Short Story

Short Story: Reality Ace

A prologue to a short story I’m writing. Happy Short Story Saturday!!! (I just made that up). Warning: Rough language.

Prologue: Reality Ace

There’s no such thing as reality. Reality TV, that is. Viewers assume—we want them to; if not, we’d be on welfare—cameramen show up and start following strangers, like assholes.

No, no, honey. There’s contracts and lighting, and scripts. Have you ever seen a producer without a script? Me neither. When a producer’s involved you can bet there’s going to be a script. It’s going to be fake; that’s what you pay for—entertainment. It’s an industry, baby, and we don’t leave shit to chance.

A jungle, a deserted island, a cooking contest, it doesn’t matter. Reality TV is no better, no different than professional wrestling (sometimes, wrestlers wear more clothes); we know the winner (you know we do), and we know the outcome (you’ve got to know).

That’s what I do. Ace Jordan. I produce outcomes.

CBS, I started there. Every two years some new hotshot out of UCLA film studies guns for your job. So I ended up at NBC, but what did they know? Nothing, it turns out. A year later I moved on to basic cable with two offers: “Heels on the Hills,” (for lovers of rich, white suburban wife drama), and “Ghost Walk,” a run of the mill ghost hunters program.

I chose “Heels” for the paycheck, but it cancelled after three episodes. Pulling some strings, I found myself on the set of “Ghost Walk” as a location scout.

The show’s main producer, Jerry, told me the first season was filmed entirely in a studio. By season two the network asked him to branch out. 

“A real circus act,” says Jerry and it’s true. We’ve filmed in abandoned state hospitals and creaky old cabins—the locations, I find them all. It’s a shit job, but it’s mine, and I take it seriously. That’s the only way to get ahead: take your shit-job seriously.

Our indomitable hosts, Michael, Brad, and Aisla, are as good as any I’ve seen. On TV they’re touched, thrown down, and spoken to by entities. People ask me if I ever get scared while filming on location. I tell them that, often, we retake cuts due to crew laughter. Everything’s staged.

And honestly? Brad deserves an Oscar.

Tomorrow we head to Upstate New York, a little town outside of Rochester. (The worst part of canceling “Heels” and gaining “Walk” was the move from Los Angeles to New York. I’ve got a mouse-hole for an apartment, costing me what a three bedroom in the Valley did). There’s this old abandoned house in Pittsford I found—empty for nearly thirty years, the city is tearing it down—it’s perfect. We’re claiming it as the site of a 1942 family murder in Pennsylvania (that never happened) and interviewing fake neighbors for hire.

Ghosts are as fake as a Food Network cooking contest and I know the winner, the outcome. All I need is a paycheck and a way out, a way back to the Emmys.

Just give me a way out.

Short Story: Jake’s Jacket

The water’s just too damn cold.

Jake stood on the shore of California’s blue expanse, examining its horizon, noting the abnormalities under it. The ocean seemed empty to Jake. Sure, there was life teeming underneath, but nothing above he could see. The waves tumbled; the sea foam, in clockwork, came and went—hugging Jakes’s ankles, offering shallow solace.

Born on a farm in Pennsylvania, standing now, ankle deep, at the edge of existence. How did I—

“Why don’t you come back in?” Michael’s voice stole Jake away from his thoughts. He reached out his hand, “Let’s talk.” Michael’s body, not yet in the water but just out of grasp of the ocean’s reaching, rippling fingers, awaited response.

A black dot broke the surface in the closest series of waves.

“There!” pointed Jake, his arm outstretched, “Do you see it?” He laughed. A black seal broke the surface twenty yards or so from where they stood. “He’s come to watch me die,” Jake turned around and met Michael’s stare, offering a deflated grin,  “and you too?”

“Come on out.”

“DON’T!” Jake yelled, closing his eyes and breathing heavily. “NO!” He began to scream. Michael shot his hands in the air.

“Nothing in my hands.” Michael signaled, “Nothing in my hands.”

– – –

Inching slowly, ever so slowly, Michael approached Jake. Cold seeped in through Michael’s shoes and bit his skin. Jake had since opened his eyes and was reexamining the water. Finally, the two stood side-by-side; Jakes’s explosive vest was visible to Michael for the first time.

“Every inch you move is another towards death, my friend.”

“There’s no gun…”

“… so its been since birth.”

Michael closed his eyes in defeat.

The seal again broke the surface and Jake smiled. “I’m glad you’re here.”

picstitch

A short story exercise, 300 words or less. My first in a while. Thoughts?

Short Story: The Cafe Throne

Coffee

When I visit the cafe, I change seats about three or four times before I settle. It’s no science. I’m not a creep or anything. I just like my space. I like my spot—the corner window with the round table.

The workers here probably think I have OCD; but then again, they’re judgmental.

The coffee is how much?

Every morning I have to wait on this guy, he likes the corner window seat too. It’s the same guy every day. I imagine him outside, waiting in the cold, sprinting as soon as they open the door. You can’t blame him, it’s the best spot in the house. The lazy squatter watches the sunrise and the fog burn off both sides of the highway. By the time he gives up the seat, the sun blares in my eyes and I’m left with a lingering smell of his breakfast veggie-wrap.

That’s alright. I grab my coffee, sit, and wait. It’s okay here, the coffee that is. You wouldn’t catch me handing out any awards. They brew it hot enough, I guess. The food does make me sick and good thing, it’s expensive.

The coffee is how much? 

I’m close to home when I come here. I’d otherwise exist, every morning, with people who know how to appreciate a level table. Here, they bob up and down like a child’s hand in a classroom—can I go to the bathroom? You do all this work, jumping from table to table, getting closer and closer to that prized spot, that seat of accolade, the damn window corner cafe throne, and what’s that? Oh, it wobbles.

The coffee is how much? 

Thirty years I spent climbing the ladder. I’m not talking corporate ladder, I mean an actual ladder. Up and down every day. Up and down, up and down. Painting, cleaning, watching.

I’m tired of the up and down.

Short Story: The Hole Life

There was this one bathroom stall, I don’t know, typical for a bar I guess. It was dirty and wet and always out of toilet paper. The seat was wobbly and of course the latch on the door was broken. You had to prop your right foot against it just to keep it from swinging open. There was trash everywhere also, which I got used to. But the pint glass on the floor next to the toilet, that was different. Sometimes half filled or maybe just a drink left. Who brings this in here, I’d think. Was it some community pint I didn’t know about? Was it even beer in the glass? I found it best to be cautious.

This bar I spoke of, the one with the bathroom, it was called The Hole. Planted firmly in north Idaho, which is where I grew up. You never forgot a place like The Hole. Smoky, dark, uncouth. Every town has one I suppose; that place where so-and-so got stabbed. It was five miles outside town so there were plenty of rumors. City gossip led us to believe the bar had its own zip code. Other rumors told of the building being burned to the ground… twice.

After the last reconstruction they apparently built in a stage, put in lights and a pretty decent sound system. With the landscape for local music the way it was, The Hole became the only full functioning music venue around. So if your band wanted to play live there was only one place to go and you didn’t tell your mother.

You get in, you get out.

Convincing friends to show up was always a chore. If they were brave enough to come, they’d end up hours early as The Hole kept its own version of time. If the schedule said 8pm, you played at 10pm. The band with the ill fate of closing performed sometime around 2am to empty chairs. There was a bit of a learning curve but you got used to it. Bikers would sometimes fill the seats and keep the room saturated in smoke and insults. It was better than nothing I suppose.

The bartender, he was something else. He was an older guy with long white hair and a beard to match, tall and skinny, always wearing glasses and the same black beanie. Word around the bar claimed him the owner but you could never be too sure what was fact and fiction around there. Anyways, you’d ask for a beer and he’d give you an ear full of stories about his youth, or the seventies, or his favorite bands. His tales were hard to hear with the music so loud so you just had to smile and laugh when it seemed appropriate. I remember when I’d get off stage he’d immediately try to sell me tickets to other shows:

“You should come back tomorrow,” he’d say, “tickets only five bucks!”

It sure made you feel different, transforming from performer to audience so quickly. I felt used, but I know he meant well. He was just a different type of person. In his own zip code sort of speak. If we were lucky he’d give us thirty bucks before we left and we’d feel like we accomplished something. After all, accomplishments are rare in this line of work.

The real trick was to spend the evening avoiding the toilet. You needed a game plan. After once finding a dead fly at the bottom of my tequila glass, I decided to stop taking shots at The Hole. They served food there but I could never muster the courage. Pint glasses were a bad idea too considering the nature of things. Really anything that touched the house water was out. If you had to get a beer always get a bottle and never drink the tap water.

Somehow still, I always ended up on the toilet.

That bathroom though, I’ll never forget it. Not necessarily the toilet seat or the broken latch but its walls. They were painted in this overabundance of overlapping band stickers and phone numbers and awkward stains. It was like studying hieroglyphics when you went in there, or rather like stumbling across some great and awful mosaic.

The first time I saw it I laughed.  Some other people, I’d say, not me.

I had bigger plans. They were plans that could never settle for a bathroom wall. I’d invade the music industry and leave Idaho, only to return to play sold out festivals and arenas.

But that never happened. And every time I came back to The Hole, those stickers would stare straight through me. They tore me up with a cold realization, or rather solemn reminder, that I was no different. That I was apart of the fraternity rather I liked it or not. What a sobering feeling to get in the middle of a bar.

Every now and again I’ll drive by The Hole and pass it on my way to work. It depends on which way I go of course. Some times I’ll avoid it; other times I’ll seek it out.

One day, I finally mustered the courage and stopped in. It had been years. Inevitably, I found myself on the toilet staring at the wall, tracing my finger over stickers and stopping on names from my past. It was like some sad, sticky dichotomy of broken dreams and mild accomplishments, a yearbook of sorts.

What happened to the singer of Dead Fetus anyways? Is he still playing music? Maybe he’s taking blood pressure at a small walk-in clinic somewhere in Wisconsin. I don’t know. What about the drummer for Octagon Brain Fusion? I remember him. He probably got a PhD in something. He was smart… or… was that the bassist?  

Some names were familiar—others weren’t. Those from a distance, the ones from out of town, they embarked on what they had hoped would be some great adventure. So they put all their money together and drove hour after hour and ended up in none other than north Idaho… at The Hole. They started late I’m sure. The bikers hurled insults and crushed their spirits. Before long they were running to the toilet, sitting on the wobbly seat next to the mysterious pint glass. And with all honest humility they slapped their sticker on the wall as if to try and accomplish something meaningful, something that would last.

As I once did, one smoky, dark night at the strange tavern with its own zip code. There are less prestigious alumni’s after all. At least I like to think so.

Short Story: Lunch

Image

I remember sitting at the pub in Ireland. We were dead tired from the day’s journey. My friend and I were traveling through the country on a two-week expedition—suspending our futures for an adventure. As in most stops, local chatter was custom.

“You could call it ‘self discovery’ I guess,” I responded to the friendly stranger, “but I’m not so sure.” He was an older man, plump and symmetric on his bar stool, inquisitive like most Dingle natives. “Our plan was just to get away from life.”

“Get away from life?” he chortled, clearing the fresh mustache of Guinness off his lip. His accent was thick but warm: “Life is all there is lad, a gift. Every day it renews and don’t forget it.”

“You never needed to just leave, clear your head, reflect?” I begged.

“That’s what lunch is for,” he replied, “besides, I’ll have plenty o’ time to reflect when I’m dead.” He smiled, finished his drink and rose. “Make your days count boy, life is not a patient lass.” He paid for my drink and left.