Thursday, March 26, 2020

Robert Chicory. Chapter Two.




“The boy needs glasses!” boomed Dr. Portmanteau, the principal at Robert Chicory’s school, after hearing from the school nurse that the boy complained every day of severe headaches, and from his teachers that the boy’s attitude seemed suddenly inattentive and lethargic.
He made this remark to his assistant, Perkins -- a small spindly man that life had bent, folded, and mutilated into a humorless sycophant. Dr. Portmanteau, on the other hand, was one of those dedicated educators who was blessed with an innate knowledge that he was always right and was always expected to deliver his opinions at the top of his lungs. He gave the impression of a bullfrog about to explode.


“Astigmatism” asserted Portmanteau loudly, “is the bane of the modern educator. Statistics clearly show that nine times out of ten a student who is doing poorly is unable to see the blackboard properly -- or else is going deaf. That is a common phenomenon in modern schools as well!”


“So I have always understood” agreed Perkins, while surreptitiously sweeping a handful of pencils into his coat pocket. He liked to sharpen them with a pen knife at home; he didn’t write anything with them, he just liked whittling away at them at the kitchen table.


“Send for the boy at once” commanded the principal. “I’ll soon get to the bottom of this.”


“At once” echoed Perkins, already halfway out the door.


For it was true that poor Robert was oppressed with terrible headaches and a general feeling of malaise -- it had started the moment his loving mother had put the claptrap necklace around his neck. She had then kissed his forehead and sent him scampering off to school for the day -- except that Robert didn’t feel like scampering much all of a sudden. His head throbbed and his chest felt constricted, and he almost returned home to seek his mother’s tender arms and a cup of her soothing herbal tea. But he soldiered on -- a phrase he had heard his father use many times, especially on a Monday morning before going in to work. 


The boy was ushered into the presence of Dr. Portmanteau, somewhat in the manner of a petitioner being allowed into the inner sanctum of an oriental potentate.


“Sit down, Robert” said Portmanteau, then immediately held up a balled fist. “How many fingers am I holding up?” he asked. Before Robert could answer he pointed at a misty water color on the wall showing an indeterminate number of sailboats on a lake. “How many boats do you see in that picture?” he quizzed Robert. When Robert was slow to respond, Portmanteau looked at Perkins and gave a severe nod, which Perkins was only too happy to imitate back at him.


“The boy is intellectually behindhand, no doubt about it” he said to Perkins. “I want you to arrange the standard battery of intelligence and motor skill tests for the boy this afternoon.”


Perkins nodded eagerly. He excelled at administering tests of byzantine complexity and opaque purpose to little children. He could often make them cry, which he felt was what a good educator was all about. 


“Come, Robert” he said to the bewildered boy, “we are going to the Testing Center.” 


Meanwhile, at the Marmalade Hotel, where Robert’s grandfather kept a suite of rooms in the back, an intense and vociferous game of piffle was being played on a green baize table littered with half-eaten sandwiches, sticky bottles of celery tonic, and salted peanut shells.  


“I’m in for half a drizzle” said Robert’s grandfather, Horatio Snork, carelessly pushing a pile of tokens into the middle of the table, knocking over several bottles of half drunk celery tonic in the process.


His bidding adversary, Potato Nose Grogan, gave him a narrow stare. 


“I’m going to lift you” said Grogan, turning over his cards. The room full of kibbitzers immediately broke into howls of derision -- no one could beat a double penuche, no one! Not even that sly devil Snork!


“I claim the twenty minute privilege” was all Snork said in reply, keeping his cards up close to his wrinkled shirtfront. The game had been going on all night. 


The crowd welcomed the opportunity to raid the buffet table again. Say what you like, old Snork kept a groaning board for his guests, invited or otherwise, that never disappointed. There were candied yams smothered in marshmallow sauce; pickled herring by the bucket; toasted goose livers; cream of butter soup; marinated kumquats; dinner rolls the size of bowling balls; and a tray of foreign cheeses so piquant and intoxicating that after one bite a mouse could beat up a cat. 


“You won’t get out of this one, Snork” Potato Nose Grogan said to Robert’s grandfather. “I’m gonna go get me a smoked sheep kidney.” So saying, Grogan got up from the table and headed into the crowd of happy moochers, who slapped him on the back and congratulated him on finally pulling one over on their host, leaving Snork all alone at the baize table, with nobody near enough to spit on. The old man shrugged his shoulders silently, thinking to himself ‘winners wear out their welcomes fast, but you never get tired of talking to a loser.’


As the crowd lost itself in gorging at his expense, Horatio Snork thought back over the years to other times when he was in the bleak soup. There was that time up in Purgatory Falls, surrounded by wiffle ball enthusiasts who resented his presence in town selling official major league baseballs -- he had only escaped their clutches by distracting them with a bag of turtles long enough to get into his car, lock the door, and drive straight through the farmer’s market back onto the highway. Or the time that witch Marilyn conjured up a ninja pizza that went straight for his throat . . . 


Just as things looked bad for Snork, his grandson and Perkins the sycophant arrived at the Testing Center. This was a two story dull gray brick building in a part of town that discouraged interest or ambition. It was filled with dry cleaning shops, small ramshackle warehouses, and thrift stores that smelled like camphor and baked beans. Perkins lost no time in having Robert registered, as ‘educationally unsound, possibly going blind’ and seated at a desk in an empty room. Sunlight snuck through the windows like a fugitive. 


“Our first order of business” said Perkins gleefully, “ is to determine your hand/eye coordination. We will accomplish this with a series of simple tests.”


Perkins held up a blue ping pong paddle in his right hand, and a red ping pong paddle in his left hand. He began twirling them around, like a windmill. 


“Now, Mr. Chicory, if you will kindly pay attention -- I want you to tell me when the blue paddle has stopped -- do it by raising your left hand and wiggling your index finger.”


Robert’s headache was particularly bad today. His head felt like it was in a vise. His eyes were watering, which blurred his vision somewhat -- and so he did not pay attention when Perkins suddenly stopped both paddles, unintentionally letting the red one fly out of his hand and exit via the window. 


“Completely unresponsive!” said Perkins to himself in triumph, scribbling away on a clipboard.


“Why did you throw the red one one out the window, Mr. Perkins?” asked Robert. 


“Subject is prone to hallucinations . . . “ Perkins said severely, starting a whole new page on the clipboard. Robert waited patiently for him to finish. He just wanted to go home and lie down until he felt better. He looked out the window, beyond the tawdry warehouses and thrift stores, to a large green mound, where noisy mud birds were circling endlessly.


“Courage, our friend” a dim voice whispered in his head. “This clown cannot harm you -- he can’t even pinch you! We’re going to break one of our own rules and help you out for the next bit of nonsense . . . “


“Come, come, Chicory -- less daydreaming and more focus please!” said Perkins imperiously. He was enjoying himself immensely -- Dr. Portmanteau rarely let him go off by himself to torture students. This was capital fun!


Perkins led the way to another room; this one featured a large blackboard that took up one whole wall. 
“You are to use the blackboard in front of you to solve a series of mathematical problems I shall give to you” said Perkins importantly. “We will start with simple equations and work our way up to more complex problems -- to test your logic as well as your mathematical abilities. Are you ready?”


“Yes sir” said Robert quietly.


“Good. Here goes. What is two plus five plus three minus one?”


Robert picked up a piece of chalk, slowly worked the problem out on the board, and turned his gaze back to Perkins.


“Seven is the correct answer” said that worthy, sounding a tad disappointed at Robert’s success.


But before he could fling down another numerical challenge a skeleton, fully articulated, walked into the room and up to Perkins -- who stared at it in uncomprehending terror.


“You the jasper giving this kid a hard time?” the skeleton asked -- although how it managed to have a voice without any lungs was a mystery that Perkins gave much thought to during his leisure moments many years later. Right now all he could manage was to make a gobbling sound in reply, similar to a turkey’s death rattle. The skeleton then went over to Robert, who did not find it frightening so much as intriguing.


“How do you hold all those bones together?” he asked the skeleton.


“It’s personal magnetism, kid -- personal magnetism” replied the skeleton. “C’mon, let’s blow this morgue. I’ll walk you part way home.” So saying, the skeleton took Robert’s hand and they walked out of the room, leaving a petrified Perkins behind. When Perkins finally stopped shaking he ran pell mell back to the school to breathlessly tell Dr. Portmanteau what happened. The doctor was not prone to believe him in the least.


“That’s insane, Perkins -- insane!” roared the doctor at Perkins, who was still shaking intermittently like a pair of maracas. “You have strained your feeble intellect well beyond the breaking point at the Testing Center -- I can see now I should have been the one to take the boy down there. You can’t handle such things. I’m sending you away to a rest farm in the country for six weeks. Pack your bags and be on the next train to . . . to . . .  to anywhere, for all I care!” Dr. Portmanteau turned his back haughtily on Perkins, who slunk out of the doctor’s office and was never seen again at that school. 


The skeleton and Robert walked up one street and then down another, until they came to the Hotel Marmalade.


“My grandpa lives there” Robert told the skeleton proudly. “He’s rich and famous and knows lots about everything!”


“Do tell!’ replied the skeleton, which had started to disintegrate and knew it only had a few minutes of existence left. “Well, let’s go in and see the old boy -- whaddya say?”


“Sure!” said Robert. His headache didn’t seem to be bothering him much anymore. He was having an adventure that you only found in the best kind of story books.


The desk clerk didn’t bat an eye when the skeleton came up to him to ask which room a Mr. Snork had. Hotel desk clerks see way too much, especially in the middle of the night, to ever be thrown for a loop.


“He’s in the back, hosting a game of piffle. It’s getting kind of rowdy -- I wouldn’t advise taking a child back there right now” the clerk said, managing to sound both superior and completely bored at the same time.


“This is his grandson -- he’s full of magic, or will be some day. He’ll be safe anywhere” replied the skeleton, just as its skull came off its neck, rolling away and vanishing into a dusty mist. The rest of its body collapsed into a small pile of gray dust as well. 


“Boy!” said the desk clerk loudly. “Clean up at the front desk! As for you, young man, if you’re related to that rascal Snork I guess you’ll be as safe as anyone back in that den of iniquity. Just go down the hall and turn right.”


This would be the first time Robert had ever been to his grandfather’s room without his parents along. He ran all the way.


No one answered his knock, so he pushed open the door to find a gesticulating group surrounding his grandfather at a green baize table.


“Admit it, Snork” Potato Nose Grogan was saying. “You’re up a creek without a fiddle! Show us your cards and let’s get this funeral over with!” The crowd surrounding the putative winner Grogan began nodding vigorously in agreement, dislodging various bits of sandwich and blobs of mustard from their gluttonous faces which then flew across the room in a haphazard and aromatic blizzard. 


“Hold your horse shoes, Potato Nose” Snork replied firmly. “I’m now going to invoke Rule 51.”


Silence descended like a giant sheet cake. 


“What? What Rule 51? What are you talking about, you old villain?” demanded Potato Nose Grogan.


Grandpa Snork waved airly towards the bookcase by the couch.


“Take a gander in the book -- The Vade Mecum of Piffle, by Hickenlooper. That will set you straight about Rule 51.”


Potato Nose Grogan shot up and was at the bookcase in a blur of agitated speed. He found the book, opened it up, and, turning white as a cod fillet, began reading in a strangled voice:


Should a player produce a double penuche he or she shall be declared winner of that game, except in the case of another player invoking the twenty minute rule unchallenged. In that case, the double penuche is rendered null and void, and the player who was granted the twenty minute respite will be declared the winner.


“How, how in blazes did you know about this?” asked the chapfallen Grogan, closing the book and putting it back into the bookcase.


“I am what you call a serious student of all games of chance, and I especially like to know about the loopholes” said Snork, silently thanking his lucky stars that Grogan had not had the presence of mind to look at the publishers’ imprint on the piffle rule book. If he had, he would have seen that it was published by Snork Publishing. And then might have guessed that Snork himself had a hand in inserting that egregious ruling on the off chance he was ever in a game where he came up against a double penuche. 


One thing you could say about Potato Nose Grogan was that he was a good loser. He walked up to Snork, who was still seated at the baize table, nibbling on a piece of maple candy, and handed him a set of keys.


“Here” said Grogan gruffly. “You won ‘em fair and square. My dockyard and the boat.”


“You mean that old tub, the Puddle Bat?” asked Snork, fingering the keys.


“Yeah, I mean the Puddle Bat -- and she ain’t no tub! She’s as sea worthy as any other boat afloat!”


“No doubt, no doubt” said Snork mildly. “Here.” He threw most of the keys back to Potato Nose Grogan. “You can keep the dock -- I got no use for it. And I’ll keep the Puddle Bat. I might need it for an expedition I’m thinkin’ about takin’ one of these fine days . . . Hello dere, Robert!”


The old man waved Robert over to his side.


“What are you doin’ here, my boy?” he asked fondly. “Where’s your parents? Don’t tell me you come all this way by yourself!”


“Oh, grandpa! I was in school and then I was being tested by mean old Mr. Perkins and then a real live skeleton, I mean real, uh, real, uh dead skeleton come to get me and we walked by here and my headache isn’t so bad now cuz I’m with you . . . “ Robert stopped his mad rush of words to give his grandfather an enthusiastic hug.

The crowd of hardened gamblers and raffish kibbitzers looked on with misty affection, until they remembered they were a crowd of hardened gamblers and raffish kibbitzers -- at which point they gruffly demanded to know what Snork was going to do with Potato Nose Grogan’s boat. They leered at Robert as well -- trying to give him the impression they were a desperate bunch of ne’er-do-wells who would cut his throat for a grilled cheese sandwich. Robert simply stared back at them and smiled the full and open smile of a boy safe in the company of his beloved grandfather. Somewhat abashed, the crowd shifted its attention back to the remains of the buffet table, where everything was either wilted, crumbled, melted, or being carried away by an army of industrious ants. 


“None of your beeswax” replied Snork to the general hullabaloo about the Puddle Bat. “I’ll be taking that up with Mr. Grogan personally after I escort this fine young man back to his parent’s house.” The old man got up from the green baize table and left with Robert. At the front desk he told the desk clerk to send the riot squad to his rooms and clean out the moochers but let Potato Nose Grogan stay as long as he wanted. The clerk nodded briskly as he began beating on a large brass gong. The riot squad was always good for business -- they created a stir around town that gave the Marmalade Hotel the reputation of a dangerous place where anything might happen  -- and the out of towners loved to think they were balancing on a precipice when they checked in there. Plus they gave the desk clerk enormous tips for directions to the ‘danger zones.’ The desk clerk usually gave them the address of the public library.


“So a skeleton brought you to me, eh?” asked Snork, as he and Robert ambled along the streets towards home.


Robert gave his grandfather a blow-by-blow account of the whole incident, not forgetting to mention how sick he’d been feeling ever since his mother made him start wearing the claptrap necklace. This worried the old man, and made him feel somewhat guilty -- since it was he who had gotten the stone in the first place and suggested to Robert’s parents that he be made to wear it to dampen his possible magical abilities.


Robert did not weary of retelling the whole story again when he and his grandfather arrived at home. While his parents listened, half in awe and half in disbelief, Snork lay back in a comfortable armchair and drifted off to sleep. When he awoke with a start his smiling grandson was by his side, telling him it was time for dinner. 


“I hadn’t meant to stay so long” said the old man, rubbing the sleep out of his eyes. “I gotta get back to old Potato Nose for some business stuff.”


 It took little persuasion to convince the old gentleman to stay. But as soon as the meal was over he got up, kissed his grandson on the head, and headed resolutely out the door while waving goodbye. 


Less than a minute later Snork was back inside the house, slamming the door and yelling for all the windows to be shut.


“The mounds, them darn mounds -- they’re all lit up with green light!” he exclaimed. “Something weird is gonna happen tonight, and I wouldn’t be out there right now for all the mud in Brazil!”


Daily Progress Report on my new novel. Thursday, March 26. 2020



Thursday March 25. 2020.
Snowing. 33 degrees.

I went over to Fresh Market for the last time this month this morning -- I hope. I spent 17 dollars, which leaves me with about 17 in the checking account until next month’s Social Security arrives, or my son Adam gives me some more ghostwriting work. But that’s not likely. He says that kind of work is drying up; he wanted to pay me to do clerical entry work for him, by the hour, for his websites, but after thinking it over I turned him down cuz I just can’t do repetitive work of any kind anymore. If I can’t be creative, I don’t wanna do it (says the big elderly baby.) He’ll probably have his son Noah, who’s 12, do it.
The top photo gives you some idea of the amount of donations I’m getting for my daily hot meal for the residents of this fleabag. Now I have to spend time sorting and collating -- it bites into my writing time and tires me out!
Oh, the sacrifices I make for the sake of a hungry humanity!
Today I’m making cheesy cornbread, eggplant with spaghetti, and slow cooker cabbage with beans. No dessert. I’m just too tired. 



I basically finished Chapter Two yesterday -- there’s just a few odds and ends I want to tidy up and then tie everything together so Robert and his grandfather can take a long, fantastic trip together.
But before that happens, I think that Chapter Three is going to be a distraction, a diversion, a wonderful digression into a snowy day. It’s going to snow, and snow hard, over those curious and possibly haunted mounds, and Robert is going to have all sorts of frosty fun -- just like I did as a kid on those long snowy days when I shoveled the walk, made a snowman, went skating at Van Cleve Park, and then helped my best friend Wayne Matsuura build a snow fort in his backyard. Huge icicles formed on the eaves of all the houses, cuz back then nobody had gutters -- like air conditioning or a riding lawnmower, that kind of stuff was for rich people. 
So, anyway, I’m planning on Chapter Three being an elegy on snowy days. 
You should have Chapter Two in your grubby little hands sometime this evening . . . 




The blessing of the Lord

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The blessing of the Lord, it maketh rich, and he addeth no sorrow with it.
Proverbs 10:22

Never doubt the Lord will bless
each one of us with more, not less,
as humble steps we take towards grace
until we see his loving face.
Our sorrows he will wash away
and dry our tears on that great day
when like a scroll the earth will coil
and Christ the Lord rewards our toil. 

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Progress Report on Chapter Two of Robert Chicory

Wednesday, March 25. 2020.
Snow and 38 degrees this morning; can’t even see the mountains from my patio.
Let us consider the fine art of piddling -- otherwise known as procrastinating.
Yesterday as I feverishly began Chapter Two I had no idea of what was going to happen. I knew I had to get Chicory out of his house and bring in Grandpa Snork again, but other than that I had bupkis. So I just started writing the first thing that came to mind, which was the booming voice of an educational pomposity -- and things took off from there.
But then I painted the wily Grandpa Snork into a corner, and was stumped getting him out without resorting to cliche or pure fantasy. So writing came to a grinding halt. In despair I made myself some fried Spam with sliced sauteed dill pickle (I sure miss not being able to get any pickled herring anymore . . . ) and had it with two slices of Grandma Sycamore’s White Bread. But even that didn’t kick start my imagination, so I gave up and continued my binge watching of The Office on Netflix (I’m at the end of Season Four.) 
Then the solution to Snork’s dilemma hit me -- I scribbled it down in my handy dandy little notebook, to write out today.
But now, today, I just don’t feel like getting back to it, even though I’ve left Snork in a kinda life and death situation. I’d rather piddle. So I took my time at Fresh Market this morning, picking out an egg plant to make eggplant and pasta tomorrow for lunch, and got 2 onions, and a package of chicken trimmings for chicken soup, and a 69 cent bottle of Shasta Cola, and a carton of cottage cheese. Then I moseyed on home and gabbed with my neighbor Clara for nearly an hour about our lack of hot water in the building this morning and the fact that the Salt Lake Food Shelf will be dropping off not one but two food boxes for each recipient, so they won’t have to come in contact with us in April. I’ve got to go get them this morning at 10:30, and then I’ll spend an hour putzing around finding places for all the dry beans and pasta and canned carrots and canned tomatoes and bottles of apple juice and cartons of irradiated one percent milk. My apartment is starting to look like an old-time grocery store, with food stuffs piled up on my couch and arm chair and running along the wall like a mop board. 
Then it’ll be time to serve lunch and then I’ll have to take two advil and take a nap until about four -- at which time I’ll spend an hour trying to wake up and reading the NYT and the WaPo. THEN I’ll be ready to go to work on Chapter Two again.
And lemme tell ya, you’re gonna love the gambit I figured out for Grandpa Snork. I pride myself that is it one of the most original plot twists in modern literary history. Unparalleled, if I may be so bold.
But . . . you be the judge.

And there was no contention

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And there was no contention among the people in the forty and fourth year; neither was there much contention in the forty and fifth year.
Helaman 3: 2

No contention anywhere
shows that people really care
for their neighbor and their God,
though each one of us is flawed.
Savior, help me spread the oil
of thy peace upon turmoil,
and o'er scorn and frozen hate
blithely and securely skate!

Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Progress Report. Tuesday March 24 2020.




Tuesday March 24 2020
Today’s progress report will be brief. I have sent you the first chapter of Robert Chicory, so you are now familiar with the characters and the nascent narrative. 
As I lay in bed this morning, luxuriating in a soft mattress and even softer pillows, waiting for the lazy sun to light the top of the mountains, I had to face the old bugaboo that has kept me from writing so many other novels in the past -- namely, after the initial excitement wears off the whole novel-writing process becomes too much like work, like an unpleasant chore that may or may result in pleasant consequences. Today I’m already bored with Robert Chicory. He’s still an unformed creature -- an enigma -- he could be good; he could be bad; smart or stupid, a great lover or mean pinchpenny -- I just don’t know what to do with him outside of freeing him from the claptrap so he can use his magic again. Along the way I have in mind to make fun of a few things like higher education, religion, and even novel writing itself -- but I can do that just as well with a poem as with a novel.
No, I’m afraid that the only salvation for the novel Robert Chicory is the one character that I mentioned earlier -- the one I thought best to kill off before he takes over the whole novel. Grandpa Snork. Grandpa Snork is me; there is no need to shilly shally or beat about the bush. And I LOVE writing about me -- it’s the only subject that never gets tiresome.
So I’ve decided that the book will be all about Grandpa Snork’s adventures, with his grandson Robert Chicory tagging along and hopefully developing into an engaging personality along the way.
Oh, and another volte face -- I AM going to include a character named Marilyn. She is going to be an evil enchantress, sort of a Circe. A fit antagonist for Snork and his grandson.
Under those conditions I believe I can carry on with writing my novel and enjoying it, and hopefully giving others some fun in reading it as well.
Now it’s time to make the fresh salad for lunch today. We’re having potato cabbage soup, along with a pot of curried beans, cornbread, a green salad, and jello. If more people don’t show up today, i’m going to have a heck of a lot of leftovers. I’ve made enough to feed at least a dozen people. 


****************************************

An email response from a friend who is a film producer in the Congo DR:

What a relief that Marilyn gets her due role! Be careful about making her evil, though. Your descriptions of her from real life are so vivid and entertaining that she becomes pitiable and fascinating all at once.
I love the idea of magic and Robert. I was entertained by the first chapter. So, how do you plan on confronting writer's block? What do you do to coax the muse? Marilyn doesn't need to be coaxed. She simply shows up. So, including her will summon your best gifts. And Granda Snork will be delightful.

The vain things of the world

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. . . for there were many who loved the vain things of the world . . .
Alma 1:16

The vain things of the world have held
me in their thrall until I swelled
with pride and other vicious lore,
so I did heed the Lord no more.

I was so foolish and unruly,
yet the Lord still loved me truly;
so when at last I bowed my head
to seek forgiveness with great dread --

All my fears were washed away:
A gentle voice did seem to say
"Welcome home, my fool esteemed;
come revel with the glad redeemed!"