Saturday, October 1, 2016

Oh, Sacred Moments


Too many days go by.
Too many meaningless hours spent
On too much frivolity…
Immortal still, I turned thirty…
Teased death at forty…
Embraced mortality at fifty…
Bored by it at sixty…
And now I’m seventy, it
seems I might have used up my chances
To spend very much more time on
Wonderful frivolities.

My life has been a blessed one.
I have loved and been loved by several women
Whose generosity loaned me their hearts.
At times it was for one night of bliss
And others there was enough for two lifetimes.
Several times I crossed between love and obsession
And I never learned the lesson.
But always, I was forgiven my trespasses
Every time.

Oh, sacred moments…
The bardo between love and obsession
Bring me home… bring me home…
Maybe another ten… twenty years…
But bring me home to the one
That saved my heart from dissipation.

Oh, my Bonnie, we all end up where you are.

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Chapter 18. Modigliani Eyes

   Casey and Anna were cozy at the helm where they’d been watching the action when I came out of the cabin. Her eyes were riveted on me while I walked back to the stern to sit and air out what had transpired. The Blatva… it was something I’d heard of but hadn’t paid much attention to. The LSD affects were at that stage where my brains felt fried and my eyes burned from the light reflecting off the seas.
“We’re goin’ to the Bay now, the Boss wants us there,” Casey’s voice interrupted the thought.
“What?” I had begun to wonder what Ryan was doing ashore. I knew he would have something planned but I had been in the dark up to then. It would be easy to get Casey to tell me everything he knew of it. I probed, “I know Ryan wants us in San Rafael but you must know more than me.”
Casey was bubbling with joy to be part of a big plan… that he knew more than me, “I have a good friend, Jimbo. He has an old boat I heard he’s been workin’ on. New canvass and paint. Other than that I gots no fuckin’ idea what Ryan’s up to.”
Anna interrupted, “Speaking of fuckin’ ideas, I want to know what the fuck’s going on with Doc, huh? What’s the plan with him?”
“He’s still tripping pretty heavy. I sent him below to chase the bats from his belfry, I suppose. I’m done with him though… got what I wanted.”
Anna entered the cabin and went straight below towards the berths where Doc was quietly sitting on the bunk. “I gotta use the head and change clothes.”
I followed close behind and called out, “Wait, Anna. I’m done with him but we need to pow-wow.”

The Dinky Dao had a layout similar to the Sherlock’s except that the Casey’s tub was an unmodified working lobster boat. The Sherlock had the same cabin and berthing configuration. Converted to a popular yacht design, it’s stern wasn’t open for hauling in lobster traps. The cabin was a step up from the deck to the galley and cabin table and then three steps dropped down to a level accommodating a small shower and head. Forward of that space and through a hatch were four bunks… two on each side. The helm was outside in the weather on the starboard side but under the same canopy as the cabin.
The Dinky Dao was in dire need of a paint-job and unlike the Sherlock, there was garbage everywhere. Empty plastic water bottles, empty beer cans and gallon wine jugs, newspapers, doubled plastic bags stuffed with laundry, and junk… fishing line and flasher lures etc. covered every counter and table top. However, a stack of skin magazines was a conspicuous exception. They were kept, covered in cellophane in a neat bundle in a plastic milk crate under the table I’d cleared for our breakfast.
It was noon by the time I was done with Doc but I was anxious to keep him out of reach of Anna. Once paranoia slips into one’s psychedelicized consciousness it is difficult to sort out which fears are justified and which ones are not. I knew a few Lurps (an affectionate name adopted from the initials for Long Range Recon Patrol) that liked to go into the bush on acid to enhance their environmental awareness. This worked well for real reasons to be safe, “left of the bang”, but it might also account for some of the Geneva Accord violations against innocent villagers. My paranoia told me that Anna had a motive to take out Doc beyond mere revenge. He might expose more than she wished of how she fit-in. I had to keep those suspicions in check, however, because they might just as well be chemically induced fears.
Anna was already stripped down and stepping into the shower. I could see why Ryan was in love with her. Her nudity, while my mind was sucked into a cosmic chemical reality, didn’t evoke any desire at all to possess her sexually. I was completely enrapt at the sight of her innocent beauty. My mind raced from big questions to wondering whether women got the same depth of sensual arousal at the sight of a man’s naked body. They might but I suspect not because I don’t see women keeping a neat and bundled stack of old skin mags. I million and one such ruminations passed through that transcendent Bardo as she slipped out of sight into the shower. I went from paranoia to awe in less than a flash… the time it takes for a match head to flare upon striking.
Her shout from below snapped me out of that Bardo of reflection, “Hey! There’s no fucking water!”
She came out and up to the table wearing a weather jacket and nothing more. She knew she was going to be grilled and was prepping herself to craft the best defense she had leaving the jacket open enough to expose the partial curve of her breasts. Just enough to keep me distracted. There is a line from the Bible… hell, I don’t know where to find it. I just heard Thumpers quote it in jail. It says the eyes are the windows to the soul. Anna had been trained by someone on more than that Mac-10. Her eyes suddenly became hard to read and that’s a skill known by only a few amateurs that are unwelcome at poker tables or by specialists in trade craft. I knew full well when the subject’s eyes became opaque and unbreakable.
I broke the ice, “We aren’t playing the school-girl now, are we?”
She wasn’t playing alright. She had become robotic and my task was to remind her that she was human; that I was human, and hardest of all, that Doc was human. Her jacket opened to expose more Modigliani flesh but I was transfixed on the opaque eyes. The painter studied eyes. Each portrait displayed a fascination with the deception of eyes. It was as though the painter never quite figured them out. He painted what he saw. There is one painting of a teen with the pupils blurred… there could be a three ring circus behind them but there was no way to get past that matte glaze. No wonder he drank himself to death with absinthe and wine.
Her hands lay flat on the table with her fingers spread as though on display. They were another work of art; long, thin and graceful, those of a Gothic saint that had just blown away a man with a Mac-10 a few days ago.
I finally saw in them. Her eyes turned sad… full of regret, "Look Crash, I've got nothing more. This tub needs swamping out if we're staying on it for any amount of time. Let's not play cat and mouse for a while and get to work."
"You might be right. But we have to talk."

It felt good to fill garbage bags with Casey’s junk. He objected a few time saying, “I need that!”
“What, you need this Styrofoam cup?”
Anna ordered him, “Get back at the helm, Casey. Trust us, you won’t need anything we get rid of,” and I was astounded he obeyed like a scolded child.
We fill several bags of junk and set them on the deck. If it was up to me I’d have dumped them over the side but Anna stopped me.
“The ocean isn’t your dump, you dumb fuck. We can get rid of this shit in port.”
The whole deck was packed and stacked with black plastic bags but there I was… I’d been slapped stupid for a minute, “You’re as bad a Ryan. Shit. He didn’t even want anyone to through fucking cigarettes butts overboard… like a dolphin would choke on ‘em.”
“Who do you think straightened out Ryan about that?”
I was beginning to see why Ryan loved her. Casey shrugged, “As annoying about bullshit as she is you can’t argue with her. I mean, you could argue but you can argue with a brick wall too.”
“Okay, Okay. I get it.” I looked around the Dinky Dao and felt good about how clean she was and still had good lines after all. “I’ll take the helm now. What do you think Casey, you like her?”
Casey’s face was to the garbage bags like he wanted to salvage what he could. Anna had a coiled up the hose we’d used to flush what was left through the scuppers. “He likes it. Don’t you feel better, Case?”
He sat on one of the bags, “Okay, I guess. Where we gonna set in?”
“Monterrey… big enough harbor. We oughta go unnoticed there… ‘cept for hauling this shit to a dumpster.”

As we approached the lights





Tuesday, August 9, 2016

Acid Interrogation



The sound of coffee poured from urn to cup and the audio-hallucination of each gurgle is a comforting one to me. After Casey poured the coffee I had to get alone with Doc if I was going to get anything out of him. That no one was attending the helm made it easier. Casey didn’t have auto pilot. He normally just strapped the helm in position with a belt or frayed bungie cord. “It’s time you two attended to the helm,” I ordered.
Anna hung back reluctant, “I’ll stay here.”
It is a routine interrogation procedure to separate subjects. An objective investigation doesn’t assume anyone is innocent or guilty, “No, Anna. Doc and I need to sort this out, mano y mano.”
I didn’t actually realize, until the acid kicked in that, though Anna had been my protector in the beginning, she had become a person of interest or a possible suspect since we left the island. I wasn’t sure if she was guilty of anything but I did know she was not all that innocent. Peculiar as he was, Casey, in spite of his constant chatter, was the only reliable ally I had on the Dinky Dau.
After Anna and Casey left the cabin, Doc and I sat silent for an age or two… who knows how long? Larry’s pupils were almost as wide as his irises. He was looking at his plate of fried-up canned hash and yellow egg yolks like they were an all-out assault on his senses. I couldn’t resist rubbing it in, “How ‘bout some Ketchup, Larry?”
He laughed. I mean, he really laughed. It started out as a chuckle but rolled into a demonic cackle. He stopped as suddenly as he started. Fear washed over his face… His mirth switched to contempt, “Don’t you have any salsa?”
“C’mon, Larry. You’ve been in Southern California too long. Ketchup’s the American salsa everywhere else.”
I palm-pounded out the thick red goop that plopped from the bottle, “Eat. It’s better while hot.”
Larry stared at the pile on his plate. “I’m still not hungry, Crash.”
I must’ve dropped several hundred times from 1965 to ’74. My interrogation method was as simple as walking inside your subject’s head… a friendly guest… quell all fear until there. Once there, the work begins.
“Larry, you’re with me aren’t you? What do you see on the plate, Larry? Share with me.”
“It moves… and what?” he stuck a finger in the mushy pile and tasted, “Red blood… my God! Real red blood!”
“It’s okay, Larry. That’s what I see too… but it’s just Ketchup.” I stuck my finger in the pile, “The blood is Ketchup, Larry. Blood has a taste and smell you can’t forget.”
“I never tripped before, Crash. Everything is new to me.”
“I can guide you through this. It’s the novelty of perspective, Larry, not the novelty of a fantasy of reality. You’ve had hash and eggs before. There’s nothing to be afraid of between your ears, is there Larry?” I asked, knowing there had to be a kaleidoscope of visual delights, odors, senses awake but mostly fears circling around like buzzards… swooping in and snipping and pecking at morsels of crimes and misdemeanors locked away in there. His eyes followed my hand as I waved it over his plate. Larry’s fear was palpable… like a dark aura… a shade between us. I knew I had to gently steer through it or lose him. Hell, he could just as easily switch the focus and direct my consciousness wherever he wished.
“Between my ears? What are you going to do with me, Crash?” His gaze followed after the space where my hand had passed.
 “You know, Larry, my name is David Craszhinski. You can call me David. I’m not going to harm you.”
“David… I know your name. But everybody calls you…”
“Larry. You aren’t just anybody any longer. You are Larry. And Larry, I’m David and I’m going to lead you and we’re going to get through it together.” Repeating his name set it in… scribed it into his hard drive. I had to replace the persona of Doctor Lawrence Spawn with something closer to eye-level. Larry.
Doc sat with hands on the edge of the table and pushed his back against the vinyl cushion… the very idea that we might be pals disgusted him but he tried not to offend me, “Pals? Crash, I don’t get it. The people behind all this… You and Ryan. What makes you think he won’t turn on you?”
“That’s more like it Larry. The people behind this.” He was soft and easy to turn. If I hadn’t been on acid I would have gladly busted a cap between his eyes. Empathy, that’s how acid helped the interrogation.
The acid was hitting me hard too and its power was unexpectedly daunting. I had to focus and make a few friendly suggestions in order to get back on track. Awestruck, Doc was staring at his plate and coffee mug as I asked, “Do you see that? What I’m seeing? I see sparkling iridescent rainbows over an abyss of black…”
Doc’s voice quivered, “Yeh, Crash, I see them too, rainbows…”
“David… I’m David, Larry.” Over gently rolling seas the Dinky Dao plowed on. It was time to get down to brass tacks. I got on beam with Larry’s consciousness and could take him anywhere. I poked at his fear to make sure, “Do you hear that Larry?”
“What? Sure. The engine?”
“Yeh, growling. An angry growling?”
The suggestion worked. Fear’s pallor washed over Doc’s face, “Yes… yes… angry!”
I went with his fear. The engine growled like a tiger in the bowels of the boat. What’s more, it took on my father’s voice… Judge Hard-Ass’ voice… every cop… authority… my own words bounced around…  fear between my ears…. Out of body I watched from above the table and became aware that my lips were moving and the vocal chords that I felt vibrating were my own as I moaned, “snap out of it or you will crash…. Craszhinski!”
My voice caught Larry’s attention, “What? What?”
I came back into my body and to the subject, “So, what? What’s with you Larry?”
“I don’t know what you mean?”
“I mean, what’s with you? Nothing more… nothing less.”
Larry puzzled, “Were you really some kind of spy?”
“Not exactly… not as glamorous… no sex kittens to turn, if you know what I mean.” I answered without thinking… not as glam alright. A murderer maybe… fucking license to kill, yeh, sure. License to bend over for every jackass with a star or two on their collar… “You’ve been watching too many movies, Larry.”
Doc’s fear had dissipated. I’m fishing. Let him run with the line but be sure not to let him go too far. I needed him to feel confident that he’s safe once we dove into the subconscious because that’s where the real sharks swim. The image of the marlin’s head on the pier came alive, saying, “I’m warning you Craszhinski, don’t play with him too long. There’s a great white out there at the helm.”
Anna… My mind went to Anna… then Perry… then Jenny… then Ryan…Yuri… and a mysterious puppeteer… synapses playing musical chairs… focus… goal… why am I here? What am I trying to accomplish? Ryan’s investigation… investigation… interrogation… oh yes, interrogation… “Wazzup Doc?”
We laughed hysterically. I mean, really laughed. Doc kept repeating, “Wazzup Doc… Wazzup Doc!”
After we were done laughing, Doc asked, “Do you believe in God, David?” He was a minister after all.
“God? Be honest, Larry. You don’t believe in fairy tales, do you Reverend?”
“Not really… I mean, I wish I did. It would be easier.”
I had him now. “Easier to what?”
He knew I knew he was a fraud… a big part of him was aware of it, “To confess.”
I went to confession once in Nam. I’m not a Catholic but I liked the idea of going into a dark closet to confess. This crap was eating him up and now I was inside. Time to set up the confessional booth, “Tell me Larry, I know someone like Yuri’s a hired gun but can you tell me who it is he works for.”
Larry spat out one word, “Blatva!” A few minutes passed as it soaked in.
“Blatva? Oh shit.”
His chest expanded… “I told you that you were dealing with more than you can handle… They’ll get Ryan too… if they haven’t already.”
Doc was doing a good job by accident of turning his paranoia onto my own beast. An unconscious power-play on his part. Little phrases like, “If they haven’t got Ryan already.” They stuck… enhanced by my mind already on the edge of control… what if Ryan gets offed? Larry wasn’t a pro but the ego is. The ego is the expert double agent in all of us. It is always on the lookout and ready to counter-attack when threatened. His ego threw back a greater fear in a gentle lob, what if Ryan gets turned! Almost anyone can be turned. Gotta stay on track… it’s Ketchup, not blood. It could just as well be blood… all the blood I’ve ever seen. Crystal clear. Reality or hallucination… it makes no difference. Both are real… all’s the same thing… it merely takes a twist… a change in lighting and someone’s bleeding.

Looking back on this era… the eighties, I can reflect on how these were skilled operatives pulling the strings. I didn’t know what only a few at the top of the intelligence community in the Kremlin and Langley knew; the Soviet Union was falling apart. The Blatva (the Russian brand of the Mafia) was there to welcome their Cold War skills. These characters alone would be tough enough. From what we, as in the USA, should have feared of the Blatva was that the KGB would, and did, take it over sometime in the future. The children would be kicked out of the candy store once the grand play for democracy, Glasnost, was subverted.  They’d elect themselves by brute force. The only ballot needed for real power came from a radioactive capsule dropped into a dissident’s tea or a sniper’s rifle. Yuri was but the first wave of opportunists under the guise of seeking asylum in the land of the free. It wasn’t so much that I was so damned prescient but I could see where trends go.
“I know you, Larry,” I began bringing him home… reeling him in, “You might be a creep but I don’t believe you have it in you to orchestrate anything like this. How did they get their hooks in you?”
Larry straightened up in his seat like I’d hit him with a cattle-prod… “Uh… I dunno, Crash. You think I’m a creep… but it just happened.”
“Happened? Naw, Larry, I don’t think you’re a bad man. Just don’t lie to yourself. Who made it happen? I don’t give a shit about your fun and games before. I get it… you were having the time of your life.”
Larry’s face lit up. The fucker was reliving it. I did think he was a creep and a weak, rotten, son-of-a-bitch… but not intrinsically a bad man. I’ve seen bad men before and he did not qualify.
Empathy was my best tool. “The young girls like Anna, then S & M. I get it, no one was hurt that didn’t want to be hurt. You knew a few people that would like to have pants-party flicks so you filmed the action… it was amateur hour… that ain’t so bad either.” I lied, “Your friends saw a business opportunity. Make a little money… You did make some money from your hobby, Larry, right?”
Larry busted loose in agony, “But I didn’t want it to go as far as it did…”
I had to keep him on the subject, “So, Larry, the pros moved in. Young girls weren’t enough now, were they? You got younger girls. Your clients wanted more. You actually liked that and so did your clients.” I turned to look out through the window and then nodded to Larry for emphasis where we could see Anna at the helm, “Anna got too old for you. Didn’t she? Look at her out there. She’s a woman now. It wasn’t enough to have schoolgirl outfits… they had to be real children Right? How am I doin’? okay yet?”
Larry’s gaze was beyond me towards the window, “Okay, okay. You’re right. You’re right… what do you want me to tell? Yes, I liked it too.”
“You said, it just happened. You said that as though you had no control over what went down.” The LSD was getting to me too. My emotions were flipping from empathy to disgust… I wasn’t interested in what Larry did. I wanted to know who it was behind the scenes… the ones calling the shots. But to get there I had to dig through this pile of rancid shit… go inside his head as dark and fetid as it was. “There are no rules, Larry. No right… no wrong… are you feeling guilty? Is it a foreign feeling to you? Well, that’s good, feel it. Guilt’s good for you. Never mind what Dr. Freud said about it.”
“No, I didn’t mean it to go as far as it did.”
“Snuff films? You can say it. I just did.”
“It was Yuri’s idea! He forced…”
Feigning impatience, I interrupted, “You can do better than whining to me about how the devil made you do it! Tell me something I don’t know, Larry.”
We sat silent for quite a while again. I was tripping. The gentle lifting and falling… the audio of the waters against the hull, the hum of the engine purring… the walls of the cabin breathing in synch with every breath I was taking… While this was going on with my consciousness, it was happening simultaneously with Larry’s, I didn’t suspect or imagine it…. No, I knew I was inside Larry’s head… like the way Charlie Manson got inside the heads of The Family.
 “A name, Larry. Give up one name.”
“I don’t know their names. I know of a house at the edge of Hope ranch, that’s all. They send people to me and I pay a fee…taxes, let’s say. Anna and Yuri know more.”

Anna! Shit. Her story about how she got her studio never made much sense to me. Like Kali, the destroyer of kings, she could be far more dangerous than Yuri or the Blatva. I’m going to have to squeeze information out of her too. I wasn’t so sure I was up to the task and, for the first time since this crap started, I needed a drink to come down off this acid. I softened my tone to a friendly purr, “That’s bullshit Larry. If we’re going to help you, you need to help us.”
He clasped his hands on the side of his head as a vise to squeeze his brains out and whispered, “Smerdyakov. Billionaire, Anton Smerdyakov.”
“KGB?”
“Ex-KGB.”
“Larry, there’s no such thing as ex-KGB.”
  

Thursday, April 7, 2016

Chapter 13: Tiger's Cage

 We took our separate bunks but, saying nothing, Anne slipped into my berth and fell asleep in my arms. I felt like a father holding his child. It had been a long time since I’d been in this domestic a scene. The rocking chair of the ocean waves in the harbor and the sound of the water against the hull lulled me into the serenity of this harmonious atmosphere Anna had created. When I had it, I don’t believe I appreciated it… the comfort of simply holding a loved one.
It was sunrise and the sound of Anna opening and slamming shut the cupboards awoke me from a dream… That is, the erased chalkboard memory of a dream leaving a residue of a feeling… a sense of loss… the image of my daughter… to Anna nudging me, “Wake up sir, your table’s ready.”
She had already started the burners by the time I joined her, “Say, I found powdered eggs, real butter in the fridge, some homemade bread, and cans of corned beef hash here! You hungry for some scrambled powdered eggs and hash?”
Anna burned the bread on the burners into something that resembled toast, fried the and powdered eggs in butter.
Anna watched me looking at the plate without yet taking a bite. She said, “I saw a tiger that had been in a cage for some time. When the cage was opened the tiger hung back as though he didn’t trust the illusion of freedom. Eat dammit. It’s real.”
Years of being alone with one night stands as though I had been in solitary confinement had been relieved… the chains dropped and the cage opened. This girl took an interest in me and that too was a simple comfort I hadn’t had or hadn’t noticed before.
 “Maybe the tiger doesn’t know where it wants to go.” I knew where I wanted to go. I was jealous of Ryan, my friend, … I felt the urge to rip his throat out… she was mine, dammit! The tiger’s figuring out what he wants to eat first. Hunger won the debate and I gobbled up my plate without talking much beyond a grunt of pleasure. Yes, powdered eggs. But they might as well have been gourmet that morning.
I waited for something from the radio and sat in the cabin until noon when she asked, “Can we take the skiff ashore for a hike?”
“It isn’t easy to get out of here,” not wanting to leave the radio, I handed her the binoculars. “Look for yourself.”
“There’s a trail … ain’t so bad in the middle… a creek bed.” Anna eyes locked onto the binoculars checking out the coastline and talking to herself, “You’re right. Terrain’s pretty rough alright,” She handed the binoculars back, “I’ve been here before. Too difficult for day trippers… most won’t come around these parts of the island. Especially from up there.”
I looked up at where she was talking about. It was a warm day… now that the sun shone down from over the cliffs it was downright hot on the water. I didn’t want to leave the boat but thought I’d humor her by agreeing, “Sure, there’s somewhat of a beach anyway. Go ahead. You can take a cold dip… but you’re on yer own.”
By the time I finished saying that, out of the corner of my eye I caught a flash of flesh swoop out over the skiff on the transom. She treaded water, shouting, “Let’s go, pussy!”
I couldn’t let her get by with that kind of challenge so I stripped down to jockey shorts, braced myself and dove. The shock of cold water on bare flesh stunned… numbed… before stimulating me to action. It was more to do my best to get my ass out of the icy embrace of the waters than to catch up with her.
We hiked barefoot and near naked… I mean, Anna hiked and I followed. Not only did she lead but she waited for me and held out a hand on the rough parts of the climb. I wouldn’t be telling the truth if I said that I wasn’t delighted to have Anna in wet skivvies and topless climbing ahead of me. That was when I noticed the tell-tale bruising under her right buttock covered by the transparency of wet cotton briefs. She was a lean and lithe cheetah, though, and physically prepared for any challenge the trail might offer. I hadn’t been working out, or running as much as I once did regular. Chain smoking a couple years had me coughing and out of breath just from the swim. We managed to get to the top and hike through the brush to the point between the two fingered harbor where we had a view of the boat below and the coast of Santa Barbara beyond the Channel. Anna sat, feet dangling over the edge of the precipice, and I approached her perch with caution fighting off an onslaught of vertigo. Ego and my training wouldn’t allow me to succumb to any such fear. Especially since Anna didn’t seem to have had it. I sat to her, catching my breath, I felt better nearer to the ground than standing.
Her eyes were half open when she began to speak, “You’ve been sitting in a cab too long, Crash. Catch your breath and let yourself breathe naturally. Let it happen, Relax your shoulders. Breathe from your belly… just breathe. And crack a smile, asshole.”
I felt almost guilty interrupting, “Are you teaching me how to meditate?”
She grinned, “No, I don’t know shit about that. Not much more than you do. Maybe a bit from yoga. That’s all.”
At first I thought I was humoring her. She closed her eyes and I tried to see behind them… wondering what she was thinking. She might have been looking for something behind that beautiful mystery of her face. It was the best I could do… let her teach me something if it made her feel better.
I distant image came to me as my mind became fixed on hers. They call it a mind meld in akido, “You know; I did meditate. Towards the end in Nam. We went to these people. It must have been part of my job.”
“We?” 
Anna’s simple question opened a door that had been shut… sealed as though something dangerous was behind it. I remembered being there with a woman… I had no idea who she was or what she meant to me. I hadn’t one thought of her since… “Yes, I remember now. This man… this monk. He called it a Buddhist Church… not a temple or something. A bunch of monks trying to make peace, you see… with all sides. Charlie and the rest of us. I went there to… what… to deprogram a high valued deserter. He sought refuge, I think.”
“And there was a woman?”
“Yes, a woman. A beautiful woman,” I said, remembering an image… nothing more. The monks in robes… her face… that monk’s voice… hers too, and she looked something like Anna. “No more please.”
She answered… “Reminds me of a Japanese haiku:
Yu-gasūmi
Omoeba hedatsu
Mukashi Kana
---- Kitō
The mists of evening
When I think of them, far off
Are days of long ago”

After a long silence she said, “It’s you. It’s me, David. I’m as lost as you are and searching for it too.”

The wind was fierce over the slopes of the island and cold on my bare back at times … no trees to break it. I felt its chill against my bare back too… but a warmth arose from my belly… I listened to the mews of gulls but kept an eye out on the channel. Anna, sitting beside me, was a presence… a powerful presence of peace… peace that had evaded me for so many years. We sat together for almost an hour. Pelicans flew past us at eye level in formation.
She opened her eyes, catching me staring at her.
“Are you looking for her now, David?” her voice was as though she was from an altered state… a deeper hypnotic and somewhat comforting one. I almost fell in with her but recoiled. She was giving me a disturbing feeling that arose from my gut. I hate it when people try to guru me. I felt the urge to confess… to tell somebody. I didn’t know what I had to confess. I thought I was just thinking and wasn’t aware that I started to ramble aloud, “I left something in Saigon… I can’t remember… that last day. It was wiped clean. I remember a woman’s plea and running with a child in my arms. It left me then and this thing in me became numb.”
She droned, “What left you Crash? What was the woman to you?”
I wasn’t following her mesmerizing tone, I cried, “Left me? No, left it. I don’t know and it’s not knowing that bugs the shit out of me.”
“You do know, Mr. Craszhinski. It’s in there somewhere.” She came out of the trance state. Her voice was almost normal again. “It’s not so bad, Crash… not knowing, that is.” It felt better… talking with another human being about the emptiness. “I haven’t known my parents… my people since... I have memories… vague… they fade with time. I know foster homes and… I hate to think about it now.”
“I hardly knew mine either… except when I was a kid. Dad gave me a boat.”
 “My shrink hints that’s all she does… one of the reasons…” her voice drifted with the winds. “Crash, you know I’m trying to quit, don’t you… you know, heroin.”
“Fuck yes… I saw… It pisses me off too. Muscle pops on the side of your butt.”
As much as I had been living the low-life and taking every drug I could, my imagination had always held the image of a jaundiced junkie nodded out in some shooting gallery with tracks up and down every available vein. But, other than that bruise on her butt, Anna was vibrant and healthy to look at. Her body perfect and her mind clear. Young, you can get by with it for a while when you’re young.
“I’m trying Crash… been trying since…”
“You were dope-sick, not sea-sick, last night? You fixed.”
My heart felt like lead was poured into it. I wanted badly to let it out… to cry…. to curse… I swallowed… gulped it down. Sitting there on the precipice I understood… it was a flash. Looking down at the Sherlock bobbing gently at anchor from the edge of the cliff we sat on, I thought of Earhart taking his dive off the bridge. It was his last chance to get back to his warrior soul… and Anna… she had been committing the same suicide I had been and we were in the same boat in more ways than one.
She didn’t answer my question but continued as if to harass me, “I watched you become a drunk. Driving a cab at night when I met you… hiding from it.”
“I know. I know…” I wondered how she got so abstract wise. Our daily reality shocks normal people with so-called, normal lives and they think we suffer our symptoms… treat them with chemicals that don’t fucking work. We know the proper medication on the street if that’s the only aim. It’s not their fault. They just don’t get it.
“Do you believe in Karma, Crash?”
“Now, don’t go hippy on me, Anna.”
“No one can be expected to understand, David Crazhinski. You still have it there in you.”
I loved her clarity. I’d been thinking the same all this time. Where did she get that? A young junkie teaching a weary old drunk.
She must have read my thoughts when she said, “I’ve been trying like you. I love you, David Craszhinski.”
I know shrinks call it transference, “No… no please, Anna. I can’t… I don’t know why for sure but…”
“Maybe not that way then,” she elbowed me… jabbed so hard it almost bruised, “but maybe the way two people surviving a sinking ship care for each other, okay?”
She was making me nervous and I hoped to make her nervous too. I threw in some sarcasm to ease the tension, “Until the water and food starts to run out and one of us has to eat the other.”

She jumped up on her feet, pivoting on one foot perilously near the edge of a hundreds-foot fall as if trying to catch a pelican soaring close by, she yawked, “Fa-a-a-awk it!”
She came back to me, lifting me with force dangerously cantilevered only by my weight, gripping my hands, and arching her back over the rim of a hundred-foot drop as though trying to pull me over the edge with her. Like the child she still was she demanded, “Let’s fly like pelicans…”
She let go of me so that I had to step back and catch my balance. Scared shitless, I thought for sure she would be sailing over the edge but raised her arms like a crazy Isadora Duncan she pivoted, pirouetting, on one foot. I checked my feet where I stood and fought vertigo to look at her. She fearlessly squealed bird noises to an approaching pelican formation, “See, you stopped me from the brink… we balance each other… Screech, scawtch, skree… C’mon, Crazhinski!”
 “Fuck girl, don’t scare me like that!” then it felt silly. I looked around to see if anyone was watching this display of idiocy.
She came back to embrace me full body. Our nakedness melding. She smiled and, between breaths, she panted, “See, we were getting too heavy. We need to let out some tension.”
Tension? Unrelenting winds like what was blowing up there was a force of nature I couldn’t fight and an unknown foe on the sea evoked tension enough for me. There were no trees anywhere but the ones hiding in the ravines. No seed but thistle and scrub thorny barberry had time to plant itself there and she had been close to being blown away too.
More tension was jetting across the Channel at eighty-knots in our direction. It was close enough for me to see its wake with the naked eye. It would have been a good thing to have the binoculars from this vantage but I knew the chances were a thousand to one it against it being anyone else’s boat other than Doc’s. That was okay with me because in times like these I needed the string pulled tight as an e-string on a Stradivarius.
Anna’s heard it too. I felt a little better once I saw it turned towards Prisoner’s Harbor. We watched the channel. Her voice broke through the wind, “Might be nothing. Let’s go back. There’s another way to let off tension. The wind cleared my mind.”
The girl was coming on to me again but the taboo had been becoming clearer and it stuck, so, to redirect the innuendo, I joked, “Did you say, the wind killed a mime?”
She gave me an elfish grin that was so cute I wanted to kiss her before she gut-laughed, “Ha! Yeh, let’s go.”
“Right, let’s go.” The image of the Cigarette boat with Yuri and an AK displaced any other erotic notion I might have enjoyed. I wanted to fly down to the Sherlock and hear whatever chatter came out of the scanner.
The climb down was easier except for a few of the more daunting drops and, as soon as we got back to the beach, Anna challenged, “Let’s race to the boat. Loser cooks!”
She was in the water before I could answer. I ran across the beach behind her and dove in. I’m a fairly good swimmer but was humiliated. Not only that I couldn’t catch her but she put another length on her lead before we got to the boat.
Knowing she kicked my ass, I whined a weak protest, “Foul! You had a head start!” We hung on to the diver’s ladder over the stern. I admired how proficient she seemed to be at anything she put her mind to. I have to be honest about it too. I wanted to touch her… hold her… but something held me back.
“It doesn’t make you a loser, Crash. You just lost this one.”
We boarded the ladder into boat in time for a call from Ryan. “Home Base Dang, Home Base Dang calling Sherlock… Sherlock… San Pedro. Ralph’s San Pedro… Dream’s at Prisoners Harbor… Santa Cruz.” He emphasized the misdirection, “San Pedro… repeat, no potato and Ralph’s.”
“Way… Way… Way… Roger that.”
“What’s that, baby talk… way-way dang-dang way-way?”
We use our old handles. He was Dang… i.e., Da Nang, and mine was Way as in Hue… simple but good enough an identity shield.”
 Ryan, love that old fox in times like these… confuse anyone listening. He emphasized San Pedro several times. They wouldn’t figure out who or what or whether Ralph’s a bar, a landmark, or a friend’s place. It’s a place alright, five hundred miles north. Point San Pedro is at the entrance to San Rafael estuary. We’d used the name Ralph before, while talking about San Quinton, the City, the Bay from Rio Vista all the way south to Coyote Creek. My father ended up in San Quinton before he died and Ryan knew about it.

Weighing anchor, we got underway as dusk settled a little early because of a fog bank coming in. It was dark enough to hardly make out the coast line. No sooner than after we passed the pinnacles at the entrance of the harbor nearing the Arch Rock, I heard what I figured was the same Go-Fast that patrolled the harbor. It was loud off the Starboard side coming our way. They make ‘em that way. Like a Harley… no one would buy ‘em if they were quieter.
I cut the power behind the Rock. Our radar got a blip off Doc’s boat because his had a radar mast. I knew he would have seen us had he been paying attention. It was a slim chance Mizz Sherlock hadn’t been noticed on their screen before we could duck into the radar shadow of the Arch Rock.
We had to use stealth in lieu of speed. I could hear its engine’s roar coming closer but could see nothing from where we idled behind the rock. With my Browning I wouldn’t have a shot until they came within sight of our hiding place and I could be sure that, whoever they were they would be armed better than us. Counter Intelligence in Nam Browning automatics were standard issue and I was good over fifty yards with one but not good enough to go against an AK or whatever they had.
I listened to the scanner in the cabin for radio chatter among the gossip of lobster and urchin boats until I heard, “Shoreline… Shoreline to Dream Boat Shoreline to Dream Boat… Lady’s Harbor... Not there, you lazy worthless. Try Potato Harbor. Copy Dream Boat.”
“Dream Boat to Shoreline… Copy.”
Lazy… I counted on Doc being lazy. He didn’t have the thoroughness to check out where we were helpless. I was happy that Potato Harbor was far enough away to give me a lead out of range off their radar if I powered along the coast. Potato Harbor’s at the other end of the island. I skirted so close to the shore that I nearly grounded her on the shoals at West Point. Heading further out through the straights between Santa Rosa and Santa Cruz into the open seas was my best bet. I was hoping they would assume I’d hug the coast and try to catch me on the east end of the island. Failing that they would go south towards San Pedro.

Once out past East Point of Santa Rosa I was on the open seas where, if I was going to die, I’d rather die there than anywhere else on the whole planet Earth. After all, I had a sturdy boat and a mate as wild as any seas. I thanked Ryan in my heart for putting the helm of such a fine craft in my hands… not to mention the package.
We would be sitting ducks against Doc if he was paying attention or didn’t buy into Ryan’s crafty obfuscation.
 The scanner confirmed we were being monitored as it squawked with the hint of a Slavic accent, “Shoreline… Shoreline to Dream Boat… Sherlock, San Pedro. Copy.”
“Shoreline…. Hmmm. Sounds like Yuri’s call… He’s still ashore or calling from another boat,” I said after we were well beyond the straits into the blue waters.
“C’mon…” Anna didn’t seem to care about my concerns and insisted, “I see, nothin’ to worry about. I’m still fuckin’ hungry. Time for brunch. Plenty here for you to cook. Your turn, you know. Ryan stocked us up pretty good.”
She was right, we were likely okay for the moment. I feigned a complaint, “I was going to cook…”

Friday, March 25, 2016

Chapter 12. Safe Harbor

If there’s a place for the sunset, it’s at sea. I idled at the pyramid to the display of crimson and golden light sinking behind the silhouette of the mesa above the shoreline. I circled back, dropped anchor at East Beach as soon as the marine layer came in, doused the cabin lights and waited for the double cover of the night.
Ryan was up to some dark shit and I kicked myself for not asking more questions. I began wondering about this Yuri too; thinking he might already be looking for me, or the Sherlock, at the Harbor. I lifted the seat on the stern where the outboard was stored and pulled out the case. The case held a Browning semi-automatic pistol and a shoulder holster with several boxes of 9mm ammo for it. The Browning’s holster fit nicely. I smiled. I hadn’t a sidearm strapped on me in a decade and it felt good. Ryan’s and Anna’s shenanigans were taking me on an adventure that could be deadly and, if anyone asked, I wouldn’t have admitted I missed that kind of action since Saigon fell.  Thank God, not all GI’s baptized in the blood and gore of combat felt the way I did about it.
Most sailors keep a few books in their cabins. In one cupboard was a copy of the Bhagavad Gita. Some of the best read folks, though not always academically bred, are those in prisons and the military. I’d even read it before I got dinged but I must have skipped over some of these stanzas. Shades pulled, and under the soft glow of the desk lamp of the chart table, I opened it to a page and read. I could hear Krishna speak to Arjuna as the hypnotic sea gently rolled under the deck. I read between the lines of the stanzas regarding the castes, “The Priests, the Warriors, the fuckin’ regular people with homes, families, and careers. Krishna advises Arjuna that he can’t help to be anything but what he was born to be. Who’s to say my fate wasn’t to be condemned to an asylum or prison, an outcast. Arjuna was told to accept that his place in life arose from his own nature.
I took a deep breath and sighed the sorrow of resignation. So, we are born the way we are. I had been granted a part in the universe I’d denied. I tried to find peace back “in the world” where no peace for my kind could be found. No, it wasn’t just the cluster-fuck we called Vietnam. It was as though Krishna’s voice broke through the fog, “Strap on your Browning Arjuna and get back into the mix.”
“Hearing voices?” I questioned this bout of narcissism and anyone else would say I was more screwed up than Casey. He was, at least, harmless in a way that I was most certainly not.
Sure, I’d witnessed several of these guys talk about guilt from their experiences and adjusting to coming home as if they were reciting what they figured the shrink or their fellows in Group wanted to hear. But, when they talked about combat, their tenor changed… sometimes ever so slightly… but it changed. Any good therapist could spot it. Before anything else… the hardest thing to admit, in those circles at the VA, was the fact that some of us loved the action… feared it… were trained for it… but loved it and nothing… nothing could replace what happened to our spirits when death was at the door and we fuckin’ blew it away. It was the immortality of the moment. Ryan salved it positively by becoming a cop. Casey and I found solace in the bottle. But we had that in common. Once the lab rats map out the hi-way of our DNA, I’m certain that the warrior gene will be found on one of its off-ramps. We could never go back to being plain old civilians, even if Vietnam never happened. It was a double helix screw that bore into us like a worm and ate us from the inside out. The thought occurred to me that maybe… just maybe, Anna had it too by virtue of her birth in a nasty place.
I took out the Channel chart to familiarize myself with the Island’s rocks and shoals. I had been to all the Channel Islands. Images of the coastline came back. The chart refreshed my memory as well as the seascape, going over it to happier times of sailing with Ryan and scuba diving in the various sea-caves and inlets with Elaine. But even these pleasant thoughts turned sour. I had to reverse the downward spiral of morose memories with the task at hand.
There were a few beers in the cabin’s small fridge but I craved the sugar sweetness of a soda instead. I realized I hadn’t the DTs I’d feared since my last drink. I should’ve. I always did when I dried out a few days. I had nothing more than the usual hangover, and some shakes, but it was remarkably easy to quit this time. It had never been this easy for me whenever I tried previously. Shit, it had been a couple years of hard daily drinking. I’d heard others say the same thing happened to them when they’d gone bat-shit religious. They always attributed it to a miracle… an act of God or any one of a hundred ambiguous Kahunas. It made believers of them. I hadn’t any such an apparition or transcendent experience. I’ve heard it said that a dramatic… or traumatic… conversion experience, changes the brain chemistry but that wasn’t quite enough of an explanation for me. I could have been driven into further depression but it was as though my friends on the Wall had called me to a mission. Maybe Earhart’s spirit was my version of a Higher Power.
I approached the SB harbor rowing the skiff between the pilings under the Harbor Restaurant as the fog set-in thick as snot. That helped to make the shortcut under the wharf harder for the eyes of the nightshift rent-a-cops to see. I knew they usually smoked a cigarette, or something stronger, at the end of the pier after each round.

Sports-fishing and whale watching excursion boats tie up on the interior side of a small jetty inside the entrance to the harbor. Along its spine of boulders, under a walkway to a navigation light, a narrow strip of sand made for a small spit on the outside of the harbor.
Almost to the jetty, a go-fast cigarette boat, appeared off my port bow. A search light radiated a halo in the fog, furtively side to side, scanned the marinas. She’d been coming directly towards me. I beached the skiff and leaned back, digging my heels into the wet sand, and tugged it to the boulders where I ducked in their shadow. Just in time, she turned her beam away to check out the slips behind the breakwater. I wouldn’t use a light to search at night… especially in fog. Two things happen; it effectively blinds the eye to any movement outside of its scope of light and even a light mist spreads it out and throws it back at ya cutting visibility to a few yards.
Adrenaline stood my senses at the relief of going unseen. I crouched and made for a space between a couple of rocks while I took a breath and looked for an escape route, or some kind of package, stashed there. As though a boulder had risen, a dark form that had been squatting in the shadows of the rocks only a few yards from me came out. The mission already compromised, I readied myself, gripping the Browning from inside my coat.
The form got closer and I let my breath out. It was Anna tossing a sea bag over her shoulder. She passed me on the way to the skiff and whispered, “C’mon.” She dropped the sea-bag over the gunnels. I expected that to be all there would be to it and she would turn away.
Instead she helped me push off the skiff from the beach.
“What’s in the bag?”
“My clothes,” ankle deep she jumped in. Then, commanding in a low voice, “No time for small talk, let’s get out of here.”
“So, you’re the package?”
 “I said, no time to chat.”
The cigarette boat roared up to the outer jetty’s sand-spit buoys and turned back towards the harbor. the search light scoured everything like a wand, swinging side to side. I could make out the name on its starboard bow when it turned nearer to us. It was The Doctor’s Dream. That figured. His was one of the few cigarette boats in the harbor. She got close enough to illuminate the skiff in its beam and give the jetty rocks a look over. Thankfully, he was too lazy to get off his boat to check out a beached skiff. He had to be looking for the Sherlock solo. If Yuri was with him was the pro I thought he was, he would have preferred using a night vision device.
We took the chance to row over to Stern’s Wharf as it cruised further into the harbor and cut is motors.
I took the chance on making a little noise once we were a hundred yards on the other side of the Wharf and started the outboard on the first pull. We put up aside the Sherlock without further incident and boarded while I watched for the cigarette boat. I passed the light outboard motor and sea bag up to Anna and climbed back aboard. She slung the sea bag over her shoulder, one hand on the rail, swung up deftly on the runner going forward, dropped her bag down the forward hatch, came around and jumped down on the deck behind me.
Anna was cheerful, “Aye Mate. Been knockin’ the hats off strangers lately?”
I put a finger to my lips, “Shush. Help me pull in the skiff.”
My hands weren’t used to ropes and rigs and I could figure, neither were hers. Regardless, hand over hand, we lifted it over the side in unison like old salts before I asked, “Knocking off hats?”
I put the small outboard in its ventilated locker. Working together gingerly, we strapped the skiff, keel up, in its place across the stern. She shouted against the deep growl of the engine, “You know… feeling grim? November of the soul?”
Oh, its Melville. I did the finger quote thing, “Then I account it high time to get to sea as soon as I can.” I felt a little pride I remembered it.
The deep grumble of the 1946 straight-eight marine engine made enough noise to bother me for one moment. The Sherlock was painted a dark blue. Without running lights in the fog, it would be hard for anyone to see us. Still, we had to get some distance from the harbor because there was no way we would be able to outrun the go-fast at our fifteen knots top speed. Anna huddled next to me, holding herself, in hoody and sweats… might have been warm enough for Santa Barbara winters ashore but not where we were sailing.
“Speaking of November, it’s colder than day-old dog shit out here!”
“You’re underdressed for going down to sea.”
I don’t like surprises and it was a surprise that she was aboard but, more surprisingly, I was glad to see her. I patted her behind to step into the cabin, “There’s foul weather gear in the fo’rd hold. Help yourself.”

She yelled back on her way down cheerfully, “I know this boat better than you do.”

She came out of the cabin presenting a cute picture standing on deck fully dressed in oversized Macs looking like a Norman Rockwell child playing in her dad’s New England lobstermen’s slicks. She asked, “Ryan said something that I had no idea of... you know. What do you think he meant ‘by full circle’?”
“Don’t ask me. He doesn’t waste words. Has to be something he wants us to think about.” I was smiling. We were far enough past the buoys by then so I took her up to 10 knots. She wasn’t made to plane but for plowing through the swells instead of slapping and banging over them as any faster boats her size would.
I looked back from the helm at Anna sitting on the transom and watching the wake roll out into the dark behind us in the inky deep. Full circle indeed. The words came out without me thinking as it dawned on me, “To the sky gods. I’ll be fuckin’ goddamned!” Fatigue must have been getting to me because my belly rolled out a laugh in the wake of the possibility, “April fuckin thirtieth!”
“What’s so funny ‘bout my birthday?”
I don’t know why I hadn’t suspected before. That the girl I gave to the Sky Gods might as well had been Anna.
Trying to conceal this troubling revelation from her, I asked, “What did Ryan tell you about this trip besides you being the package I was picking up?”
Mizz Sherlock began cutting through the gently rolling seas that were growing. She held on, standing next to me at the helm, under the overhang of the cabin.
Ryan’s package comment stuck. I had to ask, “Do you remember anything about Saigon?” Anna didn’t answer. She was turning green. I knew the signs and pointed to the port side of the deck, “There’s a bucket in that locker. Go over the side or in the can but don’t use the head.”
She sat at the gateleg table in the cabin with the bucket on deck next to her. I hollered into the hatch, “Open the windows a crack ‘cause, if you’re staying in there, the cabin makes it worse. Fresh air out here’s better. Not much, but better.”
“I don’t give a shit,” she answered while opening the windows within reach before the sound of ralphing came back out at me. She moaned, “I’ve never been sea-sick before!”
“Anyone can get it if it hits you right.” I turned the navigation lights on when we entered the shipping lanes to reduce the chances of a tanker running us down. It’s best to give out tasks to sea-sick sailors and I knew it would get a bit rougher soon enough. I hollered into the cabin, “Anna, make sure the forward hatch is battened down. And then come back here and make sure the skiff is secured good.
The currents in the channel are jokesters and they could easily take us off-course over two miles. A warm stream runs northward along the Santa Barbara side of the coast but the prevailing cold stream from the Gulf of Alaska runs further out and part of it turns between the north flowing current on the coast and the Islands. This makes for a confusing drift to amateur sailors and, with the winds adding to this, the seas churn up like a mad dog at the most unexpected times. I expected it and enjoyed how Mizz Sherlock handled the white capped swells. For the fun of it I had her full throttle over the top of one wave and plunging down the trough and into the next, sending spray radiating from her prow high and wide, before I cut back for Anna’s sake and to maintain her into the seas.
We made only about three knots progress for about an hour but it was safer at this speed. The seas calmed into gentle rolling a mile south of the shipping lanes in the shelter of the island. This did little to relieve Anna’s seasickness. By the time we came in sight of the lights at Prisoner Harbor, the marine layer lifted. The pier was ninety degrees dead ahead from three miles out when I snuffed the running lights. I set my direction but couldn’t see much of anything but shadow of the Island on the radar screen. I turned Mizz Sherlock’s bearing forty degrees to the starboard side hoping the reverse current would take us less than twenty degrees north. We were only a couple hundred yards off the coast when I spotted the entrance to Lady’s Harbor by the glow of the surf churning up a soft bio-luminescence on the shoals at each side. We got lucky going down the coast in the dark even with radar especially passing the shoals. Once safe in the harbor by midnight, we dropped anchor where it was only a couple fathoms deep. I’d been in Lady’s Harbor before and always thought it was the best of all the anchorages for its privacy. It had the extra assurance of no hiking trails above the surrounding cliffs.
Anna came out of the cabin and emptied her bucket over the side. “Sorry, I never get sea-sick.” And putting her fingers on chart, said, “It’s a Peace Sign.”
I knew she was still green in the gills but it was good she was trying to be nonchalant so I asked for distraction’s sake, “What’s a peace sign?”
She held two fingers to my face in a V, “Yeah, look… the chart, the harbor’s shape’s a peace sign,”
Hanoi Jane and the anti-war movement sickened my spleen so I countered, “I prefer Winston Churchill’s Victory Sign for us.”

Her eyes bore through me, “No, my friend, we need peace.”