1.
The
Walking Heart Attack Man has two outfits. In
the summer he dresses in a short sleeve checkered
button down shirt and high-waisted Bermuda
shorts with sandals. In the winter he wears
dark pants and loafers with a gray corduroy
coat which he buttons tightly across his throat.
At all times, summer and winter, he hides behind
large, impenetrable sunglasses that cover a
good deal of his creased, leathery face. His
hair is dark and his gait quick and confident.
He swings his arms as if they were dead weight.
He doesn’t walk like a man who is made
of heart attacks.
Every evening the Walking Heart Attack Man
walks the sidewalks so he can stay alive. It
is before
the modern era of bypass surgeries, stints and
heart transplants. We don’t even know his
name; all we know is the neighborhood gossip that
says he is a man of many heart attacks. He must
walk in the sun and rain, snow and sleet if he
wants to live. He has to walk, even on Christmas
even on Easter and even on Halloween.
Here he comes toward us, swinging his arms, his
face a perpetual sunburned smile. He neither nods
nor speaks as he passes, but his serene smile impresses
all who watch him on his nightly rounds.
We are many children in this neighborhood, dressed
in bright plastic costumes which vibrate against
the cold metal sky and snowflaky air. The Walking
Heart Attack Man walks toward us and we part to
let him by, and suddenly he is surrounded by luminous,
colorful goblins and princesses, his gray coat
buttoned to his throat being swallowed by the gray
Halloween evening. His Cheshire Cat smile hangs
in the air like tintinnabulation, and we can see
ourselves full of life and color reflected in his
black sunglasses, in that moment before the light
leaves the evening entirely.
The Walking Heart Attack Man stops and appears
to be admiring our Halloween costumes. He stops
walking and we are all afraid.
2.
1983.
We’re doing our live comedy show outside
on a rooftop. It is a special midnight Halloween
performance. Our largest crowd ever. All three
of us are completely fucked up on beer, whiskey,
Nyquil, and whatever else we can get our hands
on. The entire show is a kaleidoscope of images.
I can’t remember what sketches or bits we
did.
I remember the heavy sweet smell of burning pumpkins
and the crisp sting of October night.
I remember hearing my voice’s amplified sound
bounce off the rooftops and then suddenly looking
up into the sky and marveling at how twinkly the
stars were.
I remember puking in someone’s open suitcase
in the dressing room and laughingly closing it
back up.
I remember the helpless laughter of our audience,
all as drunk and fucked up as we were.
I remember doing a bit (yelling into a microphone)
and turning to see Kyle, in my peripheral vision,
approaching me from the side in full nun’s
habit, about to give his special benediction. Matt
staggers behind him with a lighter setting the
tail of the black gown on fire. Kyle, flames climbing
up his legs and back, breaks character, slapping
at the nun’s habit and shrieking, “This
is fuckin’ rented you asshole!”
3.
It is Halloween
night on Lynwood Lane and that means one thing,
Tony Curtis as Houdini. Houdini
is what I am thinking about at 13, when while staring
out our picture window I see something strange
in the sky.
It is a light. Not a star or a plane but what looks
now to be a ring of undulating lights, moving in
a weird circular motion, like a crooked Ferris
wheel. It is very high in the sky.
Now my heart pounds. Oh my God! A ufo! I’m
actually seeing one! I yell out for my dad who
is in the bathroom shaving. He runs out with no
shirt on, shaving cream all over his face. He is
pissed off.
Wordlessly I point to the light which to my relief
has not vanished into thin air the moment my authority
figure entered the room. My father looks at it,
gapes and looks at it again. The radio on kdza
is segueing from Michael Jackson singing “Ben”,
a love song to a rat, to the breathless announcer,
RandyJay.
“There are scattered reports of a unidentified flying
object on the south side of Pueblo. This is no
Orson Welles Halloween joke, please stand by for
further information.”
“Radar Love” by Golden Earring comes on and
I look to my father whose stolid sensible nature
is the anchor to our family and I see him in utter
terror. His face is red, his eyes are bulging and
his mouth is open.
“Go get my binoculars,” he says in a low voice,
as if the strange lights could hear him.
Panic-stricken but still in control I hazily go
to his room. I pass my sister in the hallway; she
is hollow eyed and clutching a stuffed animal.
Her lower lip is trembling. I fumble, thinking
nothing is ever going to be the same now. We’re
experiencing history now. This is really happening
and I’m a part of it now. A part of history,
a piece of history.
I get the binoculars and hand them to my father
who hasn’t even wiped the shaving foam off
his face yet. He holds them up to his eyes.
“Goddamn sonofabitch!” he spits and hands
me back the binoculars then he stalks back into
the bathroom and slams the door so hard it cracks
the wall.
I look through the binoculars and I see the rotating
light, but now that it’s closer I can also
see that it is spelling out words. English words.
“Happy Halloween From Jess Hunter Ford”
Thank God I thought, thank God the world was still
the same that everything was still the same that
I was not a part of history.
4.
One year at the
Raw Haus Art Gallery we were having a pumpkin
carving contest. It was my
idea to turn it into performance art. I suggested
that we pre-cut some pumpkins, hollow them
out then fill them with stage blood and cow
guts so that when people cut into them they
would bleed.
5.
I am nine. My dad
is just home from work, excited. “The
mailman just got killed,” he says breathlessly. “Hit
by a car over on Garwood.”
He puts his lunch pail down and takes off running
out the door. The whole neighborhood follows.
Gruesome deaths are big news and always followed
by large masses of people seeking the bloody
affirmation of their own mortality.
Garwood is only a couple blocks away. It’s
on my paper route. I try and focus my mind on
this mailman, whose name we do not know. All
I can call up on him is the fact that he always
wore a pith helmet.
As we get nearer, the crowds thicken, heavy engines
are sputtering and growling, and people are turning
away, silent, sated. I am anxious to see my first
dead body. But when we get to the front of the
line the body, in an ambulance, has long been
gone. What we gawk at now is two oddly smashed
shoes and a pool of blood that is being eagerly
licked up by the neighborhood cats.
6.
Kyle is in love.
We have just wound down a rockin’ Halloween
party and I find myself alone in my apartment
for the moment, smoking a bowl and enthralled
by James Whale’s “Bride of Frankenstein.” Breathless,
drunk and giddy, Kyle staggers in and sits down,
slobbering all over my pipe.
“That girl Marilyn, I really like her. I kissed
her goodnight and I even got a feel,” he
enthused, but I was annoyed that he was disturbing
the best part of the movie, where the insane
Dr. Pretorious is revealing the contents of his
weird homunculus jars to a horrified Dr. Frankenstein.
Noting my lack of enthusiasm for his womanizing,
Kyle pouts, hitting the pipe again. Brightening,
he removes a cassette tape from his pocket. It
is some piano music he has been playing with
at home. His piano is a little out of tune, but
the music is sad and lilting with just a touch
of grace and humor. He inserts it into a cassette
player and it begins playing softly.
At first it seems to be a soundtrack for the
movie. It is minutes before I realize what he
has done. By then I have begun to gravitate toward
the music as it accentuates what is happening
on the screen. Kyle is sitting low in the couch,
never taking his mouth from the pipe, his head
enveloped in a cloud of white smoke.
I turn down the sound on the television, and
turn up the sound on the cassette player so the
piano music fills the room while the black and
white horror movie plays itself on the screen.
The music and the moving pictures seems to meld,
to anticipate each other. At first I think it’s
because I’m stoned, but Kyle looks at me
through the haze and smiles.
“Hey, do you notice … ” he stammers.
“This is cool,” I manage, but the words
hang there like lead turds, so I shut up and
turn the music even louder.
Now Dr. Pretorious is laughing heartily in a
catacomb crypt, having a very civilized dinner
with the Frankenstein monster. They share delicate
glasses of wine, while Kyle’s music fills
in the gaps where words would ordinarily go.
7.
The radio says
there’s a baby crying in
a field. The only light on Red Creek Road is
our headlights.
Being in high school now and having outgrown
Halloween trick or treating, Matt and I spend
the night with our older teenage mentor Doug,
drinking beer and smoking cigarettes. Doug is
nineteen and has his own place, a junk filled
garage on Poplar Street where we spend the night
watching old movies.
This Halloween night, we are playing Monopoly,
a game we all take very seriously indeed, when
on kdza we hear the deejay say that there are
reports of a baby crying in a field on Red Creek
Road and volunteers are needed to search for
it.
Even though it is after two in the morning, we
all look at each other and think the same thing.
Now is our chance to be heroes. We pile into
Doug’s 1967 Ford Fairlane and ride the
deserted post-Halloween streets. The radio says
there’s a baby in the field.
At one point, Doug stops the car and shuts it
off, plunging us into darkness. We roll down
the windows and listen. Usually Halloween is
the night of the First Snow in our own but it
is warm, almost balmy for a change. Red Creek
Road is out in the middle of nowhere, a dirt
road that bisects the outskirts of the city,
well traveled by drag racers, teenage neckers
and stoners. At three in the morning though it
feels like the dark side of the moon.
“Shh! Shut the fuck up!” Doug whispers firmly.
“We should see some lights,” Matt says. “I
mean if there’s a search there would be
some light.”
“Joke!” I say. “Halloween prank!”
“Fuck!” Doug says, suddenly opening his
door and stepping outside. He lights a cigarette.
Matt and I get out the back seat. As we double
slam the car doors and plunge ourselves into
the breezy night we hear it.
Clear and close, the long steady wail of a baby
in the prairie darkness.
Instinctively, all three of us leap back into
the car and roar down the road, excited and frightened.
I’m not sure where we’re going, because
we’re driving away from the sound, not
toward it.
We come upon a car turnaround on the dirt road
and there we see a police car and a woman wearing
a fur coat sitting on a horse. I’m serious.
The cop immediately puts his hand on his gun
as we rush out of the car babbling about crying
babies in the dark.
“See I tole you,” the woman says thickly
to the cop, who is holding his hand out, palm
up to stop us from charging him. We stop, breathless,
flushed and blurt out the story, the radio, the
car, the dark, the scream.
All he says is, “Goddamn radio station.”
“I heard it too,” the woman assures us though
her dirty clothes beneath the gamey fur coat
and heavy air of alcohol indicate that as a witness
to anything she may be taken as less than credible.
Still, I know I heard a baby cry.
“It was just a rooster,” the cop says. “Go
home.”
“It was a baby,” the woman repeats. “Look
here what I found.” She tosses a bundle
of tattered rags onto the hood of the police
car. The cop glares at her then shines his big
Maglight on the rags. He spreads them out until
they take the shape of a weathered baby sleeper
pajama; obviously it has been outside for a long
time.
A chill runs down my spine and I look at Matt
who is looking away and at Doug, who leans against
the car, looking at the woman appraisingly and
not at the clothes. My eyes lock with the cop’s.
He asks me how old I am.
8.
It is the last
year of the 1960s; an overrated decade. I have
just returned home from trick-or-treating
and am in my room frantically stashing my candy
so my sister won’t find it. This is a very
delicate and important procedure requiring all
of my attention and intelligence when my mother
comes barging into my room.
Our cat Mackey has been sick and she has just
learned through neighborhood gossip that the
Carlino family is poisoning our cats because
they shit in their yard. My mother is livid.
“I need you to help me in a little while,” she
hisses and I nod, afraid of her wrath. “Don’t
go to bed. We’re going out,” she
says and she leaves my room. Hastily I stash
my candy. I sit and wait.
It is late, about ten o’clock. I have been
waiting for my mother to return so we can go
on this urgent errand. I am half annoyed and
half frightened because for one thing she never
wants my help or even my presence for anything.
It was her tone that scared me more than anything
else.
As I was working this out she reappeared in my
door. The look on her face was determined but
when she saw me sitting primly on my bed atop
a mound of candy witlessly stashed under my bedspread
she grinned a wry grin that showed a slight gap
between her front teeth.
“Yeah, keep your costume on. That’s a good
idea,” she said, pleased that I’d
been thinking for once. I hadn’t until
that moment realized that I was still wearing
my Frankenstein costume. I had been into Frankenstein
a lot lately, obsessively watching the old universal
horror movies and freezing my Revel monster models
in blocks of ice so I could melt them as in “House
of Frankenstein.”
Silently I followed my mother. Our house was
dark. My dad, who was always wary of my mother’s
plans, had gone to bed. My sister and my baby
brother were also asleep; one with a candy smeared
face the other with a full diaper. I was apprehensive
about being so alone with my mother. I was not
comfortable.
She was carrying a piece of white chalk a stubby
black candle and some of our baby teeth in her
hand.
“What are you doing with my baby teeth?” I
asked her.
“Shut up.” She snapped.
I recognized the black candle as being part of
her latest craze, witchcraft.
Witchcraft was only one of a long line of fads
that my mother wholeheartedly embraced then discarded
with rock solid regularity. Other fads of her
life included tropical fish, plants, rock hunting,
and pornography. In her current incarnation as
a Wiccan, she had painted all the doors to our
house black, much to my father’s dismay.
“Where are we going?” I whined because I
knew the black candle meant business.
“I know who’s poisoning Mackey. I’m
going to go over there and I need you to go with
me.”
I had stomach-knotting visions of wild confrontations
involving flinging hot wax at our enemies or
something. What I couldn’t figure out was
why did she want me to come with her? Was I to
be a sacrifice? Would she throw me to the wolves
so she would be free to wreak her havoc? It seemed
plausible.
We walked across two yards behind our house and
went to the front porch of the Carlino family.
“Watch for cops,” My mother said to me. “If
you see any just pretend to be trick or treating.” It
was ten-thirty now, a school night, and the street
was dead. All the porch lights were extinguished,
marking the end of another successful Halloween
bacchanal. I pulled down my plastic Frankenstein
mask like a knight’s helmet visor and kept
my vigil as ordered.
My mother, working quickly, drew a shaky pentagram
on the Carlino’s tidy cement porch, and
then carefully placed one of our baby teeth in
each enclosed triangle of the devil star.
“C’mere,” She whispered and I obeyed.
She bent her head down low then looked at me
and gestured to do the same, so I did. A sharp
stab went through my scalp as she snatched out
a few hairs. That was nothing compared to how
she poked her own finger and squeezed tiny droplets
of black blood on each point of Satan’s
emblem.
“There,” she said with real satisfaction. “Those
motherfuckers will never poison our cats again.
Will they!” This last was directed at me
in an almost conspiratorial way. Its tone made
my heart bloom with love and friendship for my
mother.
As we made our way across two backyards to our
house, we didn’t talk to each other, but
my mother placed her hand on my shoulder when
we jumped the fence, and fleetingly, I felt the
absence of unease.
9.
My son wants
to be a Red Power Ranger for Halloween. We find
the deluxe Red Power Ranger uniform at
the mall for twenty-five bucks. He’s four
and he doesn’t know that twenty-five bucks
is a shitload of money for a flimsy Red Power
Ranger costume. His eyes glitter and I remember
that feeling, that flame of Halloween, the colors.
To this day the combination of orange and black
can put the smell of burning pumpkins into my
head.
When he puts on the deluxe Red Power Ranger uniform
on his whole demeanor and his whole posture changes.
He slides the mask down and strikes an impeccable
karate pose. He swaggers, not like the toddling
four-year-old he is, but like a man, a Power
Ranger.
We’re trick or treating and he is walking
excitedly ahead of us. My wife and I link arms
and suddenly our son drops his bag of candy and
wheels on us menacingly, in perfect martial form. “I am the destroyer you must heed
my words now! Time Force Megazord mode red. Your
weapons are
useless against me. I am the conqueror and you
are the defeated you will now obey me and all
I stand for.”
All around us it begins to snow.
10.
It’s Halloween
night. I’m in my worrying
phase. I’ve been out of weed for three
days and all the worry in the world wells up
in me. For instance, right now it is three in
the morning. I worry that if I stay up past four
that I’m going to wake up with a headache
tomorrow morning. I look at the television and
I can’t focus on what is on. I think to
myself Oh Jesus what am I going to do when this
TV breaks.
All Machines Fail.
How am I going to get the two hundred bucks it’ll
take to replace it? Oh God. Then my cat walks
past me and I think, what am I going to do when
this cat dies.
All Machines Fail.
I go into my mind and imagine the horrible death
of this beloved cat. Where will I get the strength
to face it?
A noise out the window and I notice a strobey
blue and red flash of light suddenly bouncing
off my walls, and I look out. Below my apartment
are some drunken teenage partyers. A police car
has stopped them, his spotlight illuminating
them as if on a stage. They are happy drunk,
their costumes not very original K-Mart witches
and devils red and black schemed kind of things.
I see the cop go into their car and come out
with a four-foot Graphix bong.
“What’s this?” he asks them jovially,
thrusting the mouthpiece of the bong against
a startled partyer’s lips. Withdrawing
the bong, the cop has gotten his message across.
The drunken giggling ceases.
“What’s this?” the cop teases.
I shift on my couch, trying to stay low while
this tableau plays itself out. There is a horrible
silence in the street. My heart is pounding.
“What’s this?” the cop taunts and
someone finally speaks up.
“That’s a pop bottle rocket launcher, sir.
See where it’s all burnt up there?”
All of a sudden the dark room I’m hunkered
in is exploded with white light. Every dark corner
and hole brightly illuminated by a brilliant
electric glow. My wife is standing in the doorway.
“What are you doing here sitting in the dark?” she
asks.
“Off! Off! Turn the lights off!” I yell
and startled, she turns them off. I look out
the window again and the partyers, the cop and
both cars are gone. No sign or trace. Did I imagine
it?
“What is with you?” my wife says, slightly
annoyed and tired from a hard night at work. “Here,
chill out.” She tosses a baggie of pot
at me and goes into the bathroom to take a bath.
11.
Matt and I are
fifteen and delivering pre-dawn bundles of newspapers
to 7-11. It is a sharp
steely October morning, and we discuss our Halloween
plans, which include listening to a double record
set of Orson Welles “War Of The Worlds” broadcast
and beating my brother up for his trick-or-treat
candy.
We are driving down Fourth Street crossing into
the rough east side of Pueblo. As we drive past
the bars we see a patch of color that stands
out against the gray pre-sunrise sky.
It is a clown, a red and white happy face clown
in full clown regalia which includes an orange
and yellow polka dot clownsuit, big shoes and
a tiny hat perched precariously atop his head.
He is sitting on the curb, his legs sprawled
in the gutter, just in front of the White Horse
Tavern. He has a stick and with this stick he
is idly jabbing the street.
As we drive by Matt reflexively slows the truck,
and we gawk at this apparition and as we pass
him he brightens, sitting ramrod straight. He
brightens and to our everlasting horror he smiles
largely and knowingly and waves.
12.
The earliest
Halloween I can remember seems like a dream a
long time ago. A dream you can barely
remember that has left its remnants of emotion
on you like honey on a telephone.
I am small and dressed like a ghost. I wear
a sheet with holes in it. Did I dream that
part?
Can that be? I am walking with my dad, carrying
an orange plastic pumpkin bucket.
Then there’s a duck. A fluffy white duck
with a bright orange bill. Can this be? I like
to touch the hard bill and the soft fluffy feathers.
I like the funny grunting quacking sound it makes
when I grab it. Then the duck bites me with the
bill and I yell.
Later when I ask about the duck there are whispers.
13.
October 31,
2001, NYC.
It is Halloween and I am in New York. Ten a.m.
and we are walking toward Ground Zero with a
crowd of people streaming toward some spooky
loudspeaker opera music. There is a special service
going on at the wreckage of the World Trade Center.
We decide to walk it from midtown, a not inconsiderable
hike, but I am flying home today and I want to
soak up every last bit of New York I can.
As we walk through Chelsea, Greenwich Village,
Little Italy, Soho, and Chinatown, I focus on
the little things like a man in sunglasses surrounded
by a swirl of costumed schoolchildren, the smile
on his face beatific. Or on Church Street, just
three blocks away from the epicenter of wreckage,
a nun in full habit singing “God Bless
America” over a karaoke speaker, her eyes
closed, her voice in love with its amplified
self. A plane flying over, towing a sign whose
message is meaningless and illegible against
the bright blue sky.
As we get closer, I see shrines to the fallen
ringed with black candles melted into Rorschach
pools and Xeroxed images of vibrant people who
were once alive and now are “missing.” The
street gets dustier and I notice the fabric signs
cheerfully announcing “New York’s
Financial District” on lampposts are singed
and scorched. I look on the ground and see little
fragments of gypsum and cement, sharp and new
and fresh. Picking one up and putting it into
my pocket, I think, a piece of history, a part
of history, all around me imprints and smithereens
of history.
We’re stopped on the edge of the Future
by a plywood wall, the sad, reverberating opera
music now loud and blaring, and we can hear someone
reading names over a PA. We’re on the steps
of a church still covered with soot and dust,
and on the steps are more candles, chalked messages,
and neatly arranged piles of shoes. I wonder
about the shoes until I overhear someone say, “Well,
you know the first thing that happens in something
like that is you get knocked out of your shoes.”
Video news cameras roam the gathering and people
play to them, like the man dressed all in a red,
white, and blue costume. He looks like a clown
with no make-up on. He weeps and slowly dances
to the sad opera music, waving two little flags
in each hand. His tears roll until the camera
stops looking at him, then he resumes selling
the little flags to stupid fucking tourists.
Like me.
All around me I am feeling a need, an urgent
need, but for what I can’t say. I look
up at all the buildings surrounding us and I
see the burned walls and the blasted out windows.
Inside the jagged windows I can see offices and
apartments all still covered with fine white
powder like some huge art exhibit. I look down
and see gouges out of the cement sidewalk. The
debris pile is still burning and an acrid, strangely
sweet chemical smell lingers in the area.
A baby is crying in its stroller and its mother
takes him out and holds him, giving him a toy
duck to gnaw on. The baby looks right into my
eyes, smiling largely and knowingly and waves.
I know that in seven hours I will be home in
Colorado, holding my son’s hand while he
demands candy from strangers. It will be a night
of ghosts and monsters, but by now I’ve
already had my fill of both.
| As
one half of the semi-legendary playwriting
team Broken Gopher Ink, MICHAEL K. WHITE
spent his youth tricking and fooling producers
into investing money in his lurching, lumbering
plays. Incredibly this led to almost forty
play productions, including fifteen off-Broadway
runs that cloaked the author with a bogus
literary credibility he misuses to this
day. His low cholesterol mega monologue
play, "My Heart And the Real World" ran
for almost two years in New York City,
enabling the authors to eat at John's Pizzeria.
A
shy, humble man who lives with the cows
in Colorado, Michael White, a deeply scarred
veteran of the furious litmag scene of the 80s, is
now content to live in solitude with his
debts and addictions. Recently his family
introduced a new addition; a sassy black
and white kitten named Circe who enjoys sleeping,
dashing about late at night and eating spiders. |
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|