Perhaps it’s Love (Chapter 11 and 12 Bustling and Remote)

11
Bustling

“Tommy seems really nice, I like him; I think you found a good mate,” said Tasma with a little flatness to it to Jill.

“Well, I suppose, I mean, everyone likes him, he’s not like Johnny, I mean, wild like Johnny and me, but maybe I need that,” she said unenthusiastically.

Tasma simply avoided the subject, it was, or could surely end up, too deep for her understanding. From what she remembered of Jill, it would be an ongoing open-ended conversation and end up with Johnny somehow dominating the scene.

After breakfast was over and everything put away, they both went to Jill’s bedroom, she had to waitress at the bar in an hour or so, and then before dusk, Tommy would take over as the waiter.

[The Bedroom] Tasma noticed Jill’s bedroom was quite spacious, at least, twice the size of hers. She had a number of paintings, sketches and photographs of nudes on the walls, possibly a dozen or so; even one of Elvis, a photo a record, it looked signed, the Doors, Beatles and Janis Joplin all photos. Tasma’s eyes opened up wide as an owl checking out corner to corner of the room, wall to wall. She even noticed holes in the wall used for incense: it seemed she must have burnt some, for there was still a strong smell in her room.

Then over the bed was kind of a bookcase, there was somewhere around twenty books on itall on psychology, behavior modification, counseling and psychotherapies. They were obviously Tommy’s, she concluded.

As Jill changed into something more favorable for waitressing she noticed on the side of the bed on a stand was a picture of Tommy. And next to that were a number of magazines on hunting, shooting and sailing.

“You can borrow any one of my magazines if you wish Tasma,” Jill commented.

She had also noticed in the living room a number of volumes on Patrick O’Brien, another kind of Jack London I suppose, she may have concluded. Possibly they belonged to her father, or who knows, maybe her; she noticed one book called “The Pat Hobby Stories,” her father had that one in Minnesota, the last book to her understanding of F. Scott Fitzgerald, just published last year [l966] she thought. Some 75.cent paperback Tarzan books were lying about. Jill could see Tasma pacing and looking about through her mirror, “The Tarzan stuff belongs to Tommy, not sure why he likes him, he is far from the macho Tarzan himself.”

Tasma was not going to touch that remark, it was too precarious, and she could see from the side of her eye Jill curiously waiting (should she stick up for him or not). But she had learned from her family arguments: she did not need to respond to every rhetorical question someone brought up to her, or what she felt was rhetorical. It didn’t surprise her that Jill didn’t have any classical books, like Hemingway, or older Fitzgerald books, or books by Faulkner, or Jack London, writers she liked, and writers her father likedas they say, ‘like to like,’ when it comes to father and daughter in writing, she’d always say that. And I suppose no matter what, we pick up traits from our parents. She was in essence looking for a romance novel, but couldn’t find one describable to her liking; she noticed one she had not seen before though, the novel itself, nor had she heard of the author, The Promise of Love, but paid little attention to it, it was a paperback and the book on the back showed something of a hospital, and she didn’t care for hospitals in particular, but the front was appealing, it showed two people hugging (Mary Renault). There was another book that caught her eye “Granite & Rainbow,” by Virginia Woolf; the author was recognizable but not the book. So she had her female writers as well, she figured.

Jill was now ready, and without reluctance, Tasma opened the door to the hallway, and bustled out.

“Listen up,” said Jill, “If you need to talk about why you’re running away: feel free to do so, if not, well, that’s also fine with me. Sometimes it helps to get it out, or so I’ve heard by everyone it seems, and I suppose sometimes it doesn’t.”

“No big reason, other than I had to go, or so it seemed at the time, kind of like Elvis’ song goes: It’s Now or Never.”

“Hmmm,” came from Jill’s voice”Bustling out or breaking out, or running away, it’s all the same to me; never thought you’d do such a thing though. Should I call your mother and let her know you are safe?” She then lit a cigarette.

“You’re not pregnant, are you?”

Tasma with an eyebrow almost touching the top of her forehead (with a chuckle) said, “Of course not Jillgosh no!”

Jill seemed a bit dumfounded thinking there was more to this than meets the eye; for she herself was the only child also, as her parents had had her late in life, for they were now in their early sixities. Tasma was from a middle class family, a well educated family. They didn’t drink or smoke, and went to church on Sundays, but they didn’t agree on much either, and Tasma was normally the one in-between. They were in a way, like the bulk of married couples I suppose, but there wasn’t much freedom in her eyes; something she envied Jill for, and evermore with Tommy. Whereas, Johnny was kicked out of his house at seventeen, his parents would had done it earlier but waited until he graduated from High School, and it was probably the only reason he stayed so long at home, so as to not get kicked out.
She tried to think of a reason she ran, but there was no reason other than she ran to run, to get away, and wasn’t sure how far she’d go, but here she was. Seattle had come to her mind a half dozen times, but so did a few other places. And then out of the blue, it was planned and she left. There was no real mystery to it other than her subconscious had put the puzzle together while she was sleeping, and her living it out while she was awake was now; as often times the mind works.

Jill played with her cigarette smoke, blowing smoke-rings as she grabbed the umbrella. For that moment she didn’t feel brave, as brave as she had felt; as Jill stood thinking on what next to say and Tasma feeling there was nothing for her to say. Then suddenly out of nowhere, tears broke out, erupted in the corners of Tasma’s eyes; out from the long silence that prevailed between Jill and Tasma.

“You can’t please anyone, ever, ever, ever. No one, everyone wants you to take their side against the other. Always in the middle; always pretending to be what they want to see from you. But you Jill, you are you; you don’t have to please anyone. (A pause came; she took the moment to put herself back together, and continued with what she was about to say.) Yes, if you want you can call mom and dad, but I’m not going home. I thought you were on my side for once.” She hesitated, looked down, and said in a pitiful manner, “Maybe I’ll have to go home then.” She had no other recourse should it come down to that, except walk the streets and that was not any life or a respectable option for her.

Jill’s cigarette almost burnt her fingers, had she not felt the heat in time. She quickly put it out, staring into Tasma’s rainbow greenish eyes, eyes as deep and green as Seattle’s Port.

“Listen up,” said Jill with a motherly tone, but the tears started to come back nonetheless; she was in another worlddisassociating with Jill’s voice, and almost in a catatonic state. Jill grabbed her, shook her like a bag of popcorn, by the shoulders, she had a strong gripdigging deep into her shoulder blades; she then caught her eyes as she opened them up wide.

Said Jill in a forkful manner, “I didn’t mean to put you into shock
I’m really sorry, what can I do for you; I’m here for yawreally. You can stay as long as you want. But you got to find something to keep you busy, a job, school, you know, something or you’ll go buggy. What can you do?”

“I don’t know” snuffled Tasma.

“Well, take some time and think about it.”

“Sure (a pause, Jill looking at Tasma), I really mean it, I will think about it as you say,” the house thereafter seemed to turn a silent gray for Tasma.

“You all really got enough problems,” said Tasma, as if she knew something which Jill knew she didn’t know: Jill looked at Tasma, and marked it as just loose talk coming out to Tasma.

“We’ll have fun, you and I, us two girls, girls talking about boys,” a chuckle then came out of Jill’s mouth, and Tasma produced a smile.

As Tasma sat back into the sofa chair, soundlessly, Jill mentioned in passing, as she turned on the TV “St. Paul, Minnesota, should be getting their lovely autumn leaves soon (a statement-question) I suppose you miss that.”

“Oh yes, it is beautiful in Minnesota during autumn, it’s the best time of the year there. It was always the best time for me (long pause)
Autumn that is.” Then out of the window a lawnmower was heard, they both could see their neighbor Wes cutting the grass.

12
Remote

Tasma had fallen to sleep in the sofa chair upon Jill’s arrival whereupon she woke her up, it was 7:00 PM, “Would you care to talk?” asked Jill.

“Oh,” she answered, a bit groggy, rubbing her eyes, noticing it was now dusk, as she peered out the window.

“Tommy’s at work now, I wanted to see how you were doing?”

“Doing, oh, oh I’m doing quite fine cousin Jill,” it was meant in jest, for a smile appeared between both of them. She added, “How did it all happen between you and Tommy?”

“Well,” she started to say and paused while sitting down on the arm of the chair, “We kind of met at the bar, he was working on his degree in psychology, and, well, we went out between his working and going to school; and I liked how he kissed. Oh he’s a little coy at times, but can be frisky; not like you, you can be spunky (Tasma like the comment she made of her, and smiled).”

Tasma commented: “Wild would be the word for you,” funny she thought, spunky was a good word, it never occurred to her and it fit just fine for her ego. “But Tommy looks so tame, gentle, and courteous,” she said out loud.

Jill continued, “To be frank, Johnny was a better kisser I suppose, that is, better than Tommy; I mean if I were to compare them two. Funny Johnny never called me these past years; we got along so well when I visited you.” Tasma took that as a rhetorical question and said nothing, plus she was lost for words in such matters.

“Anyhow, Tommy has been living here a while, a long while now I suppose; a good two years now that I think about it. Mother and Dad didn’t’ say much about him moving in and here he’s been, and he’s been good company. I thought of Johnny often, but he just never wrote me back, nor called me. And after Tommy stayed here awhile, well, I invited him into my bedroom, and so he’s stayed there ever since. Maybe I replaced him with Johnny, I hope not, I don’t’ think so. Let’s leave this between us girls; you know it is girl talk, right?”

“Right,” said Tasma with a sharp edge, and double r, with a slur to the ‘R,’ part of the word.

“Good girl Tasma; you’re my favorite cousin [long pause], you really are you know. (Tasma just smile, again not knowing what to say) I think I was thirteen years old when I met him,” said Jill.

“Met who,” asked Tasma, kind of drifting off.

“Johnny of course, who else?”

“Oh yes, yes, that’s right, I’m still waking up.”

“Did you forget something? I had an impression you deleted something.” Jill had lost focus for a moment also, Wes next door was walking his dog, he was barking, creating a little distraction.

“We had sex a few times, Tommy and I, but I thought it not to be such a great idea after a while, we seemed too much like brother and sister, and after all we are really opposites. But recently we started back up again; it was, or never has been I expect, as fulfilling as it was with Johnny; perhaps because Johnny was my first lover.”

The evening twilight brought dimly-lit shadows to her countenance. (Tasma was never sure if she was a person who could be loved, least of all, worth loving. On the other hand, Jill figured: who could fall in love with Tasma in the first place, she was safe with Tommy or anybody for that matter; in that she was so unromantic. Such a pity she murmured silently to herself.)

“I’m so happy you told me for some reason I’m more at ease. It’s good you look at all sides of a relationship. I never had one so I don’t know.”

“Yes,” said Jill, “Tommy is always preparing for life, while Johnny takes life as it comes, they are both polar opposites, are they not (a rhetorical question I would gather).”

“Oh Johnny can become a jerk at times,” said Tasma.

“Yes, Johnny and I had a short summer fling, when you fixed us up, and he was rough, but no more than I, I suppose.”

In St. Paul, Minnesota Mr. and Mrs. Stanley (Tasma’s parents), in their bedroom (on Albemarle Street), both with their mouths slightly opened, books on their laps, covers, covering them up to their waist, laying back against the bed board, a draped light over the head of the bed, ungracefully about to turn off the lights to go to sleep. Outside the window you could see the weather was freezing up, drifting snow from one yard to another, creating little mounds along fences. Somehow Mrs. Stanley (Tasma’s mother) turned her eyes to the side where Tasma’s picture was on a small table by the bed-stand, where an alarm clock was also; she knew where Tasma was, Jill had notified her, and understood some of the ‘why’s’ of Tasma’s issue. As her husband turned off the lights her mind held stone-still, a reflection of the picture, her mind heavy with calmness now, tranquility was present. As she lay back down, she could see her husband’s face, it did not move, lest it should not disturb his wondering thoughts, nor did she say a word. It was simple to remain still; knowing Tasma was well now she could go to sleep, not like before, not knowing anything.

She had learned in life there were different kinds of contentment, this was one of them. There she lay falling to sleep observing the night thin away as her eyelids shut. Thank God for little favors she hummed to herself.

Jill had left for work and Tasma sat back in the sofa chair, she was getting used to it, seemed like her little haven in the house when not in her room. She noticed a book by an author Colleen Grant, the title being: “Bustling.” Hence, she grabbed it and read it for about an hour. Then thinking: Tommy will be home soon, carefully enough she emerged with a comb from her purse, as if it was urgent, or just nervousness. She flung her hair back to give a more youthful exposed face to her pose, and continued in brushing it out with a rat-tailed brush and comb. If one had planned for her to create a pose, it would have been this, as she leaned forward, looking at the long and wide mirror on the back of the door from her chair, and from her own angle, looking into a smaller mirror in her freehand, put herself quickly together.

There was a banging at the door, Tasma had fallen to sleep, and Tommy was simply making noise coming in, a bit awkward. He saw Tasma in the chair, said: “Don’t mind me,” his face looked surprised. “Studying can be frustrating,” he added.

Tasma had woken-up partially, but didn’t really understand if he was talking to her or someone else, so she slowly opened her eyes, bending forward a little, eyebrows up a little, “Me, are you talking to me?” she asked.

He now took notice, she had been sleeping (and with a perfectly head of hair combed), not just resting. “Sorry about my noisy entrance, I got to get ready to replace Jill at the bar, the Due-Drop-Inn; got little more than an hour.”

“I hope whosoever book this is they don’t mind if I read it?”

“It’s mine, I don’t mind,” said Tommy with a joyful smile. There were two more similar books on the cabinet where Tasma found this one by the same writer.

“I wrote it, I also wrote the two on the shelf over there (pointing).”

Tasma opened her eyes wider, “You’re kidding,” she said as she woke up more and leaned forward. “But the author’s name is a girl?” she added.

“Yes indeed it is, and do you think if I put my name on the book, girls would buy it?”

“I, I don’t know, but I suppose they’d think twice.”

“Yes, of course, that’s exactly what they’d do,” Tommy trying to be polite. “Do you like it?” asked Tommy.

“Well, it’s about a girl from San Francisco, a youthful one who falls in love with a man who seems to be a lot older than she, she’s also quite busy, it’s a fast paced book, and from what I see at this moment, there is a gender gap, I’ll have to read more to see if they can work out their differences.”

“Good girl, you summed it up pretty easy.”

“Well, I guess I’m a pretty simple girl, and that is how I see it.”

“Do you hope they can mend their differences, and put it together?”

“I know you’re majoring in psychology, so I’m not sure what the twist will be. But something tells me life for them will not be easy no matter how it ends.”

“And do you think life should be easy for them?” Tasma looked deep into his eyes, and wasn’t sure what to say, he had deep blue eyes.

“Should it be? (she repeated his words)that’s a tricky question. I think the shape of words on paper will never tell the whole story one way or the other, I mean, it should be to me straightforward,uncomplicated; if their relationship is so hard, and difficult, then maybe it shouldn’t be. I mean, life seems to be hard enough, that if it’s hard in the beginning, how can one expect a happy ending.” Tommy smiled.

“That’s some good insight. It’s like love and God, they are words which can produce many questions and I have produced my own concerning these issues alsoboth words are choices I do believe.”

“I’ve only read some forty pages,” she commented.

“Women don’t quite think the same way men do, I had to ask a lot of women at the bar how they see things,” said Tommy.

“And did they surprise you with their comments?”

“I seem to have understood about one third of what they said, or should I say, told me, but I used as much insight as I could from them to perfect my story, feeling it has to come from their point of view, not mine (being a male); that is: how they think and feel, which is important.”

See Dennis’ web site: http://dennissiluk.tripod.com Dennis’ new book, “Poetic Images out of Peru,” should be out in another week so you can be checking your local bookstore, or http://www.bn.com

Tag: Chapters

Old Josh in Fraternizing with Nelly the Cow! [1873] Episode #19 Part I and II

[Advance] There was a cow over in the pastor next door to the Hightower’sHenry Jackson Birmingham and his wife Mahogany, bought the place in 1872, several months had passed, and Mahogany had met Old Josh, but has not said much to her husband about it, not much to say I would think. They bought the place from Thomas August Smiley, a white neighbor, the Birmingham’s are Negroes, who had inherited some money, and got the place for a good price. Mahogany, has taken a liking for Silas’ younger brother, Jordan as well as for the white neighbor Abernathy, opposite side of her farm, of the Hightower’s; Jordan who works in the country story in town (Ozark, Alabama), and lives in the back of the store most of the time, when not helping his pa at the Hightower plantation, like Silas does, is now home for the weekend to help his pa. Ella Hightower, Mr. Charles T. Hightower’s wife is kind of always in the background, but she is there nonetheless. Charles, also heavy with age, has had his heart trouble in the past.

There was a cow in the pastor, Henry Birmingham had bought him a few weeks ago, it was watching old Josh as he fiddled about, watching I’d say, without interest, as Josh fiddled about fixing, or trying to fix the barn door, to be correct, the hinges on the barn door, and he saw the cow from the side of his eye, over across the fence, borderline between the two properties, the cow was just staring, yawning, as Josh looked, now leaning against the barn a bit, Silas along side the barn greasing a wheel for Hightower’s carriage, Josh got annoyed at the new comer in town the neighbor next door that is. Jordan his youngest son was also on the plantation, he worked in a store in Ozark, during the week and slept on a cot in the back of the store, and if and when he could, he’d come home to help Silas and Josh around the plantation, somekind of an agreement Mr. Hightower, the owner made with Josh a long time back.

Old Josh was getting annoyed with the cow; it was as if the cow looked at him or looked over him insignificantly. The morning sun seemed to fall directly over the cow’s head, and it seemed to have a smirk on its face also, or so it looked as its head was pointed in his direction, Josh was a distance away of course, his eyes old, the hinges of the door on his mind, a jog of moonshine hidden in back behind the door, the door he was working on, but the cow looked that wayhis way and it was aggravating, even though Josh could not get a good view, picture of the cow actually smirking, purposely smirking that is.

Josh walked over to the fence, jug in hand, over to the fence, looked long and hard at the cow, then at the barb wire fence, and his jug, and the cow, and the fence, and the moonshine again. The cow’s name was Nelly; he had heard Mahogany, the owner’s wife call it that.

“Wahts you git in that jug?” yelled Silas to his pa.

“Sprin’ water,” quivered Josh as if to say it was none of his business, but didn’t, he just gave him a stare, a long stare that said what he was thinking.

The growth of the weeds kind of sheltered, and camouflaged Josh, on the other side of the fence, the cow consumed the bulk of the picture if anyone, such as the Hightower’s happened to looking his way,

Now both Josh and the cow were starting by one another, face to face you could say: big eyes at little eyes, Josh picked up the old broken metal pot, he had brought along to cover the jug with and poured some moonshine in it, fed it to the cow, and the cow drank it down, and back on the ground Josh sat watching, taking another swig himself. The cow now had a dull-gleam to its face, and hazy tin looking eyes.

The jug now between cow and man, and the cow laying down on all fours, thus, both squatted bravely by each other, and then Silas showed up.

“Pop, I dont know if we aint a-goin to git in trouble, Mr. Highter dont take to drinkin’ moonshine on his land, nor Mr. Berhamfeeding dat dar cow of his the same!

“Hus,” said Josh.

“Her woc,” said Josh, “I reckon we kin have one mo’ at dat right?” and the cow said “Mooooo!” And old Josh translated that into more moonshine, and gave him a lick.

“I reck-on you’ll wan-t a drink-in’ cup wont you?” Slurred Josh.

Then Josh looked up at his son, his son saying, “I knows how to drink out en a jug dot I?” And Josh passed the jug.

Old Josh and the Birmingham Cow
[1873] Episode #19/Part II of II

It had been a few days since Josh had his drinking bout with the Birmingham Cow

“Dey dnt wants you in, wid dher cow, on dar land,” said Jordan, Josh’s younger son, adding, “Ef de Lawd don’t’ take no better care of yo’ dan I is got to”

“I don’t want to go dar, noways,” Josh rejoined.

“Mmmmmm,” Jordan brewed.

“When us drink up dat ‘tere moonshine, blowed clean out en our min’
let ‘lone me stomach,” said Josh, adding “dat tere cow wuz back dar,” Josh pointing by the tree over by the fence where the cow was the other day, and had returned now; Jordan adding, “I dune thought Mr. Birmham wuz goin’ to talk to Mr. Hightowrbout you, but he didntyous lucky old man!”

You could here a dog howling over by the Birmingham’s front steps, Mr. Abernathy; the owner on the other side of the Birmingham’s was talking to Mahogany on her steps, another young couple, white folks, who bought the farm, he took a shine towards her, or at least that is what Old Josh thought, he was there five days out of the week talking to her as she drank her bathtub wine.

Josh stared at the two, unwinking, trying to make out a better picture for his mind, but everything was a blur, except that white skin shining in the morning sun that found its way through the thin stretched out milky white sky.

Josh found a new spot to sit and drink away the afternoon, after Jordan had left, it was a spot parallel the main road, in back of the Birmingham’s property, on government land, by some old looking whip-poor-wills, there he found his cow waiting, and they drank again, as if they were sidekicks, and perhaps they were, old Nelly took a liking to the moonshine, and Josh was not cheap with itthey both lay there steadfast, shielded by scrub and tree, and foliage of all sorts, his head was the only thing showing like a salt and pepper shaker mixed. Had someone been looking out of the Hightower house window from the side of the living room as Ella Hightower was they could have seen Josh’s head, and if she did she did not say a word to her husband.

Ella Hightower
Fraternizing with the Jug

Ella sat back in her chair in the living room, all of her instincts told her to leave well enough alone, it was a warm, and calm afternoon, and Her husband was composed, quiet, as was Josh, in his grave serenity of sorts, in which his days accomplished themselves. She had a tasteless stimulation, the secret I suppose, Josh drunk with a cow, so be it, whatever reason he had to drink so be it, she was not going to ridicule him to alarm her husband, whom would only fret over something he had no control over anyhow; she didn’t say a word: so be it, and take the whiskey with you to the gravewas her thinking, and the cow with you; she liked the afternoons she had with Charles, there were not many, so she got to appreciate the ones she got. And a drunken Negro was not going to spoil it.

Ella sat back in her rocker with her many fabrics nearby on the floor, colorful, ready to sew and crochet, she had some patterns on her lap, and she shifted them about like a puzzle. Across the room Charles sat smoking his corncob pipe, reading Hawthorn’s ‘The Scarlet Letter,’ turning pages ahead to take a peak, quickly to avoid Ella’s unseeing eyes, lest she scold him for cheating on reading the book in advance. The afternoon subsided without any grand moment, as the unshadowed head of Josh’s disappeared with the cow’s after an hour or so more, and Mr. Hightower had now fallen to sleep, book still opened, finger in the advanced section of the book, he had submerged himself into its pages, until his mind succumbed and warmly passed into deadly sleep, like a bird folding its wings.

Note: part one written at El Parquetito, 8/2/2006; part two written 8/3/2006, during lunch and coffee, in Lima, Peru.

See Dennis’ web site: http://dennissiluk.tripod.com

Tag: Short Story

Curse of the Abyss Worm (Chapters 8 and 9)

8

The Noddoc Family
New Orleans & Sally

New Orleans
October 21, 1866 (Letter)

From: The Master Leader of the “77-Days Cult [Sect]”

I write to you Ms Elsie Noddoc on behalf of Vii the Demon, whose fierce gaze burned both your son and his wife to death, although his gaze burned with the poisons of the Virus Worm, he at times can control it, his virus-stare, but sometimes it gets away from him and he can’tthe worm has some kind of emanating rays, unknown to mankind. His eyebrows are very heavy you see, and when he is active with people he tries to keep them over his eyes as much as he can, not harm people (I hate to say, sometimes his third eye gets in the way, and opens up uncontrollably and discharges the deadly chemicals); and I add, if he does open his eyes too wide, and his eye-brows do not protect against his gaze somewhat, death is imminent: unfortunately, your two loved ones were victims, of this very tragedy, but not intentionally. But we also know of your rich history that leads to the legendary Avalon, etc.

Your son was buried with his wife, it was a nice funeral, and we paid all the expenses. Vii is 480 pounds, 13-feet tall. He is a very destructive demon of sorts; we call him ‘The Unmerciful Vii,’ because of his strength. His friend is called “The Woodbridge Demon.” Woodbridge will be visiting you now and then to see how Sally is coming along. Please be a good hoist. And for your efforts, enclosed is a check for $5000, which will help you with services needed for life’s short journey, for you are at the golden age of death you know, yes it will be just around the corner, we both know that, right?

Sincerely,
The Cult Master,
And The Woodbridge Demon [WBD]

Memorandum left at the door of JJ’s mother’s house [Sally’s grandmother]

1 October, 1867. Night

From New Orleans,
By Vii and the Master Cult Leander/Priest of the “77-Day Sect” [otherwise known as the Executioner]:

I am writing this memo to let you know we are watching you and Sallyin particular, Sally, as she is growing and Vii has a personal interest in her. Please burn this memo after you read it, no sense in allowing others to see what we write; correct? Yes, oh yes, let’s keep this to ourselves. I see you are growing old and feeble, your legs are starting to acquire arthritis, and you walk quite slowly now. Gee, this is too bad; but then we all grow old do we not. I like writing letters at night, it is when I do my best work, that is why I am leaving this letter at your door steps now, it is four minutes past midnight. I have made a list I wish you to follow in teaching our child Sally, consider it the: ‘Ten Commandments,’ of Vii

1) God is unfair, we have laws that he violates, such as, he can kill, but we can’t; god is allowed to get mad, but we have to be ruled by control, this is really 1 & 2, put together I suppose, so let’s call it 1a and 1b for clarity sake.

2) God made you without your consent so he could have a kingdom, and enjoys watching you struggle trying to get to it.

3) Why is the bear and the lion and the deer and the rat allowed to be out of control, kill at will, but it is a sin for man?

4) Is man or woman responsible for adultery, how can you deaden an emotion? And that emotion is given to you by God himself. So we get lustful, even the priests and nuns get lustful; matter of fact, civilization was at first free to be lustful to populate the world with people, and then it became a sin. Brother and sister together, and relatives with relatives, why is it a sin today, but not yesterday. Do not look for the answer, just read this now and then to her, and tell it to her (this is her gospel, kind of).

5) Teach Sally, God is never punished, but punishes; thus, a dictator.

6) Teach her like the Muslims say: God hates a sinner, do not try to explain this, for we are all sinners are we not; but they the Muslims have a good conceptconsequently they teach God is not a god of love, but of anger, this is exactly what I want (Vii says so); teach her to hate Muslims, because when they kill and die in the name of Allah, they think they go to God’s whorehouse, but let her knew this crap is true, and she will be one of the whores God may select for the Muslims to screw each night, for to them a female is no more than a dog, matter of fact, a dog is better off being a dog than a human female.

7) Teach her that any man in the world when he looks at the beauty of sex, and a woman, he will throw the bible in the trash can to have her, so her body has power, purpose. (Tell her it is ok for her to use her body to make ends, meet.)

8) The laws of God are not made for man to keep; they are too hard, only God can keep them, so why does he throw them at us? Tell her the answer is so that he can punish us, and watch us try effortlessly to gain his approval.

9) Teach her we are really part of the beast family, from the monkey, not from the Garden of Eden, that is just a fairytale. Evolution is the best way to pour salt on creation (and granny, don’t you forget that).

10) Teach her that her ancestry goes back to the Great Era of the Tiamat, the Mother of Demon, the first demonic beast that roamed the world, she should worship the demonic beasts of her past; and that going to church waste precious time when you can be making money, money and more money

Best Regards, Vii and the Executioner

Jan 1868–
From Vii and the Executioner (Master of the ‘77-Day Cult)’
Letter

To Grandma Noddoc:

This year’s lesson for Sally is straightforwardand incidentally, Woodbridge who hides in your pictures, lamps and peers through your windows at night, the demon with the long face, huge space-less eyes (I’m sending you a drawing of him), and large mouth, long skull and has a derby hat on, usuallythat damn hat. He has informed us your coaching Sally is going quite well, and so, for lesson #2. But first let me give you a little advice, or if not advice, let’s call it a prelude to her training, tell her: God is unfair (I know I keep harping on this, but it is true you know). And, and the group of the, 77-Day Cult, which happens to be paying you for her education, and food, etc, loves her, as does the Tiamat, and Vii, and Woodbridge, and the Master Priest: –and so on. Now having said that, here are the new pointsby the way, if the word ‘Cult,’ seems to bother her change it to ‘Sect’ it sounds less offensive for some odd reason; anyhow, teach her ((here is the picture also of Woodbridge)):

1) That Adam and Eve ate a pear, not an apple (people do tell lies you know), plus, why did God make man, the answer is: to suffer for one woman’s mistake? Make it a rhetorical question if you want; I do not what her to ponder on it. If you need to answer it, say: because He is a mad God.

2) Teach her that we demonic-gods are more loving than He is, and allow sexual freedom, drug usage to relax from long and stressful days, and that alcohol is really a product that even Noah used, not only for medical reasons but for party time; did not Jesus turn water into wine? Let her know this, maybe Jesus liked wine himself, who knowsmaybe he got drunk a few times. Therefore teach her to drink to extremes at all occasions; why suffer tell her. If you don’t, Woodbridge will teach you what suffering is all about.

3) Plus add this: how can there be one God in three; for the bible teaches that there is only one God. She will not figure this out, the Muslims have been trying for centuries, and even put it into the Qur’an; the trinity is too difficult for most people to accept. We do not want her running to the Jews, Christians, Muslims, Buddha, or the Hindu’s for advice. Teach her Buddha was no more than a fat prophet, who was a Hindu, and Hindu teaches there are more gods than there are trees on earth. Confusion is the way to settle things, and when she gets lonely and hungry for spirituality, for each human is made with that need, you fill the black hole with Vii and the Tiamatand the devil himself, Lucifer.

4) Teach her God kills for every reason, and is unreasonable when he kills, but when we kill (the demons and mankind alike), it is a sin, we should put God in the courtroom, and if we did, would he be jailed, yes, yes, yes, for excessive abuse of power. That’s why he doesn’t show his face publicly.

5) Ask her: is God responsible for helping you Sally? When she says yes, say: but who is paying the bills, it is the ‘77-Day Sect,’ and me, the great demonic Vii. Tell her I have sent you $5000 in the beginning of our relationship, and will continue to support her life style. Have her learn the arts and humanities with the money; have her listen to mystic and enchanting music; show her paintings that have red’s and orange colors in them, along with purple colors, the devils colors in essence; make it a sober, but gruesome art agenda for her future. Bring her to sorcerers and wizards; get her involved in Black Magic if you can.

6) And last of all, teach her that God saved Noah because people got smart to his abuse of judgment and power, and he wanted to have people, new people that is, that were dumber than before the flood, that didn’t know better, so he started all over bossing people around through Noah.

Best Regards,

Vii and the Executioner

9

Belinda of Summerset
And notes by Mr. Earnest

Notes [the tape is on]: Dear Anna Viper, this is Dick Earnest again, interrupting the tape to update you with some other facts before I go on to reading more of the memos, letters, and diaries. Elsie Noddoc had a relative, she called her, her ’sister’ for some reason, her name is: ‘Lady Belinda of Summerset [England],’ and again, these are just notes I made for myself, and I’ll try to explain them to you, this may help put a few things together. As you may already be able to tell, she, Lady Belinda, has an English heritage that dates back to 1009 AD. Or so it seems: I say seems because for some odd reason all the dates reflects this. She is a beautiful woman in her early 30’s, or again, so she looks. And I know you are saying, “he said, ‘is’ when refereeing to Lady Belinda,” please be patient and I will explain all.

I sum up her manner thus, as beautiful as she is, she has an iron look tied onto her face most of the time, and, most people live in characterin that, they have a beginning, middle, and endwith Lady Belinda you could not say, likewise, you have to ask yourself, what kind of person is she, the only thing one can say, is, she was, no more, no less, whatever.

Notesby Dick Earnest [on audio tape]: Ms Anna Viper, what I found out about Vii is that he was/is a demonic being of some sort, originally assigned to the Bohemians and Slovaks who found his way to New Orleans some 200-years ago. His ancient ancestors go back to the days of the Watchers, the Angelic Renegades of 13,500 BC. He is a direct descendent of the Tiamat, Mother of Demon, and her daughter Gwyllion, who ruled the kingdom of York in about 6500 BC. This information was taken from some tablets found in old Sumer, Tales of the Tiamat, by an archeologist, and writer I think with the initials and last name of: Dlsiluk; this discovery and investigation led me back to St. Paul, Minnesota (also I had to go to New Orleans, and Nashville, and a few other places). I had talked to a woman by the name of Rosa Pe

Tag: Chapter stories

Legend ofThe Great Jaguar Beasts Of Teotihuacan [a Poetic Mytho]

[The Great Jaguar Beasts were the conquers of the
4th World Order on earth, 22,700 BC]

Prologue: we are about to take a trip, I will be the celestial navigator through time and space, into the signs of time; but we all must take a “Leap of Faith,” as I translate the mathematical formulas into constellations into the modern age. The truth of the matter is they don’t know they are being talked about, or even that we’ve found out about them. The jaguars and the giantsthe old ones, beasts of the earth; by Mexico City, where once the Alter of the Giants resided; here is where they made their sacrifices. Here at the site is where 150-skeleton bones were found; bones of giants (demonic); bones like dinosaurs. Here is where our legend starts.

The Ages

Eras and epochs, humanities rhymes

Have come and gone, passed with time:

Ice Ages, floods, winds, heat and storms;

Devouring, freezing, burying ancient man

In multi-tombs: glacial, strata, lava-ruins.

Then out of nowhere, so it seemed

Came Giants, and creepy angelic beings:

Demons, ghouls, imps and morbid fairies.

But once upon a time, there were

The unknown deadly, saber tooth beasts

Who ruled earths, New World Order

The fearless hybrids, the Great Jaguars!

Ah! but they are but a lost legend

Left, without much trying thought

For we have never seen them

But on the walls of Teotihuac

Tag: Poetic Mytho

Analysis of The Night Cafe - Vincent van Gogh

Vincent’s Two Cafes

“I often think that the night is more alive and more richly colored than the day.” Vincent van Gogh

Van Gogh’s two ultra-famous caf

Tags: night cafe, , vincent van Gogh
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