Boom Boom
The day John Lee Hooker brought his
blues hounds to play at the Bouquet Bar, I danced with dirty knees, tripped on
acid, and Michael Shortleg caught a wild hare and moved to San Diego .
Early that morning high on hashish
and buzzing on the last Nicaraguan coffee beans in town due to the actions of
some Sandinistas, I walked to work. The
morning orange cream sickle clouds fanned across the sky with dots of black-red
raspberries.
On top of my head sat a gray felt
taxi-driver cap I bought when I played my oboe in Berchtesgaden , Austria . A Hawaiian print bandanna tied loose around
my neck to keep out the nippy air. The
brown wool shirt jacket my grandpa Lanus
wore when he ranched kept my body temperature warm in the cool autumn. I was buttoned down in a white shirt, and
layered beneath hid my uniform, a solid green t-shirt with the logo of the
Boise City Parks Department on the left breast.
My baggy chinos I bought at St
Vincent DePaul hung loose in the crotch which was perfect for riding the Lil’
Hustler lawn mower. On my feet were my
new purple high top tennis shoes. I was
on the schedule to mow the ball diamonds at Ann Morrison
Park , but when I got to
work, on this particular day, the division chief informed me that I would be
working on the other side of the park helping dig an irrigation trench.
For eight hours that day, I scraped
out river rock and other debris left over from the days when the land served as
the dump for the young town of Boise . I found a milk jar and an old Listerine jar
complete with cork. The knees on my
pants wore thin in just one day’s work, and my new purple high tops now looked
the same color as my gray felt cap.
How I looked didn’t matter to me
when I went to happy hour after work. I
stopped at Pengilly’s first, and then I stumbled over to Tom Grainey’s. I dodged old boyfriends, made new friends,
and flirted with bartenders. Everyone
was buzzing about how John Lee Hooker was in town to play at the Bucket.
I bought a chorizo sausage off the
Basque food cart on the street corner and then headed to hear the blues from
one of the living masters. I knew the
woman at the door collecting the cover charge at the Bouquet Bar. She looked at my dirty knees and bandanna
with the ranch coat, and her lips pursed together, her eyes narrowed and she
shook her head in an ugly way.
“Do I look that bad?”
“Yep!” Her head continued to shake back and forth a horizontal
fashion. “Honey, you ARE the blues
tonight, come on and don’t tell anyone I let you in for free.”
She stamped my hand, and I went
inside. The place was packed, and I
could not find a spot at the bar, so I stood around a while. One of the bartenders working had served me
for years, over the crowd he handed me a deep glass with ice filled with Irish
whiskey. He yelled out over the clamor,
“I’ll catch up with you later!”
I hadn’t planned on drinking
whiskey that night, but I sipped it anyway.
My goal was to move toward the dance floor. As I stepped sideways through the wall of people,
I felt a hand on my back. When I feel a
hand on my back, I automatically stiffen, and the woman warrior comes out in
me. Athena takes her shield. I was ready to punch someone when I turned to
see who my space invader was.
The hand belonged to Jerry, a
fellow I had wanted to have bawdy, tawdry, raucous sex with for three
years. We met in the theatre. He and I were in different one act plays
which played one night at the Special Events Center
at Boise State University . After dress rehearsal, we went to the Burger
& Brew to unwind from the intensity of playing characters.
After a couple three thirty-two
ounce beers, this guy, Jerry, turns to me and says, “I am going to give you the
only acting advice you will ever need.”
“Really?” I asked him only because I wanted to have sex
with him.
“Who the fuck cares?” He looked me straight in the eyes. Eyeball to eyeball he stared me down.
I stirred up all the sexy apathy I
had. “I don’t care,” I said in a low
batted eye tone of voice.
“Exactly!” he yelled like he was
making a case to a jury.
At this point, the fellow who was
opposite me in the one act play enters the conversation by repeating, “Who the
fuck cares? That is perfect. That is just what Jamie needs to hear, WHO
the FUCK CARES!”
Paul, my co-star knew me before I
was married and moved to West
Germany .
Here it was one year later, and I am back home and separated. Paul saw the difference in me. I seemed to worry about everyone and everything. I worried what people thought, and I worried
what I was now going to do with my life.
Paul was tired of hearing me vex about life. For months, he wanted to say to me, “Who the
fuck cares?”
With the insistence from these two
men, somehow, the tumblers clicked and fell into the right spot, and I knew
that somewhere behind the f-word and the ninety-six ounces of Miller High Life
beer, they were sharing with me ancient wisdom.
I thought about my family, I
thought about how I was still married to a man who was serving in the
military. I thought about what I was
doing in my life, and it was in that moment I realized the answer to, “Who
cares?” was the answer to the universe.
Also in that moment, I realized I didn’t have a clue to the answer.
Since that night of advice, I wanted
to fuck Jerry. We ran in some of the
same circles. We saw each other at
parties, but he never seemed that interested in me.
“We have a table with an extra
chair, come on over.” Jerry took my
hand and pulled me through the crowded bar to a table with a couple of other
fellows. I didn’t know them, but Jerry
introduced us. Then he whispered in my
ear that he didn’t really know these guys, they came and sat at his table. Jerry confessed he was at the bar alone.
We smiled at each other, as if we
knew the truth behind a lie. Jerry had
not let go of my hand when the drum beat hit.
John Lee Hooker’s first song started,
“Boom, boom, boom, boom.
I’m gonna shoot you right down
Right off your feet,
Take you home with me
Put you in my house
Boom, boom, boom, boom….”
We both started singing the song
with John Lee Hooker. Jerry jerked me
out on the dance floor and we never left.
A couple of times I thought about going back to my whiskey which was now
watered down from melted ice, but we kept dancing. At intermission, we both went to the bathroom. We came out of the john at the same
time. The house lights were up, and
Jerry fumbled with something in his pocket.
“Come outside for a moment.”
I followed him into the cool night
air. Jerry looked at my dirty knees from
digging the irrigation ditch earlier in the day. “What the hell happened to you?” he asked me.
“Work.” I didn’t have to say much more, this was my
second year working for the parks department.
All my friends knew I worked for the Boise City Park system.
“Listen,” Jerry moved in close to
me, “I’ve got a tab of acid. I planned
to do it alone tonight, but since you are here, why don’t you share it with me. We’ll trip together.”
Jerry handed me a torn square of
blotter and instructed me to swallow it with him. I was walking, not driving. The next day was Saturday, but I still had to
go to work around 11:00 in the morning.
I smiled at Jerry and said, “Who the fuck cares?”
We danced about twenty minutes
more, and then the acid trip began.
Jerry suggested we leave while he could still drive. His car was parked in the ally. We danced off the floor and out the back
door.
We drove without talking toward the
north end of town. When he turned on Harrison Boulevard ,
I knew we were headed to Bogus
Basin . Jerry pulled the car into a wide turn-out off
the road which led to the ski slope. He
positioned the car so we could see the lights which lit the city of trees.
In the blur of the waves of
distortion from the acid, we didn’t talk, but kissed. Our clothes came off. My knees were dirty, but Jerry told me it
looked sexy. Our heads went below the
dashboard and stayed there. I put him in
my mouth, he put me in his mouth, and we sucked in each others hallucinogenic
auras.
When I lifted my head above the
dash, the lights of Boise
wa-wahed at me like a trombone with a toilet plunger at its bell, but Jerry assured
me that the lights’ flicker was due to the hertz cycle. He reminded me about the frequency of sixty
hertz per second, but to me it seemed more like three hertz per second. Time seemed to slow down that night as Jerry
and I tried every position, every trick and every pose listed in the Kama Sutra
that can be done in a car.
The early dawn light signaled an
end to our night of exotic and hypnotic passion as we cycled to our own hertz
frequency. We woke up from the acid trip
still having sex. Not quite embarrassed,
we went to relieve ourselves on separate sides of the car, and then put our
clothes back on our pulsating bodies.
Jerry drove us to his house, and we
slept on the floor between packed boxes because of his impending move. He was
still asleep when I woke startled. I had
two hours to get to work, and Jerry lived across town from me. I figured it would take an hour to walk
home. I looked at the still dirty knees
on my pants, put on my gray hat, tied the bandanna around my neck, put the
ratty brown Woolrich jacket on and started the trek back to my apartment.
I snuck out the front door with a
self-satisfied satiation. I could smell
the cloying musk of co-mingling on me.
After digging an irrigation trench the day before, a night of dancing
and drinking, and hours of non-stop sexual activity, I really needed a
shower. I had no idea what my hair
looked like, but I knew what it smelled like.
I smiled as I reflected on how three years of lusting had been fully
atoned. I felt complete.
As I walked from the bench to the
north end of Boise ,
cars slowed as they passed me. The
vehicles, one by one, had windows open, and people were trying to hand me
money. The first few times this happened,
I looked angry and indignant at the folks in the passenger seat or the driver’s
side as they tried to hand me twenty dollar bills. I wondered aloud to God if I really looked
that tragic.
I don’t know why I didn’t take the
money, probably pride and arrogance.
But, over and over, folks in cars and trucks pulled off to hand me their
ones, fives, tens and twenties. I had
never encountered anything like this. I
crossed the Boise
River at Ninth Street , and
people continued to stop and look at me with money in their hands.
I was almost home when a neighbor
pulled up in his car. The passenger
window was open, and he called out to me, “Hey Jamie, I didn’t know you were
part of the Vo-Tech department at Boise
State , here’s your
donation.” He tried to hand me a fifty
dollar bill.
“What is this anyway?” I innocently asked.
“The Fall Fundraiser for the
college.” He then looked at me
closer. “You aren’t dressed up are you?”
“Of course I am not dressed up…you
call this dressed up?” I shrugged my
shoulders, pointed to my dirty knees and purple gray high top tennis shoes.
“Jamie, you are not dressed up like
a hobo for the Fall Fundraiser. You know
the college kids dress up like hobos and have cans for donations. They hang out on the street corners for
people to give them their money. You are
not participating in that….are you?” Now
my neighbor looked concerned for my welfare instead of eagerly handing me a
fifty dollar bill.
“I worked yesterday, and didn’t
make it home. Um, I need to get home so
I can clean up to get back to work at the park.” I tried not to look too chagrined, and so did
my neighbor as he rolled up his car window and sped off to look for a real hobo
to take his money.
As I walked down the red painted
concrete stairs to my basement apartment at 1400 ½ Washington Street, I
couldn’t tell if my head swirled from people thinking I was dressed as a
costumed hobo, or lack of sleep, or too much sex, or maybe I was still
hallucinating from the acid.
Stuck between the screen door and
jamb was a white piece of paper. I
didn’t know if I was sober enough to read the print. I unfolded the note and held my breath. The weight of the paper felt ominous.
“Jamie,
I caught a wild hare.
Moved to San Diego .
I will call you later.
Love,
Michael Shortleg.”
It felt like a steel-toed work boot
kicked deep in my belly when I read the words.
Michael Shortleg was the last best friend I had left in Boise , and now without warning, he was gone.
My best friends started leaving Boise over several months
prior. First was Sherry my buddy who was
always up for a road trip. We planned to
write a book together about one-hundred-one ways to take a road trip. She and I had road tripped to all the hot springs we knew of in western Idaho .
We traded utensils for hotel stays.
Once, the rim of my car broke on the way to McCall. We flagged down a guy in a truck who happened
to work at the service station in Cascade.
He opened the shop for us. It was
around 2:00am, and he found a rim for my car in the junk pile in back of the
garage.
My best male friend left town, and
moved to Sun Valley . He was my drinking buddy. We caroused the local bar scene on our
bicycles. Now he had a Harley, and rode
into Boise
every now and again. I missed him.
After Petra left town, I started hanging out with
her neighbor, The Bear. One day, I
stopped by to visit with some beer, and The Bear had all his clothes boxed
up. He feigned sadness as he told me the
water company he worked for was sending him to San Diego .
His face broke out in a smile which showed all his crooked teeth when he
said, “The beach!”
Michael Shortleg was the next one
to leave. The problem was that I loved
him. I didn’t just lose a friend to the
call of the road; he was the one person who understood me. We understood each other. He loved the desert like I loved the
desert. He hated people just like I
hated people. He loved to drive lonely
dirt roads like the one I grew up on, and he was the river guide who took me
down the Bruneau Canyon .
Michael Shortleg had a wall size
geothermal map of the United
States .
When I first saw it, he started to explain the map to me. I started laughing and told him my name was
on the map. My finger directly pointed
to Givens’ Hot Springs where my family settled
on the south route of the Oregon Trail . Then I traced my finger east, along the Snake River and found an unnamed well. I explained to him that was on our family
ranch.
He and I plotted our courses to
discover new hot springs . We found obscure soaks in the wilds of the Owyhee Mountains ,
on all the forks of the Boise River , out of the town of Hailey , and on the road to Challis. This was one of my greatest joys in life,
getting in the car to discover hot water.
There was this one hot water source
close to the Salton Sea in California . It looked so promising. On the map, it looked as though the flow of
source was constant fifteen gallons a minute.
The temperature looked to be one-hundred-five to seven degrees. Michael Shortleg wanted to go to Bagdad , Arizona
and lead goat trips into the desert. We
talked about driving to look for this hot water source on our way to Bagdad . But, now
Michael Shortleg was on this journey without me.
I was still pouting when I got in
the tub. The news of my best friend’s
sudden departure took some of the pleasure away from my long awaited
shower. I was late for work anyway, and
I didn’t have time to linger. I didn’t
have enough time to scrub my dirty knees.
I hurried and pulled another green
parks department t-shirt over my head. I
put on my best blue jeans, and a fitted suede blazer. I did my best not to look like a hobo, real
or fake. I got on my bicycle and pedaled
hard to work.
On Saturdays, my job at the parks
meant moving picnic tables under shelters for birthday parties and family
reunions. I had to check the bathrooms
and change out the toilet paper. That
day, I got to the first shelter just in time when the family who rented it showed
up to decorate the park structure.
One of the men took me by the hand
and showed me how one of the toilets had a beer bottle stuck in it with a whole
lot of poop on top. The toilet was
plugged, and I didn’t feel like playing roto-rooter. I was still woozy from the night before and
wrung out of stamina, instead, I made a sign and put it on the stall, “Out of
Order.”
The day finished out, and I went
under cover for a couple of days. I
didn’t talk to anybody. I didn’t answer
the phone or the door. I slept off the
acid, the sex, the hobo attire. But
mostly, I felt despair at the thought of living in Boise without my friends.
After a couple days off from work,
I didn’t feel any better. I got to the
park and found out that I was in trouble for not fixing the clogged commode. The family who had rented the park shelter
for their parents’ fiftieth wedding anniversary complained about my apathetic
behavior. The men’s restroom only had
one toilet, and I didn’t fix it. They
were not happy about my sign.
Three bosses were in the office
when I arrived. They called me in and
showed me the yellow legal paper with “Out of Order” written in blue ink. I lied and told them I had never seen it
before. They showed me the legal pad and
pen from the park truck I drove that Saturday.
I still lied to them and denied hanging the sign.
There was an opening for a full
time position at the park, and I wanted to apply for the job since I was only a
seasonal employee. I had a good chance
because I was a female, and the city was pushing for the hiring of more females
to avoid discrimination law suits. But,
now that I had sinned, the bosses let me know my application would no longer be
accepted.
I got on my Lil’ Hustler lawn mower
and cut the grass by the ball diamonds in Ann Morrison
Park . Still numb from my weekend, the thought of
being in trouble at work didn’t faze me.
I knew my ambition of being a full time park employee was over. I started singing to divert my attention as I
mowed the outfields.
“It ain't the meat it's the motion
that makes your momma wanna rock
It ain't the meat it's the motion
It's the movement that gives it a sock
that makes your momma wanna rock
It ain't the meat it's the motion
It's the movement that gives it a sock
It ain’t the meat it’s the motion…
Sock it to me baby….
Makes this momma want to blow her top…”
It was my best Maria Maldaur impression
I could muster for my mood. I mowed around
the backstops of the ball diamonds.
That’s when I heard myself declare, “I’m leaving town.” When I went into lunch at noon, still in
trouble with the bosses, I offered myself to be one of the first laid off at
the end of the season because I was moving.
I started giving away all my
possessions. The Dodge Charger I drove, which
was my grandma’s car, was replaced with a small Mazda GLC my brother dumped on
the ranch. I paired down all I owned to
fit in the small hatchback. I bought a
sleek blue boom box with cassette to cassette recording capability and strapped
it into the passenger seat with the seat belt.
I called it Cecil.
There was a feeling of freedom I
had which was hard for people to understand.
My social life had become incestuous with the dating of brothers. I was indiscriminate with whom I slept with,
my indiscretions were piling up. I
wanted to change my life, and somehow leaving town and driving off into the
unknown seemed to be the easiest way to achieve the goal.
I planned out my trip, sort
of. Michael Shortleg kept telling me
about this desert in southern California . Part of the name meant sheep in Spanish. Michael Shortleg suggested if we didn’t do
goat trips out of Bagdad, maybe we could do sheep sacrifices in the Anza-Borrego Desert .
I wanted to go there.
When I left Boise ,
my first stop was to see my male friend who moved to Sun
Valley . I went with a
purpose. Thinking that I was off on a
walk about, never to return, I figured I would never see him again. I wanted to tell him how much his friendship
meant to me. I wanted him to know that
he set the bar for compatibility. The
fellow in Sun Valley didn’t understand me like
Michael Shortleg, but he did make me laugh like no other.
Since preparing for my journey into
the sunset, for my happy trail, I started telling people that I love them; this
included my friends, parents and grandparents. Everyone whom I really loved and appreciated was
told. The idea of living an authentic
life appealed to me, why not let those I loved know how much I appreciated
their influence in my life.
When I got to Sun
Valley , I told my drinking buddy that I loved him, and he
freaked. He didn’t know what to do or
how to respond. The words unnerved him
so much, that he left with his brother early the next morning which was my scheduled
departure. I always assumed he left so
he didn’t have to say, “I love you,” back to me. Devastated that I ruined our friendship, I
left humiliated and promised myself never to do that again, to never tell a man
that I loved him.
I stopped in Provo , Utah
to visit another buddy. His girlfriend
didn’t appreciate me being there, so I left early. I got on Interstate 15 and headed south. Five hours later, I passed through the desert
birth canal called the Virgin River Gorge.
I was rebirthing my soul as I passed through the red rock, as the highway
transitioned in elevation. By the time I
hit the Mojave Desert , I was a new woman.
I burned temple grade incense in my
car, and the day turned into a full moon night.
The temperature warmed and all my windows were open. I took off my shirt and drove topless in the
dark. The dashboard lit up the outline
of my breasts and caught the attention of truckers. Reflected in lunar halo stood the Joshua
trees I‘d read about. Their arm-like shadows
leaned across the desert night landscape like the ghosts of Christmas Past.
I stopped in Escondido and called Michael Shortleg. He lived in Spring Valley with The Bear and
The Bear’s girlfriend who moved from Boise . We were all excited about a visit. When I got to their house, The Bear said I
smelled like a Grateful Dead concert.
We partied all night, singing songs
and throwing our empty beer cans against the wall. Michael Shortleg told me I could sleep with
him, but he didn’t want to have sex with me.
Before we went to bed, he put on a new album he bought earlier that
day. I knew the first tune. It was John Lee Hooker singing,
“Boom, boom, boom, boom….”
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