I could look at her more--which
gave me an agreeable feeling.
In
any case, the day of the concert neared, and I checked out maps of the area.
The Stalopetia was a recent construction built on
cheap land outside the small pseudo-suburb of Stensnal,
some forty miles north of the downtown core of Teelika,
which was where we all lived. We were all still hustling in those days, even
though we were all pushing middle age, or somewhat past middle age (did we
expect to live to a hundred?) trying to get jobs anywhere we could, and it has
to be said here that the purchase of the tickets put a big dent in my lousy
bank account. I won't quantify the amount--but suffice it to say that all in
all it was three weeks' rent. Of course, I expected to get eighty percent of
that back by the time the 'curtain' went up. I'd already in principle collected
sixty percent of it, and only Jayne remained to pay--but would she pay? Did she
know I expected her to pay, or did she think it was my treat? I hadn't said at
any point that she would have to pay, so I only had to hope she would make some
kind of an offer. Even forty percent of my outlay, personally, would have been
a bit much for me, but there was no way to turn back. My only hope: she'd ask
something about money. But, then again, she was doing the driving of the auto,
so all four of us would owe her something. I didn't know what to do except
count sheep to get me to sleep during the next couple weeks.
The
next couple weeks passed, and suddenly we were upon the day during which Stinkpit and the Hacks were set to play a concert at the Stalopetia outside the small northern pseudo-suburb of Stensnal. That Jayne would pick us up one-by-one in the
morning had been roughly arranged, and I was fortunate enough to be the first
one on her list. It was right around one pm.
The
auto she had borrowed from her parents was a roomy sedan, four door, front
seats and back, and it was the perfect auto for five people, two in the front
and three in the back. I say I was fortunate in that, since I was first on the
list, I commandeered the front passenger seat, and thus I was sitting an elbow
away from the driver, Jayne, and there was nothing that would take me out of
it. Sean, Marilyn, and Tony didn't know her as much as I did, so I felt it was
like a date, almost.
I
got into her sedan auto, in the front seat. I pulled myself in, saying:
"This is a treat, driving to a concert."
She
looked at me. Her hands were on the steering wheel. I looked at her. Yes, it
was she, and all my visual memory came flooding back upon me and I instantly
had the same subtle emotions again. Her eyes, as it turned out, were, and had
been since the day she'd been born, brown. She had skin that could only be
described as creamy. She said: "Okay, now I have to get to this Sean
Connery's house, right?"
I
said: "Yeah, he's a good friend of mine."
"You
know him well?"
"I
met him in grade seven, he's a serious guy, more serious than me."
"Are
you ... serious?"
"No,
it's that he studied books and did well and wound up in an 'advanced placement'
at another school."
"You
didn't make the cut? I think you're smart. Did you feel left behind?"
"Not
as smart as Sean."
I
went up to his apartment building and pressed the button for his number. A
voice came out: "I'll be right down, everything is set."
In
a couple minutes, he was outside. Sean is definitely better-looking than me;
he's taller, has better hair (brown) and always looks like he's just come from
the beach. His hair accompanied his voice when he spoke by waving invitingly.
We
went out to the auto and I made the proper introductions. Fortunately, I didn't
see anything but courtesy pass between them.
Sean
said: "Oh, I'm in the backseat, am I?"
"Yes,"
I said. "I get the honour of the front seat, since I arranged
everything."
Sean
shrugged, seeing my point. "I guess that follows."
Getting
in, he continued: "Yes, I see your point. This was a good idea of yours,
after all. I saw Stinkpit a long time ago, in the
'30s."
Jayne
said: "Those were the early years."
"I'm
amazed he lasted this long. I guess that's what continual re-invention can do
for a musical career. There was his druggy phase, his sleek phase, and so
on."
I
said: "He's now into a louche phase."
"Yes,
the battered suits. Louche lizard."
"In
any case, he'll be playing old stuff, new stuff, everything including blues
stuff."
I
directed Jayne on, across town, to where Marilyn lived with her on-again
off-again. I didn't tell Jayne anything about that part; if it came up in
conversation, I would play dumb. I certainly don't like telling tales out of
school. I'd met Marilyn some decades before, when we were both working
part-time at a lousy restaurant. She already had her on-again off-again, so
there was nothing between us but friendship, and I subtly tried to get that
across to Jayne that, although Marilyn was a fine-looking specimen, with a good
shape and a clean and symmetrical face, the spark of delightful pleasures,
though considered off and on again, had never become flamed. These are all
subtle matters, to be sure and as no doubt you understand, but I may have
gotten it across clearly.
Marilyn
popped into the back seat, beside Sean, and although she knew she would wind
end up sitting in the middle, on the hump as it were, she didn't move over
immediately. Marilyn and Sean knew each other, from afar, as the saying goes,
but, again, I didn't see any connection between them. They were friendly
enough, to be sure, but something held them apart.
Marilyn
said: "Here we go! And the person in front of me must be Jayne," and
Jayne replied: "That's me, and you are obviously Marilyn."
"That
I am. This is so exciting! I've never travelled so far for a concert
before."
I
said: "All we have to do is pick up Tony."
Marilyn
said: "Not far from here."
Jayne
said: "So, what way?"
"Go
two blocks up, and two to the left. The Stalopetia is
near Stensal, right?"
I
said: "It's about two miles from downtown Stensal."
"I've
been to Stensal. I had a childhood friend who moved
up there. I went to visit her once. That was an awful long time ago. I think I
was eleven. I never went again. I wonder if she still lives there. I don't know
if I'd recognize her."
Sean
muttered: "People don't change much. If she's there, and alive, and we see
her, you'll recognize her immediately."
Marilyn
sighed. Jayne and Sean and I listened. She was about to say something.
Marilyn
said: "You know, I had the strangest dream last night. Something terrible
was happening, but I didn't know what, or I can't remember what. In the dream,
something was going on somewhere, and I was really afraid. Finally, I yelled
out: 'Fuck off! Fuck off! Fuck off!' over and over, and I woke up. My mother
came into my room--you get, this is still in the dream--and cradled me. She
thought I needed a glass of water, so she went out of my room and down the
stairs. Meanwhile, I could hear my father grousing, like: 'Let the girl be, for
Christ's sake! She's got to learn! Afraid of the dark, my foot. She just wants
you all to herself. She's got to become independent sooner or later!' And then
I woke up a second time, in the bed I was in last night, and I realized I'd had
a dream-within-a-dream. My parents are today nowhere to be found, they're both
dead, but because of that tiny moment in the dream, when they were with me
again, I felt so lonely. It was the strangest thing I've ever been through. The
strangest dream, anyway. Will we get some food and drink in Stensal
before the show?"
"I
think we'll have to. A couple hours free, then get our bearings and head off to
the Stalopetia."
Jayne
glanced over at me. She appeared to be in a very good mood. I took a little
credit in that. It had been my idea in the first place, and she was driving. It
felt like we were going on a picnic to the country, with the kids in the back
seat. Then I thought, naturally, of Stinkpit, and his
song, how did it go? Yes: The fire on the asphalt's no match for the one in
me / Sun's going down behind the willow trees / And we're not due til the morn. That's why Stinkpit
was so essential in those days. He had songs for every occasion.
"Here?"
"Yes,
that's the place. Just honk and he'll come running."
Sure
enough, Tony locked the door to his rented house, yelled something through it,
turned, and trotted to the auto. He got in beside Marilyn, and Marilyn slid
over, sure enough, to the middle, and our symmetry was broken.
"Hello,
hello," said Tony. "Is everything in order?"
Sean
said: "Certainly seems that way."
I
pulled the five tickets from out my jacket pocket. "Here they are."
They
all looked as I fanned them out.
Tony
asked: "Why didn't you buy an even number of tickets?"
Marilyn
said: "I know, I know. Stinkpit wanted everything
to be uneven for the show. I read it in the Journal the day before
yesterday."
Jayne
said: "Now that's a real artist."
I
pondered this. "But, couldn't you simply buy three tickets and then three
more? To have six altogether?"
"Yes,
I suppose you could cheat."
"Maybe
we were supposed to cheat. Somebody will know the answer."
"I
don't think I want to know then answer. That reminds me of a dream I had last
night.
"I
was operating some kind of a switchboard for nurses. It was an odd thing, since
it had buttons on it all over the place, but pressing any of them didn't make
any difference. I'd get warnings appear in a little screen, about problems here
and there, like in room X3 or room 17E, and it seemed I was responsible with
making it all work. But I couldn't get it to work right, no matter what I did.
Every once in a while--about three times as far as I remember--a loud voice
would yell something at me and I'd receive an electric shock and I'd halfways wake up but I would go to sleep again and the
dream went on. It eventually seemed like I was literally crying out in my
sleep, such were these electrical shocks. I couldn't get anything to work, and
when I eventually woke up, for real at last, I still had the feeling I had to
get back there, to the switchboard, to make everything right."
"Interesting,"
I said. "Maybe your dream will continue tonight."
"Yes,
maybe I'll be going back to the switchboard tonight. Who knows?"
As
we headed west toward the 7B Highway, along Sizzle Street if you're mapping out
that long-ago journey and want to know, I looked at the lower dashboard and saw
a radio sitting there, turned off. I had a notion to turn it on to get any late
news or maybe hear some old-timey music. I checked out Jayne's face-in-profile,
and it looked good. I could have said: "Let's play the radio," but I
didn't. She was the captain of the ship, and if she wanted music or news then
it was entirely up to her. However, could I have made the suggestion? Maybe she
was concentrating very hard, as we crossed the Diggins River and found
ourselves in the county of Draymer and approached the
onramp of the 7B Highway. I figured: Maybe she'll want the radio on when we're
on the highway, when things would get monotonous. People drive in all sorts of
ways.
"Ah,"
I said. "If you bought three tickets, then another three tickets, odds are
that the first three wouldn't be close to the second three, since it's all
pre-blocked. The first trio could be in an entirely different section. And that
would defeat the purpose, wouldn't it? And you'd have arguments about who was
sitting where. Clearly, a sub-optimal result."
I
waited for someone to say something, anything, in response, but no-one
responded. It was like I was in my own little world, talking to myself.
We
were on the highway by then, and heading north. And now Jayne decided she
wanted some radio. She reached down, without even looking, and fiddled. A voice
suddenly surrounded us all. It happened to be a travel report, and the travel
report mentioned that Highway 7B was getting somewhat clogged on account of all
the "Noomers" heading to the big Stinkpit concert at the Stalopetia.
Sean,
sitting behind me, said: "God, I hate these demographic designations. Noomers indeed! Like my cohort is what it is because of a
silly and infantile association with a dumb word which I had nothing to do
with."
Jayne
said: "Speak for yourself. I'm not a Noomer, and
I have even less to do with the word."
"Okay,
sure, you're a bit younger than the rest of us, but still."
"I
look mature for my age, but I'm not a Noomer."
"Well,
what are you, then? Are you one of those Orbers?"
"Actually,
yeah, that's what the popular demographers call us, yeah."
The
conversation was getting a little heated, as such arguments about temporality
and the mysteries of generations often do. Sean moved the conversation a
little--you shouldn't piss off the driver, you see--by saying: "I guess
you had Stinkpit around you your entire life."
"Pretty
much." She laughed. "My folks don't understand this 'modern music' as
they call it. They were a little too late to be in the know about him and his
Hacks. As my mother said: 'We were a bit busy raising you all,' meaning me and
my two brothers. 'We barely turned on a radio for eight years."
It
was an interesting observation, but no-one except Sean and Jayne were talking,
and they got a bit embarrassed and shut it down then and there. We passed the
exit to Slumbar; we were making good time; we'd have
plenty of the stuff--time, that's to say--in which to have all kinds of
agreements and disagreements.
Traffic
was thickening. "Look at all the autos," I said. "I wonder what
the little town of Stensal thinks of it all."
Marilyn
replied: "They wanted the arena, the Stalopetia.
The place is growing like crazy. There are motels popping up on the edge of the
town. Look, right there, that one looks new."
We
all turned our heads to look out the window at a new Jorgensen. Off-white all
over, like stucco, six stories tall, entrance in Jorgensen trademark blue, and
a parking lot full of autos. We had only four seconds to look at it in wonder.
Marilyn
continued: "And we're still miles away from Stensal.
A coin to whoever spots the next one."
"What
kind of coin?" I asked slyly.
"Oh,
a nice bright shiny coin. But I haven't decided yet."
We
paused, collecting our thoughts.
Sean
re-started the conversation. "Communities shouldn't rely on only one
thing, though. The Stalopetia could close in a matter
of months, be abandoned by everyone. There's so much chance involved. I saw my
hometown fall apart when the Tanstanedia factory
closed down."
Jayne
said: "That's right, and the company moved all the way to Sylsia. Complete upset."
"And
the funny thing was, everyone saw it coming. Factory after factory was heading
over to Sylsia, and we all knew ours was going to go,
too. Like we were too busy staring at the ticking time bomb without really
expecting it to explode."
I
said: "Well, migration. It's been going on, like, forever. People are
willing to pack up everything and go to another environment. And then they
invent stories about their old environment, like in the tale of Laurel and
Costello."
"I
read that once." (That was Tony speaking.) "I didn't attach that much
to it. I mean, it was an okay story and all. Maybe I wasn't in the right
headspace."
"It's
an ancient tale, told for thousands and thousands of years. It must be
something special, you know?"
We
pondered the matter for some time.
Sean
slowly said: "I had the strangest dream last night. Maybe not the
strangest, since waking up from a dream when you're in a dream is the
strangest, right Marilyn? but nonetheless, it was odd because I didn't seem to
be myself.
"I
was on a trip like this, with other people, whoever they were, and it was time
to head back to wherever we had come from. Now, I had a bicycle, for some
reason, so I was pedalling down the roadway and I came to a little city or a
big town, whatever, and I felt like getting some cigarettes. Oh, and I was
going to take my bike on some bus, I was waiting for it to arrive, so I left
the bicycle at the bus stop and I went down a hill to a corner store and bought
some cigarettes. When I got back to the bus stop, the bicycle wasn't there
anymore. I looked around and saw a police station, so I went in and told them
I'd had by cycle stolen. They took my name down first, which was Jean-Jacque
Rousseau in the dream; I even had to spell it for them. We went out to scope
the scene of the crime, then I got into one of their police autos and we went
to a couple places where one of the cops beat up some people, but no cycle, so
we went back to the police station. It seemed apparent to me that they weren't
going to do a thing, they were so hesitant. Then I told them some story I don't
know, about having a cycle stolen outside a pool hall when I had been twelve
and how the cops hadn't found it and they lectured me a bit about hanging
around in pool halls."
He
fell silent. I asked him: "And then what happened?"
"And
then nothing happened. I woke up, and I wanted to be that Rousseau guy again.
Even now, I feel like this is the fantasy world, and that was the real one.
But, no, this is real and we're going to see Stinkpit.
Another motel!"
He
shoved his hand between the front seats and was pointing. We glanced, and
indeed there was a motel, a flat motel with autos out front of each room or
cabin or whatever you call them at a motel.
"That
doesn't count," I said. "It's obviously been there for, what, since
we were kids."
"That
just means they knew about it decades and decades ago.
It's not like things like the Stalopetia just pop up
overnight. The arena had been planned, like, a half-century ago."
"That's
a fair point. But look at that one, that one is definitely new." I pointed
out a tall hotel, eight stories tall, part of the Stenzen
chain. "That's very new. The perfectly-formed shrubs give it away."
Jayne
said: "Yeah, I don't remember that one. I'm starting to see familiar
landscapes, though."
I
replied: "You said you'd only been here once."
"I
was at an impressionable age. Or, at least, I feel like I remember things.
Maybe it's some kind of an illusion."
Sean
said: "I go to places I used to know, and I can never find my way around.
It's like the place had gone through an evolution, and, though everything
changed slowly, over the years it can come as quite a shock."
We
were suddenly in Stensal, mid-afternoon. We argued
through restaurant after restaurant until we found ourselves on the far side of
the town.
Jayne
said: "This isn't going to work. Let's park somewhere, and wander around.
That way we can see posted menus and stuff."
"Sure,"
we all said.
Jayne
parked the auto off the main strip and we got out of the auto and locked it up
tight. (We weren't taking any chances with our 'ride'.) Lots of people were on
the street, and you could tell who lived there and who was visiting. The people
who lived there kept their eyes straight ahead, like they had seen everything
already, while the visitors were gawping like they were in a Zipperworld amusement park. We walked down one side of the
main strip, then up the other side. We debated about where to go. Marilyn
remarked on a place we'd passed, and none of us had any serious objections, so
we crossed the street. No-one got hit by an auto, out-of-town or local, and we
went into a restaurant called Steelhorse.
We
all sat down around a table. (The seating arrangement doesn't matter, though I
managed to sit beside Jayne.) I was facing the bar, so I scanned the list of breeps they had on tap. I said: "They've got all the
usual breeps."
Sean
remarked: "We're still in the same supply chain as we have in our city, so
that's not surprising."
Tony
muttered: "I wonder if they have Stingo." He scanned the breep and tance section of the
menu. "No, doesn't look like it."
We
waited for service. About half the tables were full or about half the tables
were empty. A servant came by and said: "It looks like you've come up for
the big show."
Marilyn
said: "Are we that obvious?"
"Yes,"
said the servant pleasantly. "I hear it's a big thing for some
people."
"You
aren't fond of Stinkpit?"
"I'm
a bit young for him, I mean, he was pretty much before my time."
Yes,
she was in her twenties. Poor thing, she'd missed out on all the really
exciting stuff in music and literature and art. These days, if you shot
yourself in the arm as a performance piece, people would just yawn. Either
artistic expression had stopped, or the five of us were simply out-of-touch.
It's not impossible that subtlety went in and out of fashion too.
"You
missed out!" said Sean a little-too-loudly.
The
servant smiled. "I hope you have a delightful evening."
We
all ordered breep, except for Jayne, who said it made
her sleepy, and she was driving, after all. The servant went away with her
little notebook, and, since the lull was opportune, Tony said: "Since it
has been mentioned already, I myself had a strange dream last night.
"I
had a business of sorts, coming up with solutions for people, it seemed. I only
remember one customer, though, and the dream was about him. He came to me to
find out why he'd failed his first driving test, and he wanted to know if his
friend and neighbour, one Vegeesen Geneshemoorthy by name, yes, I remember names in dreams,
had anything to do with it, like did Geneshemoorthy
put a curse on him or something. 'It was all a long time ago, but it's been
bothering me ever since,' he told me. So I went into a trance, a dream, a
different dream, and I saw my client and Geneshemoorthy
together on the day of the driving test. Things were especially fuzzy, being a
dream-within-a-dream and all, but I could tell that Geneshemoorthy
wished his friend and neighbour all the best, and in fact want my client to
pass. Then I saw later that same day, after my client had failed the driving
test, and I saw Geneshemoorthy meeting my client and
smiling and trying to cheer him up over a card game. I came out of the dream or
trance or whatever and I told my client that he had it wrong; his friend and
neighbour Geneshemoorthy had wanted him to pass, and
what my client had interpreted as glee was actually a condolence of sorts. 'You
were only seventeen,' I told him: 'and things look bigger in rearview mirrors
than they actually are. Then my alarm went off, and I remembered what I would
be doing. What I am doing now. Being here in, um, the Steelhorse."
I
guess we all thought it, as described to us, had been a pretty good dream,
inexplicable in its own way, and equally as inexplicable as the other two
dreams had been. Thus, we all looked around the Steelhorse
and admired its décor.
Darling
Jayse asked me: "What did you dream about last night?"
I
had to tell her: "Nothing."
The
servant came with a tray of glasses with breep in
them. She said: "Anything for lunch for you folks?"
We
ordered some lunch-type meals. There's no reason to name what we all ordered.
Before
she departed for the kitchen, Marilyn asked her: "We were wondering:
What's the latest thing? How do your musical tastes run?"
The
servant said: "Oh, well, I guess Mandy Stixen is
my favourite, especially her 'Locusts' record. Layers and layers of sounds and
ideas to it. My friends are more into the harder stuff, like the
Lilies-of-the-Valleys and Seymore Stanley. It's hard to put into words, though,
the distinctions."
"Is
that because it all sounds the same?"
"Oh,
not at all! There's plenty of differences between Stixen
and the Lilies and Seymore Stanley, if you actually get around to listening to
them. You really should check them out. They're very good."
"Thanks,"
said Marilyn.
We
got back to our conversation, using the servant as a springboard.
I
said: "I think I heard something by Mandy Stixen
in the supermarket a couple days ago."
"How
did you know it was Stixen?" (Jayne speaking
through a wry smile.)
"I
don't quite know. I must have heard the song somewhere before, and somehow I
was able to identify its, ah, authorship."
Tony
said: "It all sounds the same to me."
"Yeah,
not like the good old days."
Sean
said: "Movies these days are pretty crappy too."
"Not
like the '30s, not at all."
"All
the actors these days are indistinguishable."
I
said: "Whatever happened to those old stars? Has King Lear done anything
recently?"
Marilyn
replied: "I saw her on tv a couple weeks ago, in a cameo role. It was some
comedy thing, and she was playing someone's mother."
"Semi-retired,
I guess is the term."
Sean
said: "You remember all those Spartacus movies? He was in one after
another."
Tony
remarked: "Action-packed, and handsome he was."
"Yeah,
'The Stemroids and the War', 'Fightin' Bad', and the
one with the time-bomb ticking through the whole thing."
Jayne
filled in: "That was 'Climb to the Roof.' I had a poster of Spartacus in
my bedroom."
The
servant returned with our meals.
Jayne
asked her: "What do you think about Spartacus?"
The
servant said: "My folks go on and on about him. I saw something, something
about a roof, but it was too fast for me."
"Oh.
Well, thanks! This all looks great."
The
servant smiled, and took her leave.
Tony
said: "Maybe we're just over-estimating things. Nostalgia or something.
Maybe the old movies weren't as good as we think they were. How can you measure
taste?"
We
all tried to come up with an objective measure, but we couldn't.
"In
any case," said Marilyn: "I think we were lucky to go through the
'30s. How old were all you in, say, '33, when that 'Gotcha-Gotcha' musical came
out?"
I
said: "I was eighteen."
Tony
said: "Er, I guess I was sixteen. Yes, because I was born in 717." He
laughed. "I could show you my birth certificate."
Marilyn
said: "I didn't know we were the same age. Yes, I was sixteen."
Sean
chipped in. "I was only fifteen. I had to sneak in to see it." He
continued, after a pause: "Do you think we should head over to the Stalopetia about now?"
Marilyn
replied: "We've still got hours to go."
Jayne
chipped in: "I don't know how far away I'll have to park. I'd like to be
in their parking lot, at least."
"Why?"
I asked. "Last in, first out."
"I
don't want to walk though fields to get back to the auto. That's all."
Sean
said: "We have to go with the captain on this. Walking home is not
an option."
We
all started pulling out money. (The bill had arrived. I've elided over that.)
Then, all paid up, we bid out servant a good afternoon and left the Steelhorse.
We
walked on back to the auto and we all got in, in the same spots we'd been
before.
Jayne
said: "Okay, anyone know which way we go?"
I
said: "I saw on the map that it's east of the town."
Marilyn
said: "Start east, then. I'm sure we come across some signs."
This
all sounded reasonable to us. Jayne checked the position of the sun and we went
east and we were out of Stensal in three-to-five
minutes.
"That
was a nice restaurant." (Sean speaking.) "We should keep it in
mind."
"It
looked old, but it also looked new."
"Rustic
décor."
"Old
signs taken from who knows where."
"Yet:
with a gambling machine in the corridor."
(I
don't remember who said what there.)
Sure
enough, there was a new sign put up by the state. STALOPETIA with an arrow
under it, and "5 ni."
Tony
remarked: "They're using the Netric system out
here."
I
said: "We'll have to get used to it."
Marilyn
remarked: "I'll never get used to it."
Other
autos were on that little two-lane road.
Jayne
said: "I don't think we're coming at it the right way. This road is too
narrow."
Sean
said: "Back on the highway going into Stensal I
noticed a sign. A whole exit made just for the arena."
"I
guess we're taking the backroads way."
It
was about that time that we noticed there was a goodly amount of traffic going
in the other direction, away from the Stalopetia.
"Where
do you think they're all going?" I asked. "Is there another concert
in the area?"
Jayne
said: "Not as far as I know."
"Can
I switch on the radio?"
"Sure,
go ahead."
I
turned on the radio, which was in mid-sentence, as is typical. "--can be
refunded through your purchasers. It's a terrible tragedy, and there's not much
to say about that. As you have heard, in our state, one of the most profound
musical voices has been silenced--"
Marilyn
said: "Does this mean what I think it means?"
"--still
arriving at the Stalopetia, heartbroken, despondent,
and in tears--"
Sean
said: "I think it does, I think it does indeed."
Jayne
said: "I need to pull over."
She
stopped the auto on the shoulder of the road. Autos continued to pass us, and
it was rash for Jayne to get out, but she did it anyway. She went in front of
the auto, hugging herself, looking down.
"--heart-attack
happened right around one pm, during his lunch. Stinkpit
never did anything--"
"Past
tense," muttered Tony.
"--by
half-measures, and he liked a big meal at about the same time, one pm, every
time he played a major concert--"
"Jesu,
this is rough!" I said, then regretted saying something so bloody simple.
We'd
heard enough, so I switched off the radio. We looked at the autos going past
us, wanting to be in those oblivious autos, speeding to a great void stadium,
innocent and lacking in experience.
Tony
said: "Well, I guess: there goes the day, huh?"
Marilyn
said: "And half the autos we see, they don't know anything. The ones
coming back do, but not the ones heading our way. I feel rather alone right
now."
I
said: nothing.
Jayne
got back into the auto. She asked: "So, any place to go, other than back
to the big city?"
Tony
said: "Could you drop me off at the Steelhorse?
I can make my way home from there."
Jayne
started the auto, then, when the road was clear, made a u-turn,
and drove.
I
finally spoke: "I guess I'll be getting these tickets returned."
"They're
no use anymore." That was Jayne speaking.
Marilyn
said: "Um...." Then she continued: "Yeah, they should be
returned. Oh well."
Sean
said to Jayne: "But I guess we owe you for the gas you used getting us up
here."
Jayne
said: "It wasn't all that much. I ain't gonna nickel-and-dime you here!" (I think that
sentence could be classified as 'sardonic'.)
I
said: "It was a fine drive anyway. It's always good to get out into the
countryside."
"If
only, if only."
"What?"
She
laughed bitterly. "There was certainly room for improvement!"
I
realized the death of Stinkpit meant Jayne and I
would never be able to get as close as I kind-of wanted us to be. We'd always
be thinking about this day to nearly the exclusion of everything else. But I
had something. I had a ticket. I decided then and there to return only four of
them.
Marilyn
said: "I wonder where the funeral is going to be."
Sean
said: "I heard he was originally from Mestania."
"Then
I suppose ... that's where he'll be buried."
"If
he's buried at all. You never know, with Stinkfoot."
On
we went.