A little spittle rocketed off his lip each time he shouted the word into the phone.
"Bald!"
The word echoed across the empty field. The anger in it threatened peaceful gaps in time beneath lavender shadowed trees, trilled the dew in the morning grass, and sent a shiver thorough the two quiet children who had been standing motionless beside the shouting man.
A sad looking Lab nipped at the echoes and suddenly took down the field to a row of crows that were resting their wings near the end of the world.
"That's what he said!" shouted the man after a long pause.
Beyond the end of the world something stirred.
The boy was lean, blond, and long-toothed. He edged toward me, leaving his sister to shiver quietly near her frothing father.
"What's your name?" he asked.
"Skeezix" I said, and nodding to my son, "that's Alfonso."
"Want to play?" asked the boy.
The father was ranting and spitting but he saw his son speaking to a stranger and paused for just one guilty moment before picking up the rant once more. "I told him! I said,
You've got to be kidding me!! I'm only thirty-five! Son of a bitch! How could I be going bald!"
"What's your name?" I asked the boy.
"Walter," he admitted, weakly. "That's Horatio." He nodded to his sister.
"Isn't that...."
"Yes,"
"Doesn't she..."
"We call her Henrietta."
"I see."
Alphonso tickled his nose with a blade of grass and sneezed.
"Your dad's angry huh?"
"Jeepers..." said Walter.
"Henrietta looks frightened, don't you think?" I asked.
"She always looks like that - Hey! Hey Henry!" called Walter.
Horatio ignored her brother.
"You want to play with me?" asked the boy.
"We wouldn't mind," I said, pointing to Alphonso, "but what about Henry?"
"Oh she's not feeling much like playing, right now," said Walter. "We were supposed to go to the pool. Then dad got mad and now - no pool."
"That's too bad," I said.
"Sure is."
"Why's your old man screaming cause he's bald?!" bleated Alphonso. "What's the big deal?"
Walter shrugged.
"My papa's bald, you don't see him screaming!"
"Hey now, be nice, Alphonso! You just didn't hear my screaming - I screamed plenty."
"No you didn't!"
"Sure I did, you just weren't there to hear it."
"Well then, you stopped anyhow! That guy just keep screaming."
Walter frowned, Henry made a little red fist and threw it against her hip.
"He's mad at his bald because mother didn't like him and she moved out."
"She moved out because he was bald?" asked Alphonso, surprised.
Henry finally couldn't stand it. Her father was so deep into his rant that he couldn't fix himself beyond the end of his cell phone and the rage kneading up his lips.
"She didn't leave because he was bald, you idiot! She left because daddy never stops screaming about it! She said he was a dummy."
Alphonso pulled the Velcro strap on one sneaker up and down. Then he looked at me and said, "Papa, Mama just says she doesn't like you thats all. She doesn't say bad words."
"I'm glad to hear it." I said.
Far off the little spot that was the Lab chasing crows in the field grew larger.
"What's the name of your dog?"
"Tick-tock," she said.
"Why's that?" asked Alphonso.
"Cause his she's go like this..." and Henry made like left and right with her big brown eyes.
"That's funny," said Alphonso.
End part 1
welcome to the baldie stories blog.
Maybe you're bald, maybe not, maybe you care, likely not; stories here, some funny, some not.
"Baldie Stories 1" now available for purchase - visit amazon Kindle today! click here; Baldie Stories 1
"Baldie Stories 1" now available for purchase - visit amazon Kindle today! click here; Baldie Stories 1
Stories used for publication of Baldie Stories 1 have been removed from this blog.
Friday, July 18, 2014
Friday, August 30, 2013
Baldie Portrait in Blue
Baldie Portrait in Blue
(in the "Baldie Stories 1" collection - on sale at Amazon.com)
(in the "Baldie Stories 1" collection - on sale at Amazon.com)
“Papa,
I drew a picture of you."
"Is
this me, here? Right here with big muscles?"
"Ha-ha!
No, that's the tree, silly."
"Oh,
I was wondering why I had all that hair!"
"Those
are leaves! Leaves on the tree!"
"So
where am I? Is this me, here?"
"That?
No! Ha-ha! That's a rock! "
"Oh.
I thought maybe because..."
"Because
it doesn't have any hair?"
"Bingo!"
"No,
Papa. This is you."
"Wow!
That's fantastic! I didn't see it at first..."
"Papa,
you’re teasing me! This is your little hair, here on the top!"
"Good
job! Teasing is a good word..."
"And
you have a rectangle body! And I... I forgot to put hands!"
"Are
those my eyes, right there by my chin?"
"Yes
- ha-ha! You're engabberest!"
"I'm
what?"
"Em-grabber-rest?"
"Embarrassed?"
"Yes,
that! And I colored you blue."
"I
see that. I love blue."
"Me,
too."
"Why
am I embarrassed?"
“Ha!
Cause you used to have hair and now you only have little hair!"
"You're
a funny kid. Ha! But come here; let me tickle you for teasing the old man! And
you want to know something?"
"What,
Papa?"
"See
all this hair on your head?"
"I
have a lot and you have little!"
"For
now baby, for now! But one day...."
“I
know Papa.”
“What
do you know?”
“I’ll
have more hair, like you did in the old pictures, and your little hair will be
even littler and littler and littler forever.”
“Come
over here wise-guy. It’s tickle time again.”
The End
Thursday, May 9, 2013
Future Hair
Future Hair
(in the "Baldie Stories 1" collection - on sale at Amazon.com)
(in the "Baldie Stories 1" collection - on sale at Amazon.com)
Capping Aisle G88 hummed.
Wire tests crackled, nose height; blossoms of sizzling points - carbide,
magnesium, ozone-fire, yellow and orange-blue, the signifiers of sparkling
efficiency in a diode haze within the pure white light shrouding the conveyor.
Crinkle and crackle and a few moans and groans when Alph jammed a finger
up his nose with a smirk. Otherwise, follicle replacement and synaptic
cleaning, replacement, cleaning - more and more of the same.
"Sixty-eight!"
"He's on it!"
"One-twenty two!"
"Lost!"
"Five-eleven!"
"Who?"
"Fiver one one!"
"Hang on, Fred...Fred? Who’sit?! We didn't wire a fiver one
one!"
"Short guy, bald....Har! Haha!"
"Haha! You kill me Fred! Seven hundred years later - it still
cracks me in half! Bald! Rich! Creamy rich!"
"Five-one-one - Q-zone, section eight-six-six, bank B3-R,"
suicide, triple - receding hairline: affectation, loss of job, wife,
self-esteem, blah-blah-jam a finger up his nose, sniveling loser!"
"No dice!"
Alph didn't look like he enjoyed hearing it. He sniffed, looked about to
sneeze but making like over there to a single empty seat on the conveyor,
"Jeeze! He's got away!!"
The alarm was louder than it needed to be, just to incentivize, and the
LED emergency lamps were digitally programmed to cause muscle spasms. The pulse
would take down any living creature with proper electro-synaptic gap junctions.
Even with the helmets and glasses, both Alph and Fred did a little involuntary
jig down below the knees. A bright queasiness, unknown in the natural world,
twinkle-toed in their guts, beneath their privates. Duodenal excitement,
adrenal prompts, shots from groin to mouth causing spontaneous lymphatic
drainage - shits and drooling giggles.
Scare - from Scary, the rhyming rib of Nary, poetic for Never, which his
Mom found amusing and his dad, well his dad was done before Scare was born,
done and gone, forward or backward in time, but gone all the same - Scare
called himself Scare, but his real name was Never.
What a name. Never. But Scare? Even worse!
His mother had gossamer hopes for the boy. She wished, white-knuckled and
shivering in her birthing bed that the boy would never ever have to feel the
pain of unnerving groundlessness that has plagued her life, the life of her
parents, and the generations of unhappy souls that came before them. She cursed
her time, the discovery of "past-presence," "future-bringing,"
the models and mechanics that allowed for such witchcraft.
But Never would, and always prevailed. The universe didn't care much, and
Never worked out just fine, in fact better than fine, and better than the
future foretold! Mama was nervous about nothing! Ha! Just goes to show.
It was Scare that got loose in the future hair conveyor. Never, who
stood up and slid away - bald, anxious, just fine!
"Five-oner-one!"
Never smiled, one nose-picking stroke away from a good mind-cleanse and
a healthy head of hair.
"Here Baldie-Baldie-Baldie!"
"Peckerhead."
"Alph, my head feels like jelly."
The strobes had been disengaged, capping aisle G88's flow was rerouted
to G89, and the locator sensors had a fix on Scary.
"There he is, behind the pallet of styling mousse."
"I see him."
"Five-oner-one," announced Fred, "Mr. Never Ever!"
Alph stopped. "That's his name?”
Fred checked his tablet. "That's it.”
Scary interrupted. "Future-presence shows I'm walking out of here,
bald and intact. You guys smell like shit!”
"Security is on the way, remain where you are.”
"You mean future-bringing," Alph clarified.
"No," said Scary, stepping into the aisle to face the two make-over
specialists. "I mean future-presence. A bit different, huh?"
"What's he talking about?" Asked Alph."
"I walk out of here, and I will be the first Baldie in seven
hundred years to do so. I'll live out my life bald and as fucked up in the head
as I can be!"
"He really does need a cleaning!"
"And some hair."
But Alph and Fred both had a strange and uneasy feeling as they listened
to Scary. They were feeling reality shifting against its natural course. Scary
was in the process of bringing about that shift. Seven hundred years of perfect
coifs, spotless attitudes, endearing social graces, and undiminished enthusiasm
for the cause of greater good was about to become a part of the real past.
"You feel it! All that hair coming undone one pretentious follicle
at a time, one affected and totally brainwashed lock after the other!"
They could hear the Baldie Police at the conveyor entrance, bashing at
the sealed security gate. Scary continued.
"I did something none of you thought to do! So simple! I brought
past-presence INTO future-bringing!"
"What?"
"Seven hundred years! Idiots! I took a ride back and brought it
forward! It's happening now! Look at yourselves!"
"Alph! Your hair! What's happening?!"
"Fred! You've got a shadow on your chin! Something's wrong with
your head! I don't feel well!"
"You'll start feeling real angry in a moment. Ouch! That's gonna
hurt!"
"You don't know what you're talking about! That's why your
here!"
"The anger you know is controlled, just like all your other
emotions and thoughts! Like your hairline! Like your attitudes about everything
from what you eat to how you dream! No more! I stuck before, after! Turned
always into never-more! Me! Scary Never Ever!"
By the time Baldie security got through the gate there was little left
of causal notion. A few drips of adjustment and neatness. Mostly there were angry
bald men with no sense, no reason to be, no pretense to righteousness, which
was replaced by another false righteousness, the old one, the lousy little one
that might be overcome by kindness and compassion.
And then:
The rest followed.
The safe-line lineage of Never-wrecks, the suffering stream one blood
relative to the next, knowing and not knowing the past and the future. Scary,
finding solace in distress, bringing about the final shift, ending the new
horrors and bringing back the old, pressing the reset, bringing despair upon
his mother, worse for his father, and the weight of universal clarity upon
himself, a bald and insecure Adam in a groundless place. All that and more!
The
End
Monday, February 18, 2013
1/2 of Stanley - (complete story)
1/2 of Stanley
(in the "Baldie Stories 1" collection - on sale at Amazon.com)
(in the "Baldie Stories 1" collection - on sale at Amazon.com)
They
couldn’t find the top of him so they used an old half a cantaloupe to punctuate
the clear run of ruin above his mouth. “How’s he even sitting up like that? You
need a brain to sit up like that, don’t ya?”
“I
think so, but it’s like that chicken thing; they run around a bit before they
die.”
Then
it spoke. It put a finger up to the top of it, scratched at the dirty rind,
found a half an ear and inserted a finger clear through to where that part of
the brain should have been.
“Gettem...
gettem here to the spital- ohspital - getteme ospitl....”
“Crap!
The hospital! Call 911.”
They
led him, on foot into the emergency room. He refused to sit. Even with half a
head, he was stubborn. Later, while the surgeons were shrugging around the
operating table, the cops were asking questions in a room next to the emergency
waiting area.
“I
don’t exactly know. We didn’t know him, just saw him there after the car backed
up off his head. He must have been drunk. But then he sat up, and it looked...”
“Yeah
- it looked like he was going to try to light a cigarette. But the top of his
head was gone. Looked like a bowl of old soba noodles. Ick…Christ!”
Two
days later he was transferred to a special clinic in Colorado. Two weeks later,
he was on a plane for Germany. They’d managed to keep the infection at bay by
topping him off with a glorified fish bowl. There was puzzlement all around.
Not only didn’t the man with half a head not die, but he seemed to be
communicating just fine with a pad and a pencil. Nasal passages worked with
some assistance, feeding tube did its job. The major hunk of brain that went
missing appeared to be superfluous to begin with.
His
family was contacted. They weren’t surprised.
“Sounds like something that joker would pull off” was what his brother
had to say. His mother was fine with it as long as they never got a bill for
any of the work performed. No one expressed interest in seeing the man.
His
name was Stanley. And even with half a head, he was one completely irritating
guy.
"He
keeps writing that he wants to listen to Beethoven's fourth piano sonata! God
damned doesn't have ears! Shit-basket doesn't have a skull to hang ears on! For
fuck sake, I quit!"
And
that was the fourth personal attendant in five days. Stanley complained about
the darkness, the pain in his face, nicotine withdrawal, pissing down his leg,
and he wanted soup! He wrote it:
Sopu
soupp nou fuker nou!
Stanley's
father suggested they drive him to the expressway and let him find his own way
home.
"Son
of a bitch can still play the piano, he can find his way through six lanes of
traffic."
"Why
do you hate our son so much!?" They’d paused to take a look. At the
hospital's fairly decent upright piano, Stanley is leaning into the tangle of
the fourth piano concerto’s first dawn, fish bowl for a skull tucked into a
bloody gauze ascot, thumping away as if nothing were at all wrong.
Sidney
pointed at the nightmare, wiggled a finger at it.
"Same
reason I hate you so much! You fucked up my life without even trying! Look, at
least now he's got some effort into it! No fucking head, no fucking brains, but
he’s still ruining my life, one second after the next!”
"Sidney!
It's terrible! Look at him - that horrible, horrible thing plugging the rest
from spilling out his neck! He's your boy! Your boy!"
"Darlene,
you've said it so many times I'm starting to wonder whom you're trying to convince!"
Stanley
sensed the discord; the vibrations came to his knees and elbows with the
sensitivity of perfectly honed tuning forks. He wrote with two hands on two
separate pieces of paper, rarely defining which words follows which, page to
page. It was an unbearable torture to decode the double-handed rant.
"Piss
off, something, something Else, the. Piss off some more. Lousy parents.... so
on. "
Sydney
laughed heartily, threw the note on the hospital floor, and laughed some
more.
"This
kid is some ball buster. Honestly, no head - chin up, nothing, and he's still
telling us what to do."
Sidney
turned to the new attendant. "What took you so long? You’ve been on
standby since yesterday?!”
“Yes,
sir. It’s just...all the shouting. I figured…"
Sidney
snarled, “Don’t figure! Look at that! That thing is supposed to be my son! If I
started figuring, where’d you think I’d end up? No. No figuring. Unless you
figure out how to make this all go away. Then let me know what’s on your mind.”
If
Darlene seemed at odds with Sidney over Stanley's condition, his well-being, or
the possibility of an emotional tether to their youngest offspring, it was
merely the brute force of the maternal instinct hat had overcome the aging
mother.
In
fact, when the answering machine took that first call from the police, it was
Darlene who said, "Don't pick it up! If we're lucky he's dead - If
not, I don't even want to know."
But
later, the curious nature of the condition of their boy, the hints of potential
profit that lurked burbling just under the base of his skull: talk shows, book
deals, options - hell, they'd been contacted by a major toy manufacturer who
wanted to pay dearly for rights for the name and identity of "Stanley The
Headless Wonder Doll! " - they found something inside each of them that,
when polished by desire, managed to look awkwardly like diffident care,
strangulated love, or some other common pathology that passed for familial
attentiveness.
"He's
the worst of both of us, and nobody's math can add those things together without
sobbing at the end of it!"
Sidney
winced in the parking lot, "I mean, they'll know we hate him before I
hang up my hat!"
But
they hadn't counted on Darlene's maternal instinct.
One
look at half a head and it didn't matter how horrible the little shit had been
to the world, it was her little shit! Her little shit without a face!
"He
wants hair!?" Sidney screamed. He clutched the bed rail and shivered.
"He
doesn't even have a brain and he wants hair! He doesn't have eyes or cheeks or
a god-damned mouth and he's still telling us..."
The
old man quaked. Veins in his neck pulsed and flexed and the flesh on his face
jelly-rolled through a rainbow of horrific expressions, colors, ungodly
contortions. Then, right before poor old Sidney dropped dead, dead and
quivering still - he got out the last couple of words that would finish him for
good:
"He
wants a new hairdo!?"
The
sound of Sidney shattering from the inside out was audible. Darlene had an
eyebrow up and the doctor, who looked more intrigued than startled, had to lift
his glasses over his eyes to be certain he wasn't seeing things. He nearly
spoke, but didn't.
Darlene
walked over and nudged her husband’s corpse with the blunt toe of her left
shoe.
"Sidney?"
The
doctor knelt down beside the dead man and checked for a pulse, flipped an
eyelid, and thoughtlessly thumped a thought out on Sidney's forehead with a
pencil.
"He
has died," said the doctor.
At
that moment, Stanley began to burble. Burble and bubble. He swayed and grasped
at the air around him and a thin gruel of bloody matter erupted from the fleshy
mess at the top of him.
"What's
happening?" screamed Darlene.
"I
don't know!" exclaimed the doctor.
"Do
something!" screamed Darlene.
"But...
but…" stammered the doctor, unsure of exactly what the emergency protocol might
be when dealing with a patient with no head.
More
blood and phlegm splattered about as Stanley began to swing about, left and
then right and then back again.
Darlene
screamed some more and then screamed again. She took it all in, dead husband at
her feet, her only son - she remembered a moment of pure pleasure, the infant
smiling - now reduced to this unspeakable horror...
Her
shrieks increased until she found it impossible to shriek any longer. The
doctor bounded across the room to upright Stanley and with one hand
outstretched, poked a finger into his fleshy blow-hole to stem the loss of
blood. Darlene tripped over her dead husband's body and split her skull wide
open on the cast-iron lift mechanism at the foot of the bed.
Darlene
was dead before the doctor felt the quality of quivering that emanated from the
orphaned boy’s body. It was not the quaking distress of choking. It wasn't the
flailing of fear or terror - not at all. The doctor withdrew his finger from
Stanley's gullet and put a hand on the headless man's back.
"You
are laughing?" whispered the doctor, horrified.
"Evil,
through and through."
Stanley
flailed about until he found a sheet of paper. The doctor handed the headless
man a pen. Stanley swayed over the sheet as he wrote. When he was finished he
tossed the sheet into the air above his shoulders. The doctor pulled it out if
the air.
It
said:
‘Greedy
people! Hated me. Wished me dead but wanted profit from this horror. Their
son...
I
want a head. Make me a head. Put hair on it! Don't get greedy.’
The
doctor looked up slowly.
Stanley
shook with joy. He was feeling better, much better indeed.
The End
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Bald in Russia !
Well I am very pleased to note that Baldie Stories has found it's way to Russia, where I seem to be more popular than here in the U.S. - we are all brothers bald! And sisters. And occasionally have bald pets. I would love to hear from any followers, and please follow and comment - it's lonely here in this bald story place a lot of he time, and I would live to publish a Baldies book of short stories, so more followers and readers, better chance of publishing. In the meantime, please enjoy the stories, and my gratitude to all who do, those who may, and the others who really couldn't care less after all!!
Andy
Andy
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
a room filled with 4 year olds
Enter.
"You rascals! What's all the noise!? The grown ups are trying to talk down there! Hey! You! The one that looks like me! Poor sod! Do I know you?!"
"Papa! It's me!"
"Me?! My boy? Is it you? Yes, he llook like me, just, nearly - only the hair - you have all that hair!"
"It's Mason!"
The children laugh. They shout it, shout his name because they know the routine. They love to know the routine. Everybody loves to know the routine.
"How could it be? All that hair! Where's MY hair!? Whatcha laughing at? Hey! You! You laughing at me? This bald head? Huh?"
Even those who haven't been in this scene before, they pick up the cues like pros. Small gestures, big ones - my son makes google eyes at me - then even the quiet one in the corner comes out to see where he trick is hiding.
It's a lot for a four year old to hold in, but they're trying hard to stay in character . The longer they hold it the funnier it will be when they let loose.
"You! You got my hair?! Huh? Is that it in your pocket? My hair? How about you?! You're laughing - you look guilty! What's all that rolling around on the floor?"
"Where's you're hair?" It's a kid I don't know.
"What? Did you say...? Did ask me? My hair? Where is it?! That's what I'm asking!"
"It's not on your head!"
It's the punch line. They roar. It's done. We did it again. Now the close.
"Who said that? Who.... Say now, you're all teasing me! Go ahead, laugh! All of you! I'm leaving!"
Exit.
"You rascals! What's all the noise!? The grown ups are trying to talk down there! Hey! You! The one that looks like me! Poor sod! Do I know you?!"
"Papa! It's me!"
"Me?! My boy? Is it you? Yes, he llook like me, just, nearly - only the hair - you have all that hair!"
"It's Mason!"
The children laugh. They shout it, shout his name because they know the routine. They love to know the routine. Everybody loves to know the routine.
"How could it be? All that hair! Where's MY hair!? Whatcha laughing at? Hey! You! You laughing at me? This bald head? Huh?"
Even those who haven't been in this scene before, they pick up the cues like pros. Small gestures, big ones - my son makes google eyes at me - then even the quiet one in the corner comes out to see where he trick is hiding.
It's a lot for a four year old to hold in, but they're trying hard to stay in character . The longer they hold it the funnier it will be when they let loose.
"You! You got my hair?! Huh? Is that it in your pocket? My hair? How about you?! You're laughing - you look guilty! What's all that rolling around on the floor?"
"Where's you're hair?" It's a kid I don't know.
"What? Did you say...? Did ask me? My hair? Where is it?! That's what I'm asking!"
"It's not on your head!"
It's the punch line. They roar. It's done. We did it again. Now the close.
"Who said that? Who.... Say now, you're all teasing me! Go ahead, laugh! All of you! I'm leaving!"
Exit.
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