Sunday, March 30, 2014

Riding the Thirsty Mule - Tina's Fable

As Tina handed the Captain his refilled mug, the Captain said, "Now do not forget the gratuity for service as part of the fee for the tale, lad."

"I agreed to pay for stories," Franklin replied, fingering his purse. "Perhaps a copper?"

"I am a guest here the same as you," Tina said. "My help I give freely. But if you would buy a spice cake for us all to share, I will give a story my mother often told me as a child."

"Yes, let us have the cake. And your tale," Franklin agreed.

Tina's Fable: The Lost Fairy


"When I was a little girl, my mother would tell me stories while I worked besides her in the kitchen or garden. One of my favorites that often I requested was the fable of Desimina, the Lost Fairy, a poem I still repeat to myself in bed at night when I think of my now departed mother.

"This is how it goes:

Alas, Desimina, so far from home
To a strange land by a fearsome storm blown.
Poor lost fairy now so very alone,
No other fairies, not even a gnome.

Each day she searched until thoroughly worn,
But found neither kin nor way to return.
Oh, each night she laid on her bed of fern
And more deeply sank to a state forlorn.

One morning from her unhappy sleep risen,
She heard flapping as she paused to listen.
Wings, not flying, in sunshine did glisten
In web above, someone was in prison.

Desimina's fear awoke at the sight,
But soon anger caused her terror to fade.
She looked for a leaf to serve as her blade,
Then flew to the rescue, ready to fight.

She brandished her weapon like a hero
And faced the spider who had come to eat.
Waving her frond so, she made him retreat
And, on silken thread, drop to branch below.

Desimina went to free her found friend,
But saw not a fairy held so snug.
It was a butterfly, only some old bug,
For all the efforts that she did expend.

She did break him loose, for that was the plan,
And he fluttered free, hovering nearby.
Her heartbreak was clear to that butterfly --
She despaired ne'er again to see her clan.

"I thank you for my freedom from the cord,
Although you thought to save another instead.
Without your help, by now I would be dead,
So I wish to offer you some reward."

"Can you show me how to get my home back?
Can you bring my friends with whom I can play?
That terrible wind has blown my life away
And left me with only ruinous wrack."

"I was a caterpillar in my past,
But I shall not be so ever again.
Life is not meant to stay where you have been,
But to go where you are sent, 'though unasked.

"Wherever you are is your home for now,
And whomever you meet can be your friends.
Follow your life through all its twists and bends,
And enjoy here all that life will allow."

Desimina opened her eyes for the first
To see her new home all around her there.
Our happy past should not cause us despair
When in our next venture we are immersed."


Sunday, March 23, 2014

Riding the Thirsty Mule - The Captain's Tale

The Captain’s Tale


“What say you, Captain? Have you a tale to raise our spirits through this long and bleak night? Or to haunt our sleeps later?” Franklin urged. “I will keep your mug full with Mule’s Kick all night, if you will favor us with a story from your adventures.”

“Ah, lad, your offer is too generous to pass, but why settle for some mere exploit of mine when I could give you the truth behind the legend of Lord Balamore the Dragon Slayer?” the Captain replied with a conspiratorial smile.

“Oh, yes. That would be fine. Norford, please, a tankard for the Captain to get him started.”

“I am here near the tap. Let me serve the Captain, Norford,” Tina offered and moved without waiting for his reply to fill a mug and deliver it as the Captain rose to stand at the hearth. Norford smiled resignedly. It pleases the lass and does me no disrespect, he thought. She carries no pity for me, only the love she could not give her father.

“Ah, well, you all know the legendary Balamore and his acclaim as an itinerant slayer of dragons. Some say he dispatched as many as seventeen, while I heard him more modestly claimed only eight were really grown beasts worthy of counting. Oh, yes, I knew him. In my youth, I served him as squire in his late years. All but one of his famous combats were decades in the past by then. He had retired to his ancestral estates, so long neglected and, if we are dealing in truth, always so meagerly impoverished even before his time. It was his upbringing in noble poverty that sent him into the world seeking fame and fortune, even though he was his father’s only child. And that diligently learned thrift of his early years returned him home with so little care to expend more of that fortune than he minimally needed to maintain his household. He kept no list of soldiers about him. His fame defended him well enough, he would say, that all he required was a squire to tend to his personal needs, a cook for his family, a smith and a groom to see to his horses and trappings, and a caretaker to oversee the needs of the estate’s peasants and the stocking of the manor’s larder.

“He was not greedy – never was. Having acquired his ample wealth through his exploits, he allowed the peasants to keep whatever they could scratch out of the stony and dry lands. He paid them for any excess they could provide to the manor or purchased his supplies elsewhere. Their gratitude and loyalty to him was perhaps the greatest shield for him and his privacy in those declining years.

“Ah, but it is not those declining years which interest you – I see that in your faces. In his modesty, I long thought, Balamore would lightly let pass any discussion of his adventures and conquests. So many others told the tales that he had no need to sing his own praises. He smiled with scant comment to confirm or deny what the legends recounted. So, I must tell you of the only venture on which I accompanied him. You may see his legend in a different light afterwards, as did I, but I know with certainty only how the old Balamore dealt with his last reptilian foe.

“I was just short of my eighteenth year when the messenger arrived, beseeching Lord Balamore for help. His lordship was at least in his late fifties, maybe even over sixty years of age. My service in his household was going to soon end, as Balamore insisted that my training was so nearly complete and I must provide my services and perfect my skills in the world where they were better valued and more needed. Perhaps if I still had been more green or had already left, Lord Balamore would not have listened to that messenger and would have sent him away with only a warm meal and a night’s rest. But my lord was overcome with the fancy that this quest could be my final lesson and qualifying examination.

“'You are hardly my little Wiggles any longer,’ Balamore said to me, recalling the childhood name he had given me when he first saw me. ‘You know all that I have to teach you and a few tricks you created on your own. All but one last secret of mine. I cannot pass this legacy to my daughters and, alas, I shall not sire a son nor see him grown if I do. I had thought to die with this untold. For telling it is something I cannot do – I must show you and for that we shall need a dragon.’

“My youthful curiosity so easily overwhelmed my caution in those years. If this old man was ready to confront another dragon, how could I refuse to stand at his side? Over the next few days as I prepared the provisions, weapons, and four horses for our journey and the smith polished his armor, Lord Balamore seemed to be engaged in the most difficult battle of his lifetime – reassuring his wife and three daughters that there was nothing about which to worry. He would be back in a fortnight or sooner, he told them, none the worse for the exercise. The messenger called upon all his diplomacy to balance the urgency of the need for Lord Balamore’s extraordinary knowledge and prowess and the limited ferocity of the beast which was surely not the largest the hero had ever defeated. At last, the Lady conceded that she could not stop the old fool and she and her daughters set to cleaning, altering, and mending his campaigning tabard, cape, and such garments as befit the champion.

“When we rode forth, there were only the three of us – the bedazzlingly refurbished Lord Balamore, the messenger, and myself. Of course, as you know, part of his legend was that he always fought the dragons single-handedly, carrying the fight deep into their secluded lairs. If he failed, his soul could rest easier knowing he had not allowed any but himself and his squire to face the deathly jeopardy. During the three day ride to the region where the dragon had been marauding, I heard him rehearsing his old speech in low mutters as he rode.” The Captain paused to wave his empty tankard at Franklin. Tina quickly came to fetch, refill, and return it. The Captain kissed the back of her hand as he took the mug back and then threw back a large gulp of ale.

“When we crossed into the final valley, the peasants stopped their toil in the fields to line the road and cheer the hero’s arrival. The Duke and the Duchess rode out with a grand entourage to meet us as we neared their keep. With practiced grace, Lord Balamore accepted their adoration and confidence in the surety of his putting an end to their problems. Despite the recent ravishing of their territory, the Duchy hosted a splendid banquet to welcome us. On cue, when asked what he needed from them to complete his mission, Balamore gave his speech. In all the years of living in his home, I had never heard him speak with such eloquence (nor at such length). One might have been tempted to believe he was capable of persuading the terrors he had dispatched over the years into simply packing up and leaving. Ah, that old man was reborn that night in the glories of his younger years. I am certain that a fee and directions to the dragon’s den were discussed in a very business-like manner, but I shall always remember the grandeur of Lord Balamore’s assurance that they should consider the deed as good as done.

“We arose in late morning. Only Balamore, I, and the four horses were going to travel on from the keep to the dragon’s cave. We were sent off with great ceremony that afternoon and rode for a few hours before Balamore chose a spot for us to camp for the night. In the morning, he said, we would go the rest of the way to reach the cave mouth by noontime.

“At the mouth of the cave, Balamore told me to cut down a tall sapling. 'Remember your pole vaulting exercises, Wiggles,' he said. 'The right balance of strength and flexibility. Judging by the spacing of these footprints, three paces length should serve our purpose.'

“'Yes, milord. I assume we do not need the hoop to jump through,' I joked. I was recalling the many years of gymnastic, running, and jumping exercises that were as much a part of my training as the use of weapons. The pole vault through a hoop suspended from the massive oak in the training yard was one of my favorites.

“'No,' Balamore almost chuckled, 'Our dragon will provide that. He will have the ring prize also.' He referred to the small sack which hung near the top of the hoop. As I became proficient at passing through the hoop, Balamore had added the ring prize to the sport. As I went through, if I could retrieve the parcel, it was mine to keep. In the beginning, it was tied with a loose knot that came free with a tug. At first, it held a pastry or some such treat. But as the training progressed, the bag needed to be cut loose. And the prizes increased in value from the snacks I could have easily grabbed in a pass through the kitchen to more useful items. This belt buckle I wear today was one of those prizes.

“'Stand back, lad, as we approach the dragon. And stay ready with that pole. I will signal the moment when we need it and when I do, we can have no hesitation.' Balamore told me to strip all the gear off one horse and bring it along with us into the cave. After a quick check of his armor, his shield, and his sword, he led the way.

“The passage into an active dragon's lair is fairly easy, for the beast needs a wide berth to come and go. One planning for his dormancy will collapse the tunnels leading to his sanctum, but he will clear a path when the hunger awakens him. A sleeping dragon retreats deep into his inner chamber, but one on a rampage moves to an upper hunting den nearer the surface. We had not far to go to find the dragon. He was awaiting us, for there was no hiding the sounds of our coming from his keen hearing.

“'Sir Knight, you travel rather lightly; the last party to visit me here had twelve of your kind. I expected at least twice that number this time.'” The Captain's voice was a mocking thunder as he filled the role of the dragon. He drained his tankard, waving it casually towards Tina, as he continued the dialogue in the calm tone of Balamore.

“'Sir Dragon, such men are expensive, even when they fail to return. I am a different sort of emissary. As my gray hair and wrinkles do testify.' As Balamore spoke, he removed his helm.

“'Indeed you are. Your puny sword would not penetrate my scales even if you still had the strength to lift it. I suspect your meat has grown tough and stringy also. You are not much of an offering, even if I should be so inclined to settle for such an arrangement.' The dragon seemed amused, probably with his own cleverness and control of the situation.

“'To speak honestly with you, Sir Dragon,” Balamore stated, “I do not think the residents in the lands hereabout have much interest in an agreement of that sort either. I was hired to slay you if I could not otherwise convince you to end your scourge upon their homes and resources.'

“'And what arguments do you have prepared to persuade me so?'”

“'You have feasted here for three months. Their herds are a quarter less already. Are you not nearly sated anyway?'

“'You are not very well informed, Sir Knight, in the habits of dragons, I see. It will take twenty years to satisfy my hunger. And during that time and long after, in the moments that my carnal yearnings are abated, I have a curiosity about the beauties and mysteries which have been created or uncovered since I last roamed the world a century ago. No, I will not soon be ready for my next nap.'

“'Ah, are you hungry now? I would not wish to negotiate with you in a weakened state. While I am not much of a morsel, this horse might help take the edge off for you.'

“'Graciously offered, Sir Knight, although I would have had it once our talks were done.'

“'Then, with my compliments, please.'

“Balamore waved for me to urge the horse forward. The dragon bent forward, seized the poor animal, and crushed it with a single snap of his massive jaws. The dragon tilted his head back to swallow, opening his jaws widely to wash the carcass down in one gulp.

“'Now, lad, there is the hoop. And the prize.'

“With a quick run, plant, and vault, I leaped into that gaping maw. As I passed over his teeth and tongue, I swept my dagger into my right hand and spotted the gland in the back of his throat. I wrapped my left arm around it and hacked at its base. The dragon wildly swung his head from side to side, but I clung on. My feet dangled unable to gain any purchase, but I stayed to my task sawing off my 'prize'.

“When the combined efforts of my blade's cutting and my weight's tugging soon caused the gland to detach, I found myself plunging down that terrible gullet. It was a singular moment of epiphany for me. The importance of an education came into clear focus, for we seldom appreciate how we might use some bit of knowledge until the moment when we need it. As I bumped and slid down that narrowing tunnel, the dull hours of studying metabolism and anatomy of animals, both common and weird, that I had theretofore thought to be interruptions to my martial training, developed sudden relevance.

“I do not know how many of you have ever visited the inner working of a dragon. In all my years, I suspect I only knew one other and he never showed any interest in discussing it. Well, not directly. But Balamore had spent hours explaining to me how a dragon produced its flaming breath. The digestion of its meal produces copious quantities of flammable gases. It is true of all animals, but for most, they dispel these fumes in flatulent emissions from their hither regions. Whatever be-demoned mind created dragons thought of a different plumbing scheme. Those explosive byproducts of digestion in a dragon are shunted off into an internal air bladder that circles back to the gullet with a flap just above the stomach. When the dragon wishes to produce his awesome weapon, he compresses this bladder and belches the gases up.

“Now, by itself, that exhalation would be fearsomely odorous and perhaps overwhelming, but the dragon adds the ability to ignite those gases as they enter the mouth. And, now, what do you suppose I had locked under my arm as I descended deeper into that beast? Yes, the sac that produced that spark. The gruesome drawings of dissected dragons that I had studied since I was a child came into my mind – a virtual map to guide me even in my dark tumble to the beast's gut. I drove my dagger into the wall to slow my drop and prayed that I was sliding down the correct side. When I felt the edge of the bladder's flap, I shoved the fire gland through and continued on my way.

“There is a good reason that a dragon does not ignite these gases until they reach his mouth. While tougher than you and I, the insides of a dragon have none of the protective qualities of his exterior scales. The explosion behind me blew a enormous hole in the dragon's side and it died quickly thereafter. Once the skin was breached, Balamore had little trouble carving me out. A quick wash in a stream on our way back to the keep, a jubilant feast for the modest Lord Balamore, and we were soon heading home with the last bounty of his career. The rest is legend.” The Captain smiled slyly. He raised his tankard above his head, lowered it to drain its last contents, and swept it wide with a flourishing bow. The audience cheered and laughed.

“Oh, that was a marvelous story, Captain,” Franklin said. “But did not Lord Balamore live four centuries ago?”

“That is a different story, lad, and you only bought one from me this night,” the Captain replied as he waved to Tina for a refill and returned to his seat.

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Marching in Crimea

Marching in Crimea

(heard on the streets of Simferopol this week?)

We’re marching in Crimea, Crimea, Crimea.
We’re marching in Crimea, Crimea, hooray!

We are you and you are us, and
So we are all together,
So we are all together,
Together is much better.
Yours is ours and ours is too, and
So together is better.

We’re voting in Crimea, Crimea, Crimea.
We’re voting in Crimea, Crimea, vote yes!

Put’n loves you and Put’n love us, and
So let’s be all together,
So let’s be all together,
Together is much better.
We take this and you give that, and
So we can share the weather.

We’re annexing Crimea, Crimea, Crimea.
We’re annexing Crimea, Crimea, so there!

Sunday, March 16, 2014

Mystery of MH370 (screenplay pitch)


Escape on the Plane of the Apes
(the maybe true story of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370)


Story/scene synopsis:

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 0005 (12:05 a.m.) on March 8, 2014:

Scenes of happy families and bustling business people getting onboard the overnight flight to Beijing. The piloting crew are doing their pre-flight checklist as the stewardesses (and token male steward required by Hollywood PC Practice Board) are settling passengers into their seats. Two heavily bundled “special medical needs” passengers in wheelchairs are traveling in front row of first class with their own attendants who wave off any need for assistance (or interference) from the flight crew.

Cut to: Cargo loading into belly of the MH370 aircraft. Six large crates (with airholes) are being put onboard. Marking on the outside indicate delivery to the Beijing Zoo. The manifest is written in Chinese and English, but only says “Live specimens”. A workman attempts to peer through one of the airholes to see what is in the crate, but it is too dark, and he is quickly ordered to get back to work because they need to close up and get this flight out on schedule.

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 0040 (12:40 a.m.) on March 8, 2014:

Cockpit as the flight takes off. Normal routine. Coach passenger area – typical chatter and settling in for a red-eye flight. First class passenger area – normal; “special” passengers are still tightly (and obscurely) bundled up and apparently asleep.

South China Sea, 0120 on March 8, 2014:

Mostly passengers are dozing or quietly reading, working on laptops, etc. The pilots make a routine check-in with air traffic, stating the time and the all system a-ok status.

South China Sea, 0122 on March 8, 2014:

Quiet passengers as before. Shot moves to the “special” passengers. Their attendants are alert, perhaps even nervously expectant. A hand emerges from under the wrapping of one of the special passengers – long fingers and red-furred coated. It is an orangutan (specifically a Borneo orangutan, but only the primatologists in the audience would know the difference).

Cut to: Cargo hold. A similar hand is working a latching mechanism inside one of the crates. The crate side falls and out steps a large male orangutan. In quick succession the other five crates open and three more males and two females emerge. They appear to confer in guttural sounds and hand motions. They move towards a door leading out of the cargo bay into a subfloor mechanical systems area and then up a ladder to a hatch into the passenger area above.

As the cargo orangutans emerge towards the back of the plane, the first-class orangutans jump out of their seats and run to the cockpit door. With their superhuman strength, they batter down and tear off the door. The four males from the cargo hold take up strategic and scattered positions amongst the passengers and scream threateningly. The two females run forward to first class, join the two working on the door (both large males), and turn to face the first class passengers. They are plenty frightening also.

As the cockpit is breached, the two “first class” males rush in. The co-pilot has risen out of his seat as if to investigate when the door comes off – he is knocked down hard by one of the intruders who continues on to grab the pilot. The navigator is knocked out of his seat by the other ape, collides with the wall, and slides to the deck unconscious. Having overcome/subdued the cockpit crew, the two apes turn as their human attendants enter the cockpit. One (let's say “she” (Natasha) for this one and “he” (Boris) for the other, but casting can decide later on the specific gender and ethnicity) points to two locations in the cockpit and says “There. And there”. The ape that knock down the navigator (let's call him Clyde), smashing a fist down where she pointed – destroying much of the navigator's other control circuitry. The other (throttling the pilot, let's call him Sam) flips the other switch off. She looks at Clyde with exasperation. Clyde sheepishly shrugs.

Boris moves into the co-pilot seat while Sam deposits the unconscious pilot back into his seat. He studies the controls, familiarizing himself with their reading and confirming his general understanding of the working of Boeing 777. After a while, Natasha displays some impatience and asks “well, can you fly it or not?” Boris is both annoyed and confident. Perhaps not really yet prepared, he grabs the controls and starts to bank the plane into a turn. There is a sudden drop in altitude. Boris over-corrects and the plane climbs rapidly. Natasha gives Boris the same look of exasperation she gave Clyde earlier as he struggles to get the plane under control. As the plane levels off and flies smoothly, Boris confidently says, “next stop, Sumatra”.

South China Sea, 0132 on March 8, 2014:

The first-class passengers have all been moved back to coach and the first class section now holds all the crew members. They sit with their hands bound with zip-ties, guarded by the two females (Mopsy and Flopsy). The pilot is still out, the navigator is moaning, and the co-pilot feigning more severe injuries, fearfully hoping to not draw any attention to himself. Natasha is in first-class. Her trenchcoat is open enough to show the Orangutans Worldwide Liberation Society (OWLS) emblem over her right breast. Boris has the same patch similarly located. The four cargo males are menacingly patrolling the coach section. The passengers are all properly cowed, but nobody is sleeping now. One not-easily-distracted businessman is still busily working on a presentation he needs to have ready for a morning meeting.

In the cockpit, Clyde sits at the navigator's station while Sam is in the pilot's chair. They are both largely out of the bundling clothes they wore to get onboard, but they do have on t-shirts with the OWLS logo. Sam is wearing the pilot's hat. Boris is still in the co-pilot's seat. Boris seems to have gotten the knack of flying this particular plane and is arguing with Sam (in both voice and pantomime-hand signals) about who is really the captain of this flight and not to be touching any of the instruments and controls. Clyde is playing with wires and components which are exposed and/or hang out of the keyboard at the navigator's workstation – he gets an occasional shock.

In first-class, the head stewardess confronts Natasha and asks why they are doing this. An exposition is given in the dialog between them about the unification of the orangutans of Borneo and Sumatra. The Borneo orangutans are on a mission to assist and organize the Sumatra group which is much closer to extinction. Natasha demonstrates the ability to communicate via hand signals and speech with Mopsy and Flopsy (something like “Bring me and Stewardess Jane martinis. Make mine very dry.”)

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 0145 on March 8, 2014:

Air traffic controllers are discussing the absence of the routine check-in of flight MH370. Suggestions about relaying concerns to Vietnam and China air traffic are made, but it is not considered important enough to “wake up the old man”.

Peninsular Malaysia, 0215 March 8, 2014:

Natasha comes in the cockpit to check up on the progress on their plan. Boris, Sam, and Clyde all simultaneously give her a “thumbs up”. She asks how much farther they have to go. At this, Boris is a bit more vague and uncertain. The destruction of most of the navigation station is discussed. They seem to be able to ping the GPS satellites, but they are not receiving updates from the worldsat or ground control systems on their exact location. Boris assures Natasha he can get “close enough” by dead reckoning with the onboard system to find Sumatra and their destination. Natasha gives that exasperated expression again.

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 0215 on March 8, 2014:

Another thirty minutes have passed without word from MH370. It is now 1 hour and 25 minutes into the flight, and they have had no contact for 55 minutes. Vietnam and China have reported that they have not heard or seen anything either. Air traffic controllers play rock-paper-scissors to see who puts in the call to “the old man” (the loser, of course).

Straits of Malacca, Indonesia, 0245 on March 8, 2014:

Boris is oscillating between looking out the cockpit windows (and seeing nothing) and reading the instruments on the panels in front of him. He decides to decrease elevation, but again over-steers and goes into a rapid and bumpy descent before he is able to guide the plane into a smoother flight. Sam looks at him quizzically and Clyde issues several loud protesting cries. Boris remarks to Clyde that he was not the one who broke the navigation system.

Once the plane's bouncing calms down, Natasha comes rushing into the cockpit, demanding to know what the problem is. Boris explains that he thinks he might have overflown Indonesia. He is not sure how, but he does not see what he was expecting (cannot really see anything). He suggests that if they descend and go north (or maybe even NNE) they should get back to see the western shoreline and then they can follow it to their destination. Natasha, exasperated, leaves the cockpit. She repeats the hand signal she used earlier to Mopsy to order a martini. Then she puts up two fingers to make it double.

Andaman Sea, off coast of Myanmar, 0315 on March 8, 2014:

Boris is arguing with Sam again. “How do you know what the jungles of Sumatra look like? No, I not sure either. I suppose it could be the mainland. Okay, okay, we will go west if you want to. Remember this one is on you when Natasha wants somebody's ass to chew.”

Indian Ocean, 0345 on March 8, 2014:

“Oh, go ahead. You fly it for a while if you want to. I am going to get drunk. How did I ever decide to go into world wildlife conservation in the first place?”

THE END (or is it? Wait for the sequel: Return of the Plane of the Apes)

Sunday, March 9, 2014

Riding the Thirsty Mule - Setup

SETUP:


This is a story seed, originally intended to stimulate a Story-By-Baton multi-authored stream. So far, there have been no nibbles, except whatever has knocked around in my skull.

Meeting at the Thirsty Mule


It was a slow night at The Thirsty Mule. The nights had all been slow at this tavern and every other in Havenport since the war ended in mid-summer nine months ago. A year ago, the taverns were full with mercenaries rushing to the front for the spring campaign or hobbling away. And with the merchants and camp followers who sold their wares to them. Now, half the taverns were out of business entirely and only the locals and few straggling soldiers without a war came to linger peacefully over mug and platter in front of the fire.

Maistra was one of those stragglers, a half-elf who felt unwelcome in any society except the armies to which he attached himself. Bereft of home and, for now, a job, he remained here with no good reason to stay and none to go. With coins from his cashout still in his pouch, he camped out in the woods to the north of town, wandering in as far as The Thirsty Mule a few times each week. He listened for news of the next conflict brewing where his superior archery could be redeemed for coins from the highest bidder. He was neither humble nor inexpensive, but even his haughty patience had become depressed by the nightly dullness in the world. Everyone, it seemed, was finally exhausted after the decades of conflict and ready to give peace a turn.

Across the table sat Franklin, the beardless but bulky farmboy. A year ago, Franklin was eager to join the combat, but could not disobey his father who forbade it. Now, with his father's death in the winter, he found little difficulty in abandoning his family loyalty to his eldest brother, only now to have no army to which to run away. At seventeen, Franklin was larger than most full-grown men by at least a head and broader (and heavier) by half again. He fed his appetite for military adventure with his nightly visits to the taverns, asking the soldiers to tell their tales. As he (with his recent inheritance) was the one paying for the drinks (or even a meal when the story particularly excited him), he found many soldiers willing to abide his company and curiosity. Some of them with greatly enhanced imagination as the evening's beverages added up.

Tonight it was The Captain who told the tale. Nobody was clear about which side The Captain had served in the war, but all felt certain he and his troop of cavalry were deeply immersed in its many seesawing battles. None of his horsemen remained to lend testimony to his history and he skillfully avoided the mentions of names and places that might reveal his battlefield loyalty. Even his own name and origins were a mystery that the audience forbore exploring, for his powers in relating his ageless legends of conquest and defeat enraptured them beyond such mundane curiosity of here and now. He stood at the hearth with his boot resting on the log pile. The rumor was that the lower leg in that boot was wooden itself, but none here had ever seen the evidence.

The injuries to Norford, the tavern owner, were plainly seen. He waited upon his customers himself now that he could no longer afford a barmaid. With a large-wheeled cart and a crutch, he moved amongst the tables delivering drink and meal. Despite the lack of his left hand and most of the leg on that same side, he had built the cart many years ago for travel amongst the soldiers in the camps with his "extra comforts". Whether in sympathy or because his cart filled a real need, his business there prospered enough for him eventually to buy The Thirsty Mule in Havenport. Now, Norford had no other options, but to struggle through these lean times until business resumed. [i]Who would ever have thought the war would end,[/i] thought Norford as he rested upon the seat which swung out of the back of his cart.

Tina looked over at Norford, wishing to offer her help. She was his barmaid as recently as two months ago. Then he told her he could not pay her anymore. She offered to work for a pittance or even nothing but food and lodging, but his pride was too obsinate. Her father was the blacksmith and her new husband his apprentice. Her marriage was the price she paid to move back into her father's house when she could not earn her own income. Derrick, her husband, smelled of smoke and sweat just like her father who had always made her feel unwanted for the flaw of not being a son. Derrick did not care for her much either, but needed to yield to the pressure from the old man if he wished to continue as his apprentice. Slipping out to her old haunts at The Thirsty Mule, even if infrequently, was Tina's only pleasure now, mixed with the pain of seeing Norford struggle so.

The only other person in the tavern tonight was new. A figure sat concealed under a large hooded cloak in a corner distant from the fire and the others. Norford had attended to this guest upon arrival, but he only received a silver coin without a request for food nor drink. The stranger simply asked in low whisper to "rest for a while with no disturbance". Well paid for nothing, Norford readily agreed. He had not seen the stranger shift position in three hours since sitting there and assumed that he (or perhaps she) was asleep.

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Campfire Songs for the Retirement Roundup

Ghost Workers Whom We Hire

(to tune of: "Ghost Riders in the Sky")

An old employee went to work, the same as any day,
And while he settled at his desk, ready to earn his pay,
All at once on his screen arrived an ominous warning;
He was summoned to meet with H.R. later that morning.

Their files were very thick and they archived everything.
They smiled at him as he sat; it was cold and menacing.
Your work, they said, is excellent – we've noticed for some time –
We'd like to keep you with us yet 'though you are past your prime.

Yippie-yi-yay
Yippie-yi-ooh
Some folks ne'er get away.

As he looked 'round the room to see if they might be joking,
He saw the glint in their eyes and that their ears were smoking.
Piles of paper on the table, waiting for blood to sign,
A pledge forever more to vow, “My soul e'er shall be thine.”

We heard you say that you were worried about retirement,
What you could do to fill your days, after your employment.
So if you prefer here to stay to ever play our games,
We will make a place at our side in our eternal flames.

Yippie-yi-yay
Yippie-yi-ooh
Ghost workers whom we hire.
Ghost workers whom we hire.
Ghost workers whom we hire.


Don’t Throw Me Out

(to tune of: "Don't Fence Me In")

Oh, I have years, lots of years of experience to share
Don’t throw me out.
Let me work at my job nestled in my old chair
Don’t throw me out.
Let me come in each day and smell my mornin’ coffee
And listen to the news and swap tales with my posse.
Set me out to greet visitors in the lobby,
(but) Don’t throw me out.

Just wait a bit, do not cashier my old career
Underneath pensioning feet.
While here I sit, let me produce those facts obtuse
That I so oft do repeat.

I want to feel that my life still has some meaning,
As I near those retirement pastures greening;
I know to work’s end I am now careening
(but) Don’t throw me out.

Oh, give me time, just a bit more time to linger.
Don’t throw me out.
Let me find in my mind how to leave this wringer.
Don’t throw me out.
Let me be my old self ‘til I plan another
And enjoy what has been before the next other,
Or let me train my own replacement if you’d rather
(but) Don’t throw me out.

Just four more years, in your employ me to deploy
Wherever I can help out.
To ease my fears, let me fulfill with my tried skill
‘Til this job I can do without.

I want to roam someday in that slower pasture
And sleep until noon with no disaster,
But I have many leisure skills yet to master
(so, please) Don’t throw me out.


On The Off Ramp

(To tune of: "On the Road Again" (Willie Nelson version))

On the ramp at last -
Time is coming to exit from my jobs past,
That life I live working to do my daily tasks
And I can see approaching its end so fast.
On the ramp at last.

Doing things that I've been asked,
So many things that may be later trashed.

O, I'll need to say goodbye to work amassed.
On the ramp at last -
Like a load of bricks, they built my self image,
They filled my day's glass,
Giving me the reasons to join the scrimmage.

That's the way
To the off ramp at last.
Say farewell to all those whose path I crossed
In the life I worked doing my daily tasks

And leave directions to all the chores I pass
From the ramp at last.
Like a trail of breadcrumbs to lead them to the clue
Through my notes so vast
Hoping they can find what, without me, to do

That's the way
To the off ramp at last.
Just can't stay fore'er in the happy past --
The life I will live is coming near at last

And I need to get ready, so very fast -
Now that I have reached the ramp at last.


Get Along Little Dougie

(To tune of: "Get Along, Little Dogie" )

Whoopee-ti-yi-yo, get along, little Dougie;
It's your retirement to face on your own.
Whoopee-ti-yi-yo, get along, little Dougie;
You know that it's time for you to head home.

Your parents did raise you to work for your living,
And you try to do so, if ne'er too hard.
While we appreciate the effort you're giving,
We are still all signing the farewell card.

Whoopee-ti-yi-yo, move along, little Dougie;
It's your retirement to face on your own.
Whoopee-ti-yi-yo, move along, little Dougie;
You know that it's time for you to stay home.

Some folks join the old rat race for security
That's where they get it most awfully wrong.
You can run 'round the track well past maturity,
But there comes a time when you should be gone.

Whoopee-ti-yi-yo, move over, little Dougie;
You made your fortune, if ever you will.
Whoopee-ti-yi-yo, move over, little Dougie;
Leave so we'll have a position to fill.


O, My Old Job

(to tune of: "O, Shenandoah")

O, my old job, I'm bound to leave you.
I must leave forever.
O, my old job, I'm goin' to miss you.
Away, I'm bound away
To future mystery.

O, my old job, I'd loved my career.
I must leave forever.
O, my old job, beware what is dear.
Away, I'm bound away
To future mystery.

O, my old job, I planned to retire.
I must leave forever.
O, my old job, ne'er thought it so dire.
Away, I'm bound away
To future mystery.

O, my old job, you're always with me.
I must leave forever.
O, my old job, wherever I'll be.
Away, I'm bound away
To future mystery.


Sippy Cocktail Straws

(to tune of: "Tumbling Tumbleweeds")

Look at them rushing around,
Treading water, not to drown,
While at poolside I'll be found,
Sipping mai tais with my sippy cocktail straw.

Cares of the past are behind,
As I peacefully unwind –
Fixes are for others to find.
Sipping mai tais with my sippy cocktail straw.

I knew it was time to leave,
Time for my work's reprieve.

I will just rest right here
Now that I am off that tier,
No troubles to ever hear,
Sipping mai tais with my sippy cocktail straw.

I knew it was time to leave,
Time for my work's reprieve.

I will just rest right here
Now that I am off that tier,
No troubles to ever hear,
Sipping mai tais with my sippy cocktail straw.