JOHNNY AMERICA
Up to No Good
by David LARSEN

The man fell to his knees on the carpeted floor in his bedroom. For what seemed like the umpteenth time in less than two months he’d turned his ankle and twisted his back, the same ankle and spine he’d injured four nights ago in the very same room. And all because he was up to no good, as his mother used to chide him, seventy years ago.
Sam, a man of predictable, sedate habits, had recently become fixated on his neighbor. Every night, once Mildred, Sam’s wife of fifty-five years, dozed off in front of the TV, Sam sneaked into their bedroom, turned out the lights, opened the blinds, just enough, climbed up onto a rickety wooden chair that allowed him to peer over the redwood fence between his house and the house next door and waited to spy on the new resident, a young schoolteacher, thin, painfully plain-looking, rather studious in her thick-framed glasses, a woman who, for some reason, undressed with her curtains open. Intensely curious, if not gainfully aroused (he was getting along in years), Sam pivoted from his perch when the woman turned abruptly and stared at her unshielded window. Sam tumbled like a stricken sentry. The show was over and he was a casualty… not exactly of lust, but of a longing for something he felt he had missed out on. And he might be in more trouble than he could imagine.
Once again, he’d succeeded in tweaking every nerve in his already-torturous back, and, on top of that, he’d managed to thump his noggin against the headboard of the bed, the standard-sized, creaky old four-poster he had shared with Mildred for more than fifty years. He was lucky not to have impaled himself. Was being a peeping Tom worth it, a racked-up hip, a jived-up back that felt like someone had thrown a switch allowing the electricity to jolt through it like a surge through a condemned man whose stay of execution had gotten lost in the mail? Apparently, it was worth it. He’d been at this, diligently, night after night, for nearly two months.
Sam’s bedroom window, adjacent to his neighbor’s gauze-curtained window with the flimsy material pulled back — invitingly, thought Sam — offered the ideal vantage to enjoy her amateur burlesque show, exposing herself, not completely, but satisfactorily, good enough for curious Sam, though probably not adequate for a true, hardcore voyeur. Sam was a man still interested in such matters, prurient and titillating. Most men would want more, but Sam, a retired accountant, a deacon at the Disciples Church, a Shriner, wasn’t one to ask for more than what was offered; he was a man of mild expectations; he settled for what was offered.
His wife would surely ask him in the morning, on their mile-and-a-half walk through the bucolic suburban neighborhood of handsomely-groomed homes, well-manicured lawns, all maintained by their neighbors of more-than-modest means, why he limped. Hadn’t his leg recovered from his mysterious mishap of only a few days earlier? Again, Sam would blame the dog, Max. Would Mildred believe, that on more than a handful of occasions in less than a few months, her husband was so clumsy that he tripped over the schnauzer when he took the dog out to relieve himself before she and Sam turned in for the night after Jimmy Kimmel’s monologue? He could only hope so.
Sam never claimed to be the most creative guy in the world when it came to lying to his wife, or anyone else for that matter. He’d never been a good liar. The dog was the best he could come up with. Luckily, Mildred, gullible and wonderfully naïve, wouldn’t press for more than he offered; she trusted her seventy-eight-year-old husband. And the dog could be a real nuisance.
“The woman next door wants to come over and talk with us,” said Mildred as she poured her husband his first cup of morning coffee. “She sounded rather severe on the phone.” Each morning, before their walk, Mildred buttered Sam’s two pieces of wheat toast and pulled the box of his favorite cereal from the cupboard above the stove. His breakfast was always the same, a bowl of Cheerios with a sliced banana, two pieces of toast and coffee, black. “I told her to come around ten, that we’d be back from our walk by then. Her name’s Susan or Sharon. I think that’s what she told me.” She hummed, as she always did when she puttered around the kitchen, or if she was nervous. And when wasn’t Mildred nervous? If Mildred wasn’t prattling on and on about one thing or another, an annoying habit, she was humming. She was of the jittery sort by nature. “I’ll offer her coffee, but I won’t bake anything. She sounded a bit officious on the phone. I think she’s like the rest of them these days. She prefers texting.” Mildred sighed. “But as you know, I don’t text. I won’t do it. If they have something to say, they can call me or just show up at the door, for crying out loud. Who do they think we are, the Jetsons?”
Returned from his brisk walk with Mildred and, of course, Max, Sam sat anxiously at the dining room table. He pretended to read the morning paper while he tapped his foot like Gene Krupa, his right foot, the kick-drum foot; the left foot ached something awful, along with his ankle. Luckily, Mildred hadn’t commented on his hobble. The neighbor was in the kitchen listening to Mildred chatter away about the change in the trash collection days. In a matter of minutes, they’d both bring their coffee into the dining room. Sam prepared himself for the worst; he was about to face the music and there was nothing he could do about it.
For the first few minutes the conversation was light: how cool the nights were, but the days were warm for this late in autumn. Yes, the weather was exceptionally pleasant.
Then: “I hate to be a complainer,” said the neighbor, Susan or Sharon, “but there’s something occurring every evening that just has to stop.” The thin-faced, young woman glared at Sam. Across the table from him, fully clothed, she was more attractive than she was undressed late at night.
Sam ceased tapping his fingers. The jig was up. He’d soon find himself on the sex offenders list or even in the slammer. Sex offenders don’t do well in prison. He’d read that somewhere. He’d be shunned at church, perhaps also at Pierpoint Bowling Lanes where he went every Tuesday for the Seniors League. His team, The Hipsters (a name Sam detested) would scratch him from the roster. Even a bowling alley was no place for a deviant.
“Tell us what it is,” said Mildred, earnestly. She tended to fret. Over everything. Even her grocery list and smarty-pants contestants on Jeopardy. “We’ll do whatever we can to make things right. If we can. Won’t we Sam?”
Sam nodded. Even if they had to move out of the neighborhood, they’d make things right. But would Mildred move with him? Or would she turn her back on her banished husband? And could they afford a divorce on their fixed incomes, her schoolteacher’s retirement, and his modest funds?
“Well, Mrs. Smith,” the young woman said slowly. “I think your husband already knows exactly what I’m referring to.” She paused. She looked directly into Sam’s eyes. “Do you want to tell your wife what’s been going on, or should I?”
Sam shook his head. He bit at his trembling lower lip.
“What have you done?” asked Mildred.
Sam looked down at his hands, locked into a knot in his lap. He cleared his throat but couldn’t utter so much as a sound. Tongue tied, as his mother used to say. Cat got your tongue?
Finally, the woman spoke. “It’s disgusting, Mrs. Smith.” She sighed. “I hate to even bring it up, but it’s got to stop.” Her eyes shifted from Mildred to Sam, then back to poor Mildred. “Every night, late at night, around eleven o’clock, your husband takes your dog out to do his business.” She huffed. “And the dog seems intent on lifting his leg on the pyracanthas that line against the side of my house.” She grimaced. “He’ll kill them if he keeps doing it. And you,” she said directly to Sam, “don’t seem to care. You just let him pee wherever he pleases.”
Mildred grimaced and the neighbor folded her arms across her chest, the smallish breasts Sam had caught glimpses of over the past eight weeks.
His wife took a deep breath. Finally, she asked, “Why don’t you take Max into the back yard at night? Or down the street to the park?”
Sam shrugged. His senior-citizen brain wasn’t processing as efficiently as it should. “Max prefers the front yard… and the side of the house,” he said with a timid grin. “From now on, I’ll let Max go out into the back yard.”
Both women stared blankly at him, the only two women he’d ever seen undressed, other than a few in the more modern movies he and Mildred had seen together.
“Sam,” said Mildred. “You might at least apologize.”
“I am sorry.” Sam gulped. “I guess I’ve just been lazy.”
“No harm done,” said the young woman brusquely. “I just thought we needed to get this settled.”
Silence.
Mildred, never one to tolerate awkward breaks in any conversation, said, “Let me run into the kitchen and heat up some cinnamon rolls. They’re the kind you get on the refrigerated shelves at Kroger’s. You know, the kind you bang against the counter to get the tube to explode. That’s how you get them to open. You hit the package. The tube pops, and out comes the dough.”
“That would be nice,” said the neighbor.
“It’ll just take me ten minutes.” Mildred gave Sam an all-too-familiar look of disgust and left the two strangers alone at the mahogany table.
Sam tapped his fingers lightly on the tabletop and looked out the window. Out toward the woman’s shingled house. Her trim needed paint. He could feel the schoolteacher’s eyes boring a hole into the side of his head. Each breath she took seemed insistent. Out of the corner of his eye he could see her, not quite as plainly as he could feel her presence, but she was there: the grand inquisitor of the suburbs. He knew, all too well, that he wasn’t off the hook. He was dangling helplessly and she was enjoying every moment of his anguish.
In the kitchen Mildred hummed a hymn Sam thought he recognized but didn’t much care for. She slammed the door on the oven, too loudly, as she always did; not angrily; she was simply worked up and fretting.
Sam burned the roof of his mouth on the thick frosting on his cinnamon roll. Only a hint of the flames of hell, he thought. His wife and the neighbor discussed the problems with schools today, in particular, how an incorrigible child is best handled.
Filed under Fiction on January 19th, 2024
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Script
by Mark JACOBS

“Does your mother know what you do for a living?”
Gina had been out last night. She and Pigeon danced their brains out at Surface 21, which meant hours of what Pigeon called martini infusions. At work, Gina’s brain and body were shaky. So she wasn’t sure she heard the question right and blew past it, staying on script.
Script 2B, intended for the ones you kept on the line but were not quite cooperating, or not yet cooperating. Some of her work-mates kept print-outs of the scripts thumb-tacked to the walls of their cubicles. Gina didn’t need any priming. She knew them all by heart, which now that she thought about it was a strange way of putting it. Heart did not come into the work.
“Mr. Dixon, as a member in excellent standing of our Preferred Associates Club, I know how you value your time, and I want you to know that we value it, too.”
She stopped for breath, and to focus. That was martini blowback. No biggie, it was always like this. Something had been taken out of her. It would come back.
God damn it, she missed what the old fart said. The shoes the shoes the amazing blue Perrugios on sale for fifty percent off if she applied for their credit card. Those shoes were tap dancing on the screen of her phone, which peeked at her discreetly from her purse, left open for moments like this one when she absolutely had to think about something that wasn’t the script.
She did not need another credit card. Another credit card would be another mistake, it was that simple.
Pigeon was a cool name for a person who didn’t know who she wanted to be, or what. Left all kinds of doors open, which also was cool. Pigeon was hot.
“Old school,” the man was saying.
Ambrose Dixon was 66 years of age, according to the target profile data Gina was using. He had paid off his mortgage. What the fuck kind of name was Ambrose?
“It’s only because I’m old school that I’m not hanging up on you, Miss — is it Miss or Ms. Peruggio?”
Nah, he didn’t really say Peruggio, that was her martini-infused brain.
“Gina Infantino. I’m not married.”
You weren’t supposed to give up personal stuff like that, but she had learned that sometimes it was useful in establishing trust, and Bill wasn’t going to argue with results. Not to say that her supervisor wasn’t an asshole because he was.
A thought crossed Gina’s mind. Dangerous territory, that. The thought was a question: was she still drunk? No. Maybe. Sort of. It didn’t matter.
All around her, in neighboring cubicles, men and women with mediocre credit ratings were saying exactly the things they were supposed to say, in the order they were supposed to say them. Staying on script, it was called. Someday, it would be really nice not to have to work in a cube farm.
Back to the script.
“I’m sure you and Mrs. Dixon would love our Anchors Aweigh getaway package. It’s customizable.”
“Mrs. Dixon is deceased. We lost Marjorie three years ago.”
Gina scribbled a note. They were supposed to update the target database if they turned up mistakes, or new information, as long as what they learned fit one of the fields. Gina knew those fields really well, every last one of them.
“I’m sorry for your loss, Mr. Dixon.”
In a way, she was. Specifically what way, she was unable to say. Not now, when her sentences kept scrambling.
She plunged.
“I bet you haven’t taken a vacation once in those three years.”
Silence on the line then, but he did not hang up.
“We have a getaway package designed for mature individuals,” she said carefully. “It’s for people who share similar life experience, and a similar lifestyle.”
“You mean singles with a certain income level.”
“Well, yes, I guess I do.”
“I’m not a single, I’m a widower. Listen, Ms. Infantino, I’m going to hang up now.”
“Wait.”
Wait? That wasn’t in the script. Blame Surface 21, or the martinis. Not Pigeon. Nothing going on in Gina was Pigeon’s fault.
Dixon said, “I understand that your company gives you a script, and you have to follow it. That’s how all of this works.”
It’s not my company, is what Gina thought, I’m merely one of their flesh-bots. What she said was, “The reason for the script is to make sure we cover all the necessary information.”
“No, it’s not.”
“What do you mean?”
“The reason for the script is market research. It’s what you people think will be effective. Just out of curiosity, where do you work?”
“We operate out of Cincinnati. Why?”
“I spent a long weekend there once. This was years ago. I remember it snowed hard, and I got lost downtown. They record all your calls, don’t they?”
“For training purposes, and for quality control.”
Also, she did not add, just in case Bill felt like messing with her. Messing with her was his idea of a great day at the office.
The kicker was, Gina was good at her job. Damn good. Sometimes management used her calls to train new hires. Listen up, people. This is how it’s done. She was a top-tier performer.
Speaking of performance, here was another question: how come she could not bring down what she owed on the plastic below $14,000? Shoes were not the whole answer, they couldn’t be.
“If anybody’s listening,” said Ambrose Dixon, “I want them to know that people like me — I believe there are lots of us around the country — are turned off when someone reads from a script over the telephone. If they want us to buy their vacation trips, they might consider allowing the employees to have a regular human conversation.”
Was he daring her? Nah. He was just being himself, an old guy who’d lost his wife and owned his home free and clear. No credit card debt for Mr. Ambrose Dixon, that was for sure.
“What did you say about my mother?”
“I’m sorry?”
“Before. When we first started talking. You said something about my mother.”
“Does she know what you do for a living?”
Now was the time to get back on script.
“I’d like to send you some literature in the mail,” she told Dixon. “I think you’ll find it interesting, and hopefully a little exciting, too. Let me just be sure we have your correct address.”
She read the address that was on her screen.
Ambrose. The name was growing on her.
“Shakespeare? Charles Dickens?”
“Sorry?”
“You said you were sending me literature.”
She definitely had a headache. It was definitely not going away. She felt an intense longing to be somebody else, in another place. We could die in Cincinnati, that was one thing she remembered Pigeon saying last night.
There was something about the silence on the line when Ambrose stopped talking. Mysterious was the word that came to Gina, but she was not entirely sure what she meant by it.
It was time to end the call. Nobody who knew this job would estimate the chances of selling Ambrose any of their products above three percent. That was what top-tier performers learned early on. If the customer wasn’t buying, you weren’t selling. Move on. Every minute you spent not selling was a minute robbed from your next prospect, who might be golden. Besides, if Bill happened to be listening in — he did that fairly often, sometimes just for grins — he would be salivating at the chance to rip her a new one.
It was not like she planned to stay with the company forever. The day she paid off her credit card debt she was out of there.
Fuck it.
“My mother thinks I do graphic design.”
“Of course,” said Ambrose.
It was not an insult. There was a hint of sympathy in the words. Not too much, not too little.
“Nobody knows what I do for a living,” she admitted to him. “Not my family, not even my friends.”
Pigeon knew, of course, but what was the point of blurting that out? Anyway Pigeon had her own strange gig. She gave Brazilian wax jobs to rich ladies at a super expensive spa. She believed herself to be an artist, and who was Gina to say she wasn’t? If women had had their pussies shaved back in the day, in the Old World, maybe Michelangelo would have been into it.
“I think we ought to hang up now,” said Ambrose.
“Why?”
“If they’re taping this conversation, it’s not going to do you any good, is it?”
No.”
He was gone. Why in the world that would bring tears to her eyes, she had no frigging clue.
Because he was the supervisor, Bill had an office with a door he could close and open and then close again to suit his managerial purposes. He had this thing he did, exactly like what you saw on cop shows, where the captain stepped out into a room bustling with detectives and uniformed policemen and sketchy criminals, called somebody’s name in a hard voice, and then, “My office. Now.”
Gina’s cubicle faced away from Bill’s office — a mixed blessing — but when Ambrose hung up somehow she knew her supervisor was opening his door, he was standing in the threshold, he was opening his mouth to say it.
“Infantino. My office. Now.”
“Be there in a ‘sec,” she called back.
First, a quick text to Pigeon. Promise me we won’t die in Cincinnati. Then she wrote a few quick sentences on a piece of note paper. It was not really a script, but it would work like one when she had her conversation with Bill. When that was over, however it came out, she was ordering the blue Peruggios.
Filed under Fiction on January 5th, 2024
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Refugee in Riverside
by Robert WEXELBLATT

“Your great-grandfather was a tram driver. Professionally, he stayed on the rails, but at home he went off them once a month. This was down to his homemade slivovitz, which, for your information, is an infernal brandy made by fermenting plums.”
Ten-year-old Stephen rolled his eyes at his brother Will, who shook his head. Always the same joke about the rails, always the hellish slivovitz. Still in their pajamas, they were seated on the sagging couch in their grandfather’s living room on the morning of December 27. The lights on the tree were off; the room was chilly and full of shadows. At twelve, Will understood that the old man felt some compulsion to tell them the story of his life. He was willing to sit through it because he knew that his mother, for whom he would do anything, worried about her father. It was after their grandmother’s death that she insisted they spend two days of Christmas week in their grandfather’s drafty Victorian house. The boys went, Stephen stoically, Will under protest. Both would have preferred to be at home with their own beds, bathroom, presents, and friends.
By now, listening to their Djed’s story was a seasonal ritual, like productions of The Nutcracker and A Christmas Carol. This was their third year. The old man was settled in his recliner with a mug of tea with honey. The boys sat still on the couch, doing their duty while their parents were upstairs sleeping — or pretending to.
“The alcohol made Otac crazy angry. Majka insisted that he was only blowing off steam, letting out all his dissatisfactions and disappointments, the bad memories from the war. He was usually a gentle man, my Otac. It was only when things went badly that he got into the slivovitz. Something went badly every month. But it wasn’t so bad because by the time he came after us, the brandy spoiled his aim and his balance and, anyway, he soon passed out. All the same, I promised myself never to drive a tram or drink fermented plums. You understand? I was ambitious for another life, boys, a better one. I studied hard, as I expect you two do. I won a scholarship to the university. Zagreb University was founded in 1699, long before the United States, a fine old school, the top one in the country. As I’d always been interested in how things worked, especially radios, I decided to study electrical engineering. It was a new field back then and for that very reason a smart choice.”
The old man cleared his throat and sipped the tea that had gone cold, like the house.
“When the war started, I was in my last year, only months from my degree. But my parents said I should get out of Croatia or I’d be drafted. ‘War is terrible. Come back when it’s over,’ said Otac. ‘Yes. Go to America,” Majka said bravely, trying to hide her sadness. ‘I have a cousin there,’ she said. ‘First name Petar, last name Horvat. He lives in a town called Riverton in some place called Tennessee. You find him, he’ll help,’ she said, then burst into tears. I pray you never see your mother weep as mine did.
“I had little money when I landed in New York and my English wasn’t good, though my passport was. A man in a uniform looked at it then hard at me, and said “Welcome.” I was so nervous and such a greenhorn, I thought because he wore that uniform he could tell me how to get to Riverton. So, I asked. He made me repeat my question three times. My pronunciation wasn’t perfect, the way it is now. He laughed and said, ‘Oh, Riverside.’ Then he pointed down the concourse toward a long desk with a crowd of people around it. It was the airport’s tourist bureau. I picked up my cardboard old-world suitcase and took my place at the end of a line of middle-aged travelers with luggage that had wheels, exasperated parents wrangling whining children, and excited people my own age in blue jeans with enormous backpacks.
“The longer I waited in that line the more confused I became and the more anxious. My head filled up with doubts and questions. Was it Riverton or Riverside I was to go to? America is so much bigger than Croatia. The airport itself stretched out in every direction and seemed to me as vast as all of Zagreb. Would I be able to find the cousin who knew nothing of me? And even if I found my way to Petar Horvat, would he welcome me? He could have changed his name or moved elsewhere. In my nervousness I completely forgot about Tennessee. Your grandfather was a real mess that day, boys.”
Stephen turned toward his brother and giggled. Will smiled at his brother and held a finger to his lips.
“When it was finally my turn, I asked the woman behind the counter how I could get to Riverton, then I said, no, to Riverside. She was impatient. ‘Which is it?’ she demanded. Remembering the man who checked my passport, I said it was Riverside. She made me say it again, slowly. ‘Which Riverside?’ she asked. I was shaken. ‘There’s more than one?’ Boys, do you know that forty-six states have a Riverside in them? It’s the most common name for a town in the whole of America. As I’d forgotten all about Tennessee and had to say something, I asked what the biggest Riverside was. The woman tapped her busy colleague on the shoulder, whispered in his ear, got a reply, turned back to me and said, ‘The one in California.’ And so, I spent almost the last of my money on a bus ticket to Riverside, California. It took days and days. America, I thought, it’s almost all highway. Everybody wants to be somewhere else.”
By now, Stephen was squirming and Will couldn’t resist the urge to move things along.
“When did you hear about the tornado, Grandpa?”
The old man frowned. “That was the year after I got my job.”
“And it really destroyed all of Riverton, the one in Tennessee?”
“If I’d had better pronunciation and a clearer memory, I might have been there, among the dead.”
“So Riverside was the wrong place but turned out to be the right one?”
“Yes. Bourns had set up its headquarters here. They hired me because business was taking off and they were desperate for electrical engineers, even one with poor English and no degree.”
“And your boss’s secretary was Grandma?” Stephen chimed in.
“And you invented two new transformers. Big sellers. And they promoted you.”
“Then you and Grandma got married and had Mommy.”
“And Mom met Dad and they had us.”
“And here we all are!” shouted Stephen, jumping off the couch.
Hungry for breakfast, Will also got to his feet. “Just think. What if you’d remembered Riverton and Tennessee!”
Peeved that the boys pre-empted his story, the old refugee raised a finger spoke sternly.
“There’s a lesson for you. In this world things happen in three ways.”
“What are they?” asked Will, trying to sound interested as he yanked his exasperated brother back toward the couch.
“Some things happen by choice — like your mother. Some happen by necessity — like leaving Croatia. But most things happen by chance.”
“Chance?”
“Yes. In fact, you could say that my career, my marrying Grandma, your mother getting born, her marrying your father, and the both of you all come from a mix-up. But nobody likes hearing that. They want their lives to be meaningful, the result of their choices. So they call chance fate.” Here the old man pointed at the lightless tree. “Or, if they’re religious, they call it God’s plan. So, be humble.”
“Yes, Grandpa.”
“Be humble and hope to be lucky like me.”
“Can we have breakfast now?” Stephen begged.
“Just one more thing — don’t interrupt your elders.”
Filed under Fiction on December 22nd, 2023
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