Showing posts with label free. Show all posts
Showing posts with label free. Show all posts

Saturday, July 04, 2015

MOTH MADNESS - a short story

On a clear New Mexico day, the sky mimicked polished turquoise pierced with veins of crystalline quartz. Navajo artists sold malachite rings and squash blossom necklaces at the Palace of the Governors. Across the street, non-native artisans expressed their own vision in a more contemporary fashion.
The old town was alive with color. Morning glories and hollyhocks lined the street, and pastels clashed with orange berries of mountain ash and chocolate adobe. Sunflowers, pumpkins, and sacred corn crowned flat roofs.
A message on an old car painted in splashes of bright, freehand colors said, “Never pet a burning dog.”
Two couples meandered down the sidewalk, stopping to examine silver baubles and turquoise rings. Finally, Pamela said, “What now, gang?”
Pamela’s husband, Don, winked at Raymond, his male counterpart, and said, “A drink at the nearest bar?”
“Honestly, Don,” Pamela chided. “Has the town’s ambiance not caught up with you yet?”
“Just the gas from last night’s frijoles,” he said.
Raymond added, “So spicy, there’s a fart in every bite.”
Pamela frowned and walked ahead in silent protest. Don winked at Raymond and Julie, puffing his cheeks in Dizzie Gillespie fashion to show his distaste for the local fare.
“Slow down, Dear,” he said, words dripping with mischievous inflection. She didn’t, and they hurried after her.
Julie pushed her plate aside after lunch at a courtyard restaurant and asked, “Where to?”
Don stretched in his chair and yawned. “A nice nap?”
Pamela sipped her mineral water and smiled. “It’s the last day of our vacation, Don.”
“So what?”
“This is the center of New Age. We can’t leave without visiting a channeler and summoning a lost spirit.”
Don grinned, playing with his gray mustache. “Dear, you’re crazy.”
Pamela ignored him, turning to Julie and Raymond. “What do you two think?”
Julie glanced at Raymond, “I don’t know. Sounds silly to me.”
“It’s not silly,” Pamela shot back. “Don and I will go alone if you think it is.”
Don glanced at Julie and Raymond. Then, winking at Raymond, he asked, “How will we decide which channeler to consult, Dear?”
“We’ll ask the waiter.”
Don grinned. “Sounds logical.”
Pamela ignored him. Raymond glanced at Julie and smiled. When the waiter with the Brooklyn accent returned, Pamela asked, “Can you direct us to the best channeler in Santa Fe?”
“Depends,” he said.
Her curiosity piqued, Julie asked, “On what?”
“How much you’re paying.”
His terse reply raised Pamela’s eyebrows. “Are there some that much better than others?”
“No, but I’ll do it myself for the right price.”
This time, no one stifled their laughter. Pamela folded her arms, sat up straight, and frowned.
“I wasn’t making a joke,” she said, reprimanding the young man.
“Well,” he paused, “If I’m not good enough for you, you might try the Wolf.”
“The wolf?”
“Steinhart, Wolf  Steinhart.”
Bob chortled, “Wolf Steinhart?”
“Who’s Wolf Steinhart?” Julie and Raymond asked in unison.
“If you want to know about New Age, Wolf is your man.”
Don leaned back in his chair, folding his big hands behind his head. “Where might we find Mr. Steinhart?”
The waiter glanced at his watch. “Right now, he’s at the Pagan Bar.”
Don’s pale blue eyes widened. “He keeps a schedule?”
The waiter grinned. “Nah, he’s there most of the time.”
***
They found the Pagan Bar empty and eclectic, even by Santa Fe standards. Small dragons hung from the ceilings. A tree grew behind the bar. Louis Armstrong’s picture decorated the wall with crosses, lizards, and stained glass dragons. A sign said, “This is the year of the dragon.”
A lone man occupied a pink stone table, his head resting on his arm. As they stood in a semi-circle around him, he began snoring at a level that would have made a tic on the chart at the nearest seismic station.
Don grinned and tried to rouse him. “Ahem!”
A louder snort erupted from the man’s nostrils, and Pamela suggested, “Maybe we should come back later.”
“Not on your life,” Don said.
Raymond grabbed her elbow to prevent her exit. “He’s right. Let’s wake him.”
Raymond shook the man’s shoulder. Steinhart brushed away Raymond’s hand like someone swatting an annoying fly. A voice startled them. “You wanna talk with the Wolf.”
A dark-skinned lady wearing a bright red dress draped low over her shoulders stood looking at them, her hand on her hips.
“Why yes, as a matter of fact,” Don said.
“Then wait a minute.”
She disappeared behind the bar, returning with a shot of tequila, which she placed beside the man’s head. The Wolf snorted and opened his red-rimmed eyes, glancing up at the five people standing over him. He drained the shot in one gulp and tossed the glass into the adobe kiva behind him. When it shattered, he winced and massaged his left temple.
“Whom do I have the pleasure of addressing?”
“I’m Don Brabham, and this is my wife Pamela. These lovely people are Julie Hamilton and Raymond West.”
The man stretched himself to his full, impressive height. Don was tall, but this man was taller, at least six-six.
“Wolf Steinhart,” he said, extending his hand. “At your service.”
Steinhart spoke with a clipped British accent, and his khaki shirt imparted the appearance of a big game hunter. A red stain on his shirt dispelled this initial impression. When Pamela edged to the back of the group and eyed the door, Don grabbed her arm.
“We understand you’re an expert in New Age philosophy,” Don said. “May we sit?”
“How rude of me,” Steinhart said, pulling out two of the red lacquered chairs and raising a finger to the woman in the red dress. “Ramona! Tequila and five glasses.”
The dark-skinned woman ignored his request, continuing to polish a glass. “Who’s gonna pay?”
Steinhart glanced at the group until Don raised his hand. “My treat.”
“Then make it Cuervo Gold, pretty senorita,” Steinhart said, popping all five fingers on both hands. He bent over and placed his palms on the table’s pink surface. “Ladies and gentlemen, you have found your man.”
Still beaming, Steinhart plopped down between Pamela and Julie on the pink-cushioned bonco. They wrinkled their noses and edged away as Ramona brought the tequila and five-shot glasses.
“I’d rather have a glass of Chablis,” Pamela said.
Julie said, “Make mine a Coke.”
“Well, gentlemen,” Steinhart said, refraining from breaking the glass in the fireplace. “More for us.” He smacked his lips like a contented bovine and added, “My friends. You have arrived at the pith of the maelstrom, the mouth of the volcano, the eye of the needle.”
“The tail of the ass,” Don said.
Unperturbed, Steinhart continued. “Exactly what is it you wish to discover?”
“The address of a good channeler,” Don said.
Wolf’s chin dropped. “Is that all?”
“No,” Pamela said, becoming enthusiastic. “We need a guide through the mysteries of New Age.”
Wolf perked up at Pamela’s words. “A broad and demanding subject. I require a fee.”
“That’s no problem. . .” Pamela began.
Don interrupted. “How much?”
“Thirty dollars an hour and residuals,” Steinhart said.
Don squelched Pamela’s reply. “Residuals?”
Steinhart held up the bottle of tequila. Don glanced at Raymond and Julie. They smiled and blinked.
“You got it, old man,” Don said, taking the initiative.
Steinhart filled Don and Raymond’s glasses and poured another for himself. “As you mentioned,” he said, looking at Pamela. “This is the hub of New Age. The place where everyone’s karma hits the fan.” He chuckled. “In Santa Fe, experts perform diverse functions."
"Such as," Pamela said.
 Synovial fluid equalization, aura balancing, crystal healing, vibrational healing. Need I continue?"
"We're all ears," Pamela said.
 "Connective tissue polarity therapy; colon cleansing; clear light therapy, and bio-energetic synchronization.”
“More like bio-energetic money detachment,” Don quipped.
Pamela ignored her husband’s levity. “And channelers?”
“My dear lady,” Steinhart said, “There are hundreds of mystics, gurus, and spirit channelers in Santa Fe.”
Julie sipped her soda, and Raymond fidgeted in his red lacquered chair. “Every waiter in town is a mystic,” Raymond said. “I'm sure most of these people are fakes preying on unsuspecting visitors.”
When he glanced away from Pamela’s glare, Steinhart nodded. “What you suggest is true, but they are here for a reason.”
Raymond asked, “What reason?”
Steinhart poured another shot and answered, “The Native Americans.”
Pamela leaned forward. “You mean Indians?”
“There are fifteen thousand Pueblo in New Mexico, along with the Navajo and Hopi. The Pueblo believe they are here, now and always. They keep This fundamental view because it reveals their feelings for Bahana.”
“Bahana?” Don said.
“Whites. You and I. The original people have occupied this region for almost eight thousand years. Their culture is quite defined, more so than any in North America. There are things we bahana will never know.”
Julie asked, “Such as?”
“Koshare. . .”
Steinhart’s words died on his lips.
Don glanced at Raymond, then at Julie. “Koshare?”
“Powerful secret societies. Magic, both white and black. The so-called New Age practitioners gravitated here. To the Pueblo, this is the center of the universe.”
Pamela’s face glowed with anticipation. “You mean these people could summon a demon or heal cancer?”
Wolf Steinhart nodded. “These people, as you call them, are quite capable of almost anything.”
“Then this is for real?”
“As real as you or I,” he said.
Pamela asked, “Can we experience this mysticism or witness the summoning of a spirit?”
Don turned in his chair. “Dear, this is getting ridiculous. Let’s go back to the hotel and take a nice nap.”
Pamela glared at her husband. “You go, I’ll stay.”
Don frowned but remained seated, pouring another shot from the bottle. Raymond and Julie cast nervous glances at each other. Steinhart folded his arms, silent as he contemplated Pamela’s question.
“It’s possible,” he finally said.
Pamela glowed. “We’ll pay whatever it costs.”
“Dear lady, it’s not a question of money, though there is the matter of my small retainer.”
Don opened his wallet and handed Steinhart a Benjamin, asking, “What else is it a question of?”
“Belief,” he said, finishing his shot. “Where are you staying?”
“La Fonda,” Don said.
Wolf Steinhart glanced at his watch. “If you’re serious, I’ll pick you up at the hotel at five.”
***
The two couples waited, Pamela beaming, Don fidgeting. Julie looked bored as Raymond paced the sidewalk. “This is stupid, Pamela,” Don said. “Steinhart already has our money. He isn’t coming.”
“Of course he is. He’s just a little late.”
An old Land Rover pulled up to the curb, allaying Don’s doubts, Wolf Steinhart at the wheel in the same outfit as before. A broad-brimmed hat completed his big game hunter look. Raymond noted with relief he had at least changed shirts. Steinhart leaned across the front seat and opened the door with a smile.
“Pile in, good people.”
Because of his height, Don sat in the front seat. The others crowded into the back on the narrow bench. Steinhart pulled away from the curb and headed out of town.
Don asked, “Where are we going, old man?”
“First to Taos to secure a guide and then to visit the witch.”
Julie sat in the back seat, arms folded and toe-tapping. “I thought you were our guide.”
“Unfortunately, this excursion requires more than I.”
Pamela was ecstatic. “We’re visiting a witch, a real witch? Please tell us about it.”
“A practice passed through successive generations. Spanish monks introduced Catholicism to the region. Since then, the native’s belief in the spirit world has intertwined with the Catholic view of God.”
Raymond said, “Such as?”
“The evil eye. The Pueblo and Navajo believe wizards and witches own the power to harm by gazing at you. The power of the evil eye. They wear amulets and talismans, Catholic crosses, or votives to protect them from this power. They commingle Catholicism with their beliefs when they invoke spirits of the earth and moon.”
“And our visit to the witch. . .”
“A demonstration,” Steinhart said, finishing Raymond’s question. “Understanding this region's mystical culture would take our combined lifetimes.”
Purple shadows engulfed the highway, blended with a hazy orange sunset as they continued north to the Taos Pueblo. Steinhart entered through the back gate. In the encroaching darkness, they approached two pueblos separated by a clear creek. Both structures looked like ancient apartment complexes.
A church bounded the west end of the coyote-fenced enclosure. Steinhart crossed the narrow bridge, careful of the roaming horses and mongrel dogs. He stopped by the largest adobe structure, opened the door, and stepped out.
“Wait here. I won’t be long.” Steinhart started away but returned as if forgetting something. He removed four crucifixes from his safari shirt and handed one to each.
“Wear these,” he said.
They watched him climb a ladder to an upper entrance, disappearing inside. Don glanced at the crucifix, saying. “You think this will work for a Jew?”
“Honestly, Don,” Pamela said. “Just put it on.”
Raymond nudged Julie, and she bit her lip to keep from laughing. When Steinhart returned, only the stars and moon illuminated the surroundings. He wasn’t alone.
“This is Sam,” he said, introducing the young man. “He’ll lead us the rest of the way.”
Sam rode on the Land Rover’s fender to his own vehicle, an old pickup truck. Steinhart shadowed him out of the enclosure and into the darkness. They followed the highway for several miles before exiting to a dirt path. It jutted into the desert, following a dry arroyo for five more miles.
Julie, Raymond, and Pamela held on to their uncomfortable seats as Steinhart shadowed Sam’s truck. At the end of the arroyo, they found a single adobe cubicle, light radiating from its windows. Steinhart helped Pamela and Julie unwind from the uncomfortable back seat. The two couples waited in chilly bleakness, Sam and Steinhart soon returning from the house with a smiling boy. Steinhart took a bag of fruit from the vehicle, handing it to the lad.
“We’re just here to observe,” Steinhart said. “Please don't ask any questions.”
They followed him into the stucco house, finding a young woman beside a kiva fireplace. Two little girls giggled, playing ball and jacks on the earthen floor. When they spotted the sack of fruit, they rushed with pigeon-toed gaits, demanding their share.
Peculiar objects decorated the walls: an old chrome hubcap, several jawbones of indistinct origin, and some shells. Lateral vigas supported the ceiling. Bits of hay in the walls suggested real adobe formed them, not the cement variety used by local builders.
“This is Rachel Kucate, her daughters Verla and Natalie, and her son Chester.”
Don, Pamela, Julie, and Raymond followed Steinhart and Sam to a room in the back. An old woman sat alone in a rocking chair, a black cat at her feet. Sam closed the door behind them, illuminating the room with a dim coal oil lamp. The old woman continued rocking.
The cat arched its back as it moved beneath her legs and the chair's rockers. Though she looked at the picture of antiquity, the brightness and color of her garments clashed with this notion. Withered as a corn stalk ruined by too much sun and lack of rain, a blue flowered bandanna capped her silver hair. Turquoise and silver draped from her earlobes. A flowered shawl cloaked her pink wool sweater. Twisted turquoise graced her gnarled wrist.
“I have brought visitors, Grandmother,” Sam said.
The old woman opened her eyes, one dark and old, the other green and alive. She studied the visitors as Sam brought a small table from the corner and placed it in front of her. He sat on the floor and began chanting and beating a drum he’d brought from the truck. Her almost inaudible voice quivered when the old woman spoke, and she looked straight at Don.
“You brought somethin’ for Grandmother?”
Startled by her question, Don reached for his wallet. Steinhart touched his wrist and shook his head. “She’s not asking for money.”
Confused, Don fished an old gold watch from his pocket, attached to a length of frayed chain. Without understanding why, he placed it on the table.
“Bring me the cloud blower, my son,” she said.
Steinhart handed her the ceremonial pipe, which she lighted with a thin piece of wood in the flame of the coal oil lamp. The acrid smoke of wild tobacco billowed from its bowl. After several puffs, she handed the pipe to Don. Don puffed it, coughing as the harsh smoke filled his lungs. The old woman took it from him, placing it on the table beside the watch.
Soon, her shoulders began to quake. The tremble continued up her neck until her eyes closed and her head tilted backward. Her wrinkled lips parted and emitted a moan that sounded like wind whistling through branches. Trembling enveloped her, and she shook in a wild paroxysm of movement. Her head slammed against the table so hard that Raymond thought she must have killed herself.
When Don moved to help, Steinhart’s upraised palm signaled him back. Her head thrashed against the table before finally surrendering to a few feeble palpitations. Finally, she was quiet, her motion ceasing completely. A voice spoke, her lips unmoving. The voice, coming from the bowels of her soul, sounded masculine and tinny, as if awakened from a long sleep.
“I plunged from the sky, embraced by icy blue water. Now I am free and can say goodbye, little brother. Live your life in peace.”
The voice died away like an echo in an empty cavern as they watched, mollified and frozen in place. Sam stopped drumming and filled a ladle with cool water. He and Steinhart helped the old woman back into the chair and held the water to her lips until she opened her eyes.
Steinhart hugged the old woman and gave her a tobacco pouch, then exchanged a silent farewell as he motioned them to leave. Raymond was the last out, stealing one last glance at the old woman before shutting the door behind him. He noticed the cat beneath her feet had only one eye, green and alive. Steinhart gave Sam and Rachel twenty dollars in the cheery outer room. Sam nodded and faded into the darkness.
“That’s the strangest experience I’ve ever had,” Pamela said, returning along the dirt path to the Land Rover.
“Amen to that,” Julie said.
Raymond asked, “What’s the story of those people?”
“The old woman is a witch, as is her granddaughter Rachel and the two little girls. They suffer from genetic epilepsy and the foot abnormality you noticed. Navajos call the epilepsy moth madness—witch frenzy. This is because, in the throes of a seizure, they move their limbs like the wings of a moth near a flame. The Navajo believe women possessed by moth madness are magical and can converse with spirits. What you saw is its own explanation.”
“Fascinating,” Pamela said. “Whose voice did we hear, and what did the message mean?”
“Maybe you should ask your husband,” Steinhart said.
Confused by Wolf’s reply, Pamela put her hand on Don’s shoulder. “Don, are you all right?”
His usual joviality had flown out the window. “The watch I gave the old woman was my older brother’s, a tail gunner during the war. His plane crashed over Germany, and his body never recovered. We were close, and I never told him goodbye when he left to go overseas.”
Pamela started to comment. Caught instead between reality and a dusty desert road, she reclined against the bouncing seat of the Land Rover. With his arm around Julie, Raymond gazed at the sky. As he did, a shooting star lighted the darkness before disappearing forever behind a distant mesa.

###

Born near Black Bayou in the little Louisiana town of Vivian, Eric Wilder grew up listening to his grandmother’s tales of politics, corruption, and ghosts that haunt the night. He now lives in Oklahoma, where he continues to pen mysteries and short stories with a southern accent. He authored the French Quarter Mystery Series set in New Orleans, the Paranormal Cowboy Series, and the Oyster Bay Mystery Series. Please check it out on his Amazon author page. You can also check out his Facebook page.




Tuesday, May 07, 2013

Free ebook, Morning Mist of Blood, at Smashwords

When cowboy gumshoe Buck McDivit is hired by a wealthy rancher to investigate murder, oil and cattle theft, he encounters more than he bargained for. His investigation leads him through places in Oklahoma City no tourist ever sees, and to a pagan commune populated only by women. Before he can solve the mystery, he must first survive a gang of cattle thieves, a killer tornado, and a shape-shifting black panther bent on his demise. A very untraditional Western. Hang on to your Stetson!

Free on Smashwords

Eric'sWeb

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Tell Me a Story - a short story



I wrote Tell Me a Story after returning home from a tour of duty in Vietnam. While there, I once enjoyed a three-day stand down in the Vietnamese resort town of Vung Tau, the setting for this story. They say there’s a grain of truth to every fiction. What I say is there’s a bit of fiction in every truth.


Tell Me a Story

 “Hey, Mac. You've had enough already. Why don't you drag your ass outa here and go home?”
“Leave him alone, Clancy, why don't you?” Clancy, the big bartender, turned to see his nephew Tim standing on one foot in the half-opened doorway, bracing himself with an elbow against the wall.
“You wanna close up for me?” Clancy said. Not waiting for an answer he threw his bar towel across the counter, removed his apron and grabbed his coat from the rack in the corner. He dropped the keys to the door into Tim's hand as he passed. “Lock up when you've had all the fun you can take. I'm going home.”
Tim watched Clancy disappear down the deserted sidewalk and then glanced at the drunk sitting alone at the bar. Grabbing a bottle of Clancy's bourbon, he took the stool beside him.
The man seemed oblivious to his stained shirt and day-old growth of beard. As Tim filled his empty glass, he opened one eye and glanced up from the table.
“And to what do I owe this honor?” he said, alcohol slurring his words.
“Clancy decided to let us borrow a bottle of his best sipping whiskey,” Tim said.
Raising himself into a slumped sitting position, the unshaven drunk hiccupped, glanced at the bottle and grinned. “Well, I'd rather have a bottle in front of me than a frontal lobotomy.”
Smiling at the tired old joke, Tim raised his glass and the drunk did likewise.
“Here's to you. What's your name?”
The man, after draining half the liquor in a single swallow, said, “Harris. John Harris.”
“Pleased to meet you, Mr. Harris. I'm Tim Sullivan.”
“And a fine Irish name it is,” Harris replied.
After tapping Tim's barely touched glass, he finished the remaining drops of his own whiskey.
“To what do I owe the honor, Tim Sullivan?” Harris said again, refilling his glass from the bottle.
“Curiosity.”
“And what might ye be curious about, lad?” he said in his drunken imitation of an Irish brogue.
Tim smiled. “I'm a reporter. I haven't slept in thirty-six hours and I can't remember the last time I ate. I just covered a murder so grisly and sordid my editor's not gonna believe it when I give it to him.”
“If I could make the past go away, I would do it for both of us,” John Harris said.
Tim nodded, and his grin remained acerbic when he said, “I guess you can't. But there is something you can do for me.”
“Name it,” Harris said.
“A story,” Tim said, resting his head in the palms of his hands. “Tell me a story.”
Staring with drunken, rheumy eyes, Harris raked five bony fingers through his matted hair before pouring himself another shot of whiskey.
“What story?”
Shrugging noncommittally, and glancing at his watch, Tim said, “You name it, John. Everyone has a story. I'm too wired to sleep and too numb to talk. I gave you whiskey, now tell me a story.”
Harris nodded and leaned back in his chair, watching Tim Sullivan light his cigarette. For a long moment, he stared at a point above Tim's right shoulder, making him wonder if he’d passed out with his eyes open. He hadn't. He was trying to recall a past moment, and the exact nuance and inflection to convey that memory. The cogs in his drunken brain were turning. Finally, he blew a wisp of smoke at the ceiling and began in dreamy, broken sentences.
“Pale, washed-out sky. Butt on a canvas seat and back against a metal vibrating wall. Half-dozen expressionless Vietnamese Nationals across the aisle, staring at nothing with nervous eyes, inside the droning monstrosity.”
Harris' words seemed to emanate from a different person. Before three sentences passed his lips, he had stopped talking and held his own cigarette with a palsied grip. Slowly, he sucked at it, as if he might never taste another. Tim thought he was done. He wasn’t and soon began again.
“Glanced out the porthole. Endless connecting craters surrounding a forest of defoliated stumps, many still burning. Wisps of yellow smoke curling up from decimated earth. Pale tropical sky back-dropping freshly churned dirt—like a coffin's velvet lining around an ashen corpse.”
Harris paused again as if remembering the vision with vivid recall.
“Ruined jungle. Rice paddies. When the Caribou banked its wing, I saw the South China Sea for the first time. It looked like paradise.
“The Chinook began a downward spiral, and I saw a short stretch of man-made gray surrounding an eternity of tropical green. Heat devils danced on the concrete runway. Greenhouse heat and outhouse stench hit me when they opened the door.
“I was soon in a green army bus winding down a seaside road surrounded by endless vegetation. They let me out at an Army base by the sea.
“I hit the base on Friday for a three-day stand-down, and the place was jumping. Stowing my duffel in one of the tents, I followed the noise to the beach. I thought I had died and gone to heaven, standing on the whitest sand, beneath the bluest sky, beside the clearest water I’d ever imagined.
“Half-naked Vietnamese girls with seamless copper skin and flowing black hair were everywhere, and they all had sensual lips and dark eyes that could burn a hole through your heart like a cutting torch.
“G.I.'s were also everywhere. Young, drunk and laughing. Grunts, straight from the jungle, wearing cut-off fatigue pants. Bodies the sun hadn't touched in months—bleached by sunless, triple-canopy darkness. Martha and the Vandellas blasted from a quad-speaker radio in the background.
“I pulled off my boots and shirt and tossed them behind a concrete wall. A squeal behind me. A beautiful Vietnamese girl walked by, and I watched her tanned legs and bikinied ass. She left the beach with a lifeguard and my heart.
“Drunken, dancing Aussies. More girls. Tropical colors, loud music, and alcohol. I should have felt happiness, but the throes of melancholia entangled my neck with icy fingers. Still, after an hour in paradise, I had yet to speak a word. Feeling strangely invisible and ignored, I changed clothes and took a Lambretta to Vung Tau, the village beside the sea the French called the Vietnamese Riviera. Tall palms, tranquil breezes and long stretches of white beach were everywhere. On a back street that swarmed with bicycles, buffalo, and little yellow people, I met a grunt. The man, no more than nineteen, had the hard edge of someone that had already experienced more life and death than most ninety-year-olds. With him, I went to a whore house in an old French villa, with a red tiled roof, surrounded by creeping greenery. A mama-san, her tongue, and lips black from chewing betel nuts, smiled.
“Got two baby-san,” she said. “Numba one. You like?”
She wasn't lying. Neither of the girls looked older than thirteen. When I shook my head and backed out of the room, the young G.I. grinned and took both girls. I never caught his name.
After returning to the base, I slept till late the next morning on a cot in a muggy tent, returning to the ville that afternoon. I visited a bar and met Hoa. G.I.'s and boom-boom girls crowded the bar. A smiling Vietnamese waitress approached me through the throng when I sat down.
“You buy me tea?”
Dark hair. Tight yellow sarong slit almost to her waist. Ruby lips and amethyst mascara surrounding dark eyes that glowed in the dim room like coal in a hot furnace. She was beautiful, and I was in love. At least in lust. I nodded and patted the empty chair beside me, waiting as she signaled someone across the noisy bar before putting her arms around my neck.
“G.I. alone?”
“Not now,” I said.
A little man brought her a glass decorated with a single cherry. ‘Saigon tea’ was just that—tea. Holding the cherry by the stem, she touched it suggestively to her tongue and closed her red-painted lips around it.
“What name?”
“Harris,” I said.
“Glad to meet you, Hawis. My name, Hoa,” she said in broken English.
Between patron noise and jukebox, blare I drank a half-dozen gin slings while she consumed a like number of Saigon teas.
“You spend night with me, Hawis?” she soon said.
“How much?” I asked, not naive enough to believe she was offering charity.
“Ten dollah, MPC.”
I'd already paid twice that much for drinks, and ten dollars in military payment certificates were about all I had left. “Five dollars,” I countered.
Folding her arms tightly, she crossed her legs and shook her head. “No way, G.I.”
“All right,” I conceded. “Ten dollah.”
When I gave her the money, her oriental smile returned. “How many rubbah you need?”
“Ten.”
“G.I. numbah one bullshit. Give me dollah,” she said, holding out her hand.
I dug a dollar out of my shirt pocket, handed it to her and watched her disappear through the crowded bar wearing a mile-wide grin. Checking my wallet, I found I had less than twenty dollars left. Five minutes had elapsed when I spotted Hoa standing by the door. She motioned me, and I followed her outside to the dark street.
“Give me dollah,” she said. “Taxi man charge you five dollah. I talk.”
I fished in my pocket for another dollar.
We weaved a circuitous course through the ville to a three-story apartment complex and then walked up to the second floor. Holding my hand, she led me to her one-roomed apartment. Inside, sweating plaster was peeling off the walls from the humidity. There wasn't a single couch or chair in the room, only a large bed.
“You hungry, Hawis? Give me dollah. I get food.”
She took the money and disappeared for ten minutes, directing me when she returned to the bathroom. “Brush teeth,” she said, handing me a well-used toothbrush and tube of toothpaste. I wondered how many G.I.s had used the same brush.
Tim Sullivan waited for Harris to continue. Instead, he slumped in his chair. Thinking him too dry to talk, Tim refilled his glass. Harris didn't seem to notice. Producing a crumpled pack of cigarettes from his shirt pocket, he fished one out. It was only slightly bent. Smoke wafted slowly from his nostrils. Although he stared at the ceiling, his green eyes became glazed as if he were envisioning something far away. After a long, unbroken silence, he stubbed out the cigarette and stared at Sullivan.
“Have you ever gone five months without seeing a woman?”
Tim Sullivan shook his head.
“I had thought about having sex so long when it finally came to pass, the act paled beside the dream.”
“No problem, G.I. Happen all time,” she assured me.
“Someone knocked on the door, and I almost came unglued. Hoa patted my shoulder and got out of bed, not bothering to dress. An old man, totally unmindful of her nudity, handed her a steaming bowl of fishy soup through the door. We shared the spicy soup and rice with a single spoon.
“You married, Hawis?”
“Yes,” I said.
“Wife very pretty?”
“We were only married five months when I got here. I can barely remember what she looks like.”
“You love her?”
“Don't know,” I said. “Are you married?” I said, changing the subject.
Shaking her head sadly, she said, “I have lover. He beaucoup love me.”
Hoa pointed to a glossy 8 by 10 on the stand beside the bed—she and a young American airman, holding a tiny baby.
“Is he stationed at the airbase?
Again she shook her head. “He go home six month ago. He send for me soon.”
“And the baby?”
“He our baby-san,” she said, smiling. “Leonard take us to America. Baby-san grow up become rich man, very smart like father.”
My heart skipped a beat and almost seized up. While I longed for a woman far away whose face I could barely remember, Hoa longed for a man who’d fucked her, taken her love and gone away, never to return.
“The war will end soon, Hoa. All the G.I.'s will go home. What will you do then?”
Even as I mouthed the words I knew they sounded cruel, though I couldn't prevent myself from saying them anyway. With sad eyes darker than ten years of war, she stared back at me.
“I check on baby-san,” she said. “You stay. We make boom-boom again when I come back. Better this time."
After ten long minutes, waiting naked and alone in the dark, paranoid thoughts began to overload my brain. What was I doing in a Vietnamese village swarming with Viet Cong, with no weapon, alone in the middle of the night? What if Hoa returned with a little black-garbed man armed with a demon spitting AK-47? I got dressed and peered out the door, seeing nothing but darkness.
“Fear is a strange emotion,” Harris said, smiling up at Tim Sullivan.
When Tim topped up his drink, Harris continued his story. “I abandoned the apartment and hurried down the stairs to the deserted street, finally managing to hail a surprised Lambretta driver passing in the night. When I reached the base beside the sea, I fell into a fitful sleep in the airless tent.
Lingering guilt overcame me the following morning. After checking my wallet and finding it nearly bare, I took the army bus back to town and waited in the hotel lobby that housed the bar where I’d met Hoa. Although the place seemed deserted, she soon appeared through a door from the bar. She was wearing a lime green sarong and looked exotic and beautiful.
Glaring at me with accusing eyes, she said, “You leave door unlock. Why not tell me you go? I very much worry for you.”
When I reached for her, she pulled away, shaking her head.
“I'm sorry, Hoa. When you left, I got frightened. I didn't mean to leave the door unlocked.”
Hoa's features softened, and she touched my hand. “You miss wife very much?”
Cradling my face in the palms of her hands when I nodded, she stood on her tiptoes and kissed me.
“You remember me always, Hawis?”
“Always,” I said.
Though she turned away, attempting to hide the tears streaking her amethyst mascara, I caught a glimpse of her sorrowful smile.
I never saw her again.
Upon returning to the base, I found it nearly deserted with all the Aussies and Line Company grunts gone. Despondent, I took a walk on the beach, alone with only an old papa-san picking up yesterday's litter using a nail protruding from a broom handle. I sat on the concrete wall, feeling like the last man on earth.
All alone, listening to a whistling ocean breeze and watching distant gulls, I sat there.  A G.I. dressed in camouflage fatigues, walking along the beach alone, smiled when he saw me, joining me on the cement wall. He was a sniper, trained to lie in wait for the enemy and kill him with a single shot from his specially modified M-14.
He asked, “How far away do you think you can kill a man?”
Shaking my head, I answered, “I don't know.”
“I killed one once from nine-hundred meters. Believe me?”
I shrugged.
“I was on a hill overlooking a rice paddy when I saw a papa-san plowing behind a water buffalo. He was so far away he looked like an ant. I raised my sights and squeezed off a round.” Raising his arms to show me, he added, “A second later, papa-san dropped and never got back up. I killed him from nine-hundred meters.”
When I nodded appreciation for his feat, the camouflaged man acknowledged my silent praise with a smile and walked away down the beach without speaking another word, relieved for the moment of more guilt than one person should ever have to bear alone.
“People do things, you know. Sometimes terrible things. They may live long enough to regret it. They never live long enough to forget about it."
***
Tim Sullivan waited as Harris became silent. When he reached for his glass, he found not a single sip missing from the last pouring. Returning it to the bar, he watched as John Harris dragged himself sullenly off his stool.
With a wry smile, he left Tim alone with his thoughts, never speaking another word as he opened the barroom door and vanished into the dim morning light.

END




Born near Black Bayou in the little Louisiana town of Vivian, Eric Wilder grew up listening to his grandmother’s tales of politics, corruption, and ghosts that haunt the night. He now lives in Oklahoma where he continues to pen mysteries and short stories with a southern accent. He is the author of the French Quarter Mystery Series set in New Orleans and the Paranormal Cowboy Series. Please check it out on his AmazonBarnes & Noble, and iBook author pages. You might also like to check out his website.