Saturday 9 July 2011

Any Given Weekday

Written in the fall of 2007

"Five bells. It's about fucking time."
Our hero pulls the sleeve of his coveralls back up over his watch, promptly drops his shovel in the dirt and marches over to where the truck is parked. Wasting no time he sheds his blue probans and worn out steel-toes, jumps into the driver seat, lights a cigarette, turns up the Venom on the stereo and before the boss can say "Seeya in the a.m." or some equally quaint and hollowly cheerful farewell, all that’s left of him are tail lights.
Another day, another dollar. Just like the one before that and the one before that and so on and so forth.
Our hero’s social life however, seems to also follow the same ridiculous repetitive pattern as his working life, for he knows that sooner or later this very evening he will find himself once again perched on a lonely stool drinking beer at the Ooze just like yesterday and the day before that and the day before that and so on and so forth.
It's never planned that way, it just happens.
Our hero in this story is called Buck. This is the name his father gave him.
...
Once the essential shit, shower and shave portion of his evenings events is over, depending on if anyone’s called to invite him out, he may have a meal before he goes to the bar. If someone’s called, chances are he'll just grab an apple, stuff his discman in his pocket and his headphones in his ears and be out the door. If no one calls he'll make dinner, eat it, browse through the sea of rubbish evening television, and wait around getting bored before he finally figures he's thirsty enough to brave the elements and go to the bar.
This is one of those evenings.
Like most males in their early twenties, Buck has the hygiene routine down to an efficient science and it only takes twenty minutes to relieve his bowels of all the days coffee induced gut-rot, then run through the rain room and relieve his body of the day’s filth. The longest part of this process is usually deciding what CD he's going to listen to while he accomplishes this.
Today it is Blood for Blood, which is why one may not find it at all shocking that within an hour our hero will be pouring beer after beer down his gullet.

"...self destruction on a daily basis,
intoxication is my only oasis..." he quietly growls to himself in the steam of the shower.
Now cleansed, and with some leftover pork chops and mashed potatoes in the microwave, he unplugs his cell phone from the charger and checks it's messages. There are none.
"Fair enough."
Although this might make some people a little blue, Buck shrugs it off and like his friends, also doesn't bother to phone anyone or attempt to find any company because he knows the odds are heavily in his favor that he'll see one or more of them at the bar with a couple brew already in their bellies when he arrives.
Finally after the left-overs are engulfed, boots are laced up, cigarettes, lighter, wallet, CD's, discman and the ever elusive touque are accounted for, Buck takes his ratty, hand-me-down leather jacket and is out the door.
...
It's a brisk evening, a clear night with plenty of stars and a bright moon that gives the skiff of late autumn frost on the grass a dull blue glow. He sighs, watching his breath trail off into the atmosphere,
"Goddamn winter..." he mutters and wonders once briefly if he should go back into the house to change into some long-jons but instead he marches off through the alley. Fuck it, he thinks to himself, I'll be there in fifteen minutes anyways.
On he strolls through the blackness of Innisfail's backstreets, getting barked at by the occasional neighborhood mutt and wading through the stench of the Ralston-Purina dog food plant on the nearby truck route.
Upon crossing the plant’s mostly empty parking lot he reaches the train tracks and, glancing quickly back and forth, steps in between the rails and heads south. Buck always felts a certain degree of paranoia walking on the tracks with headphones on, especially when it happened to be a wall of down-tuned distortion and feedback that he can’t even hear his footsteps through, but rather than simply turn it down, he opts instead to look over his shoulder every few moments like some nomadic fugitive of trains, waiting for the day that one will catch him.
Afew hundred railroad ties down the line, our hero steps off the trail and crosses the street to his final destination of the night. There it is in all of it's inglorious glory, the big red brick monolith that is the Ooze.
He quickly bounds up the few wooden steps leading to the heavy steel green door, throws it open and with a puff of nicotine smoke, he disappears inside.
Shaking the chill off his bones in the doorway, he removes his headphones and surveys this night’s situation.
Dead.
Shocking.
It's a weekday crowd. Even less, it's a cold autumn weekday crowd, which finds alot of the town drunks in a short lived hibernation while they adjust to the inevitable frost that will plague them for the next four months.
But not our hero!
He's there with the other small handful of true believers, fighting for his right to party...that being have afew monotonous drinks before he begrudgingly stumbles home to bed.
Nevertheless, he has arrived, undaunted by weather, fatigue or the morning’s alarm clock that constantly haunts the back of his mind. A small triumph, but a triumph all the same.
...
Rage is behind the bar, just twisting the cap off a bottle of bud that she hands to Dwight and even though he's sitting on his usual stool it takes our hero a minute to recognize him when he realizes that Dwight's actually clipped his shaggy black mop.
Simply stunning.
That's probably the only noticeable difference in the bar, the other being that it apparently is Rage's last night shift.
"What?!" our hero says with obvious disappointment, "why?"
"I'm fuckin sick of this dude, I want my nights back. I mean sure, the tips might be better on the night shift, but it's a trade off because it's also fulla’ drunk assholes! I've done my time on nights, I want a break." says Rage as she grabs a fresh mason jar, fills it with ice, two shots of rye whiskey, tops it with ginger ale and stabs in a couple pink straws before setting it gracefully in front of our hero.
He gives a sympathetic nod and shrugs, "Fair enough, if anyone’s earned it, you have." he says and hands her a crumpled tenner.
"Goddamn right."
"Well shit Rage, we best get some shots in for the occasion!"
"Jager?"
"You know it."
She pours a couple, they hoist, gently clink the glasses, tap the bar and then down the hatch.
Gak, who was standing at the jukebox, wanders over and takes a seat next to Buck. Rage glances over at him,
"Another one Gak?"
He gives a tired nod with a slight grin on his face then slowly reaches over to his pack of cigarettes and offers one to Buck before lighting one himself.
Enjoy the Silence by Depeche Mode fades in and begins blaring from the speakers.
You can always tell when Gak's hit the jukebox, usually just by his presence in the bar, but also by the steady amount of 80's synth-pop that gets played while he's there.
"Thanks." Buck says as he takes a long drag from the donated smoke, "So Gak, what's the craic? How's things?"
"Oh not too shabby" he replies with a lazy shrug, "not delivering pizza anymore."
Buck nearly chokes on his own cigarette smoke,
"Get the fuck outta here!"
Gak has been a pizza delivery driver since the dawn of time, with one shop or another, but he has always done it.
"No really, I got myself a job at Suds, and Cold Beer, just goin' back and forth."
Buck makes a puzzled face,
"Suds?"
"It's the new liquor store on main street, you know where the old Esso gas station used to be? Naynay bought it and turned it into a beer store slash car wash." says Gak as he takes another swig of pilsner.
"Unreal." says Buck, "Places that involve booze sales and vehicles always make me laugh, like the used car dealer slash liquor store just outside of Edmonton. The drive-through liquor stores take the cake though."
"That’s true." Gak nods.
Rage pipes up, "It's not all that shocking, it's actually a reoccurring motif in society. Make something illegal, but also make sure it's a law that's really easy and convenient to break. Make music piracy illegal but produce every computer made with a burner and every store from Wal-Mart to 7-Eleven selling blank CD's? Speed limits of no more than 110km an hour and cars that have the capacity to go 200? It's just business. The more drunk drivers caught on the road, the more fines the government can rake in. It's a cash cow."
Both men think for a moment and nod in agreement.
"Good call." says our hero.
"Yeah, well put." says Gak.
This is why Rage is one of the best barmaids in this solar system. Fast, efficient service, a genuine concern for the clientele and the clever social commentary you'd expect from the bartending elite.
Just don't make her mad.
...
"So geez gak, how're you adjusting to the new routine behind a counter instead of behind the wheel?" our hero says.
"It's alright, a little boring, but ok. It's not half as high stress as trying to rush food around town, definitely not as high stress as working for Obee-one." gak says, pointing with his chin to the pizza store across the street.
“I hear ya there,” Buck nods, “I did my time with Obee-one Perogi. Nice guy, and not bad to work for, but not too great either. Remember that time a few pizzas got burnt and he threw one at me, hot pan and all, and then chucked the spatula at you?”
“Yeah,” says Gak, rocking with laughter on his stool.
“Fuckin ridiculous,” says Buck, laughing as well.
Buck had worked with Gak at the pizza shop a couple years earlier when he was still a minor. After quitting the job he never saw Gak at all until he turned eighteen and started frequenting the Ooze. Now it was back to seeing him almost every other day.
“So yeah, with all the spare time at Suds and Cold Beer, I pretty much just watch TV or goof around with crosswords.” says Gak very matter-of-factly.
"I could see myself burning through a lot of books in a job like that." says Rage with a smile.
Buck shakes his head, "Wow. That's four liquor stores now for Innisfail. I'm surprised they stay in business with the population we've got."
"I'm not!" says Rage with a laugh, "There might not be many of us, but we damn sure enjoy our drink."
"I suppose," says our hero chuckling as well "it's men, women, children and elderly alike in this place."
Our hero’s smile, however, fades out when the next song on the jukebox fades in and he hears the familiar guitar of Flock of Seagulls' "I Ran So Far" and even though Dwight is doing an awkward little dance while sitting on his stool, singing the wrong lyrics out of key, Buck knows that this music has simply got to go.
He shoots Gak a condescending glare, who replies with a slightly embarrassed shrug.
"Gak, for shame." Buck says as he puts out his cigarette and blowing a cloud of smoke, proceeds over to the jukebox.
...
It's always a bit of a task picking something on this machine, mostly because it's all been heard a hundred times before. It really depends on who is in the bar and how much money a persons got. If the bar is packed, you might want to load as many songs as you can before some wanna be clubber plays two hours of "nu-pop trax" numbers one through eighty, or some buckle bunny puts on "hot country 2000!". If the bar is dead than a person can play songs at their leisure, or as Dave Gahan had just said in the previous song, enjoy the silence.
If a person is short on money, they'd want to pick very lengthy songs to occupy as much time on the jukebox as possible with minimal cash. In situations like these our hero would usually opt for "Free Bird", "Stairway to Heaven", and "Fairies Wear Boots".
There is no need for this tactic tonight, however, as he jingles what should have been Rage's tip in his pocket.
Tonight, as ridiculously distant as the two choices may be from each other, he picks two Heads, one of the Motor type and one of the Radio type.
Turning back to the bar he sees another double rye-ginger already on the bar waiting for him.
Cheers Rage, he thinks, cheers.
The chugging drum beat of "Overkill" begins to boom throughout the bar and almost as if on cue, the green steel door swings open and the Animal comes sauntering in from the cold, trench coat swaying behind him and fingerless mittens air drumming the familiar tune. He quickly steps behind the bar, takes a stick of chalk from the counter, and begins to write on the chalkboard just adjacent to the entrance,

"F-U-C-K....

"Oh boy, what's it gonna be this time..." Rage asks to no one in particular.

"....T-H-I-S-L-I-F-E-L-I-K-E-Y-O..."

"Not sure, but you can bet it'll be good." says Buck with an anxious smile.

"....U-M-E-A-N-I-T"

The Animal turns around, slaps the chalk on the bar and starts laughing, "Nice eh?"
"Fuck this life like you mean it?" says Gak squinting at the chalk board across the bar, "I don't get it."
"You wouldn't." balks the Animal in jest, slapping Gak on the shoulder as he rounds the bar over to Rage.
"Rage, may I please purchase from you a Coors light, a double rum and coke, a glass of red, and two moosehunters." he says in the most polite of tones, not so much asking a question as making a statement.

She laughs and shakes her head in bewilderment, then turns to begin assembling the Animals alcoholic arsenal, grabbing first a bottle of Crown Royal and a bottle of Amaretto to concoct the two shots, because as one of the best barmaids in the solar system, she knows that the moosehunters are the priority and will be gone long before the other three drinks are prepared.
As soon as Rage sets them in front of him, the Animal takes one of the shot glasses, and very careful not to spill sets one of them in front of Buck.
"One for the patient," hoist, clink, tap, "and one for the doctor." shoot.
Wiping the remains of the shot out of the bristles on his chin, the Animal pulls up a stump beside Buck at the bar as Rage begins placing his other drinks in front of him.
“So is that one an original?” Buck asks, gesturing to the newly defaced chalkboard.
“Nah, that’s some obscure central Alberta poet whose name escapes me for some reason. He was an overeducated street punk in Calgary, managed to get one volume of poetry published and then apparently took the money, fucked off to the Caribbean and was never heard from again.” says the Animal, sipping his red wine first.
“Hm, must be nice. I suppose it‘d be pretty easy to do when you‘ve got nothing‘ to lose anyway” Buck thinks to himself out loud.
“Haha,” laughs the Animal, “the man pulled off the Great Alberta Poetry Swindle. Take the fuckin’ money and run.”
...
It’s difficult to tell from the angle he’s sitting, but Buck is pretty sure Dwight has fallen asleep sitting up. Gak and Rage are idly watching the TV. It’s one of those generic forensic science dramas, but he can’t tell which one, mostly because he seldom watches TV, but also because they all basically pan out the same.
As would be expected from the title of the song, “Overkill” is still playing.
“So me man, what else is new besides obscure Alberta poets?” says Buck, turning his attention back to the Animal, who answers without hesitation,
“I’m having an existential dilemma.”
Buck furrows his eyebrows, waiting for an explanation without responding.
The Animal grins slightly, sips the double rum, and lights a smoke before he begins.
“In the last few weeks, I’ve become horrifyingly bored because I’ve come to the conclusion that everything is ridiculous and my life is absurd. I spend my time trying to distract myself from thinking about how much of a waste of time everything is, weather it’s by working, watching TV, listening to music, or using substances to dull my sense of reality. I derive no pleasure from these activities, they only serve to temporarily alleviate the pain of living with mediocrity. I‘m not exactly sure what to do about this, because although I was more or less aware of these things in the past, I can no longer seem to ignore them.”
Jimmy Page’s warbling intro to “No Quarter” only serves to punctuate the desolation in the Animals rant just as it comes to an end. He notices the music as Bonzo kicks in on the drums and asks Buck,
“Is this your fault?”
He shakes his head, “I’m pretty sure that one right there is responsible” and he points to Rage, standing at the jukebox, her right Chuck Taylor tapping to the beat on the rough wooden floor. She has interrupted our hero’s songs with the almighty “my song first” button. It takes two song credits, but puts the track to the front of the line. This can come in very handy on busy nights when a lot of people have fed the machine or on any night that one person puts in ten bucks at a crack and proceeds to act like the Ooze’s unpaid DJ. It is the only respite from what could be an entire nights worth of utterly shit music.
Smiling, the Animal raises his bottle of Coors. “Fuckin A Rage.”
She looks over from the play lists with a big smile and gives him a thumbs up.
Buck and the Animal both smile and slowly take a drink to the song and the suffering it suggests.
“Sounds like you got the blues my friend.” Buck says, as he scams the Animals idly burning cigarette from the ash tray.
The Animal laughs, “Yeah, I suppose that sums it up.” he adds with a slight tone of sarcasm, which seems to taint almost everything he says. Sometimes it’s possible that even the Animal himself doesn’t know when he’s serious.
“Seriously though,” says Buck, “if it’s mediocrity and the tedious grind of the rat race that’s gettin’ you down, I’d say all you really need is a change. You change your situation and it can help to change your perspective. Find a new job, or a new hobby, maybe just change your surroundings. What else can you do?”
The Animal nods, even though Buck can see that in his current state, he’s inconsolable.
“All good suggestions, but it’s easier said than done.”
“Yeah yeah, I know.” Buck concedes.
“I mean, I would love to change my surroundings, but money is always tight and I can’t just pull the wee girl outta school and hit the road, right?” He pauses, considering his daughter, “Anyways, not to worry, I know I’ll be ok.” The Animal says with a certain air of defeat.
It is true though, he will be fine. He always is.
Thus the boom and bust of small-town-life emotion carries on. Sometimes the stock invested in oneself pays off very well and sometimes you end up in the Great Depression, and on and on….
“I gotta hit the head.” says Buck.
He pushes away from the bar, sliding back his stool before he stands up and turns towards the great mural at the back of the bar. The mural sits in between two corridors, the left being for the male bathroom and the right for the female bathroom. It is a colossal painting of a cougar perched upon what one can only presume is a Rocky Mountain range cliff. At the top is a painted on placard that says “Nature’s Calling.”
He begins his slow march down the Ooze bathroom promenade, a sure fire way to tell how drunk a person is because the walk from the bar to the bathroom is just long enough to see every embarrassing drunken misstep a person may or may not take.
Avoiding his reflection as he steps into the bathroom, he rounds the corner to face the trough, a long steel urinal that stretches across the south wall of the facility. Above and beside the trough is all manner of graffiti, and he scans the walls briefly to see if there is anything new.
Nothing today.
Just the same old depressing phrases that no one can seem to wash off, although it doesn’t appear that anyone tries very often, and even when someone takes the time and effort to make the walls slightly more presentable, it only takes one weekend before it’s back to normal.
He steps up to the trough where a rather large skull and cross bones with the words “Juice was here” on it looms over him. As he begins to break the seal he observes a soggy half-smoked cigarette floating in the sweet alcoholic urine. He aims his stream at the butt like he always does, destroying it and chasing it down towards the drain. Simple pleasures, he thinks to himself.
Swaying slightly, he buttons up his fly and turns his attention to the bare area on the wall directly above where he had just relieved himself. He reaches into his cargo pocket and pulls out a small felt-tipped black sharpie and inspired by the recent act of urination writes where anyone else lined up at the trough could read it,
“Look down and say goodbye to all of your money.”
Our hero stands back and re-reads his words, looking back and forth from the phrase to the urinal’s drain, stinking of ammonia.
Fuck.
The trough begins to flush, snapping Buck out of his trance and he looks at his watch. The days events all come crashing in at once and his brain decides that the evening is over and it is time to retire weather his body agrees or not. He turns suddenly and exit’s the bathroom without washing his hands.
“Well, it appears to be that time again.” says Buck, approaching his stool and grabbing his leather jacket off the back-rest.
“What? I just got here man, have one more with me.” the Animal says, grabbing hold of Buck’s rubber arm and giving it a stern twist.
Buck slurps the dregs of his high ball from the pair of straws in the jar, preparing to decline the Animals offer, but before he can swallow, Rage has popped the cap off of a cold Pilsner and placed it on the bar for him.
She grins, “Enjoy the night cap.”
Buck looks again at his watch.
Shit.
I can’t just leave a full beer.
Shit.
Right then, Rages one Zeppelin pick ends and our hero’s song choices resume with the Radiohead song he’d wanted to hear since he got in the door.
Well, what the fuck, I’ve got a bit of time yet.
He pulls the stool back from the bar and sits down on it, “You guys are suuuure persuasive,” says Buck with a smile, “looks like that time has been temporarily delayed.”
“Atta boy” the Animal says, now finished all three of his drinks, “Rage, another Coors if you please.”
“You guys are terrible. When my mom asks me why I ended up living in a homeless shelter addicted to crack, I’m gonna tell her ‘Rage and the Animal mom, that’s why.’”
They all laugh.
“Fuck yeah” says the Animal, raising his fresh bottle, “To corruption!”
He and Buck clink their bottles and Gak raises his from his isolated corner of the bar. Dwight doesn’t do anything, and Buck is now positive that he’s unconscious, but that’s alright. Rage will wake him up and send him to his room in the motel above the bar when she’s ready to close.
“Hey man,” the Animal says to our hero, “don’t sweat it, your bed will still be there when you get home.”
“Yeah yeah yeah, well what fuckin’ time do you have to get up in the morning bud?” says Buck smiling with a false air of superiority.
“Who fuckin cares? It’s just a job dude.”
“I know," he sighs, "Tomorrow might suck, but it’s nothing I haven’t done before.”
Buck absent-mindedly peels the label from his bottle of Pilsner, rolling the paper bits between his fingers and depositing them in the ash tray. He takes a big swig, swallows and continues running his thumb nail over the label’s remains, still glued to the bottle.
“So what are your plans for the weekend?” Buck asks the Animal, before he has another sip.
“Nothin really, Sanser wanted to maybe jam a little bit. We’re not really doing much, he teaches me a bit of guitar, I fuck around with a bit of lyrics. Just stupid shit for fun. Have you heard his home recordings?”
Buck nods , “Yeah dude, the jar of change for percussion? Classic.”
“That guy is a song writing machine, it’d be really fuckin cool to actually get something going with him. Anyways, what about you? Any big plans?” the Animal asks.
“No, not really. I’ll be working all day Saturday, then Weasel wanted to do something, maybe catch a movie at the cheap theatre in Ded Reer. Fuck knows though, we’ll probably end up here.” says Buck with a shrug.
“Yeah, I’m fairly certain me and Sans Condom will be making an appearance here at some point over the weekend.” the Animal says in agreement.
“I’m fairly certain you’ll both be making a few appearances here over the weekend.” Rage pipes up from behind the bar, as she makes the rounds emptying the ash trays.
“Yeah good call,” says Buck as he takes another drink from his now completely label less bottle.
Setting it back down on the bar, he glances up at the clock above the chalk board.
He panics briefly before he remembers that the clock is twenty minutes fast, and always has been. He’s not sure why it’s never been corrected, but has also never bothered to ask. That’s just the way it is.
Well then, no rush, at least not that much of a rush.
Layne Staley and Jerry Cantrell have begun cooing the intro to “Rooster”
“Man, I should really give Edgar a call,” Buck says, vocalizing his inner monologue, “this album always reminds me of that guy.”
The Animal laughs, “Why? Because it’s a concept album about addiction and depression? Yeah I can see how that subject matter would really suit Hemlox Wolfbane.” There’s that tricky sarcasm again.
“No, fuck sake…well kind of,” says our hero with a smirk, “I mean, the subject matter is definitely why he’s into it, that and Alice in Chains just write good songs, but it reminds me of him because it’s one of the albums responsible for our friendship, the principle one being Everclear’s ‘Sparkle and Fade’ ”
“Fag shit.” the Animal says, and they both laugh.
“Well we can’t all be as hardcore as you my friend.” says our hero, tipping the rest of his beer, “Anyways, it’s my bedtime. Now I’m really gonna leave this time, so don’t any of you assholes try seducing me with alcohol because it’ll work and I actually do need to sleep for a little while tonight.”
The Animal stands up, “Yeah, I should split too. You need a lift?”
“Nah, I’d rather walk, it’s a nice night.”
“Suit yourself. Have a good one.”
“Will do, seeya in the Future.” says our hero, plugging his headphones back into his skull.
“Goodnight kids, play safe.” says Rage as they both round the bar towards the door.
“Goodnight Rage, thanks.” says the Animal, exiting first.
“Take it easy Rage.” our hero says to her over his shoulder and as he opens the door and steps back out into the night he says, “see you tomorrow.” and it isn’t really to Rage, or Gak, or the Animal in particular as much as it is to the Ooze itself.
A farewell for the evening before the next day’s inevitable rendezvous.
He slowly walks down the wooden steps outside the steel green door, stopping at the bottom to light a cigarette. He returns the Animal’s wave as he passes by in his car and takes a long drag from his smoke. Looking up at the moon, he exhales the smoke into the night.
Reaching into his jacket pocket, he presses play on his discman, turns and begins the walk home.
Crossing the street towards the tracks, he glances back for a moment at the Ooze as the ethereal voice of Thom Yorke wails in his ears,
 “A self-fulfilling prophecy of endless possibility
You roll in reams across the street
In algebra, in algebra
The fences that you cannot climb
The sentences that do not rhyme
In all that you can ever change
The one you're looking for
It gets you down
It gets you down
There's no spark
No light in the dark
It gets you down
It gets you down
You traveled far
What have you found
That there's no time
There's no time
To analyse
To think things through
To make sense”

Tuesday 5 July 2011

Memory Lane


"This sucks. I don't wanna be here."
Nan finally broke the silence with an expectantly negative comment. She and Buck had been sitting at the bar staring at the muted television suspended from the ceiling, idly stirring their drinks, catching random snippets of conversation from the few people around and trying to ignore the jukebox.
It was a weekday, which specific day is irrelevant since they are all basically the same in Innisfail. Nan had finished a shift waitressing and Buck was still unemployed and now they were at the bar.
Just as irrelevant were the images and corresponding captions on the television screen that held their stupid gaze for so long. This always happened at that particular vantage point of the Ooze. Inevitably no matter what was on, one would glance up and get locked in. Buck thought to himself that's probably what happens with most people where ever any TV may happen to be. When he found himself at other seats around the bar he would watch people in that particular spot, watch them as they watched the TV, all with the same vacant stare.
"Well, what do you think? You wanna bail?" Buck responded, optimistically, "Grab a bottle of wine, go for a wander?"
"Do you have your headphones? Cause I wanna listen to mine." said Nan
"Look who you're talking to." Buck said, holding his palms upward with a grin.
"Ok," she said, "let's skee-daddle."
Nan finished her gin tonic, sans olives, and pushed back her chair.
They both popped in their respective headphones, both ear-buds, zipped up their hoodies and buttoned their jackets. As they headed for the door, they waved to Sandy at her post behind the bar as she said a goodbye of which neither could hear, “Stay warm kids!”
...
As soon as they stepped outside, Nan reached into her purse, took out her pack of Canadian Classics, and lit a smoke even though the 7 Day Liquor store on the opposite side of the building was literally a forty second walk away and she would have to either extinguish it, stand outside and smoke it, or pitch it before entering. She opted for a combination of the latter two upon arrival.
Gak was manning the till, eager for the next few hours to pass when work would be finished and he could at long last cash out and walk through the back door of the establishment, into the bar, and have a beer.
"Evening folks." Gak said giving a nod with his bristly chin.
"Good evening Gareth." said Buck making a bee-line for the beer cooler. Nan carried on to the back of the shop to exchange in some brief small talk with Keeba-lalma. Keeb was picking up some supplies before going to a party, as was par for the course.
Buck placed a crinkled ten dollar bill and a bottle of black berry Arbor Mist on the counter. Six dollar bottles of twist-off-cap wine were basically the only wine he ever bought. Nan joined Buck at the till as Gak rang it through and placed it in a brown paper bag.
"Much obliged Gak, have a good one." said Buck sliding the brown bag into the inside pocket of his black pea-coat.
"You too" he smiled.
...
The pair exited the store and immediately put their headphones back in, before strolling across the parking lot on their aimless journey.
They reached the south west intersection and crossing the desolate street thought it was an appropriate time to open the wine. No sooner had the seal broke when they noticed red and blue lights flickering from the alleyway of the adjacent building.
Music blaring away in their ears, they both mouthed the word "Fuck."
Knowing they had been seen, Buck did the best he could at concealing the open liquor and held it beside him as they silently passed. The police were far too busy with a drunk driver to bother with the drunk walkers and, much to their elation, they carried on their merry little way. Nothing says sigh of relief like avoiding a confrontation with police.
To celebrate, once they were at a safe distance, Buck produced the bottle again and they handed it back and forth, trading swigs and singing out loud whatever song either one happened to be hearing, creating some mad, drunk accapella as they walked down the middle of a small town residential road.


It was a cool night, at the absolute tail end of winter when the range of Alberta weather can cover almost anything. Gorgeous sunshine for a week right before two feet of ridiculous snow which will immediately proceed to melt all over the place and make a mess of everything just as it had a week prior.
This particular evening was neither frosty nor muddy, it was nice and dry, with only a winter's wind remaining. The anticipation of spring weather was evident in the duo simply by their enthusiasm to drink outdoors.
It was this chilling breeze that prompted Buck to nod at Nan when they approached the United Church. He waved a hand cloaked in a fingerless mitten in front of her and gestured with his face to the church entrance, a set of concrete steps that would offer them shelter and enough privacy that they would not be noticed by any passers by.
She nodded and they stepped up the curb and across the dead grass. The serenity of their walk had finally settled in after the near-miss with the cops when the sudden explosion of the churches motion sensor light in the entrance shattered it once again. And once again they both cursed and squinted their eyes, experiencing some kind of vampiric contempt for light.
Fuckin pigs. Fuckin church. Fuckin lights.
Looking at one another and laughing, they continued on around the backside of the building before coming upon a bench in a small deviation of the church wall. The bench was chained to a shed.
They sat down and Buck removed his headphones and turned off his Ipod. Nan removed one ear phone and turned down the volume on her cell phone.
"Gimmie that." she said holding out her hand, fingers and thumb extended to the diameter of the bottle.
Buck handed it to her and sighed lightly, looking out at the sky. It was incredibly clear.
"What were you listening to?" said Nan after swallowing the gulp of wine.
"Ummmm, afew things," said Buck, "some Waits, some Bloated Pig."
Bloated Pig was a band of fellow Innisfailures relocated to Calgary. It was comprised of Wilhelm, Vahgner, and Hemlox Wolfbane. The three of them lived together, worked at the same job and played in the band together. No wonder their music was so angry.
She smiled. "Aw, I miss those guys."
"Yeah, me too.” said Buck, taking the bottle back as she handed it over, “What were you listening to?"
"Oh just Fiddy and some other rap shit you wouldn't like." she laughed, digging around in her purse for a lighter to give purpose to the cigarette she had just left dangling in her lips.
"People must think we're just completely fucked, eh?" Buck asked semi-rhetorically.
He was referring of course, to the fact that he and Nan could often be seen walking around town, side by side, both wearing headphones, neither one speaking to the other. This was something Nan, Buck, and Crusty Bill Dangers usually did. Everyone else either drove, didn't have headphones or thought it was absurd to be in individual domes of music while spending time with someone. May as well be alone, they thought.
With Nan and Buck, however, it was perfectly normal. They both loved music as much as the other, albeit varying genres, and their friendship was such that they did not need to constantly converse simply for the sake of conversation. Silence never seemed to be uncomfortable for either party.
"Newsflash darlin': We are fucked." Nan retorted.
She had misinterpreted the comment. She thought Buck was referring to their relationship with one another and how some may find it bizarre.
A brief history lesson:
Nan and Buck met in junior high. Through afew friends they found themselves socializing in the same circle and they all became partners in crime during that glorious age when a young person discovers personal freedom and individuality.
That as well as marijuana, alcohol, punk rock, and a general distaste for authority.
Alas, this period came to an end when Nan`s family moved to a neighboring town. Her visits back were seldom and although Buck rarely saw her, the other girls in the group still kept in close contact. Somewhere around the tender age of fifteen, afew of the girls played match maker and got the two together in what would become the first cloud-nine-retarded-teenager love that either would experience.
Alas, this period would also come to an end as so many crazy young romances do. The difference, however, was that they remained very close friends. There had of course been afew bumps along the way, as a transition of that nature is never easy, but where many had failed, they had succeeded. Buck was always reminded of her whenever he listened to the droning chorus of "Hey" by the Pixies.
"We're chained. We're chained. We're chained."
No matter how much he had tried from time to time, he could not shake that girl, and although they were both certain that there was no romantic future for them, it didn't matter.
They loved each other, they were chained.
"But really," Buck said, "Who does that? I remember once when I was overseas, I was having a pint on some patio in Belfast. For once it was a nice sunny day and people were out and about and I saw this guy walking down the street, with his headphones on, playing air guitar in between bursts of air drums, singing out loud, and I thought to myself, 'That's what I look like?' Fuuuuuuck"
They both laughed. Nan was certain she'd heard the story before. Buck had a tendency to find relevance in things he had done traveling, she believed, just so he could bring up the fact that he'd been somewhere that perhaps someone else hadn't. It was a harmless stroke of his ego so she humored him.
"Tradesies." she said, offering her cigarette in exchange for the wine. Buck obliged.
Nan took another pull from the bag and gave it a little swish after wards, like she was ringing an ugly brown bell.
"Not a whole bunch left. What do you wanna do after this?"
"Well, Slickers is close, probably dead. We could go there, grab a drink, warm up and take it from there." Buck suggested.
Slickers was the so-called country and western bar located in the north-east corner of the Henday strip mall afew blocks north of the United Church. Nan drank there more often than Buck did as it was closer to her work and she was less likely to see people she may know. Buck didn't really like it. The jukebox was trash and the crowd was too juvenile. They behaved as if they'd never been drunk before and that Slickers tavern was a dance club straight out of a top 40`s music video. He was more accustomed to the docile boobery of the old drunks at the Ooze.
Even so, they needed a change of pace, it was a convenient walk and would likely be empty.
"Yeah, ok." she said, "here, kill it."
Nan handed him the wine and Buck tipped it back without a moments thought, setting the empty bottle beside the bench. They got up and once again went for their headphones.
Buck set his Ipod to shuffle, and met Nan`s eyes. They smiled and nodded at each other and then started across the grass.
This is where Buck slipped into a hazy time warp of sorts.
There is something about music, especially when it is the only sound a person can hear, that does something strange to the psyche. The right songs, played at the right moments can affect one in such a way that they almost hallucinate on their own bliss. When Buck pressed play on his personal stereo, this is what happened:
...
Matthew Good Band - The Inescapable Us
Buck began walking across the familiar patch of grass of the United Church. He remembered going to that church for boy scout meetings when he was eleven, just a year before he met Nan and the rest.
Buck's parents encouraged him to partake in some kind of extracurricular activity and he chose boy scouts, not because he wanted to learn how to tie knots, but because his friend Chops was in it. All scouts ever was to Buck was a night of the week when he and Chops would piss around at the church and hang out with each other. This was a time before Chops was even Chops. At this time he was still Moose. This is the name his father gave him. Moose's father and Buck's father were old friends. Such is life in a small town.
Scouts was the principle reason Buck and Chops became the incredibly close friends they did. Buck recalled one camping trip in particular where he and Chops had ditched the rest of the troop on a lake shore where they were about to light fireworks. They climbed up a bank and into some dead trees overlooking everyone else. It was dusk. The two of them talked about girls and music and just as the other boys began lighting the fireworks, the stunning beauty of the northern lights came rocketing from the horizon clear across the night sky, completely outdoing anything in the scouts' arsenal. The two boys watched in silence as the green, blue, and pink hues danced through the stars, stars that they would then decide to sleep under that very night. They were so enamored with the event that once they got back to their tent they immediately dragged their sleeping bags outside.
Buck looked to his right as he walked and could clearly see a game of touch football he had played years prior where Chops insisted their team be called "The Mosh Potatoes" Small town central Alberta was still in a very post grunge state.
Buck looked to his left and he could vividly see himself and Chops sitting on top of a group of mailboxes alongside the curb, arguing about weather or not Metallica was remotely punk rock or not based on their tendency to cover the Misfits at their shows.
That was the last year that Chops' age would allow him to be in Boy Scouts. After Chops was finished, Buck quit.
His left foot stepped from the grass onto the curb, his right then proceeded onto the street.
...
Broken Social Scene - Cause = Time
Approaching the intersection, Bucks mind jumped even further back, to the night of his tenth birthday. This birthday was still an innocent occasion. He invited over some friends from school, there was cake, hot dogs, a fire in the backyard, a sprinkler set up to keep cool and when the evening came, he and his pals jumped on their bikes and hit the town. Oh, to be at an age when the simple act of riding a bike was more than thrilling enough. No destination or purpose, just riding around.
The crew had come to the intersection he was standing in now. Buck could see them riding up the hill, under the dim streetlight. Buck anticipated what was to happen next and he watched his childhood friend Stephen crest that hill, skid out on some gravel by the curb, and fall off his bike, badly scraping his knee on the pavement.
He watched as he walked, saw the drunk adults having a fire in the yard below approach them and bring Stephen down to a lawn chair to dress his wound.
Reaching the bottom of the hill, with the scene behind him now, Buck looked back over his shoulder just in time to see those nice people`s yard turn into the overgrown mess it was now. Who knew how long that house had been empty. Buck hadn't thought about it in a long time. The only person from that birthday Buck had anything to do with now was Bizz. That was when they first met.
Looking ahead of himself again, he saw Nan afew meters further down the road performing her funny little dance/walk she did when in the right company and in the right mood. She was singing to herself and finger-dancing as she went. Reeeeal graceful, Buck thought to himself with a grin and quickened his pace to catch up.
Once at Nan's side, he looked across the street at the D&R drive through. It had been there for as long as he could remember and almost every one of his friends had at one point worked there, himself included. It took Buck three short weeks to quit, after being scolded by his short Korean boss, Cecelia, for whistling. Trying to defend himself Buck laughed and said
"C'mon Cecelia, whistle while you work, ya know?"
She looked at him with as serious an expression as she could muster and said it was distracting to him and to his other co-workers. He nodded while thinking to himself, adios you preposterous bitch.
Buck did not see any of these memories as he walked. What he saw was a scene that occurred on a night very much like this one, but in the dead of summer, shortly after his eighteenth birthday. He saw himself on his knees, bleeding into his lap from a gash on his forehead and just beyond that he saw JFK holding someone’s bicycle in the air before throwing it.
This was what one may call the climax of the absurdly drawn out altercation between Buck and one Leonard Young.
Buck and JFK were walking back to Buck's parent’s house to crash after a night out and as luck would have it they ran into Leonard, or Lenny, and one of his friends on their bikes, right in front of D&R. Buck had been waiting for this moment. For months now he'd heard that Lenny wanted to maim him on account of Buck having hung out with his girlfriend some night awhile back. More specifically, having touched her.
A little background on this messy scenario:
Lenny's girlfriend was a young girl called Dak Shat. Long before the pair began seeing each other, Dak was a member of that same circle of friends that Buck had been introduced to with Nan so many years previous. Dak was with them for all that initial rebellion, but somewhere along the way she shacked up with Lenny and that was the end of it. She was basically under lock and key for the next seven of her very brief teenage years. Buck saw very little of her, but, as with Nan, Dak still kept in touch with Bucks older sister, Edith the Fedith. So it was one summer evening in Buck's backyard, he and Bizz came upon Edith, Dak, Nan, and Crusty Bill drinking 40's on the patio. They joined the girls and everyone had a great time. Dak got incredibly drunk and began wrestling in the grass with Buck. It seemed so innocent at the time, that was until Lenny caught wind of it and decided that Buck must pay for his transgression.
And so it was when they met in front of D&R, Buck had the ethics of what to do and what not to do with another man's lady frantically slurred out to him before getting one-punched into the ground. JFK, bless his drunken heart, tried to help out and got knocked down as well. The cyclists rode off as JFK collected Buck off the grass, and they wandered to the hospital to get stitches. At least it was over and done with.
Buck saw only afew quick flashes of this memory and with a shake of his head decided it was best not to dwell on such things, especially since every motivation for that night had disappeared. Some years later Dak and Lenny predictably split up and no sooner had she left him then her friendship with Buck had resumed. More so, their friendship became even stronger than it had been when they met, perhaps because they were deprived of it for so long. During moments of clarity, usually following fits of laughter, she would remark on all the years they had missed out on and Buck would have to remind her of all the years they still had to go.
What a manic saga.
...
Frank Black and the Catholics - True Blue
Directly to the west of D&R was A Liquor Barn outlet and directly to the north of that was the southern-most point of the strip mall Buck and Nan were heading for. It used to be a SAAN store, but was now empty.
Stepping onto the concrete between the Liquor Barn and the SAAN, Buck saw himself, no more than sixteen, dressed in the denim uniform of a skinheaded youth, lit cigarette in his mouth, hands in his pockets, trying in vain to skateboard in a pair of ten-eye steel-toed Dr. Martens.
Buck was out with Potatoes, Chops, and Bizz, who were actual skateboarders. Buck tried his hand at it around age twelve and was terrible at it. He simply lacked the persistence and the stubborn will to improve, so he dropped it. On this occasion he was trying to play a game of POSER with them, borrowing Potatoes board. Needless to say, he lost terribly.
Buck remembered how much fun it was to lose.
Rounding the corner of the SAAN store and heading north along the strip mall brought a barrage of images into Buck's view. Stepping around the building exposed him to the whole parking lot and as he walked up the mall sidewalk, Nan barely leading the way, he clearly saw Bizz grind the legion rail, which was simply a steel tube that divided up parking spaces at the Royal Legion. Bizz slid right off the end, landing it effortlessly and then faded into a session on Dave Wasted's fun box. There was Potatoes, Wasted, JFK, and Bizz all skating in an autumn snow fall, which then faded into one of many manual competitions across the parking lot, using parking stall paint marks as a gauge. JFK, the biggest sonofabitch out of all of them could almost always manual the farthest. Astounding.
As Buck's eyes continued panning from south to north across the open lot he then saw the boys having a session at the old Extra Foods curb, which was simply an abnormally high curb that everyone used to do tricks off of. These are the skate spots you find in a small town, whichever ones you can. He saw Potatoes nollie off it and roll back into the lot after wards to retrieve a lonely shopping cart. All day, skating the curb and taking back carts for the quarters they delivered, quarters with which one could use to buy fifty cent cans of pop from the grocery store, or if skating was done for the day, cross the lot and grab a VHS rental also for fifty cents.
Buck sighed. Everything was so simple. Everything was so easy.
Looking beyond the mall, Buck saw a train rolling by in the dark. The train tracks ran just north of Extra Foods, on the backside of the strip mall. He was briefly puzzled by the absence of a horn that he surely would have heard over his headphones until he realized the train was also a memory. He knew this because the train he saw chugging by was covered in Christmas lights of all different colors.
Buck had seen the train one cold winter night with Crusty Bill. It should be noted that Crusty Bill's nick-name was simply a tongue-in-cheek joke with her then boyfriend, now co-parent and soul mate, the Animal. Crusty Bill, contrary to how it sounded, was as beautiful as they come.
They had been sitting on the train tracks behind Extra Foods, sharing a six pack of Guinness. It was a rest stop on a moon-lit drunken walk, similar to the one he was currently on with Nan, music blaring, destination unknown. They stopped at this point on the tracks because it was out of sight from any roads, hidden by the mall to the south and a hill to the north.
As is usually the case on a railroad track, lights appeared off in the distance prompting Buck and Crusty to walk up the neighboring hill and let the train pass. They stood in wonderous surprise as they saw the approaching train was covered in the neon lights of the season, with the final car spelling the words "Happy Holidays" on the side in vibrant reds and greens. It was over almost as soon as it began and the pair looked at each other, mouths agape as if they weren't sure what they had seen.
Buck didn't even know such a thing existed, and considered the odds of himself and Crusty Bill being on the tracks on that exact evening, at that precise time, and how much of a fluke it really was.
In his head, they were the only two people in the world who had seen that train, and it was just as likely that it had passed them by specifically to wish them seasons greetings.
He and Crusty Bill laughed like drunken hyenas and moseyed on down the tracks.
...
D.B.S. - Kitchen Noise
Right at this moment in Bucks recollections, when his nostalgia was at such soaring heights already, this band came on out of the hundreds of others, and gave his wander through time the finale it deserved.
This was the absolute favorite band of his very good friend, sadly departed from the world, Weenie Potter. Never, since she had introduced him to the Victoria based pop-punk group, had he listened to them without thinking of her. Those songs would remind him of her sweet face and brilliant smile every time he heard them until he was himself departed from this earthly domain.
Grade Seven Drama class. Buck and Bizz walked in that first day and saw Weenie and Nan sitting across from them. They didn't look like any other girls in the school.
So began the circle.
They bonded around being outsiders, characterized by skateboarding, music that defied the norm of small town taste, experimenting with drugs and alcohol, sneaking out late at night and constantly loitering at the Club Cafe. Some of these things are classic symptoms of youth, it was just that those kids seemed to get to them before the rest of their peers and were border line ostracized for it.
That first winter they all spent together was a revelation for all. In three short months, over many silly wasted nights, they had become as good of friends as young kids can be. Sadly, that was as long as that golden period lasted. After that, the friendships were forced to change. Nan moved, Dak was imprisoned by her relationship, Chops moved, JFK dropped out and moved, and Weenie as well was forced to change schools. They all remained friends, though it was never the same as it was for that first winter.
But nothing ever is, Buck thought to himself as they reached the bar's entrance. Every year brings changes and all era's, no matter how good or important, come to pass. There had been many good times since, as well as bad and Buck stopped to remind himself that he was currently in one of those golden age's. He always was, and always would be. The present is the most golden age of them all.
As someone once said about the late great Joe Strummer, his light shined brighter than the rest of ours and as such, burned out earlier. For that reason, we cannot resent their passing.
Such was the case with Weenie. After much personal anguish, she took her own life.
Buck stood on the sidewalk in front of Slickers staring over the empty lot, and through the distorted noise and painful wailing of the song, he could hear Nan squeaking his name. Snapping from his trance, he took out one headphone and looked at her.
"Yes?" he said.
"Are you coming in or what?" said Nan, obviously not wanting to go in alone. She had that doe-eyed expression on her face that she subconsciously used when she wanted something. Buck loved it.
"Yeah, I'm just gonna finish this smoke and this song, oldy foldy?" Buck hadn't even realized he was smoking until then.
"Ew," She said, "Hurry up, ok?" she said, shivering, and went inside.
Looking back toward the parking lot, he introspectively inhaled the smoke into his lungs, breathing it out slowly. It's a good thing that Nan had interrupted him, before he got too lost in the wilderness of his past. What he had thus far experienced that evening, to him, seemed like the tip of a very large ice berg.
Buck thought about the Kurt Vonnegut classic "Slaughter-house Five" and the concept of time presented in it. That time as we perceive it is false, that rather than the two dimensional moment to moment way our lives pass, all time is actually one instant with all things happening simultaneously.
He thought about all the moments he alone had lived right there in front of his eyes, all crammed together, all happening at once, all these faint versions of himself jostling around one another like a street in midday Tokyo. He thought about how much of the surrounding buildings and patches of pavement had imprinted his soul, and he smiled.
It's a good thing, he thought, that the universe is infinite, otherwise there would be no room for the future. He looked at the stars, said goodnight to Weenie, turned and stepped into the bar as the song echoed it's final words:
"Can your stereo go that high?"